Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 4256
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Title: HPR4256: Birds of a Feather Talk at OLF 2024
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4256/hpr4256.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:07:49
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4256 from Monday the 25th of November 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, Birds of a Feather Talk at O-LF 2024.
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It is the 20th show of Facerre and is about 17 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Lyle and Fispeak some nonsense to make other people make shows.
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So, uh, hi, welcome.
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We're, uh, here to talk about Hacker Public Radio and encourage you all to start listening
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and start contributing, because we need shows.
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We always need shows.
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So, what is Hacker Public Radio?
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It is a podcast powered by an international community producing shows every weekday, Monday
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through Friday.
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Every episode is recorded by a member of the community, uh, sharing their passion and expertise
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on a truly staggering number of topics.
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Who are we?
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Lyle, I'm an IT professional with, uh, 15 plus years of experience, doing all kinds
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of stuff, different verticals, different size companies, all kinds of stuff.
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Yeah, and so I'm Taj.
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I work in the education sector in higher ed, um, but I'm in a past life.
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I was an audio engineer, so we decided a recovering audio professional was the way to state
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that.
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Uh, we've been contributing to HPR and other community podcasts for over 10 years, but
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we're also just folks.
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We want to see the community grow and help out.
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So, how do you get involved?
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First of all, you can start listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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||||
It's usually pretty cool.
|
||||
And the best part is, if you come up to an episode you don't like, there's a great button
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on your pod catcher.
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It's called Next.
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Yeah.
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You can join the community discussions on Matrix and on the mailing list.
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Can we decide to have a master on what we forgot to put on here?
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There is a master.
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There is the master on.
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We forgot to put it on.
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No, I know we didn't.
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Um, but really record a show.
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Yo, kind of show.
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Special if you know what that means.
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If you know, if you don't.
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All right.
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We've now set aside time for objections and excuses.
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So, Mark, what do you have?
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Excuse, please.
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Am I even good enough to have been past the center of this point?
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So, no, and there's still such thing.
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There are shows that are five minutes long, there are shows.
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I mean, and then there's a New Year's Eve show.
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The New Year's Eve show, which is four or five hours.
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But, cutting to four or five hour chunks, it's a 24 hour show
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that they cut up and release after the New Year.
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So, and I mean, there have been something that have been,
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I think, as short as like 40 seconds.
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Yeah.
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So, however long it takes you to say what you want to say.
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So, a common, common reasons people say that they can't do a show
|
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is they think they don't have anything interesting to say.
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They're wrong.
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They don't have something interesting to say.
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Mark, put your head out.
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You just did a whole presentation on interesting things to say.
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Who really thinks that they don't have something interesting
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that you talk about for five minutes,
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that nobody else would want to hear about?
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Good.
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Oh, good, I don't have to argue with you.
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That's the best place.
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Just me.
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Right.
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We came prepared for that outcome.
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So, the next one is, you think your audio quality is bad.
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We're here to help, but also it's fine.
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Yeah, so the meme with HPR is that I'm the guy that cares
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about everybody's audio quality.
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So, if it's something that you're really worried about,
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there's actually a series of episodes
|
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that I did about how to fix your bad audio quality
|
||||
and just basic audio engineering principles.
|
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One of the things that a lot of people are like,
|
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well, what do I record on?
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What device do I use?
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||||
You can use a phone.
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||||
We were talking about one of our friends.
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||||
He has one of the Sans Eclipse, the old MP3 players.
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He literally clips it on the brim of his hat
|
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and records a podcast.
|
||||
And it doesn't sound terrible.
|
||||
No, I mean, he does zero post-processing
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||||
because that would be work and he doesn't do that.
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I'm just hoping he listens to that, so that's a big frame.
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||||
But...
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Are you recording one right now because it would be great?
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Yes, this is the meta of this whole thing
|
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is that we are making an episode right now.
|
||||
This is being recorded and when we get to the second half
|
||||
of this, we are actually going to edit and upload it.
|
||||
So, you can see right here.
|
||||
Specifically, because I'm going to tell you, it's easy.
|
||||
But then we're going to show you that it's maybe not so hard.
|
||||
So, uploading a show is hard.
|
||||
Yeah, we're here to help.
|
||||
We're going to show you how.
|
||||
You have other questions?
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You know who to ask?
|
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Well, it's us.
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||||
That's what we're here for.
|
||||
Yeah, and you'll get contact information for us
|
||||
at the end of this.
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||||
I think right there, actually.
|
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Hey!
|
||||
There we go.
|
||||
So, any questions besides the ones that we run up
|
||||
that people want to ask real quick?
|
||||
Content moderation?
|
||||
Ah, this is a no, right?
|
||||
Yeah, this is a wonderful thing.
|
||||
There is intentionally no content moderation.
|
||||
Now, that has led to...
|
||||
I think they've pulled maybe one or two shows
|
||||
in the history of Ever because something was said that was...
|
||||
Because it is international, we have to be...
|
||||
Very considerate of all the laws,
|
||||
and somebody said something that would be considered illegal
|
||||
and a certain jurisdiction, so that episode had to be pulled.
|
||||
I think they pulled one or maybe failed to post something
|
||||
because of copyright, and the janitor's stance is...
|
||||
I know you think it's fair use.
|
||||
Fair use is an active defense.
|
||||
My name's the one on the domain registrar.
|
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I'm not doing it.
|
||||
That's not me.
|
||||
That's the janitor's position.
|
||||
So, and just for people who don't know,
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the way that HPR works is sort of the admins
|
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we don't call them admins, we call them janitors,
|
||||
just because it's fun.
|
||||
And so, they're the people who make sure
|
||||
that the shows go up, and because of some of the laws
|
||||
and certain jurisdictions, if they have heard a thing
|
||||
and then publish it, they're held legally liable,
|
||||
but if they publish it without hearing it, they're not.
|
||||
So, that's one of the reasons
|
||||
there's not any content moderation.
|
||||
There have been some issues when people post things
|
||||
that are sort of not cool to a lot of people,
|
||||
and then we're basically a self-policing community.
|
||||
There have been some people that are no longer part
|
||||
of our community because they were sort of ostracized
|
||||
for their opinions that they were sharing.
|
||||
But also, the janitors are called janitors
|
||||
because they're not in charge.
|
||||
They do not set policy.
|
||||
They implement policy decided on by the community.
|
||||
They are very, very clear about that.
|
||||
They do not make decisions, except for a few things
|
||||
that would impact them personally.
|
||||
They implement the decisions of the community.
|
||||
That's why they've chosen the name janitors,
|
||||
not administrators.
|
||||
And all of the policy is decided by the community
|
||||
on the mailing list.
|
||||
So, anything that changes in policy is put up
|
||||
and then people make comments on it.
|
||||
And if somebody says no, then there's a discussion
|
||||
about it, and that's happened, where we kind of modify things
|
||||
back and forth until we get something
|
||||
that everybody agrees on.
|
||||
And I was going to say something else,
|
||||
and I've already forgotten what I was going to say.
|
||||
But that's, oh, there's multiple levels.
|
||||
So, like the janitors are kind of at the top
|
||||
and anytime something that is, I don't want to say,
|
||||
something where they want to know
|
||||
if they made the right call.
|
||||
There's another level called auditors.
|
||||
So, like I'm an auditor.
|
||||
So, if Ken, who we made the joke about,
|
||||
you owe Ken a show, Ken is one of the janitors.
|
||||
If he needs to have an interaction with somebody
|
||||
that is about policy, that email goes to all the auditors
|
||||
and the person that is going to.
|
||||
And then I think there's been a couple times
|
||||
where it's been sent before it's been sent.
|
||||
So, everybody has to approve it before it goes out.
|
||||
So, that's sort of how we police our own people.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So, listener figures, any idea?
|
||||
Kind of.
|
||||
We know it's in the thousands, like per day.
|
||||
I've heard much higher numbers.
|
||||
It's always a game of like, I know that like my device
|
||||
is like downloaded three times a day, right?
|
||||
So, how many, especially because it's hackers,
|
||||
how many people are doing that on the regular?
|
||||
Like, how inflated is the number we don't really know?
|
||||
But then it's also potentially deflated
|
||||
because it's syndicated on other services
|
||||
kind of with or without people's permission.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Everything has to be by essay.
|
||||
I was gonna say, that is the thing we did forget is
|
||||
that unless you specify otherwise everything is,
|
||||
I believe by essay, there's creative comments,
|
||||
attribution share alike.
|
||||
By essay four now.
|
||||
Yeah, we've made the change to four.
|
||||
Occasionally, I've heard people specifically
|
||||
designate their episodes as less restrictive,
|
||||
never more restrictive.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And that, again, that's a legal thing.
|
||||
But I know there have been places where
|
||||
HBR has been aired on the actual radio
|
||||
because it's something that can be put on the radio
|
||||
as long as that person vets that it, you know,
|
||||
here it would be the FCC or wherever it is
|
||||
that it meets those qualifications.
|
||||
But anybody can do whatever they want with it.
|
||||
The other thing I remember reading on the site,
|
||||
as I was preparing for this, that I think is worth mentioning,
|
||||
because of the way that a lot of the larger feed,
|
||||
RSS feed infrastructure is set up.
|
||||
HBR is tagged as explicit on the feeds.
|
||||
And then I believe you can specify whether or not
|
||||
it's explicit in the tag for your show.
|
||||
But that is more of a community tag where
|
||||
the headers will tell listeners whether it's explicit
|
||||
or not per show.
|
||||
But in the feeds, it is marked as explicit
|
||||
because there's no moderation,
|
||||
because people will choose to represent themselves
|
||||
however they see fit.
|
||||
And sometimes we've had the conversation
|
||||
that what is explicit in one place
|
||||
is maybe not explicit in another,
|
||||
or like certain words might be really taboo to say
|
||||
in America that are fine somewhere else, right?
|
||||
And so a lot of times it defaults to explicit
|
||||
and then you can say it's not explicit.
|
||||
But I think pretty much everybody
|
||||
makes their stuff explicit at this point, just to be safe.
|
||||
I would say not because the content is always explicit
|
||||
but simply because it is safer to leave it on by default.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Other questions, comments, concerns?
|
||||
What is an essay?
|
||||
Creative Commons attributions share a like,
|
||||
which I believe means it is you have to attribute
|
||||
where you receive the audio, work from,
|
||||
and distribute it under the same license.
|
||||
So if I made an episode about, I don't know, camels,
|
||||
just for a random, and trust me, there have been episodes
|
||||
that is not the most random.
|
||||
We always talk about the things that, you know,
|
||||
people think hacker and public radio,
|
||||
they think it's all like very technical stuff.
|
||||
It's really not.
|
||||
Probably this is the example that everybody kind of goes
|
||||
back to in the HBR community,
|
||||
is that we have one of our members, Clotu,
|
||||
who did a whole series on urban camping,
|
||||
like how to camp in your office
|
||||
or how to camp in your car and stuff.
|
||||
And it was fascinating and everybody loved it.
|
||||
We had another episode where one of the contributors
|
||||
was like literally inside of his well,
|
||||
trying to like fix something in the well
|
||||
while talking about like beers.
|
||||
And he published it and everybody was like,
|
||||
okay, I guess it's of interest to hackers
|
||||
because that's kind of the, as long as it gets
|
||||
by that very low threshold, then you can publish it.
|
||||
So that's sort of, and where it is.
|
||||
As a member of the community for me,
|
||||
the of interest to hackers is, are you excited about it?
|
||||
Somebody's probably going to be interested
|
||||
in hearing about it, even if they're only interested
|
||||
in hearing about it because you're excited about it.
|
||||
I was gonna pull up and see like what the topics
|
||||
for this week work is that would be an interesting.
|
||||
Dead air, we're not allowed to have a talk while
|
||||
truncate silence is the thing.
|
||||
Oh, yes, it is.
|
||||
So somebody did a show about playing Civilization 4,
|
||||
which has been a whole series where he's gone
|
||||
through every Civilization game telling you
|
||||
like everything about it, which is hilarious.
|
||||
How to stream audio streams on the command line,
|
||||
which I think was CVLC was what he was using.
|
||||
Somebody interviewing somebody from Aug Camp
|
||||
that just happened, somebody installing Geeks,
|
||||
which that's of interest to hackers.
|
||||
And then somebody just talking about podcasts and TV shows
|
||||
that they listen to, which is kind of one
|
||||
of the common things that people do.
|
||||
When you first start, kind of the suggestions
|
||||
are like an introduction episode, like,
|
||||
hey, this is me, this is how I got into whatever.
|
||||
You'll probably find out through listening to it
|
||||
that it's very heavily like Linux open source based.
|
||||
There are people who aren't that come on
|
||||
and do Windows stuff, but most of us are kind
|
||||
of more into the open source world.
|
||||
So a lot of people do their like first episode is,
|
||||
hey, this is me, this is how I got into Linux
|
||||
or this is how I started playing with computers.
|
||||
How I got into Linux, what's in my bag?
|
||||
What's in my bag?
|
||||
Podcast recommendations.
|
||||
Those are a lot of the, get to know you type episodes
|
||||
that a lot of new contributors do.
|
||||
Yeah, people do like random movie reviews
|
||||
that's happened before.
|
||||
We used to do a thing where we, and us too specifically
|
||||
with some other people, would do an audio book club
|
||||
where we would find a freely available, like,
|
||||
Creative Commons audio book, and we would all listen to it
|
||||
and just get together and have a session club.
|
||||
And there were times where we could get the author
|
||||
to come on with us, which was, that was cool.
|
||||
I was trying to remember how many times that happened
|
||||
at least twice.
|
||||
At least twice, yeah.
|
||||
Does that two count lost in Bronx?
|
||||
Oh, three.
|
||||
Nevermind.
|
||||
I was gonna say, I don't remember that's two
|
||||
and lost in Bronx or two counting lost in Bronx.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
He's the guy that doesn't like work, by the way.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
That's a dig.
|
||||
Shocking.
|
||||
Shocking.
|
||||
I'm sure in six months, when he listens to this,
|
||||
get a record, get a record and score in spots.
|
||||
Anything else?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I'm late, so I missed your presentation.
|
||||
Okay, we'll start over.
|
||||
Go back to slide one.
|
||||
This is online.
|
||||
This is an actual radio with radio signal.
|
||||
Correct.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
The hacker public radio is a community podcast
|
||||
published Monday through Friday with episodes
|
||||
from the community members.
|
||||
I was like, are you gonna do the whole opening
|
||||
should be out?
|
||||
Like, do you know it by heart?
|
||||
Cause it sounds like you do.
|
||||
Yes, I do, no, I'm not.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
I'm sorry.
|
||||
You have an RSS?
|
||||
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
It's spoilers.
|
||||
If it doesn't have an RSS feed, it's not a podcast.
|
||||
Why?
|
||||
I will die on that hill.
|
||||
I will, too.
|
||||
We don't need to talk about that.
|
||||
You don't see an Android, listen to podcasts and go ads.
|
||||
It's great.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
There are no ads on this ever.
|
||||
I've got to say, you can always listen to HVR,
|
||||
but no ads.
|
||||
There are no ads.
|
||||
Although sometimes when somebody's talking about a thing,
|
||||
it basically isn't ad, cause we're like,
|
||||
this is so cool.
|
||||
You've got to do this.
|
||||
The bigging for shows could probably technically
|
||||
be something of an ad.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
It's not for your labor, which are for shows.
|
||||
And that's one of the things with it,
|
||||
is because it is volunteer driven,
|
||||
and it is five days a week, trying to get people
|
||||
to contribute enough to keep it going.
|
||||
I think I forget exactly how long it's been going on
|
||||
in this form, it's mutated from different shows
|
||||
to this one, but I want to say,
|
||||
it's like at least 15 years, if not more,
|
||||
that it's...
|
||||
Some guys, the people were the techie, the seeded it.
|
||||
Right, and then Ben Rev was before that, so, yeah.
|
||||
I mean, having a community that can pull that off,
|
||||
but then we always run into, like,
|
||||
during the summer, or usually during the holidays,
|
||||
everybody's busy, and so there's like this thing
|
||||
where we're all getting on the mic,
|
||||
we're like, please, please, please, please,
|
||||
please, please, please, please, please, please, please,
|
||||
and then, you know, we scratch together
|
||||
enough to make it happen.
|
||||
But that's sort of why trying to do some outreach
|
||||
and try to get people involved, at least to listen to it,
|
||||
and then maybe decide, hey, I wouldn't mind doing one of these.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
Because what we see a lot of, and we are always trying
|
||||
to help out with, is we have five, six people
|
||||
in the community who make a massive number of shows,
|
||||
and what we don't want is to be, you know,
|
||||
five days a week with five hosts,
|
||||
a show by each one of them every week, and burn them out,
|
||||
and then, there's no way...
|
||||
No more yelling at anyone.
|
||||
The decision has been made for years now.
|
||||
If the queue is empty, and the reserve queue is empty,
|
||||
and there's a day goes by without a show,
|
||||
that's the end of HB.
|
||||
We're rolling up the sidewalks.
|
||||
So, so far, we managed to avoid that.
|
||||
But, we've gotten very close.
|
||||
So close, like, everybody's like,
|
||||
I've got to make an episode, like, in the next 20 minutes,
|
||||
or, this is not gonna fall apart.
|
||||
You got 40.
|
||||
Oh, what was it?
|
||||
You got, no, no, right now, you've got 40.
|
||||
Oh, yeah, we're good.
|
||||
We're good.
|
||||
We'll get it up there.
|
||||
Going once, going twice.
|
||||
All right, let's edit a show.
|
||||
Let's do it.
|
||||
If anybody wants to see this,
|
||||
we'll put it back up later,
|
||||
but Taj is going to switch over to his setup.
|
||||
And...
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
|
||||
at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
||||
then click on our contribute link
|
||||
to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
|
||||
an honesthost.com,
|
||||
the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
|
||||
On this address status, today's show is released
|
||||
under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user