- 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>
94 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
94 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1119
|
|
Title: HPR1119: Spread the Word
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1119/hpr1119.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:18:57
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
You set your dial to tune in to Hacker Public Radio and the show that you're listening
|
|
to right now is called Spread the Word.
|
|
Looking through the content on my phone, I found this.
|
|
So a few months ago, I actually recorded an episode for HPR on my mobile phone and
|
|
forgot about it.
|
|
Listening to it, I found that it was rather hard to hear what I said.
|
|
I never checked the recording, but I've wielded some audio magic to see if I could make the
|
|
audio file a bit more coherent and easy to listen to.
|
|
So I think I've managed, but still it's not top notch, but I think you'll find it adequate.
|
|
You see, I would like to tell you a little story.
|
|
I would like to talk about something that I really haven't talked about before.
|
|
I mentioned many a time that I am a teacher in the secondary educational system here in
|
|
Sweden.
|
|
I teach young adults in the age of 15 to 18 years old.
|
|
And I work at a school with a bit over a thousand students.
|
|
So we are quite a few teachers there, and for the last two semesters, I've worked with
|
|
a teacher in English and Swedish, who was put together with our computer teachers, just
|
|
to make it easier for her to interact and take care of the technical students.
|
|
And she really appreciated some of the things I could tell her and show her.
|
|
You see, we are deep.
|
|
We know things that other don't.
|
|
What do I mean with this?
|
|
Well, you all probably know of Cory Doctoro, right?
|
|
He is an author who writes science fiction, and he releases everything he does under a creative
|
|
commons license.
|
|
You can buy his books and he has written quite a few at Amazon or in book stores or wherever.
|
|
And he is a really talented writer.
|
|
I have read a few of his short stories, and he is really talented in lifting up problems
|
|
that we face in the human society now, but in a science fiction setting, which makes
|
|
reading his stories thought provoking, and it makes you reflect on who you are and what
|
|
your role in society is right now, as it should be with good science fiction, hard science
|
|
fiction, and with hard science fiction, I mean science fiction that is really scientifically
|
|
as correct as it can be regarding that it is made up, that is.
|
|
And Cory Doctoro is a master of this, and since he releases everything under a creative
|
|
commons license, there has been quite a few translations and alterations of his works.
|
|
So you can go to his web page, which I will link to in the show notes, and you can download
|
|
in EPUB or in PDF or HTML.
|
|
You can download his books anyway you like, but there are also people who have done podcasts
|
|
of the book, that is they have read them out and recorded it.
|
|
And you and I, we know that these are the things that hackers do.
|
|
This is the community, this is how we work.
|
|
If we see something we like, we try to adapt it and improve it and help with it.
|
|
But this English and Swedish teacher I mentioned before, well she is not a hacker, she doesn't
|
|
know what the community is capable of and are doing right now.
|
|
So when I told her about this, when I showed her what was available, she nearly slipped
|
|
her lid, she was ecstatic, this was something of the best she had ever seen.
|
|
Because now she can, instead of using dusty old textbooks that doesn't have anything related
|
|
to modern life in it, she can have the students read, thought provoking and intelligent stories
|
|
in English, but also with someone reading it.
|
|
I know that's often the problem, not only getting something that you can use and you're
|
|
allowed to use, as if this is creative commons, it's not a problem, but also getting an audio
|
|
version of it, since it's easier when you're learning language to both read and listen
|
|
to it, both read it and hear it.
|
|
And she was replaced recently, she had a child and moved on.
|
|
She was replaced with a new English and Swedish teacher, of course, and today I talked to
|
|
her a little bit and I asked her just a little bit carefully, you know, you don't want to
|
|
step on someone's toes, especially when it's someone you don't know yet and you don't
|
|
know if they appreciate someone coming with suggestions, so I approached it rather
|
|
openly and asked if she would just told her about what it was and if she would be interested
|
|
in such a resource and she was very interested.
|
|
So don't be afraid to talk about, if we're going to get a moral from this story, don't
|
|
be afraid to talk to other people about the things that we as hackers, the things that
|
|
we as a part of the hacker community take for granted, everything around the community,
|
|
which perhaps isn't about using free and open source software, but instead promote
|
|
what they would really find useful, so think about it, think about what could people in
|
|
your vicinity find useful, what could they perhaps need in their private life or in their
|
|
work life and try to spread the word, that's all from me for today, thank you very much
|
|
for your attention and I'll be back soon.
|
|
So that was the message of the day, the moral, spread the word, tell people, not only
|
|
about free and open source software, but also about creative commons and other goodness
|
|
that comes from our community.
|
|
To find me as usual on all in IT radio, that's a-i-i-t dot-s-e slash radio, or on identity
|
|
and Twitter as at altinomite, a-l-l-t-i-n-o-m-i-t.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio or Hacker Public Radio, those are.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener by yourself.
|
|
If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
|
|
it really is.
|
|
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dot-pound and the infonomicum computer
|
|
cloud.
|
|
HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com, all binref projects are crowd-responsive
|
|
by linear pages.
|
|
For shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting
|
|
needs.
|
|
Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution, share
|
|
a like, free those own license.
|