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319 lines
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Plaintext
Episode: 1633
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Title: HPR1633: The OggCamp organizers
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1633/hpr1633.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 06:07:08
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---
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Welcome, this is Benny for Hacker Public Radio.
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This is episode HPR1633 for November the 5th 2014.
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In this episode I talk to the organizers of OCam.
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The first interview is with Dan Lynch of Linux Outlaws.
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And we talk about OCam, organizing OCam a bit of OCam last year.
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And the second interview is with Fab.
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Churchill also from Linux Outlaws.
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We talk a bit more about Linux Outlaws.
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Bless OCam and the last interview is with Mark Johnson from the UK podcast.
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Again, we talk about OCam and especially organizing OCam in Oxford
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because he's the man on the ground in Oxford and so let's get started.
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Great, this is Benny for HPR and I'm talking to Dan Lynch of Linux Outlaws.
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And I'm one of the OCam organizers.
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We're here at OCam on the Sunday.
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Sunday morning everyone's feeling bright and ready to go.
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We've all had a lot of sleep and it's going to be good.
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Right, can you tell me a bit about OCam?
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What's OCam?
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That is a question I hear a lot.
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What is OCam?
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It is a two-day unconference so it's a barcamp style event
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where we have talks that are submitted by the attendees.
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So the first year we ran OCam in 2009.
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We ran it as a pure barcamp only format.
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And that was great but a few people said one of the things they liked was
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to be able to see who the speakers might, some of the speakers might be
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before they book tickets and before they travel.
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So we cheated and we kind of hacked the barcamp model.
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We forked it.
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We cheated.
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So now we have some schedule talks,
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a few schedule talks through the day that kind of places people can kind of look
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and see oh so and so is on at that time.
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We're going to check that out.
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And then around that all the barcamp stuff kind of fills it out.
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We're in our fifth year now.
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This is the sixth dog camp.
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I have to say it's a bit strange that this is the sixth dog camp
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but we're in our fifth year.
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So we started 2009.
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It's grown pretty much every year.
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We're up to about, usually about 300 people or so.
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Now and it's good, we're in Oxford for the first time.
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Not been to Oxford that much so I'm getting used to it.
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And it's nice to see people here having a good time and having fun.
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What's the reason for choosing Oxford this year?
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The reason is that Mark lives in Oxford.
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That's honestly the whole reason that it's here.
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I can't like.
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Yeah that's the reason.
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So what happens is we've got a small organising team
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and what we found is it's really a lot easier if one of the organ,
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if you do it in a venue or in a place where one of the organising team is local
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and they can do the local kind of running round to find out about venues and so on.
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So in the last two years I've done that in Liverpool
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and being the kind of local person on the ground.
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And this year Mark, he lives in Oxford and he said oh let's do it in Oxford.
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I'll find a venue and he's done that and we're all here and it's cool.
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And how do you find a venue compared to what you had in Liverpool?
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That's an interesting question.
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For me it's a lot more difficult because I live over the road from the venue in Liverpool
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so I just have to get out of bed and walk down the stairs and I'm there.
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It's a bit further for us but it's been different.
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We're in a hotel this year so it feels a little bit different.
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We were in a university building before which was cool.
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There's definitely swings around about.
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The tea and coffee and stuff is a lot more expensive here.
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I've noticed that.
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I don't know if that's fair comment or not.
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It's been good. The conference room's really nice.
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The exhibition space that we're in right now is working really well.
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The only thing we haven't managed to do yet is the outdoor kind of soldier in sessions which
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were not too far from but we're hoping to do those today because yesterday it was really
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really heavily raining, windy, not the best weather to get out with your soldier and I and
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sit under a gazebo.
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But today we're hoping to do that.
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Skies are clear so get some people out there and do some hardware hacking as well.
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It's a reason that it's in a hotel this year and not in a university building because
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Oxford is known for its university state though.
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Yeah, it's not like they haven't got a university in Oxford.
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I believe they've got one.
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I've heard it's quite good.
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It's a nice little university that's starting up the train hard.
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And the reason it's starting up in a university building I don't know because we couldn't
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get a university building I think.
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Although Mark works for Oxford University I think so I don't know why we can't go.
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But yeah it's in a hotel because it was a venue we could find and we could hire and stuff.
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So in the past two years we've had a venue sponsored in Liverpool.
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We had sponsorship from a Liverpool Johnwall's university and they were able to give us their
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venue almost free which was amazing.
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So this year we've had to pay out a lot more money but it's different.
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It's nice to try different places and we had to get it ready, bring our own projectors and so on.
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But one of the things about doing at university is all the classrooms have got projectors
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and computers and everything ready to go.
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But you know our amazing crew have pulled it together and we brought some projectors and
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other things and it's all hanging together nicely at the minute.
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Could you tell me something about the name?
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The name sounds a bit weird for a camp event like.
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Yeah it's very odd.
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We get a lot of people asking what we're going to talk about in relation to the
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Vorbis or Ogtheora containers and formats and so on.
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The reason it became known as Ogcamp, I actually suggested that name I'll be honest.
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And it's yeah we've toyed with changing it because people don't understand what it's about.
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So the idea is that because we're not just about free software and open source technology,
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we're also about free culture, we try and talk about we have creative commons content,
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we have artists and musicians and all kinds of things, not just hackers and we like to mix them
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all up. Actually to be honest a lot of the hackers are like musicians or artists or painters or
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so they like to mix it up and so we wanted a name that kind of summed up free culture and free
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software. So the idea was it's about media, we're all podcasters as well so the Og format was
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made sense so we could call it Og it's a bar camp so it was Ogcamp basically was how it came
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together. All right great thank you it's around anything else you'd like our listeners to know
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where to find your podcaster anything. Yeah where to find stuff so if you go to DanLinch.org that's
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my main website you can find Linux Outlaws on there you can find FlossWeekly there's a FlossWeekly
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feed from Twit which I hosted occasionally and there's also Rathol Radio feed as well for
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people who are into music and creative commons music and stuff so that's the best place to go all
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the social media stuff's on there so you can find my Twitter feed and it's app method Dan on Twitter
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but DanLinch.org's the place there's a contact form on there if you want to drop me an email say hello
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I'm always happy to speak to people so come and say hello. Great great thank you what's
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great talking to you. Thank you very much. All right this is Benny for HPR and I'm talking to
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Fab. Fab's voice has gone for some reason sorry about that you might know me from a little show I
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do called Linux Outlaws maybe not. All right could you tell me anything about this show I don't
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think I already got Dan Lynch and he told me a bit about it but your name didn't come up so tell
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me what the whole thing from your perspective so now if I tell you something completely different
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this will be this will maybe cause a ruckus I don't know it's a show we started in 2007 so that
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would be seven years ago because I came back from Australia and my English was deteriorating
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and I just want to talk to somebody who was a native speaker and at the time we were on a social
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network called Jiku which nobody knows anymore and then went to identical later on and well we just
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talked about like he was posting about Linux I was posting about Linux and I went oh let's start
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a podcast watch what shall we talk about well Linux and the funny thing is these days people
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expect us really expect us to talk about Linux but actually LO was always just us waffling a lot
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as well and in the beginning we didn't have that many listeners and people didn't mind but now it's
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just like people people tune in the show and they're like the first first 30 minutes we talk about like
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dead Hollywood stars that recently died like I don't know random crap like Dan recording music
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or me writing rather the motorcycle I feel like they're not talking about Linux at all but it was
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always kind of that way so yeah that's that what did you change you tell me that you grew what
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did you change over time why you grew well one big thing one big thing Dan did was like obviously
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we got a lot of feedback and he was always very good at including what other you know when people
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write his emails or when when they know forum and they say something and Dan was always very keen
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on reading that out and you know engaging with the listeners so that's one thing although that
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happened quite early on we changed the format we do things a few times like we used to have segments
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where we would do open-source releases and talk about news and talk about stuff Microsoft did
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wrong we had a segment for that and I changed that I decided well as Dan of obviously but
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we decided to change this a while ago because I noticed that just the stuff we talked about
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but couldn't it was weird like we talked about a lot of news so that was the biggest segment so
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like the segments wouldn't they were disproportionate and I think they didn't work anymore so
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now we just mix it up and we just talk about anything really it's changed with the time like
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with the things we've been doing so for a while Dan was doing a lot of music recording and stuff
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doing open-source we talked a lot about that obviously I was writing for an open-source website
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in the UK so we talked a lot about you know links and other open-source stuff at that point now
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I'm doing security stuff in Germany so we talk a lot about security it was just because that's
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the stuff I come across which obviously a lot of that impacts Linux but sometimes it just doesn't
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and so the show just changes with like it changes with our lives I guess as well we had a bit of a
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rough time when when I lost my job in the UK and I had to move back to Germany and then we didn't
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record for like two months or something and that was weird because I don't know one of the things
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I've noticed is if you don't do this like every week or every two weeks you kind of like you
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stop doing it because it's a lot of work if you have a routine and you do it every week that's
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kind of you stick with it like if you pause for two months like for for example winter UK
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podcasts they they do seasons so they do a break over the holidays I don't know how they get the
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will to continue the show after the break like I wouldn't if we stopped for that long time I'm sure
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I would say this is just too much hassle I don't want to start again so yeah right you told me
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you run this little podcast but probably you're one of the biggest if not the biggest Linux
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podcast literary wise so how how is that for you how does it feel to be like famous in the Linux
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community I don't know I really the thing is what we don't do the show because we have a lot of
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listeners we probably wouldn't do the show if we had only like 10 listeners like in the beginning
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we started we thought was a good idea and then we thought let's see if people listen to it and then
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people's like at the point where we got like a hundred maybe 200 people listening to it we thought
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yeah we keep doing this like that was enough and then you get a lot more listeners and it's actually
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been going down again I think it peaked at about I don't know six seven thousand downloads kind of
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it's kind of hard to track but that's like kind of the downloads I can track there's a lot more
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torrents and stuff and they're not all listeners because lots of people just have their
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podcast on download and the one thing that changes you get a lot more feedback and you get a lot
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of more people saying well you should talk more about Linux you should talk about more but this
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and that and well we we took some of the stuff on board but some stuff we're just like no like
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this is hello we we waffle we talk about random stuff we don't want to change that and I always
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been very much the on the on the fence of like if you don't like the show listen to another show
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like I air on the site I want to do show that I have fun with versus I want to have the maximum
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amount of listeners because then I would have to change the show a lot like I swear a lot so a lot
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of people say you swear I can't listen to this and then yeah there's like a lot of other Linux
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podcasts and we've always mentioned them like there's lots of podcasts where they don't
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mention other shows and we've never done this like because we were always like okay if you like Ubuntu
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it's probably better to listen to Ubuntu UK podcast because they talk about Ubuntu all the time
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or if you like Mint you probably should listen to Mintcast or something like that so yeah as for
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the famous bit I don't know it's it's kind of funny we used to go to like radio live obviously
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this is Okcamp which came out of when they stopped doing like radio live and I can remember the
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first like radio live when Dan and me went there we had a table and nobody knew us we were sitting
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behind this table and people were coming to the table and asking what are you doing like what is
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this and we had to explain that and that went away the year afterwards like the year obviously
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and then after that I don't know when that was that must have been 2009 2008 something
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after that we obviously got a lot more listeners and then everybody started like I started to be
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at a conference standing next to some like I was at first them which is a huge conference and as
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I was talking to somebody and the guy next to me turns around and said are you fat I recognize
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your voice and that was that was cool like that's that's fun but then on the other hand like people
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always say like how does it feel to be like famous is like this is the Linux community the Linux
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community is incredibly small like when you're around for in five years you know everybody and you
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know just like the people what like what job they get and what company they go to and then switch
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around everybody knows everybody it's amazing so I actually do not consider that famous it's kind
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of nice you know you're in the bar everybody buys your beer that's cool um yeah it's actually
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it's just cool it's not like I think if you're really famous it's annoying like if your Bruce
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Bringsie and you walk down the street that's being famous everybody comes up to you it's like
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it's not on the level of being annoying but you get what beers at conferences so I think it's
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best of both worlds really so you talked about the feedback did the feedback ever reach a level
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where you have problems to cope with it like to answer to everything or mention everyone
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well well yes I mean we can't read every email we get but like Dan that's the thing Dan keeps
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takes care of amazingly and he takes care of like mentioned even if we don't read out the email
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he takes care to just mention people's names and so no I think never went to a level where
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I couldn't cope with it like I've got too much email anyway so that's hard but we have a thing
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where we like either we answer email directly and then maybe if it's an interesting discussion
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we are having an email with a listener we'll mention it on the show or we'll just mention the name
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and say that they wrote us and we obviously wrote back so we can it's it never reached a level where
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you can't engage with people like on Twitter sometimes it's it's hard to do because you just get
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ad replies and stuff but no not really I mean there was some sometimes you get like difficult
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feedback but I'm I'm very hard to like shock or like I'm pretty like if somebody sends me like
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incredibly offensive email I'll just send back you know go fuck yourself you know like listen to
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another show which actually works really well it does work well the people go away you know
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like I'm never gonna listen to you you used to God's name in vain yeah it's what I do get used to
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you know it's that but that takes a very special kind of mindset and I think people always ask me
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like if you want to start a podcast what's the things you got to be aware of and I would say
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one thing is if you start it starting a podcast incredibly easy keeping it going beyond 20 episodes
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and I speak as somebody who started several podcasts that died after like five episodes it's
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incredibly hard to keep it up and the other thing is you got to be prepared if you put yourself
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out on the internet you got to be prepared with people like shouting you know I think that's not
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only if you do a podcast I mean if you if you do a Linux distribution you know this people if
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if you do something people use you create an app or whatever you will get feedback and you will
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also get like just incredibly stupid mean feedback and you're just gonna I mean I can deal with
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that very well and dance funny enough dance very different for me but he's he can cope with it
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in a completely different way I just go fuck off and then goes well it's not a valid point whatever
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I'm not bothered so yeah that's yeah I hope that answered that question because I forgot the
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question by now all right great what's great talking to you can you tell our listeners if they
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want to find you or your podcasts where where do they go well if you go to sixkan.org you find
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the podcast if you want to find me I'm fab FAB at sixkan.org or you can go on Twitter at fabge
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you can find me that's Fox dot alpha bravo's yara hotel right great thank you what's nice
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talking to you worries let's go right this is Benny for HPR and I'm speaking to Mark Johnson
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I'm not supposed to say something more than that well you can but you don't have to because
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I'm going to ask you questions okay all right but what's your role in Okam because you're you've
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got a crew batch so well this year I've I have been sort of the man on the ground doing a lot of
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the organizing in terms of booking the venue and you know scoping out the local area talking out
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the schedule stuff like that I mean my my role over the past couple of years has been focused on
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the schedule booking the scheduled speakers working out how we're going to run the on conference tracks
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this year it's been a bit more full on I've been doing bits of pretty much everything this year
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great so this year you've you have been the local local man here from Oxford right yeah exactly
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so the last couple of years we did it in Liverpool which was just down the road from Dan's house
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so Dan was the man on the ground that time at this time it's in Oxford because it's just down the
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road from me so that's generally how it works in terms of choosing our locations where is there
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someone who is willing to take on that role and do sort of the groundwork so how hard was it to find
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a venue in Oxford to to for Okam to take place well there's a lot of venues in Oxford but the trouble
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is they tend to be not quite the right size they either have one very big room or lots of very
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small rooms but not a big room and then some small rooms which is what we need to fit everybody in
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and fit in the various tracks that we do so in fact it really did come down to the venue we ended
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up in there may be others which I hadn't heard of but it's actually amazing how few venues get
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back to you when you inquire you'd have thought they'd be more eager for your custom but maybe
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they didn't like the sound of us so did you try to get like like last year in any university
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place or was it just hotel what they were there there is like a sort of conference service that
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the university provides so all of the Oxford University colleges have conference facilities
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partly the time of year we did it made it a bit trickier because the students just coming back
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so means they don't have a don't have as much capacity but also the way that the Oxford University
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is organised is quite different to the way that most other universities are organised in that
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they tend to cater for much sort of smaller more focused groups of students rather than
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enormous lectures with like hundreds or thousands of people so it's a lot easier to do it in
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another university rather than Oxford I did also look at Oxford Brooks the other university and
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they do have more of the sort of facilities that we had last year but unfortunately they weren't available
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right now we're at the end of all camping Oxford so did it turn out the way you wanted it to
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or are there things to say I'll do that different next time there's always things which we
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say we'll do different next time I mean this time you know quite a few things didn't quite go to
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plan our scheduling system broke down before we started which is a good time for it to break down
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because it meant that we could switch to the backup we had planned I mean I'm not sure about
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specific things at the moment which I do differently because I think I have to you know we need to
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sit and digest what's happened and how things went and the feedback we've received from people
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throughout the weekend and have a think about you know what we might do differently next time
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all right but there will be a next time if you say next time I hope so but at this point we
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can't guarantee anything I'm afraid because it involves a lot of things in terms of you know
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finding a venue finding someone who can liais with the venue finding enough sponsorship that we
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can cover the costs things like that so and if there is a next time do you plan to do it in Oxford
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again or do you prefer to switch the venue I think I'd prefer to switch the venue purely because
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I don't think I've got the energy to do it another year in on the truck they're not saying that
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I wouldn't do it again but I don't think I would do it again straight away because you know I've
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got a job to do as well and other things going on and it is quite a big commitment to to
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organise something like op camp because it's you know it's a big event and there's a lot of even
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though you know it's an unconference so you think oh well they just put the venue people turn up
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but because I think because we're more than just the unconference we've also got the schedule
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track we've also got you know merchandise in the raffle and we've got the exhibition and like
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social events going on it makes it there is actually you know it's like organising a full event
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all right right well it's great talking to you is there anything you'd like our listeners to know
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like where to find you on the internet or where to find your podcast or anything oh yeah
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I also do a podcast the Ubuntu podcast that's podcast.buntu-uk.org thanks for asking
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in terms of op camp stuff though op camp.org is our website we're also op camp on Twitter
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I think I'm going to try and set up some sort of more permanent online community because at the
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moment we don't have anything like a mailing list or four and four members of the op camp
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community to communicate outside of the event which I think is a shame because I think that we
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could do a much better job of sort of leveraging the community's knowledge and contacts and
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energy to help us organise our camp without it all requiring like one or two people to take
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on most of the work I think there's a lot of scope for I think there's also going to be the
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willing as well for the people who come to our camp and enjoy it and want it to keep happening
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to help out so I'm going to be looking to do that and will we publishing details of that on the
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website and on Twitter all right great thank you what's nice talking to you I'm looking forward
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to next.com thanks very much cheers all right those were the interview thank you for listening to
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hpr if you try to contact me you'll find me on stf that's Benny on stf.org or you'll also find me
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on stsnet on fractf that's now we give him at micro.fractf.com so it would be great to hear from you
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and of course you could always record your own episode and leave a comment there thank you for
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listening goodbye
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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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