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194 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
194 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 748
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Title: HPR0748: My Favorite Audiocasts
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0748/hpr0748.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:52:27
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Dismiss science, checking in on Labor Day weekend, it's May 30th, 2011.
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And I'm in the mood again to produce yet another audio cast because I love audio casting.
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When you contribute to hacker public radio, you feel like you're really doing something.
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It's almost like you're an angry bird in the video game going up against the blockades of life
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revealing the truth or your perceived truth.
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Because we know that this is not going to happen in the standard media.
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Most of you guys know how I feel about the popular media, NBC and Fox and
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these channels of such low quality. A few years ago, I started really getting into
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audio casting. It felt something so truthful or so authentic at the very least.
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That I'm at the point now where I actually listen to audio casts just about all day long.
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I listen to them while I'm working, while I'm traveling, while I'm relaxing audio casts or
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pretty much my entire life. So I wanted to take this episode to share with you guys some of the
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stuff that I listen to. So I'm just going to go down the list. This probably won't take very long,
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but it'll be a short presentation, but it's like it started with a little bit of Python.
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A little bit of Python is an audio cast about the Python programming language.
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It's a language that I absolutely love. It's my favorite language to use. I've actually never
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used it professionally, strangely enough. I only use it for personal projects, but this audio
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cast is actually produced by the Python software foundation. So it's kind of official.
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The only problem with this show is that it doesn't come out very often.
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Another audio cast that I listen to is Marketplace. This is an NPR
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affiliated business program, and I think it's pretty balanced. I don't think they're too...
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I don't think that they
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glean too much on any one side. They give pretty interesting information about macro and micro
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economic topics. I've been listening to them for years, and I think that they have maintained a good
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show. Another show that I listen to is Common Sense with Dan Carlin. He's kind of crazy,
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but he's good, and he produces two shows. One of them is called Common Sense, and it's
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kind of non-standard political points of view. And some of the stuff really kind of makes you
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think sometimes. He also produces another one which I listen to called Hardcore History.
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I haven't liked this show in a little while because he's been focusing on the Roman Empire.
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That's interesting a few times, but I think he's been doing like 10 or more Roman Empire shows,
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and I don't think it's that interesting. I hope he moves on to a new topic soon.
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The next show I listen to is Distro Watch Weekly. I've been watching the website and listening to
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this show for a fair amount of time, and it's a pretty excellent show for people who
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are trying to understand more about Linux. It's fairly technical, but not extremely technical.
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And it's pretty accurate. He looks like he takes a lot of effort into
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saying very correct things, and it's a great way to keep up on the entire Linux ecosystem.
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Probably the best way. I've not heard a more comprehensive show.
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My next one is an audio cast called Fact Check. Fact Check is a group out of the University of
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Pennsylvania and in Berks, something or other. But in fact, all these guys do as they go through
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and they check the facts of politicians, and what they've said, and if it's accurate or not
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accurate, and I think it's a really helpful tool. These guys do a lot of the research work that
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many of us won't do. And just kind of put the story out there, and I think they're good.
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They've not been publishing recently. I haven't seen an update from them in a while,
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but I assume they'll be back at it again at some point.
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Next in the list, Feather Cast. Feather Cast is an audio cast about projects within the Apache
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Software Foundation. I'm sure you all know what the Apache Software Foundation is. It's
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impossible to be an open source person and not be familiar with the Apache Software Foundation.
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Provide us the Apache, the exquisite Apache web server, and the myriad of other projects that
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are all extremely helpful. As with most heavily tech oriented podcast, audio casts,
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they don't publish very often either. But when they do, it's pretty good.
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The next one is Floss Weekly. This is part of the Twitch Empire. I don't really like Twitch
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in general, but I do like Floss Weekly. I think that they do a good job, and they do publish often.
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They published about once a week pretty regularly, and they have very interesting interviews
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with the leaders of various open source projects, and it's really good to hear from the
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mouths of these guys. Half the time you don't know who they are, what they look like.
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All you know is our software that you've downloaded, and it's really good to put a face on some of
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the people who provide you some of this great software. Next in the list, Freakonomics Radio.
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This is a fairly new audio cast, and they are on fire. For those of you who have read the book,
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Freakonomics, it was kind of like a groundbreaking book a few years ago. And if you're interested in
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unusual economic outcomes and circumstances, you really ought to look up these guys.
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This audio cast has just been spectacular, I think, since it's been out, and I see a big future
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for these guys, but something's going to happen. They're going to have a movie or a television show
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or something. Next in the list, Frontline. Another PBS audio cast. You can also watch full videos
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on their website, but Frontline is a show, a PBS show, and they usually attack some type of
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controversial issue. And it's one of those things that you can listen to or watch late at night.
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If you're having trouble staying entertained, it's one of those good late night types of things
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to listen to. Next in the list, Frostbite Media. This week in Debian. Part of Jonathan Nidu's
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audio cast Empire. I was really glad when he decided to come up with this show. This week in
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Debian, he's had some really great interviews of various people within the Debian project.
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I don't think he's been publishing recently. I think I've gone a few weeks out hearing something
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from him. I'm not mistaken, but hopefully they'll get back to publishing soon.
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He does some excellent work in general. Next in line, GNU World Order from Klaatu.
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He publishes, of course, hair. He's one of the hair heroes of Hacker Public Radio, and he also has
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his own audio cast. And he is usually doing some tutorial work. He's generally figuring things out
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and then sharing it with everybody else, and that, of course, is very helpful. A lot of it is
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media-oriented. I think a lot of it is focused for people with the artistic background, and that's
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pretty helpful. It would be nice to get more artistic people into the open-source world.
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In the open-source world, we're all such number crunching database storage management,
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security type people, and we overlook a lot of the art world, or don't take it as seriously as
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perhaps we should in. I think Klaatu is an excellent representative on that issue.
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The next in line is Hacker Public Radio. Of course, I listen to every single show, and I love
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you all, and wish you would start recording more. All of you guys listening, and it would be
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nice to hear... I'd love to hear Hacker Public Radio, somebody who wasn't a European or North
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American. I think the majority of us publishers are North American, and I've heard a number of
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Europeans, some Brits, some continental people. I'd love to hear somebody come in from Asia,
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or somebody come in from somewhere else to help diversify the pool.
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But yes, that's just my little shout-out record-guised record.
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The next in line is Hoko Mojo Podcast. That's what it's called. I live in Howard County in the
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United States State of Maryland, and this is an audio cast and local issues. Of course, we don't
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have any local news where I live. In the United States, we're running out of local news. I mean,
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it used to just be bad local news, and now we just don't have any local news at all.
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Newspapers are going broken, local radio stations are going broken. These guys are trying to fill in
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some of the pieces of the puzzle. You know, it's very hard to really know what's going on
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in government, in your local government. I mean, at the national level, people are covering
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that to a degree. I don't really know of much way to really know what's going on in the local
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level of government, how your tax dollars are being spent, how policies being formed. It's very
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hard to find out, but there are some brave audio casters who are tackling this, and you know,
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maybe they can help save the future of local politics.
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Next in line, consular cast, James Howard consular. I've been listening to this one for a few
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years also, and you know, the quality remains pretty good. Some shows better than others, but
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it's generally pretty good. I can't just skip this one. I'd have really leased it. It's humorous.
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And for those of you guys who don't know, this is a podcast audio cast focused on James Howard
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consular. He is a self-taught urbanist, self-taught urban planner,
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slash architect, slash futurist kind of guy, and he's really like a predictor of things to come.
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I think he is relatively accurate. He's a doom and gloom type of guy. He doesn't really think
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the future is going to be very good, and he might be right. I don't know, I might not be quite as
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pessimistic as he, but effectively his story is that we're going to soon run out of oil on
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earth, and when that happens, all the shit is going to hit the fan. And we'll just have to see,
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we might find out pretty soon. Next in line, Linux Foundation podcast is the title.
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And they had some excellent interviews on this. They were interviewing all types of corporate
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heads of IBM and Cisco and Red Hat and Oracle on their use of Linux. They had a few excellent
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interviews with Mr. Linus Torval's himself, but they don't publish often. I think they only have
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10 or so shows in their library, and I don't think they're publishing anymore, which was a shame
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I wish they would. It was really good. The next in line, NPR. I have a number of NPR
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things that I listen to. NPR is National Public Radio in the United States. It's the equivalent
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of the BBC in the UK or this CBC in Canada. Publicly funded radio. I'm pretty high quality
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stuff. No question about it. These are, these are kind of like some of the leaders in quality.
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And they have some shows that are very good. I listen to their economy feed.
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The economy feed is, they just give like five to ten minute updates on various economic
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happenings around the world. And it's kind of interesting. They have another feed for intelligent
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squared. Intelligent squared. These are like hour long shows of debates on controversial topics.
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Topics that, you know, split America or split the world. Things like legalized prostitution
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and things like that. And they usually will line up experts on both sides of the issue and
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they'll just debate it down. You know why it should be or shouldn't be. And then the audience votes
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in the end on whether or who won the debate. A pretty innovative concept, I think. I think it was
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actually borrowed from the United Kingdom. I think they have a show similar to this in the United
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Kingdom. And this is like the American version. And my last NPR feed is Planet Money. They give
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like 30 minute interviews on deeper economic topics. A pretty decent show.
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Lightning things up a little bit is the onion radio news. The onion is something I've been
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following for a while. I just subscribed to the audio cast. It's off-color humor. They are
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funnier sometimes than other times, but generally it's still pretty much worth the effort.
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The next in line is Pearl Cast. Pearl Cast is an audio cast about the Pearl Programming Language.
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A language that I've been dealing with for a long time. And I have done most of my work in it.
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Let's have a deep history with Pearl as a programming language. And I love it. I've kind of
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become a Python person with age. But Pearl is my second favorite language. And most of the other
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languages that I don't really like very much call me a language knob. But yeah, Pearl Cast
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publishes as usual with these highly tech audio cast. They published very infrequently. I think
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the last time I published was in July of 2010. So you can count on them to give you one audio cast
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a year, which is, you know, I guess people are busy. But I wish they'd publish a little bit more.
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Okay, we're getting to the towards the end of my list. Next in line is Software Engineering
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Radio. This is a German audio cast about software engineering in general. They interview some
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interesting people. Not really the type of tech I like very much. They're not that open source
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loving. They are open source loving, but that much open source loving. They don't really love
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you know, Linux. They don't really love Python. They are enterprise guys who, you know, love
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other types of systems. But it is worse than listening to some time today. Do have some
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interesting open source people sometimes. But let's just an okay audio cast. Next in line, Ted Talks.
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Ted is the conference group. They hold conferences all over the world. They have some of the most
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fascinating people on every topic. Give presentations, everything from agricultural practice to bacteria
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and disease fighting mechanisms to architecture to software. It doesn't matter what the topic is.
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They have incredible speakers. Perhaps the smartest people in the world from what I can tell.
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And you know, if you have a lot of money, you can go to one of their conferences. But if you don't
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have a lot of money, you can watch their conference on your phone by downloading from their feed.
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Very much worth the effort. Next in line, the economist. I've been reading the economist since I was
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kid, which could tell you a little bit about my personality. Economist is a very good British
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conservative magazine. You know, it's so funny how we use words, you know, America we call it
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conservative in the UK. They call it liberal. But they are pretty good. For the most part,
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look forward to their audio casts. They have a whole lot of them. Every week they publish on time
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like in the military, you know, they're, you know, at this time on Thursday, you're going to get all
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the feeds. But I got to give them one big negative. They've got this one show called
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Babbage. And it's a technology show hosted by two journalists. And it is absolutely
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atrocious if you ask me. I mean, it's a really, really bad audio cast. I listen to it
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partly because it's part of the economist's group of audio cast and I listen to all of them. But
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I listen to it partly because it's so bad that it's interesting to listen to. They're so biased.
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So inaccurate. But that being said, um, still, I think it's worth checking out.
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The next one, I only have two more left to talk about. The next one is a social work podcast.
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It is a podcast audio cast on social work. They usually interview site colleges,
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psychiatrists, social workers on issues concerning people with mental disorder, old, young,
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or people with hard life circumstances. And it's extremely interesting. It's done very
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professionally. It comes out of some university somewhere in the Midwest. I think University of
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Illinois or Wisconsin somewhere like that. And it's definitely interesting. And the last one I'll
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talk about is this American life. Perhaps the most popular audio cast in America. It wins awards
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all the time. It's not always very good. But sometimes it's good. It's very good. But sometimes
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it's really not very good at all. But I still listen to it because I've been listening to it for a
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long time. And usually if I get 10, 15 minutes into it and it's not good, I just delete it.
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I don't know if the quality is maintained. It's pristine levels over the years. But
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you know, we all have our quality ups and downs. As you know, I shouldn't be disparaging anybody
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under audio cast quality. I mean, I'm sure my quality goes up and down depending.
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There's more science. Checking out to now 5 a.m. I look forward to hearing more from all of you guys.
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Keep the cues full.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio. For more information on the show and how to
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contribute your own shows, visit HackerPublicRadio.org.
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