- 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>
871 lines
71 KiB
Plaintext
871 lines
71 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 916
|
|
Title: HPR0916: HPR Community News for Dec 2011/Jan 2012
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0916/hpr0916.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-08 04:56:49
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
We will see you next time, bye.
|
|
Hello and welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
This is our monthly review show where we discuss what's happened in the past month that
|
|
you should be able to speed on in case you skipped any of the shows, and I like a state
|
|
of the podcast show.
|
|
With me today, we have 5150, Patty Fox, and Ken Fallon.
|
|
How's it going, everyone?
|
|
So we have had a pretty good month at Hacker Public Radio, it's been a good January
|
|
at a lot of contributions, a lot of new contributors, and a lot of interest, a lot of positive interest
|
|
in Hacker Public Radio, it's been really fantastic, it's been a great thing to see.
|
|
We didn't do a monthly review show in December, we got a little bit overwhelmed with planning
|
|
and stuff at that point, so we're going to cover December 1st, we're going to do that
|
|
as well.
|
|
And Ken or 5150, do you guys have anything to say, anything to add before we get started?
|
|
No, no, let's go, I might.
|
|
Okay, fair enough.
|
|
So yeah, this is a monthly look at what has been going on in the HPR community.
|
|
It's a regular show scheduled for the first Monday of every month, so the first Monday
|
|
this should be now.
|
|
First we're going to start out by welcoming our new hosts, and these are guys we really
|
|
appreciate here.
|
|
Welcome to Frank Bell to NY Bill and Windigo to Garjola, Ahuka, Akronis, Mordancy, Mr.
|
|
X, which by the way, I'm shocked that no one's used that name yet, Mr. X, it seems kind
|
|
of obvious, but good name, congratulations on that one for Brockton Bob and for DM Fry.
|
|
So thanks a lot to all you guys who jumped in and helped us out, it was really appreciated.
|
|
In addition to, you know, our returning hosts, we don't doubt that was great.
|
|
So Poki, would you like me to quickly run through the show review without getting into
|
|
too much detail?
|
|
Oh yeah, I think you're better at that than I am, I kind of doubly on that stuff, so be
|
|
careful for it.
|
|
Okay, 871 was Community News, followed by Klatu with packaging for Yom, which was almost
|
|
the last in his episodes.
|
|
We had Philip and Rebecca from CrunchBang Linux, who I interviewed at AllCamp, and we had
|
|
the Open Knowledge Foundation, one of Robert Gattling's episodes on how to release data
|
|
from, you know, take obscure data from governments and make it available in an open format that
|
|
people can download that's convenient.
|
|
We had JWP throwing in replacing older hardware show, and they close up of Klatu's
|
|
packaging episodes on BSD ports, that was, I guess, one week.
|
|
I guess we could go through them week by week, I suppose, if that helps.
|
|
Then we had a new introduction by Frank Bell, come on to the network.
|
|
We had Mr. Gadgets with his last show of the year open shorts episode four.
|
|
That's a great name for his show, well done, Mr. Gadgets.
|
|
You know that he had a zone podcast before, and he's now kind of releasing a podcast
|
|
here on HPR, so it's good to see.
|
|
And we had chock full of useful hips and tricks in that one for the holiday seasons.
|
|
I'm actually going to use that to get my nephew something interesting and dangerous for
|
|
his birthday.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
And we had Sunday morning links review and a very nice new show that's coming on here
|
|
on the network, given that's on every Sunday morning.
|
|
And we have them scheduled now on HPR in an irregular slot, more information on that
|
|
ledger.
|
|
And finally handbook for the criminally insane, I'd like to complain to this team for
|
|
not releasing faster and more often.
|
|
We're working on it.
|
|
Believe me, we are working on, I had some hardware issues and some about a 13 hour editing
|
|
job.
|
|
I had to get out of the way, but I think I'm getting back on schedule excuses, excuses
|
|
cookie.
|
|
And following day we had DWP with a little rundown on the Intel, awesome processor that was
|
|
one of the most useful episodes I've listened to in the past year that gave me some insight
|
|
in this information that I could not find anywhere else.
|
|
And I just wanted to say thanks to JWP for that one.
|
|
Short sweetened to the point I like them.
|
|
Clat 2 with his RPM format, packaging.
|
|
And then we had an interview with Dan Lynch of Dan Lynch.org, Rattle Radio Alchemist.
|
|
Yes, that was when you were searching for the Linux outlaws and, yeah, and Alchem 10 held
|
|
a lot of camp, a really, really nice guy.
|
|
If he comes across as a nice guy on the radio, it's because he's actually a nice guy in person.
|
|
So we had to have a chat with him.
|
|
Yeah, great, great guy.
|
|
Then we had Nightwise with cross-platform streaming and I really liked what he's the way
|
|
he's gone through using the Mahi server, DLNA and play music in the living room and that
|
|
sort of thing.
|
|
John and I see him in with a fantastic episode on redo backup and recovery.
|
|
You know, simple application.
|
|
Click to do the backup.
|
|
Click to do a recovery.
|
|
It couldn't be simpler.
|
|
Everybody should have a look at that.
|
|
The following day was product life cycle management by myself.
|
|
The following day was NY Bill and Windigo with basically their introductions and how they
|
|
got into Linux.
|
|
Yeah, these are also two great guys.
|
|
I met these guys last year at the Northeast Linux Fest.
|
|
You briefly, I met them both, but they were both just really cool guys to hang out with
|
|
and their introductory show was a lot of fun to listen to.
|
|
That was a great format that they chose for doing the, for doing the how I get into Linux.
|
|
I appreciated that a lot.
|
|
Nice, them just chatting off each other.
|
|
I think NY Bill went over to Linux outlaws one time, flew over especially for the show.
|
|
Yeah, it swings both ways like that.
|
|
Then we had JWP and this show EMAX help sources and I really like this because it's in response
|
|
to another episode that latitude it earlier on.
|
|
So yeah, you can always do that.
|
|
Then we had yourself coming on with a quick announcement about the New Year's Eve show.
|
|
And Mr. Jay, sorry, no, I was going to say I appreciate you putting that on and I apologize
|
|
to anyone who I might have bumped.
|
|
But that show announcement was very effective and I want to thank everyone else who responded
|
|
to it, which was a lot of people.
|
|
And yeah, I think I really think we need to take some time out here and thank everybody
|
|
who was in the queue who bumped this month.
|
|
It's basically in the apology section, but I've made a complete and not our mess of the
|
|
scheduling this month for one reason or another.
|
|
The main reason being I've never had to deal with this number of shows before.
|
|
So it's a learning experience on my part and I messed up people's wrong names, put people
|
|
in at the wrong times, forgot people who had emailed me, shows and stuff.
|
|
So apology is basically to everybody you're going to try and get things a little bit more
|
|
solid.
|
|
It's been a bit hectic here as well over the last few months, but hopefully life is returning
|
|
to be too normal again.
|
|
So in the, I think it was the November monthly review show, I had made the prediction that
|
|
it would be a good problem to have to have too many shows in the queue.
|
|
Was that right?
|
|
You are, you are right.
|
|
It's a fantastic problem to have and let's keep it up.
|
|
We still, we were talking about it before the show, but we still have 207 available slots.
|
|
So that would be a healthy two years for any podcast and we're going to be putting that
|
|
on in one.
|
|
So, so there you go, two years, sorry, that would be a healthy four years for any podcast.
|
|
So yeah, for any weekly show at your word.
|
|
Yeah, Mr. Gadgets, where's my flying car?
|
|
Very, very good question, Mr. Gadgets.
|
|
And then the next one was the HPR event, the next eight, next seven actually and then
|
|
we had the last one, which was kind of the after show, which was quite funny.
|
|
I love this.
|
|
It was brilliant, Paul Key.
|
|
Big congratulations and I know what you're going to say, but it was you who put it on.
|
|
When I sent you a female asking you to do the show, I had intended you doing just like
|
|
this type of show, but you really took the ball and ran with it.
|
|
Congratulations.
|
|
Well, I don't know.
|
|
It was a massive success.
|
|
Well, I appreciate you saying that and I am going to say what you know I'm going to
|
|
say and it's that I really had nothing to do with it other than saying that I was going
|
|
to record for 12 hours.
|
|
What happened, everything else that happened was Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
It was the people who listened to Hacker Public Radio, the people who contribute and
|
|
the people who get involved, everyone who listens and who participates is Hacker Public
|
|
Radio and is Hacker Public Radio that hold it together because I didn't build any servers
|
|
to host the show.
|
|
I didn't twist anybody's arm to show up.
|
|
I didn't even bring a topic.
|
|
I just said I was going to be recording and somewhere along the lines of 35 to 45 people
|
|
showed up throughout the day in the recording and spoke up.
|
|
We had pipe man who showed up with a server that was able to broadcast live which I think
|
|
helped tremendously.
|
|
I think that really went a long way to getting people involved.
|
|
We had guys like 5150 who is here now who recorded the after show and kept it going because
|
|
he wasn't ready to let it die yet and put out some great content there.
|
|
I mean, honest to God, all I did was show up and hit record and made the announcement
|
|
ahead of time that I was going to show up and hit record.
|
|
I thought it was going to be people floating in and out throughout the day and I thought
|
|
if we were lucky, I'd be able to get two hours of content out of it after cutting out
|
|
all the dead air and what happened was people showed up and for 13 hours for longer than
|
|
I even expected, people showed up and brought content and just showed love for the community
|
|
and it was really, to me, personally, the guy who said I was going to throw it together,
|
|
it's touching.
|
|
It's an emotional thing for me that everybody showed up and did it but it's also tremendous
|
|
pride in the community that's allowed me to be a part of it just to see that people
|
|
will step up and participate in something that was even an unknown but that people thought
|
|
was going to be fun and one thing that never got said about the whole thing that was really
|
|
funny is when it was starting out, we had hit record, everything was ready to go except
|
|
that the streaming server wasn't up and that was taken a bit of time and it was about
|
|
30 minutes or 40 minutes of just kind of waiting for that for the show to start and there
|
|
was about, gosh, maybe 12 or 15 people in the room waiting for it to start and it felt
|
|
like being stuck in a crowded elevator that wasn't moving and it was, I don't know if
|
|
anybody else felt like that but that's what it felt like and no one that I was the
|
|
guy that called everybody into the elevator, I was really panicking at that point and
|
|
but everybody stuck around and they made it a great show and I honestly, I just wanted
|
|
to say that I don't deserve nor want nor expect the credit for the show because it was
|
|
the people who showed up to do it.
|
|
I was fantastic, I thought it was funny, I was on the train, I'm away home from work and
|
|
you had sent an email out on the panic, I think Dan came in and came and everybody down
|
|
so they're well used to things that are going according to plan there and TLLTS and
|
|
the pipeline music was fantastic, I shouldn't really even be naming people but it was, I must
|
|
say it was really good timing because the new year show everybody was off, at least everybody
|
|
could call in for a period of time so it was a great way of joining the different podcast
|
|
podcasting people out there on the one roof for a particular event, I think we should definitely
|
|
make it an annual thing.
|
|
Oh yeah, and you know what's going on.
|
|
Well it was also a great, go ahead please.
|
|
Yeah, this is where we need that random key interrupt that we talked about but another aspect
|
|
of the New Year's Eve show is it got all the other podcasts talking about HPR and letting
|
|
folks know we were still around.
|
|
Yeah, that was, well two things there, what I was about to say was that it
|
|
never occurred to me until just this moment now to consider how many podcasts, you know,
|
|
people who put together their own podcasts or their RSS feeds were involved and it was
|
|
probably six other shows represented that came out to help us out with that and that's
|
|
pretty incredible.
|
|
I'm going to have to sit down and count that but the other thing I was going to say was
|
|
that was an incredible, incredibly good point that you made about needing the, you know,
|
|
the random timer because that's exactly what happens and it was, I had the exact same
|
|
thought too, you know, not exactly when you said it but you know a couple days before
|
|
while we were doing it, I had the exact same thought that when there's collisions, when
|
|
people both key up at the same time, both people kind of let off and everybody waits a random
|
|
amount of time and it is random because it's everybody picking their own thing and it's,
|
|
I had the same thought that exactly how network traffic works and I thought it was, it was
|
|
either insightful of you or I'm just being ego-tistical.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Well, I guess just around that topic, I guess a lot of people were wondering is this something
|
|
that we should do more often and I don't know, I have my own opinions on that.
|
|
So if your, well, my opinion on it is that I think we captured a moment where it was
|
|
downtime for everybody, everybody was available and it was like a Christmas event on neutral
|
|
territory, HPR being the neutral territory and everybody could join in.
|
|
So I think it would distill us a lot if we started doing it on a regular show and, but,
|
|
you know, the mobile room is here if anybody wants to do a regular show for HPR, all they
|
|
need to do is turn up into this room and press record.
|
|
Yeah, so I agree that we did capture a moment.
|
|
It's a thing that, I don't think anybody could forcefully replicate that or duplicate
|
|
it.
|
|
It was something that came together organically and because of the people in the community
|
|
and I agree and I think doing it once a year and a year, I think we started a tradition
|
|
that we can't stop it now.
|
|
So yeah, for sure, we're going to have to do it again next year.
|
|
But as far as the live shows for HPR goes, there is a live show coming up, Monster B and
|
|
I believe Pegwool and 330 are putting together a live show that they're going to do.
|
|
I'm not entirely certain what their schedule is.
|
|
So if you're interested in becoming part of that, I would suggest getting over to the
|
|
IRC channel podcast planet, which is on the free node server, IRC.frino.net pound
|
|
podcast planet or hash podcast planet, whatever you like and ask around in there when the
|
|
show is going to be recorded and what the schedule might be.
|
|
I think I know what the schedule might be, but I don't want to speak out of turn and confuse
|
|
people.
|
|
So I'm going to keep it to myself.
|
|
What my guess is, anyway, for the time being and say that if you're interested in
|
|
being part of that, that is going to be a hacker public radio show.
|
|
It's going to be a very, as I understand it, a very loose format.
|
|
It's probably going to be not safe for work.
|
|
So if you need a place to come speak your mind or you don't have to feel like you're self-sensoring,
|
|
that seems to be what they've got going on.
|
|
And I think that they're opening it up to folks.
|
|
So they are going to do a live show.
|
|
It's basically the point of that and they didn't get a chance to come on here to announce
|
|
it today.
|
|
Everybody's got time constraints, but I thought I should mention it, and I thought that was
|
|
a good time.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Fantastic.
|
|
Again, tell them if you want to reserve a slot for, sorry, tell them if you want to reserve
|
|
a slot for a coming out sooner rather than later so I can put it in the calendar.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Go ahead, 51.
|
|
Well, I think we can all agree that the 13-hour marathon show could probably be restricted
|
|
to just once a year.
|
|
When Ken mentioned how it was Christmas time and everybody crossing lines and came over
|
|
and it just put me in mind of those stories about I think 1917 and Christmas in World
|
|
War I where they climbed out of the trenches both sides and shared drinks and cigarettes
|
|
around together.
|
|
And that just, that can be visions of next year that will be joined by Mac and Windows
|
|
podcasts.
|
|
I'm not sure that makes me real comfortable, but I guess the more than there here.
|
|
You're cracking me up, douche, cracking me up.
|
|
But as you know, HPR is not restricted to Linux only stuff.
|
|
It just happens to be quite a lot of the Linux people are into hacking and that sort
|
|
of thing.
|
|
Hey, I'm, I'm the guy from episode concerning, uh, uh, doscripts in, uh, in the queue.
|
|
And now the one I'm thinking of doing.
|
|
So you don't have to tell me that true enough for you.
|
|
All right.
|
|
The one thing.
|
|
I do want to say one thing before we move on and it, um, 51.50 just kind of reminded me
|
|
to say this, um, the way that I view the, uh, the New Year's Eve show that happened and
|
|
people keep thanking me for doing it and all this kind of stuff.
|
|
I just want to say that the way I feel about it is, I feel like I was a participant in
|
|
a community event and I want to thank the community for allowing me to be part of it because
|
|
it, it, it, it was, no buddies, you know, it wasn't obligatory that anybody do anything
|
|
there.
|
|
Certainly not, you know, it was not obligatory that they do anything for or with me.
|
|
So I feel like I was allowed to participate in that and I just want to say thank you
|
|
to everyone, not only for doing it, but for letting me be a part of it and, and with
|
|
that, I think I can stop talking about it.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I would just like to say finishing off on this that as for, um, turning the network around
|
|
and making it feel like less of, um, less of like a radio show where you're tuning into
|
|
a random, uh, you know, you're tuning your radio for one random station to the next.
|
|
I think that event really brought, um, bit of humanity to the HPR community where you
|
|
had a feeling.
|
|
These are all these people sitting in their basements playing guitar listening to HPR
|
|
or they're over there doing this or, you know, they're putting the kids to bed while
|
|
they're listening to the HPR or, you know, it really gave me a feeling like, okay, there
|
|
are actual people out there listening to this show and that is exactly what, um, I tasked
|
|
you with, uh, in the, in the previous, um, previous HPR review.
|
|
Arie, moving on to the following episode 900, 900 hard to believe, um, we had, um, Car
|
|
Gillion, uh, introduced himself and I'm probably brutalizing his handler, but, uh, uh, an
|
|
introduction to HPR, the following day, another intro to HPR, these, these are all got
|
|
apologies to, uh, and, uh, and, uh, Garjallan for, um, abuttering your names, but B, they
|
|
were pushed down the queue because of all the scheduled shows after the HPR, um, Christmas
|
|
or New Year's, New Year event and it was difficult to know how to handle the releasing
|
|
of that and we'll probably, you know, make it clear next year, we'll reserve a block
|
|
of, of shows, uh, for next year, so we know what's going on. Hopefully there will be a next
|
|
year. And we had, uh, a return to the network for talk, geek to mean news and, uh, talked
|
|
more about that later on and episode 903 was the SOPA protest. I don't know if you guys
|
|
had anything to say about that. I thought it was well done and I thought you handled it,
|
|
uh, properly ended properly. And by handling it, we essentially, I, I had an email from
|
|
the TLLTS mailing list and links and textual guys who were gone black and, um, and we,
|
|
we discussed it on our own mailing list and this was the, it was called appropriate,
|
|
not to release a show at day. And for that day, we redirected HPR to a, um, no SOPA.org.
|
|
Yeah, I, I know that some websites and some podcasts simply went black and had nothing,
|
|
but I, I appreciated the fact that you explained that we, we were not participating in the internet
|
|
today and this is why I thought that was the right way to handle it. And some people may disagree,
|
|
but I, I totally thought that was way to do it. Well, I think we had to do something,
|
|
we had to actually release a show and that slot. Anyway, we didn't have the HPR intro or the outro
|
|
so as far as I was concerned, it was just, you know, what you would get, you know, this show,
|
|
this website has been hijacked and been, been shut down because there's some, um,
|
|
some information on here that, um, we don't like our, you know, you could just go through the list
|
|
of shows that we have here and you would have ample proof that what we're doing is, you know,
|
|
we're hacking and all the rest of it. The fact that our website has been blocked by,
|
|
you know, corpus, uh, firewalls, because we got the word hacker in, in our name is, is,
|
|
is sufficient already to say that we are, uh, there's censorship on the internet. I mean,
|
|
it really don't want to make it anywhere. Agreed. Okay. The following day we had, uh,
|
|
frostcasts are sorry, frostcasts, northeast Gnuffin links fest, which Jonathan asked me to pop
|
|
out here and syndicate the Thursday. It was a pleasure. And they're, uh, talking about that,
|
|
a more information on that later. And the grandest thing, uh, how I got into Linux, another
|
|
episode, uh, from a new host, a lot of new hosts can bumped up. And then, um, I bumped this show,
|
|
the following show, which was, uh, show announcing Fostem, uh, up as well, because it was, uh, it was a
|
|
time needed to get some information out and a timely fashion about Fostem, which is actually going
|
|
on this weekend, as we record now. And, uh, unfortunately, I have not been able to go because,
|
|
I put my back out again. And, uh, also my wife has started a job, so, uh, working nights,
|
|
so unfortunately, I can get down to that. Uh, the guys down there, um, well, I wasn't able to
|
|
find somebody who was, uh, able to take over the booth in time. Uh, so unfortunately, uh, I had
|
|
to email the guys to say we, uh, couldn't go and they were quite, uh, they were quite nice about
|
|
all things. So hopefully, again, next year, we'll, uh, we'll, um, be able to go to that event.
|
|
Yeah. And I just wanted to say I, I'm nowhere near Fostem. It was not going to be even physically
|
|
possible that I could get there. But I did read all the emails that went back and forth between you
|
|
and those guys. And I've got to say they, they were some of the nicest people that I've ever
|
|
read emails from. They were really, really friendly and nice in every email that they wrote. And, um,
|
|
I, I can't, you know, I can't wish more that they have a good event, uh, excuse me, events,
|
|
and, um, and I hope it's going well over there. It's having fun. I hope the guys that are,
|
|
that are putting it on, uh, you know, really reap the rewards of such a thing. Not to mention,
|
|
I hope your back is feeling better. Um, too. And, and it was, it was, um, it was nightwise,
|
|
right? It was supposed to go with you. And he had another, yeah, yeah, that was, um, I don't know if
|
|
I was to talk about it here, but that, that, uh, it was heartbreaking as well. Um, yeah, but unfortunately
|
|
life does, you know, I mean, this is a hobby. So life kind of gets in this way. Um, so we love to
|
|
find some of them. I'm just proud to fab on G plus. So I'm getting a steady stream of, uh, images
|
|
from far stem in my G plus a, uh, I wait a minute. Fab, you can't represent HPR. No, he's got his own
|
|
shirt. I know he does. That was a joke. And he also managed to avoid an interview with me as, uh,
|
|
odd camp. So, uh, I'm going to have to, uh, and then I said, I'll catch up with him on, uh,
|
|
foster them. And now, uh, I'm going to have to find some other way of interviewing him. You know
|
|
who we need represent as it was them. Next time you can't make it is, is the numerous. Yeah,
|
|
he's also gone there and volunteered to come down and, uh, uh, help, um, out with the show from
|
|
time to time, but he's actually involved in the video of the, um, event itself. Oh, yeah. So he's
|
|
already working. No, I'm just thinking I can't imagine a better face to put on the HPR than, um,
|
|
than Mr and Mrs. Newborough. They were. Yeah. They were great. Sorry. Um, oh yeah. No, I'm mixing up my,
|
|
um, mixing up my, uh, names. You're talking about Carnival. For a second, I thought he was going
|
|
to be going to the show. Actually, um, I was talking about, uh, Gar, Corvus. And they, uh, is this
|
|
from the, um, August Planet show, uh, channel, GovNoo. GovNoo. Oh, yeah. Go, go, go, go, hip
|
|
new. That's the one you're going to get. It's, it's tricky when once you learn everybody's
|
|
online handles and then you have to learn their real name. Thank you, Google Plus. Yeah. And
|
|
it's, you know, you got two names for everybody. And it's, it's tough to keep everybody straight
|
|
sometimes. I agree. But I have this thing where I just see their names. It's just a, you know,
|
|
it's like a, a picture. That's somebody's name. That's some, uh, don't really read the name
|
|
as such. But I know what you mean. Just me. And the where it thing is when you listen to somebody
|
|
for, for years, and then you finally do see their picture online, it's just completely different
|
|
from the picture that your mind has been making based on the voice. So you reject the actual
|
|
picture, I think, and still see them as the made up image. Yeah. I know what you mean. But there's,
|
|
there's one guy who is the exception to that rule. And that's, uh, it's Resnell from the tech
|
|
misfits. He looks exactly like I thought he would. I had that whole syndrome the whole time at
|
|
Alcamp. I was just hearing voices and then looking around and the person I thought would be there
|
|
wasn't it. Yeah. So, uh, that would be so much fun. Okay. Where were we episode nine or seven
|
|
was learning, um, using a text to speech. This was a text to speech episode. And I don't know
|
|
Poké if you saw the emails where we got, um, more volunteers to read out episodes. If you,
|
|
if you make the script, there, um, there's been now several people who have volunteered to
|
|
read the narrate scripts for us. So, um, thank you very much for all those. Yeah. Sorry. I think
|
|
this needs some commenting. Um, I, I did see that. Um, and I did see Mordancy submit. And it seemed
|
|
to me when Mordancy submitted the show that he, he had already encoded it with the text to speech.
|
|
And it seemed that that's the way that he wanted it released. Um, had it been any other way,
|
|
I would have offered to read it. And I know that several other people would have offered to read it.
|
|
So, I think at some point we need to look at the, uh, making this an easy choice for people who
|
|
are going to read, or, or, I'm sorry, who are going to type out their show or script their show.
|
|
And they can choose whether to have it read by a machine or read by a human, maybe even let them
|
|
pick their host, uh, from the pool of people who have, who have volunteered to do it. Because
|
|
while listening to the machine was, was fine. I didn't, you know, it didn't offend me. Um,
|
|
to listen to the machine, I know that listening to a machine and listening to a person
|
|
is a different experience. And I think it should be up to the author of the show, uh, as to which
|
|
way that it goes. And it just seemed to me that Mordancy wanted it read by a machine. So I didn't
|
|
mention it there, but I, I do want to mention for anybody else who feels like they would like to
|
|
script their show and would like to have it read by another person or by a machine, you know,
|
|
please let us know what your preference is. And maybe we can, you know, publish a pool of
|
|
available readers and they can pick the person. I think we should probably make it their choice that
|
|
way. That is, um, that's exactly why I'm glad we're doing this as a live show because that's not,
|
|
that's exactly what I meant to say. What I said came out completely wrong. Um, yes, he, he recorded
|
|
the show with text to speech. And I believe that he did it intentionally. And that's absolutely
|
|
fine. In fact, uh, one of my most favorite episodes that I've done myself has been a text to speech
|
|
episode. Um, so the, uh, the, the Russian cosmoner episode. That's the one, right? That's the one.
|
|
And yeah, I was going to bring that up. That's still one of my favorites. And
|
|
did anybody else like have the joke back tears during that episode? Because I did.
|
|
Yeah, it's, uh, it's, I don't know if you got a chance to actually watch the
|
|
video that come along with that to go off an attention here for a moment, but they, um,
|
|
they announced on that day, um, the, the International Space Station, they aligned it so that it would
|
|
go across the planet more or less the same orbit that he took. And the interest first, they, um,
|
|
speech, they, uh, ground recordings that he made, uh, as, as you're watching that, it is phenomenal
|
|
to watch. I didn't watch it, but that's why I didn't watch it. I had a very hard time not
|
|
getting choked up, just listening to a robot read the story. To have the story actually presented
|
|
like that in a video format, I, I know it had a real hard time. That's what I'm going to watch
|
|
at home now to work. Yeah, exactly. I can't watch that at lunch. No, no, it's, uh, it's, you know,
|
|
and have a fisherman's friend. I don't know. Do you have those over there? Yeah, we got fishermen's
|
|
friends. Most people don't know about them, but yeah, I know, I don't understand why they'd be
|
|
helpful for this, but they have an advertising campaign here. You know, you've got these really
|
|
tough guys and, um, you know, they're at the fisherman come home and they're all on the boat. And
|
|
this young lad, you know, goes down the, you know, young fisherman that's with them. He jumps off
|
|
the boat and he runs down the pier and his wife runs at him in slow motion and the hug each other
|
|
and, you know, then a dog comes up and, uh, you know, jumps up and, you know,
|
|
hug him each other and then she turns around and like, she's got a big belly and she's pregnant
|
|
and all, and like, all the, you know, the, all guys are on the boat. You know, and they're all
|
|
holding back a tear. And the claim is just because the fisherman's friends.
|
|
Classic. That's a great, that's a great, that's a great concept. They didn't see the commercial,
|
|
but it's a great concept. Very, very good. And Chris, we'll probably put a link to that in the
|
|
show. And we can find it. You better be good. All right. Moving right along. Moving right along,
|
|
if we ever end. My reference I have for that is, uh,
|
|
there we go again. I was, I was going to say the only, uh, reference I have for that is the
|
|
pocket fisherman, which they always used to advertise every Christmas, but I don't think that's
|
|
the same thing. No, not quite. You know, a fisherman's friend, it's a, um, it's a, it's a
|
|
menthol, uh, it looks like a little brown oval shaped lump of nothing. It's really like this thing.
|
|
And you, it's really, uh, you don't think anything of it and you pop it in your mouth and it's
|
|
probably like 85% menthol. So it really, it strikes you hard and it's meant for cleaning out your
|
|
sinuses and whatnot. But, uh, yeah, it could bring a tear to your eye if you weren't expecting it.
|
|
So that's all the, and, and then the pocket fisherman can, if you didn't know, was a, a
|
|
telescopic fishing rod that you could, you know, stick in the back seat of your pickup truck
|
|
or whatnot and pull out and go fishing. Yep. Okay. And then, okay. Well, that makes sense. I could
|
|
probably use that. I used to have a tuba wasabi in the refrigerator I used for the same thing.
|
|
I didn't even move it on before this, uh, too big a while back at the point. Back at the point,
|
|
yeah. Uh, we had episode Riddlebox with TV downloader Ted. Never heard of this app. Um, yes.
|
|
Yes. First I heard of those cool stuff. Um, um, sting, steampunking with,
|
|
speaking of getting us banned by Shopea. Yes. Oh boy. Yeah. Well, educational purposes,
|
|
perfectly legal, I guess. Um, I think I, I think he has turned two pages at once now. What,
|
|
what do you mean, speaking of sofa? Well, the, he's referring to downloading episodes,
|
|
episodes of TVs. Oh, on Ted. Okay. Sorry. So, um, episode nine or nine was a steampunking with
|
|
insta paper, which was a night cast on how to integrate Google reader and various different things.
|
|
A bit complicated. I think that download must have failed for me. It's not even ringing about.
|
|
I'm going to have to go look for it. I don't know. So it's sorry. Um, uh, yeah, sorry,
|
|
why someone had to go check that out? And then we had an introduction to a page kite, which was
|
|
a way to bring public IP addresses to your local host. Um, so if you're behind a ISP that don't
|
|
particularly want you to have, uh, IP addresses, public IP addresses, then you can use the service,
|
|
which is good that it's there, but it's also very sad that we live in a world where you can't
|
|
run your own server, uh, from your own home. No, no, no, no, you mean, but at the same time,
|
|
that was a really, um, it was an interesting topic because it was like a really simple thing
|
|
that everybody should have thought of, but nobody has or a page guide. It was, it was kind of cool
|
|
in that way. And also, it just proves that no matter what you do, people will find a technological
|
|
way around it. So yeah. Ha, ha, ha, there you go. 9-1-1, um, hobbies by Mr. X, brilliant, uh,
|
|
brilliant, brilliant, brilliant show. Um, so I know we're, we really scoot, scoot over a lot of
|
|
the December shows and now we're, we're going through a lot of these shows in depth. So I,
|
|
I don't know whether we should go back and do the other shows properly, but this was an interesting
|
|
one because, um, all those other hobbies, when I was thinking of the show, I was thinking,
|
|
all the other hobbies that he's had, haven't had an influence on all the people, you know, you can,
|
|
you can make one, actually, that's probably enough correct because, I mean, he was involved in
|
|
the, um, in the CB community and the computer community and stuff. So, uh, but anyway, by doing,
|
|
I show on HPR, he has at least also had an influence on my life with his hobby. So good to hear.
|
|
Yes. Yeah. It's a good point. Um, I think the reason we're talking about these more is just because
|
|
they're fresher in the memory, but I don't mind going back and talking about the others because
|
|
there, there was a lot of things I didn't say about those and I, I never tire of discussing HPR.
|
|
Yeah, I wouldn't mind getting people's feedback on this show. I know we do it and, uh, you know,
|
|
I love talking about these shows because I listen to them all and, um, actually, I'll probably
|
|
listen and listen to them after most other people listen to them because, uh, well, we don't filter
|
|
anything here in HPR. I happen to be just a community member who posts the shows, so I have no
|
|
right as much as anybody else to say whether a show goes on or not. If it's spam, I suppose,
|
|
if we ever get to a day where we're so popular, and other people are sent on a spam,
|
|
then I'll have no problem deleting that, but, um, uh, I'm not going to you best. And he shows a sec,
|
|
except maybe for audio quality, which if it's audible, then it goes on. Which, wow, that's a fantastic
|
|
transition into Brockton Bob because he keeps submitting saying, for your approval and for your
|
|
consideration and, uh, Mr. Brockton Bob, we're posting them without listening to them first.
|
|
I mean, I know some people might listen to them just because they're eager to hear stuff before
|
|
everybody else does, but I, it, it pains me greatly to do so, but I wait until they hit the feed
|
|
before I listen to anything. And, um, you know, we're, we're not going to edit you're, you're a
|
|
community member and you have as much right to post a show to HPR as anybody else does. And the
|
|
how I cut the cord part one show 912, which is our next show, was a fantastic episode. And, um,
|
|
I, I, uh, I don't want to say it was a good example of us not editing it because it was a good
|
|
episode. Um, but yeah, I mean, that's, we don't, we don't do that here. We don't listen to shows
|
|
ahead of time and say, oh, that doesn't make the grade. We, we trust our community because we're
|
|
part of it and to show distrust in anybody else and you do member would be to say that we don't,
|
|
we'd have to hold ourselves to the same standard. So if you have a show you'd like to post, you
|
|
know, put it up here, please, we're, we're aching for a show. You know, and while the queue is
|
|
pretty full right now, that's, you know, no guarantee of the future. And it, it, it's still,
|
|
the queue is always short as long as you, the person who is listening and hasn't participated,
|
|
as long as you're missing from it, the queue is still short. I see how he got the guilt trip in
|
|
there. No, there wasn't even a guilt trip. That was honestly, that was to say that HPR is about
|
|
the community in a way that I don't think anything has been yet that I encountered. And the
|
|
community, you know, in quotes there means the people who are involved and if people are lurking,
|
|
then they're not exactly involved. Don't we don't, we don't mind lurkers. We don't mind people
|
|
who want to want to listen in. I still feel that you, person who is lurking, are a valuable
|
|
member of the community. I would like to hear from you in some way because I haven't, I haven't
|
|
heard from anybody in the community yet. All these people who say, well, what I have to say
|
|
isn't valuable or my, my contribution isn't valuable. Those people have been wrong every time,
|
|
every contribution to HPR has been valuable and positive, including yours that you're afraid
|
|
to, to, to help us out, you know, that you are valuable. And that's, it's not a guilt trip.
|
|
It's an honest to God expression of my appreciation for everything that everyone has done for HPR.
|
|
And for the stuff to be in hell back. Couldn't agree more. Okay, do realize you just recorded the
|
|
show promo for the next year. And by the way, we're still waiting on your mom's episode.
|
|
I might have to give you guys her phone number because she's going to need more persuasion than
|
|
just me. Did she listen to the marathon episode? I don't know that she did. She moved into a place
|
|
that doesn't have any internet connectivity. They don't have any wires going from, from the town
|
|
to her little, her little development. And for her to get a cable TV connection or an internet
|
|
connection or even a telephone connection, she has to pay to run the wires. So she's been run through.
|
|
Yeah, no, it's, yeah, it's, it's pretty bad. So she's been, they, they either go to the library
|
|
with their laptop, which is, you know, a half a day's trip. Or she's been doing it through her
|
|
Android phone, which is just not, I gotta say, my mom can't handle it. Android is not user-friendly.
|
|
Sorry, Android guys. It ain't user-friendly. My mom can't handle it. Every application that she
|
|
opens confuses her because there are not obvious actions to take within them. And that's, and I,
|
|
I've, since gotten an Android phone, I've checked a few of them out, and I agree with their,
|
|
I configured out because they don't mind poking it stuff. And I'm not afraid to break things,
|
|
but for someone who's afraid to damage the phone or, or, or, doesn't know how to back out of an
|
|
action, nope, Android is not cutting it as far as usability. Okay, fair enough. Sorry.
|
|
Have you considered just setting her up with a pure data connection? USB dongle? My second
|
|
data bill might be more than what you want to do. She doesn't want to pay for another bill. She
|
|
doesn't want to pay for another thing. And, and I can't. I, I would if I could, but I, you know,
|
|
it's not really feasible right now. We talked about tethering, but I didn't think we're getting
|
|
way off topic. That's the whole other show now. Okay, fair enough. Let's round it off with
|
|
Tolkien to me news by DeepGeek. Welcome back DeepGeek. Yes. I have missed you so much. And we're
|
|
already, you know, probably passed by one of your shows here, but I have missed you on this channel
|
|
so much, and I am so glad you're back. Well, let's, let's talk about that actually. We have
|
|
a few people taking advantage of our regular slots. And I think DeepGeek returning has brought
|
|
up two points that I want to address. One is that three actually. And one frank brought up.
|
|
One is that you can register a slot to have a regular slot on there. And we now have the first
|
|
Monday of every month, which is HPR community news. Every Thursday, we have the syndicated
|
|
shows, which the first Thursday of the month is going to be the Sunday morning Linux review.
|
|
Showed by the way. And yeah, you won 50. You got some, some shout out from them and some props
|
|
on their last episode or the last one I heard anyway. And I'm glad you were the one that said it.
|
|
I'm glad you got the shout out. But yeah, I think that's universally echoed that.
|
|
Sunday morning Linux review is a great show. I haven't heard anybody say anything bad about it,
|
|
and I've heard plenty of good said about it. It's a fantastic addition to the to the week actually,
|
|
to the Linux, to my Linux podcast feed. And then we have DeepGeek returning with Toki to me.
|
|
So what he is doing is I think his own explanation was fantastic. Essentially, he is going to
|
|
come back with HPR, HPR only content, so that he's not clashing with, you know, his shows are
|
|
or HPR are edited for HPR, I guess, be the correct word. Yeah, he's basically taking
|
|
sometimes excerpts from his own show that are specifically geared towards the hacker public
|
|
radio end of the spectrum and not towards his own audience. And then other times he's producing
|
|
what seems to be exclusive HPR content, which I mean, wow, that's a heck of a lot of work.
|
|
DeepGeek, it's shocking that you would do that and well appreciated that. I want to say that.
|
|
And I know we've got a couple of other shows in the works, one of which I already mentioned,
|
|
that people are contributing to HPR on a somewhat regular basis that I think are just going to go
|
|
such a long way towards strengthening the community and towards helping people to get over
|
|
whatever fears they have and helping to want to get involved. I think it's going to be great.
|
|
Linux and the Shell is a show that's coming up that's going to be an HPR.
|
|
I don't want to say exclusive, but we're going to be part of it. It's kind of a bigger show.
|
|
I don't know how to explain it exactly. I think Dan will. Well, we'll wait for Dan to explain
|
|
how it's going to go. It's it'll be quite a project that I'm really excited about it.
|
|
As of right, it'll be every second Tuesday of the every second Tuesday. It'll be on.
|
|
So it's fantastic. Now, 5150, you had mentioned something that you were talking about earlier.
|
|
Did you want to bring that up now about, you mentioned the five day a week schedule,
|
|
because this is where I was going with that.
|
|
Well, I've noticed since I'm back to manually downloading podcasts by visiting the websites,
|
|
the most inefficient method that the warning and HPR is being posted on the weekend. I thought
|
|
there had been before, but Ken disapuse me of that a few minutes ago. So it's always been five days
|
|
a week. It does seem, and I think we can credit it a lot of it to the New Year's Eve broadcast
|
|
that we've had. We have more shows in the queue than we've had in quite some time. I will remember
|
|
a lot of times down to four or five, and when we start, start bringing the syndicated podcast to
|
|
fill in, but I guess, Poking, I were thinking the same thing that may be when we can see our way
|
|
clear and have a lot of shows built up in the queue to also do weekend releases to help clear
|
|
the queue out. Of course, it's Feast or Famine. We could have 25 now, and in a month not have any.
|
|
Yeah, and my response to, I know Ken's response was that he hates the Famine, and I get that.
|
|
My response to that would be to say that right now, the queue is full, and I think it's full enough
|
|
that we may be ready for some experimentation, and we're not making any decisions here. We'll
|
|
put it out to the community, and I think I would like to hear, you know, not just Ken and 51's 50,
|
|
50, 150's response to this, but perhaps if you have an idea and would like to post on the mailing list,
|
|
my thought would be that as long as the queue is full enough, and who's to say what full enough
|
|
means, I think that's a community decision as well, but as long as the queue is full enough,
|
|
I maybe we could bump the syndicated shows to Saturday, so that we could put out five days of,
|
|
you know, five days a week, week days with dedicated HPR content before we start syndicating other
|
|
things, and maybe even, you know, not including the shows that have, you know, taken that Thursday
|
|
slot and aren't publishing anywhere else and are making HPR shows, maybe they would be like exempt
|
|
from that, but I think it's an option that may be worthy of exploring, considering the number of
|
|
shows that we have an queue now, which we haven't had for quite some time. Well, my response to that
|
|
would be, I would keep syndicated Thursday the way that it is and have the native HPR content
|
|
on the weekends, if the number of shows in the queue providing, that way we're not
|
|
bouncing those syndicated shows around that we've committed to and say, oh, you are going to be
|
|
on Thursday, now we're going to bounce you to the weekend, up the queue's empty, we need you back,
|
|
we'll put you on Thursday, I don't think that's really fair either. That's a good point ahead
|
|
and consider it that way. Well, having lived through nearly a year and a half of Faman,
|
|
I think having one month's shows is just comfortable for me, especially when you consider that
|
|
basically, we put it out that way, we think that, sorry, yeah, you cut out real bad 50, 150, we
|
|
think that and then you stopped, we didn't hear anything. Well, Kim was talking at the same time,
|
|
I didn't want to walk on him. Just my point on that, okay, if we want to consider 25 or 30 shows in
|
|
the queue as our comfort point, then we put out the community, hey, if we have 30 shows in the queue
|
|
where they're in 25, we'll be able to afford to do weekends and we might run a special header
|
|
on the weekend show. This is a special show that we've been able to provide to you because
|
|
of your participation and we'll keep doing this as long as participation stays at this comfortable
|
|
level. A bad way to look at it. However, we are producing five shows a week, so I don't know,
|
|
we still have 207 free shots, slots left. Yeah, let's see what happens. Let's review this next
|
|
month and see how many shows are in the queue. That's all I'll say. HPR at hackerpublicradio.org
|
|
is the email address for the mailing list. If you have an opinion on this, please email us
|
|
at that address. Subscribe if you're interested in following a conversation, but I think it's officially
|
|
a topic open for discussion at this point. Absolutely. Yeah, and attach your episode while you're at it.
|
|
Oh, nice one. Okay, I'd like to thank everybody and I'd like to say sorry to pretty much everybody
|
|
as well for all the mistakes and stuff that we met during the year, during the last two months.
|
|
So I know, I think that's it, right? That's the last shows. I just want to go through the events
|
|
actually. Well, yeah, no, I don't mean that's it for the show. I meant that's it for the
|
|
the shows that we were going to mention. If you wanted to go back to December, we probably
|
|
should say a little bit about some of the new hosts. Anyway, I know some of the other guys have
|
|
had some comments and some feedback on their shows, but I didn't want to skip over the new hosts if
|
|
we could try that. And just to say, I'm looking through here real quick, the JWP, I'm not sure if
|
|
I don't think that was a new one of his, but I really enjoyed his shows.
|
|
Frank Bell, however, that was his first show. I mean, I did enjoy that great thing. And I mentioned
|
|
how much I like that on the the New Year's Eve show and I'm going to stand by that comment.
|
|
Let's see. John and SC was that his first show? The redo backup in their
|
|
recovery. One point of one that was, and we get to talk about it, didn't we? Was there anybody
|
|
that we missed? I really hate to leave people, you know, left out with... Well, of course, some
|
|
DM Fry, that's Dan Fry from Tiltz and the MFTV podcast. Oh, yeah, yeah, Dan Fry, you know, he's
|
|
that he's a good guy and that was a great show. I think the only two that we probably didn't
|
|
talk about was, did we, did we even talk about, um, Garjola and Ahuka's shows, 900 and 901?
|
|
Because I don't want to skim over how great those were, not just to hear as far as like the
|
|
shows were good, because they were really good shows. But to see two new contributors pop up
|
|
right after the New Year's Eve show was like, I mean, it was like such a reward, such like
|
|
verification and justification for doing something like the New Year's Eve show that, um,
|
|
I mean, that was like, it felt like some of the best feedback ever to get some of these new guys,
|
|
you know, um, Garjola and Ahuka and Akrainus, um, you know, just popping up and putting these things
|
|
in there as their first shows. That, I mean, that was great feedback, you know, I thought it was,
|
|
I mean, for them, it wasn't feedback, but I don't want them to go and mention that way.
|
|
Yeah, I think we've, uh, go ahead over. I just want to say thanks again to the other podcast
|
|
who, uh, talked up to New Year's Eve event, uh, when we maybe, uh, didn't have a,
|
|
didn't release until right before where it was going to be hosted, but we, we got a lot of
|
|
talking about it and there's a lot of people I think who started listening to Hacker Public Radio,
|
|
not just to people who, uh, uh, uh, weren't sure if we were still around, but I think we picked
|
|
up a lot of new listeners and we wouldn't have done that without the support of the other podcast
|
|
who, uh, spoke about the event ahead of time. Absolutely. Um, one thing that I was thinking about,
|
|
as a result of that was, I think there's a real need for a mirror network or, um, or podcasting,
|
|
you know, something where people who are doing live shows like this one, for instance, could get
|
|
cost into, um, and it would feed us like a stream of, um, ice cast servers that are host, you know,
|
|
if people got hosting plans or whatever and they're not using it that much that we would have
|
|
something like, uh, that they could have an ice cast server in our DNS, um, and that would then
|
|
play out all these shows and stuff. Yeah, for sure. If you want to add HDR, um, you know,
|
|
your live broadcast, if you're trying to fill a stream, you know, 24, seven, please put us in there,
|
|
we are creative commons licensed for a reason. Well, I've had an idea for years that, well, not
|
|
years for a while, that, uh, I don't really have the skills at this point to implement. If you go
|
|
into Google and you type in, uh, TV schedule, you get TV guide and AOL and all kinds of, uh,
|
|
all kinds of choices so you can see what's on TV in your area. And really, what I would like to see
|
|
is, uh, the same sort of thing for live podcasting that, that would have to be interactive because
|
|
sometimes a podcast, even though they have a schedule day of the week that they go on,
|
|
they're an hour later, they have to cancel or they go on the next day, but if there was some sort of
|
|
interactive site where the, uh, show contributors could log in and update their own schedules,
|
|
and then as a listener, uh, if you sat down at your computers at tonight, I want to, or this afternoon,
|
|
I want to listen to a live show. Let's see what's on. I think that would be, uh, great boons of
|
|
the community. We should, uh, fire something out about that. One other thing I did want to mention
|
|
before we go on, I really need to go now because it's, uh, getting late and I have,
|
|
yes, sad, though it is with the washing, dang up and all the rest. Um, I wanted to point out a really
|
|
good site that I've come across called, um, boss event events.org link in the show notes,
|
|
boss events.org and they have, um, a list of free and open source events that, um, they maintain
|
|
where you can post your event if it's coming up and they maintain a live or SS feed of, of coming
|
|
events. Some of the events that are not in there that I do want to, uh, talking about,
|
|
uh, is, uh, let me just give a rundown on those. Is this Southern California Linux Expo, um,
|
|
unfortunate, that was on the 20th, 22nd of January. Unfortunately, we can get to, uh,
|
|
interview them in time, but we, they've been on all those shows. Uh, this weekend is FOSTEM.
|
|
Now coming up on the third of, uh, sorry, 17th of the third, which is in Patrick's Day,
|
|
will be the Northeast GNU Linux Fest. And I believe Pokey and Latu are going to be at that.
|
|
Am I correct? Yes. At the very least, I will be there. Uh, Clyte too has said that he's,
|
|
he's making his best effort to be there. I guess he's got one or two things, um, still up in the air
|
|
and contingent upon that. And several other people have said that they want to be there. Um,
|
|
and, and they're gonna try to be there. So if anybody's going to the Northeast GNU Linux Fest,
|
|
would like to do interviews, would like to put in time at the HPR table,
|
|
would like to represent HPR in any way. Please get in contact with me. Um, not that I'm in charge
|
|
of this, but I'm willing to step up, step up and coordinate it. Unless anybody else wants
|
|
the coordinating job, you can have it, please, you know, honest if you want it. But if not, until
|
|
further notice, I guess I'm the one coordinating this. So if you want to participate, please get in
|
|
touch with me and let me know so that I can get you, um, like an HPR T shirt with a logo on it
|
|
or something. If you want to do interviews, we need interviews. If you want to sit at the table,
|
|
while some people go watch talks, that's great. Um, it was, it was a really, really positive thing
|
|
last year, not only to be at the Northeast GNU Linux Fest because wow, what a great best it was.
|
|
It was, it was a lot of fun. But to be there as part of HPR was fantastic. And to have HPR
|
|
there at all was fantastic. Um, a lot of people in the, the change in topic slightly. Anyway,
|
|
if you want to get, if you want to participate, please contact me. I'm pda.ly.03 at gmail.com.
|
|
That's pda.il.eu.y.03 at gmail.com or hpr at hacker.publicradio.org. It either one will get to me.
|
|
Yeah, the HPR is the mailing list for everybody. But if you email admin.attackupublicradio.org
|
|
will go to, okay. Yep, that's fine. That's great. And if you want to participate in that.
|
|
Now, also a lot of other people have been asking me about stickers. Um, because the sticker thing
|
|
was a big thing last year, I cannot personally fund the stickers the way that I did last year.
|
|
It was, um, if, I don't want to say it was a huge bill. But if I, if I put it on my budget this
|
|
year, it would be, it would, it would break, break the budget. If somebody wants to step up and buy
|
|
some stickers for any type of event, that's fine. I will contribute. I will do my part. Or if anybody
|
|
can get us a line on some free stickers, that would be great. Um, I think probably in order of
|
|
importance, what we need this year is maybe 500 of the little stickers that Klaatu made up that
|
|
said, um, uh, I think it was, I learned to be nosy on the inner webs at HPR and had a little guy
|
|
typing on a keyboard. It was really, really cool. Stickers fantastic. If we had about 500 of those
|
|
and two to 300 of the HPR oval logos that you can stick on your, your car window or the back of
|
|
the laptop, um, that would be enough, I think, to get us through at least a good bit of the year.
|
|
And that, and that's not just for North East canoe Linux Fest. That would be handing them out at
|
|
every fest and whoever, you know, hands them out, mails them, mails the remainder along to the next
|
|
fest. I think that might be enough to get it done. Um, we do have an offer, um, name excuse me,
|
|
again, turbo with names to have stickers printed off. So let's, uh, let's see about that as well.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. And the only thing, um, need to be added to that was that the sticker that Klaatu made,
|
|
for some reason, I don't know if it was in the printing or what, but the QR code is not correct.
|
|
In that sticker, if you, if you follow that QR code, it, it's like a 404 or something, I'm not sure.
|
|
That's because that fix too. Yeah, yeah, but if somebody could, I mean, Klaatu, if you want to do it
|
|
fine or if you can't, if somebody else could do it, just, you know, I think like QR Gen, I think
|
|
is the command line, um, uh, program that generates an QR code. Um, I can do that part if anybody
|
|
wants a QR code, I can send you that, but to edit it into the sticker in a way that's acceptable,
|
|
the sticker companies because they like real high resolution stuff. That's the part that's
|
|
a little bit above my head. I can do that. It's all a problem. Yeah. So if we can just get that done,
|
|
at least we'll have something to give to the people who want to print these things up, or if you
|
|
have a design print sticker and you want to help us out, that would be awesome too. And any of
|
|
that would be great. If we don't get it, we're still moving ahead. We're still going to go to the
|
|
con and the fest, but if you can help us out with that, it was, it was really positive last year,
|
|
helped out a lot in the years before. Okay. There's, um, an open position here at HPR, by the way.
|
|
I just want to have Jeff. I'll talk off to this. I just want to interject on, uh,
|
|
NELF, if, uh, not clock two shows up, uh, anybody who attends won't have any expenses because he'll
|
|
be conducting a week long symposium on urban camping. Yeah, yeah, and scoring some free food.
|
|
So yeah, it's your expense if you, if you listen to his advice.
|
|
Okay. Thanks for that. Um, as you've been listening to this segment, you'll realize that there's
|
|
a lot of events coming up. So we have, uh, so cal North, uh, Linux Fest, North West is also going
|
|
to be on the fourth on, uh, on the 28th of the, of the fourth. And David Whitman is going to be,
|
|
so they're representing HPR. So the URL for that is Linux Fest North West.org.
|
|
And we have the whole, how Linux Fest has emailed us saying that their call for talks is open
|
|
at the minutes as well. Um, can we, I, I, I see David Whitman's email address here. Do we want to
|
|
give that out as the coordinator for the HBR, um, front, uh, yes, and the easiest way you can
|
|
contact him is go on the HPR mail list, HPR at hacker public radio.org or his email, David,
|
|
Glenn Whitman at gmail.com, which will be in the show notes for this episode. Um, now as, as you were
|
|
talking, as we were talking there, it's, and before it was obvious to me that we have, uh,
|
|
open space for sharing out some work here. And what I've been trying to think about over the
|
|
last while is, you know, how can we take certain chunks of work, put it together so that it can be
|
|
given to somebody. It's not too much work to do. It's enough that you could spend a little time
|
|
and it'll take, really take the load off our backs. And one of those things is an event manager.
|
|
And what the job, uh, would entail would be maintaining a, um, list of events that are coming up,
|
|
free and open source events that the HPR community will be, community members will be likely to be
|
|
and possibly convincing some of them to go and have a HPR booth, um, possibly contacting
|
|
the event organizers, getting their promo stickers and all that sort of stuff and sending it to,
|
|
to me or one of the other admins so we can put it on the website or hopefully we'll be able to
|
|
have you do that yourself. Um, you know, the general everyday run of the mill things around
|
|
having these events coming up because I think it would be a nice resource for HPR to be able to
|
|
do that for the community to say, right? Here's events that are coming up and here's where we'll be at.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely. And, and we're not looking specifically for people who have experience at doing
|
|
this or who consider themselves professionals. If you want to give a hand at this and, uh, you
|
|
know, give a try at this and see if it's something that suits you or if you think it suits you, um,
|
|
you know, at the end of the day, if you don't like the job that you did, we're not going to blame
|
|
you for it because no one else has stepped up to do it. We're just looking for volunteers who are
|
|
willing to give it a shot who are willing to, you know, step forward and say, I will try this. It
|
|
isn't being done and it's too much for Ken Fallon to do. It's too much for Clack 2 or Pokey
|
|
or 5150 to do and, and I'm going to give a shot in any effort that you put in any help that you
|
|
can give us is appreciated and, you know, goes in that, in that column of positive things that
|
|
you've contributed to HPR, not negative things, even if you think you've failed at it because,
|
|
believe me, I think I've failed at plenty of things at HPR and people have said, hey, great job. So,
|
|
it's, it's, it's not about that. We just, we want the community to participate. We want HPR to be
|
|
a thing that is more than the sum of its total parts and you are a part of, of that sum.
|
|
And in this position, I would say is, has been just as service for HPR, but equally other, you know,
|
|
other podcasters could, could, could avail of that service, you know, events that are in the area
|
|
that we could promote their events. So, if you're looking for the banners, if you're looking for the
|
|
promos, just a central place like the way, like the way Dan Waschko maintains the Linux,
|
|
Linux link.net, it's just a list of other podcasters out there. You know, if you could,
|
|
I personally wouldn't intend this to be on the HPR website, per se, that the philosophy at the
|
|
events will get added to FOS events.org and we would use their feed, you know, so that way everybody
|
|
in the community wins. So you go to, I don't know, let's just take Linux outlaws there and they
|
|
have the FOS events or SS feed in there. The work that this community manager per HPR has done
|
|
will get reflected in all these other websites. So, you know, it's, it's a way that without
|
|
having to spend an awful lot of time doing it, it's basically just a heads up. These are the events
|
|
that are coming up around the world or here's a promo that I heard in somebody else's podcast.
|
|
Let's make sure it's on FOS events. Let's make sure that HPR knows about it.
|
|
And that means just emailing the list. Is anybody going to this event, you know?
|
|
Can, can, would you consider someone who participates in such a thing as event coordination
|
|
or some such thing? Would you consider them exempt from submitting their one show over a year?
|
|
No, absolutely. That would be, that would be the contribution, absolutely.
|
|
All right, there you have it. And speaking of contributions, speaking of community,
|
|
and speaking of things we want people involved in, 5150, you wanted to talk about show 1024.
|
|
Right, first, I want to say, don't let Polka give you an impression that I've been doing
|
|
anything in the background, but this is an idea that I had the other day. I saw the dominer on
|
|
the episode tick over 900, and I put a mention out to the mailing list that, hey, 1,000 is coming
|
|
towards us this year. I've seen pictures of your cars. That's not the first time you've seen 900
|
|
tick over. Oh, I don't even buy them till they've, I don't consider it worth driving till it's hit
|
|
200,000. Okay, sorry, didn't mean to kill it. All right, so show, show 10,000 what to come up
|
|
or 1,000. But I put a mention out to the mailing list, we want to do anything for 1,000, maybe have,
|
|
I still think, be good idea if people will maybe record a congratulations and send it in.
|
|
But I think we want to do something a little more in that we've been talking about.
|
|
And so we're talking about putting together a panel podcast, not necessarily live, but I think
|
|
it might not be a bad idea if we could have a stream running and then have a forum set up so
|
|
folks could send in questions for the panel. But I wanted to see if we could set up a panel
|
|
consisting of some of the original hosts from today with a techie and Ben Rev and maybe the
|
|
first year or so of HPR. And of course a lot of them are still active, still recording HPRs and
|
|
some of them we haven't heard from in a while. It would like to get back in touch with. So this,
|
|
this, consider this is the initial shout out to those original hosts. I have several in mind
|
|
that I always enjoyed and hadn't heard from in a while. Well, I'm going to try to get in contact
|
|
with everybody. But we've got, I'm guessing, depending on if we go five or more days, a week podcast,
|
|
I guess we're looking at probably sometime in April that we're going to get to 1024. And I
|
|
should credit stankdog here. I skipped over that. I said 1000 and stankdog mailed in the mailing
|
|
was we really ought to do 1024. So we may want to make some kind of mention to 1000 when we hit that
|
|
but the celebration is going to be for show 1024. That is a fantastic idea.
|
|
Absolutely. Actually, what would be a good idea would be they let's contact the other podcast
|
|
people and see if they can send us in there. This is a blah, blah, blah from the blah, blah
|
|
podcast, wishing HPR a good, a good episode 1000. So I have a separate one for one or two four,
|
|
which would be the one that you are now responsible for organizing 5150. That's what I was going to say.
|
|
5150 is the organizer and maintainer of show 1024. He may not be able to be on it as he's told
|
|
me in the back channel. He may not be able to participate in the recording of the show. But he's
|
|
told me in perhaps other words that he's more than willing to organize the show and arrange what
|
|
happens. Well, I would very much like to be on the show just with my slow connection. I think we're
|
|
going to be limited to mumble again. I had an idea of maybe doing a doing on G plus on a hangout.
|
|
But I think my connection will drag everybody else down if we tried that. So
|
|
going going forward, I think I want to look at mumble. But I would like somebody to volunteer
|
|
and not poke and not can because they're busy enough. But if there's someone out there listening,
|
|
not to mention nobody likes us. Right. Uh, who'd like to volunteer to be a backup host because
|
|
in my situation, I've caretaker responsibilities. There's always a chance. Uh, you know,
|
|
I went patrol could come call me and tell me the herds out on the highway or something like that.
|
|
I, you know, in my situation, moments notice we are best laid plans. We schedule for
|
|
set time. Everybody's going to get together. And then where's 5150? And I don't want to
|
|
everything to drag off for my absence. But I do, I do intend, uh, if it all possible to host. But
|
|
it's what we probably want to do is find a time that's convenient for everybody to record the show
|
|
for the, for all the panel participants. And I, I did think it would be neat. And I, I hate to
|
|
commit, uh, Pac-Man music or anybody else to streaming. Uh, but if, maybe if we could stream
|
|
at the same time, but it's not, I don't want it to be like this big thing. Everybody coming in
|
|
the New Year's Eve podcast, but if someone has a question, that gives you a way for people to come
|
|
in, participate, and maybe go along cast planning. If we wanted to monitor that for questions,
|
|
also ahead of time, uh, just because maybe I'm not the best one to pick the greatest questions to
|
|
ask these luminaries who we hope to be, who hope to be coming in. If people can start sending in
|
|
questions ahead of time to, uh, the hacker public radio admin or to the mailing list,
|
|
or to, or to me, you can contact me. I'm, uh, 5150 written out, uh, frank India, frank, uh, tango,
|
|
yellow, uh, you know, like that, like that, the word 5150, no spaces, uh, at,
|
|
Linux based luminaries, which you just eliminated half the people who wanted to put
|
|
this thing. Well, some of the, how about any old guy who, who was an original guy, I don't
|
|
want to say any old guy, it's, it's actually, you guys mean a lot more to us than that. Um,
|
|
yeah, anyone who, who was even remotely involved in the founding of HPR and, and, and been rev and,
|
|
and, uh, today with a techie, sorry, today with a techie, yes. Um, that's right. I don't want to see
|
|
that today with a techie stickers, Pokey. I don't have any of them. Hello. Um, okay. Let's, uh,
|
|
write this up in the show notes. More information will be for coming to, there's a few things I'd
|
|
like to mention about the site. Um, if you go to beta, it does, um, hackupublicradio.org,
|
|
it's the hubby public radio.org instance is now running on the HPR website under beta, it does.
|
|
Oh, awesome. Yeah. We could go. I'm still having, um, some issues with that that I'm not comfortable
|
|
with going live. Um, I don't, there's something out with the WordPress instance. So that's why, uh,
|
|
in the foreground, you're not seeing massive changes there. One thing that I am going to be doing
|
|
is every host will be getting a, uh, your host name at hackerpublicradio.org in the feed rather than
|
|
your own live email address. And the reason for that is, um, I think, well, it's nice to get,
|
|
everybody will have a hackerpublicradio.org email forwarder. So in my case, uh,
|
|
can underscore, file on that hackerpublicradio.org will get forwarded to ken.fala at gmail.com.
|
|
There is no way to automatically do that. So whenever somebody sends you an email, uh,
|
|
I will set up the redirect. So I've asked the guys, um, to see if there's a way that we can automate
|
|
doing that. Um, maybe, uh, if I just do an export for a start or something will, and then
|
|
afterwards, um, when all get added, I can just add them manually. So that's that.
|
|
And I also updated the correspondence web page where there is, um, we no longer have account
|
|
of the number of shows that people have done. There is just the date of the last show that they have
|
|
done. That's, I think, that more reflects the community aspect of HPR. And one last thing was I put
|
|
the edited date on the calendar, um, text file. So you know, when it was edited last. So if you
|
|
uploaded a show and, um, the calendar has been edited since then, and you don't see your show,
|
|
please email me as some people have done so that they know what's going on.
|
|
That's it from me. 5150. Did you have anything to add?
|
|
Yeah. Uh, oh, um, thinking if we can set up a page or, uh, can just cover, uh, email addresses.
|
|
Maybe I can set something up. Uh, the project for 1024, uh, I didn't, uh, I didn't intend it that
|
|
way, but it just typed it in and came to me. Uh, we do, uh, we, uh, label our episodes,
|
|
EP and then a four digit number. So I typed in, happened to type in, I was going to call it
|
|
HPR 1K, but EP 1K, uh, looks like epic when you read it. So I think we're going to start calling
|
|
the, I, I don't want to turn into another epic podcast, but that's, that's my name for the project
|
|
is, uh, EP 1K. Love it. Love it. So we can refer to it that way for shorthand going forward,
|
|
and I guess if we can set up a page on, on HPR for that to coordinate and maybe an email address
|
|
that would, uh, help us get a start. We do have like four months, three months, uh, to get organized,
|
|
which is about as much time as I'll probably need. Awesome. Awesome. Thank you.
|
|
Can't be. That's how public radio don't require you on that going 5150.
|
|
Did you want just to go to, uh, my to forward it to me then? Yep.
|
|
Already set up now. Okay. I didn't catch every bit of when you were talking about that. So yeah,
|
|
it's just, uh, 5150 at linuxbasics.com, not linuxbasics, linuxbasement.com. Uh, and as always,
|
|
that just because I have a linuxbasement, uh, address that should not be construed as an endorsement,
|
|
uh, uh, uh, by chat or by Claudio, and they probably even forgot to give me that address.
|
|
And epic at act for public radio.org now forwards to you at 5150 at linuxbasement.org. So if you
|
|
email echo papa the number one K for kilo at act for public radio.org, it'll go to linux to uh,
|
|
5150. All right. Um, I think it's probably about time to wrap it up. Oh, is this,
|
|
unless anybody else has anything to add what you don't, uh, I would like to thank everyone for
|
|
listening to, uh, to the monthly review for January 2012 of hacker public radio. Um,
|
|
Ken and 5150. Thank you so much for joining me on this episode. This has been one of the most,
|
|
uh, fun times I've ever had recording upon a podcast. You guys have been really great. You said,
|
|
every time I, I love this. I love doing this. And you guys are so great. Just to talk to and chat
|
|
with and, and joke around with and, and you know, I mean, we're getting, you know, real work done,
|
|
but we're still goofing off with it and joking about it. And it's just, it's so much fun to do.
|
|
And you guys are so great. So, uh, thank, thank you guys for joining me on here. And thank you
|
|
to everybody for listening. And this is me. I am out. 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 a
|
|
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 dog pound and the
|
|
economical and computer cloud. HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com. All binref
|
|
projects are crowd-responsive by linear pages. From 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 comments, a tribute show, share a like, read those own license.
|