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356 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
356 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 796
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Title: HPR0796: Shane Marks Hacker Space Week Ireland
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0796/hpr0796.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:41:05
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---
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Hello ladies and gentlemen, first of all, I'd like to apologize for the clipping on my side of the interview today,
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but given the time condensed as Hackerspace Week is on this week,
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I don't think we'd have time to record the shows entirely in my fault and apologies to Shane.
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The second piece of news is that this week I'll be changing the RSS feed to updated to include the new RSS 2.0 features.
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So if you have an issue with the feed where you don't see a HBR episode coming in,
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or this is the last episode you see in your feed, I'd appreciate it if you could mail us,
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admin at hackerpublicradio.org so that we can get the problem fixed.
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Thank you very much.
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Hello everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and I'm delighted to have Shane Marx on the line here.
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Hello everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and I'm delighted to have Shane Marx on the line here.
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How you doing, Shane?
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Ah, not too bad, thanks very much.
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Listen, first of all, I'm going to apologise for not grabbing you for an interview.
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We met the first night in the pub, it's oddly enough to Irishmen and then a pub go figure.
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And I promised to grab you for an interview and somehow this will come as a shock telling about you.
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So yes, I'll grab somehow I manage not to not get you for an interview.
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So thanks very much for coming on the line here and giving us a quick chat about some hacker space stuff related to Ireland.
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So can you tell us a little bit about yourself before we start?
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Yeah, sure.
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So basically I'm mainly a programmer and I mainly actually doing in games programming and stuff like that.
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So I kind of just kind of got interested in Linux and stuff like that and kind of Linux outlaws and stuff like that.
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I met everyone through there and then kind of inadvertently got interested in hacker spaces and then found about Irish hacker space kind of seen.
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Eventually ended up joining the Nexus, which is the core hacker space and that's pretty much where I am now.
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So you are a system of the people's Republic of Korea?
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No, I'm actually from Waterford.
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I'm not working for Sydney over the county and then when I went to college, when I went to college then I moved to Korea.
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So it's surprising enough there's very little people in Korea actually from Korea.
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Yeah, you have that, I guess, in cities.
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Yeah, yeah.
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So first of all, let's just in case there's anybody on the line that doesn't know what hacker space is.
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Can you give me an idea of what a hacker space is?
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Yeah, sure.
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I mean, hacker space is different for everyone, I guess.
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But mainly it's just a bunch of people really interested in kind of making stuff or creating things or kind of free culture or open source.
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And it's just kind of a lot of what everyone's kind of working together to their own goals, I mean.
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And every space is a different kind of focus.
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I mean, some spaces do say biohacking, which is doing kind of biology and DNA and all that kind of stuff.
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And some do electronics and some do just mainly programming.
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And you know, it's all just kind of, I guess, everyone working together and sharing stuff.
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Yeah, and it's kind of more hardware-y, I guess.
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Yeah.
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And your chip load group, as well.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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It's an Arduino is really big and just doing electronics and stuff like that.
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I know above and the space in Dublin, they do like squeegee circuits and conductive fabrics and stuff like that.
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It's a really big and hardware electronics and everything up there.
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So how many hacker spaces are there in Ireland?
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I might get in trouble for remaining a number, but I think there is four.
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Maybe there is more.
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Yes, there's four that I know of.
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So there's the one in Dublin, which is Togdai, and there's the one in Limerick, which is a milk lab study.
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There is the one in Galway, which is a 0.9 labs.com or that idea.
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I'm not sure if you could start to do a finder.
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And then there is our space, which is the next space in cork, which is hacker spaces cork.com.
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Yeah.
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I see that. I'm on the site as we speak.
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So what could I expect if I, first of all, am I allowed to go over there?
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How do I go about joining the hacker space or checking it out?
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Yeah, I mean, most hacker spaces have a pretty open policy and showing people around.
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I mean, what we generally do is if you hop onto the IRC channel or the mailing list or if you even know someone,
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if you can just contact someone from the space and just say, hey, I want to have a look around or something like that.
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And someone will show you around that even during the hacker space, the IRC hacker space week that we're having now,
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we have a kind of beef and Greek kind of day on the Wednesday 24th.
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But in general, I mean, a lot, we run a lot of open days.
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So say there'll be an open day in Tog every, I think it's every week or two or something like that.
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And everyone's welcome to come and just tell show you around.
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And it's a really open environment.
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And in terms of.
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Yeah, go on.
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And I mean, if you want to join as a member, I mean, there is every kind of every space has their own different fees.
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It's usually between 20 to 40 or I mean, if you're a student, it's closer to 20.
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And if you're fully implied, it's 40.
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But others, some spaces run as well when when they reach the amount that they need to keep going,
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then they'll allow people to come in and still use the space.
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But they're incentivized to become members, but they're not forced because it's better to have someone there.
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Then have no one at all kind of as extra people.
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I mean, I know what you mean.
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It's a year or a month.
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It's per month.
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Yeah, it's, it sounds like a lot of money, but it's actually not that expensive.
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I mean, I knew someone who is in a space next to where the corkspaces and it was for air glue.
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And they were paying 40 euro a week for their space.
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And they got no materials.
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And all they had was a corner and they could work in there and it bring everything to themselves.
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And with spaces a lot different.
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I mean, you can use other people stuff provided day and how you and stuff like that.
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It's a very open environment.
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Yeah.
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So you haven't you mentioned you haven't an open week.
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Can you tell us a little about arguing having a week of events?
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When does that run from?
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Yeah.
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So basically all your Shackerspace week starts on Saturday, which is tomorrow.
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And they have this running for a whole week.
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And each space is running kind of their own stuff.
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So say we're running a film nice, which is showing creative comments movies.
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And we're actually showing this movie called Happy World Burma.
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The dictatorship of the third sorry.
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And it's actually a pretty interesting movie and it uses them.
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The library called Popcorn.js, which allows you to have like kind of an interactive movie.
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Sort of down on the side of the movie.
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It gives you all these interesting pieces of information that they can fit into the movie.
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And it's kind of an interactive movie, I guess.
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And we're also running a soldering workshop on Friday.
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And we're showing people around the space on Wednesday.
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I'm running actually a game development workshop on the Saturday, which is the last Saturday.
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It's an introduction to Love, which is this and Loua Framework for making 2D games.
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So I'm just anyone who wants to come around for that.
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And some of the some of the events are you have to pay if you're not a member.
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And others are free.
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Minus three.
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The obviously going around the space is free.
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But some of the other ones cost money.
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Yeah, tea and coffee.
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Yeah, there is.
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And in some of the spaces there is.
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I mean in talk they have actually a whole kind of drinks and foods thing.
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And you can you can buy food there in.
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The next is in court.
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We actually have we're actually part of a cannon palace, which is this big hotel.
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And it's not hotel anymore.
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So what they've done is they've divided all the spaces up.
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So say there's and there was a circus in there for well.
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And there's a lot of art people in there and so that.
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And they actually have a whole kitchen.
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Area side and so that it's really, really big area.
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So a lot of different people there.
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Fantastic.
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So I know this is limited to Thailand, but.
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Where would it go if I wanted to see if there was a hacker space around here in.
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And I'm around Amsterdam, for instance.
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Yeah, I mean, I'm actually pretty enough.
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I actually had the same kind of problem when I first kind of learned about hackerspaces.
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I was like, oh, maybe there's some in Ireland.
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I'm not really sure.
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So it's under searching.
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And the main takes I can seem to find is hackerspaces.org.
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And that has loads of information about different access spaces around basically the world.
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And they have lists of hackerspaces written on up there.
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So if you've got a hackerspace.
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Usually I haven't met a hacker face data that isn't on the list.
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You can just go to your country and find out if there's one there.
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There's a big Google map here.
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Yeah, there's a big Google map.
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And then it has all the lists and it's categorized by country and stuff like that.
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And it's really handy.
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It's how I found an access in the first place.
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And I have a fan talk and how I found the other ones.
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So one in Almeer, one in Utrecht, one in Amosfort, one in Amsterdam,
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but not one in Bus, Hilverson.
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And an opportunity for you.
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No!
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I have enough.
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Thank you very much for being with me.
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So how was your trip home?
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What did you think about Camp?
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I thought Camp was great.
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And I talked to a lot of people there.
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I talked to you about all the kind of crazy things that we were doing in the space.
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And all the kind of crazy ideas I had that I was working on.
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And I think the atmosphere was really open.
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And everyone was interested in talking about different things.
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I kind of mentioned to a couple of people of doing games.
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And they didn't really know a lot about games development.
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But we're willing to talk about it.
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And we're interested in learning more about it.
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And I think that was the kind of atmosphere throughout the whole thing
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that everyone was interested in.
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Do you have anything that I was related to kind of open source
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and just kind of, you know, to sharing and stuff like that?
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I'm not saying I'm sorry.
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No, that's okay.
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I'm very interested in the concept of hackerspace and hardware.
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I think I was telling you that I did my degree on computer interaction
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with, you know, hardware is mechanical engineering
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and electronic engineering interacting.
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So I kind of like the idea of getting my hands on some hardware.
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Yeah, I mean, the space in Dublin is great for that.
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I mean, it's so much fun when we got there last time.
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They do a lot of electronics there.
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And they were making like a lot of like, say, the conduct of fabrics.
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I had never really seen conduct of fabrics before.
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I kind of, you know, seen some articles on it before.
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But it really is really, really cool.
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And you can make kind of just really awesome stuff
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with like making clothes that light up when you do certain things
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or to certain people are making, say, where you can, you know,
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just, just all this kind of weird stuff that's just really, really fun
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to mess with electronics.
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It seems to be that every hackerspace has its own speciality
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would that be a fair assessment?
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Yeah, we were kind of talking with this one.
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I met a couple of guys from talk and I think every space
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is a total speciality.
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Like we have a lot of people who do like biohacking and say
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whether the guys is working on like kind of open source DNA.
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And stuff like that there.
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Okay.
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Yeah.
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You can then, I think his website is indivio.com.
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But you can read more about what he does there.
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But he's, so he's, he's him and the kind of the same group of people
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who do that kind of stuff are special to our space.
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And I don't know any space that even has that in Ireland.
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And then the guys in Dublin are really, they just do so much.
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I mean, I can really keep up with what they're doing.
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I mean, they have, they have a massive server room there like
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and they have like a dark room for photography.
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They have an electronics room.
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They even have like a room for books.
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I mean, it's, the space there is really amazing.
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It's really big.
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This is so much stuff happening there.
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Could you, for example, if you're self-employed,
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conduct your business from there or not?
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I'm not really sure now.
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I think it really comes down to what, I think it really comes down to what rules
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the space itself has.
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I mean, I think if you were there and you were making proprietary software
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to sell to people, I don't think too many people would accept that.
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But I think if you are working on something that's maybe open source
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and everyone's getting something for everyone's free food,
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I don't think anyone minds.
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I think it's just, most places I think are okay
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once you're not amusing the space is stuff that they provide to you.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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So it's fantastic, fantastic to hear about this.
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Let me have a look over in Ireland.
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I'm just pulling back here to the map.
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I can see the states is absolutely covered with dots.
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Europe is actually covered with dots.
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Yeah, yeah, it's pretty good.
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And during the week, well, we were in Ogcamp.
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CCC camp was on.
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I don't know if you heard anything about that.
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Yeah, yeah.
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I was, I was planning on heading for that, but Ogcamp came up by.
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I kind of had to pick my latent slot.
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So this was what CCC camp was?
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Yeah, CCC camp is a chaos computer camp.
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So it's kind of another conference.
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KKS computer conference is on around Christmas.
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And then this is on during the summer.
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So it's like a big camping kind of event.
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The same thing is KS computer if I guess.
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And there's, there's just lots of talks on the hackers faces.
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And then there's big massive like electronics tents.
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Arle, electronics, just hardware, hardware tents and stuff like that.
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And just, it's on a, it's not an airfield ground.
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I think it is.
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And it's just, it's a massive camping event.
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And it goes on for five days.
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And just really, if you want to meet a lot of the hackers faces from Europe,
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that's kind of where you would do it.
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And I know some of the guys from talk went over to do hardware stuff there
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and just kind of meet people in general.
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Yeah.
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I think a lot of this hackerspist office has also been promoted by O'Reilly,
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which it's Make magazine.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Make magazine.
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Yeah, make magazine and make our fairs really popular.
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I mean, a lot of actually hackerspaces called themselves makerspaces
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because they don't like the kind of connotation that comes with being called a hackerspace.
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So I know a lot of people to concept just.
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Yeah.
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So I know like, I think zero or nine one labs in Galway called them to a makerspace.
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Next is cork.
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We call ourselves a makerspace, even though almost all the members call it a hackerspace.
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It's just, they were added for official stuff because you know,
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just people don't really understand what a hackerspace is.
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But when you say a makerspace, they're like, OK, I don't want to know what a makerspace is.
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But I know what making stuff is.
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So I can kind of, yeah, I can take a guess.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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That is fantastic.
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I, I, what can I do to help you out here on the show?
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What, what message would you want to get the post to?
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Yes, I suppose if anyone's listening and they're in Ireland,
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I suppose they could check out any of the hackerspaces to see what's going on for the week.
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And if they're interested to come down and just take a look and you can just,
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you know, all the events are, you can attend any of the events and just,
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you know, just to try and get more of all, I guess, if they're interested.
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Just one thing.
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So I was, you know, I don't know backpacking across Europe or whatever.
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And I was a member of one hackerspace would, you know,
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they could be cute us to go into others and grab some internet time or whatever.
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Yeah.
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I mean, actually, there's this weird thing that some of the hackerspaces are working on to them.
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I don't know who specifically started it, but they're thinking about making this thing called a hacker,
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a hackerspace passport.
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And basically it's a passport.
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Then you can bring it around to different hackerspaces and get it stamped so that you were there and you were doing stuff.
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And, um, yeah, look, look at all the spaces.
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I mean, you're generally, you're generally more, more welcome.
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Or at least I get, I, at least it's the way I can see it.
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You're generally more welcome to spaces that you're not part of once you're part of one.
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I mean, you know, when, like, when I went up from, when I went up from, uh,
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off the talk and I wasn't there before, I mean, I was like, um, I'm the next.
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And they're like, oh, okay, cool.
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So, you know, it's kind of, you know, it's, it's, I guess it's slightly different from someone coming from a different space and someone walking off the street.
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Yeah.
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I know what you mean.
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Yeah.
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There's a, uh, yes, there's a, uh, I have a t-shirt on type thing.
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Yeah.
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You, you know, you know, you know, they're actually, yeah, you know, they're actually, you know, they're, they get what it's about.
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And you don't have to go around and explain to them what's happening and what space they're about and stuff like that.
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You know, yeah, yeah.
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And this is about 24 or 7 or does that depend on the, uh, space?
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Yeah, it depends on the hacker space.
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I mean, I know, the name escapes me.
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But the, the space and on the west coast of America, they just throw out keys to anyone.
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They don't care who has them.
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They just literally throw it about.
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They're really kind of, uh, pure, pure kind of anarchist, uh, hacker space.
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And, uh, so that place, you can access 24 or 7 with talk.
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I think, uh, it's, uh, there's a gate in front.
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So you need a key for the gate with the nexus.
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There's, uh, two doors.
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So cause it's part of the building.
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Uh, so you need a key building and a hacker space building.
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And most members have the hacker space key, but they don't have the building key yet because it's just, it takes time to kind of get keys for that.
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So once you've bought, you can access any time.
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It's empty with nearly any space, but just for anyone who doesn't have the keys, I mean, it's, you know, whenever someone's there, I guess.
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An ideal location for Erbring Camping Club 2.
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I say, uh, what's formation from the hacker space, I guess.
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Yeah, I guess so.
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I mean, in terms of big spaces, I guess.
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Uh, yeah, yeah.
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So cool.
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Well, listen, thanks for the much for, um,
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common online.
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And how can people get in touch with you?
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Um, I mean, if anyone goes on to the mailing list for hacker space, uh, nexus, they'll probably see me posting her.
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Cause I'm always talking crap on the, uh, the mailing list of people.
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Or you can, um, you can follow me like an identical, uh, S marks on identical.
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So, yeah.
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Perfect.
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We'll have a link in the show notes.
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Listen, Shane, thanks very much for, um, coming on and having an interview.
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It was, uh, it was nice to meet you at the, uh, odd camp.
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Um, uh, we'll call it today.
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Um, ladies and gentlemen, you can tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode here on hacker public radio.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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For more information on the show and how to contribute your own shows, visit hackerpublicradio.org.
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