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186 lines
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186 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1602
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Title: HPR1602: An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1602/hpr1602.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:40:48
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---
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's Aniston Fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello, fine folks at Hacker Public Radio.
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This is Semiotic Robotic here with another open source news break from opensource.com.
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Joining me today is opensource.com content manager Jen Wike.
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Hi everyone.
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Here are just a few of the stories the opensource.com community has been discussing lately.
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First, in our life channel, community moderator and tech writer, Scott Nesbitt,
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asks an important question, is open data living up to the hype?
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To explore this question, Nesbitt brings us an interview with Nicholas Kaiser-Brill,
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co-founder of Journalism Plus Plus, an organization that helps journalists leverage open source tools
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to tell stories using large data sets.
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Kaiser-Brill walks readers through the open source technologies on which journalism plus
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plus tools are based and discusses the way open data gives new organizations a competitive advantage.
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He also offers a sobering warning to journalists working with so-called open data from governments.
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Governments don't open public data, says Kaiser-Brill. They simply select a set of non-controversial
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material that they publish online. Journalists should be extremely careful before reusing a data set
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that was proactively published by a government. They need to ask themselves, was a column removed?
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Why was this data set published? Are there other data sets on this issue that have not been made
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public? And quote, so great interview here from Scott. Great interview from Scott.
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Scott is one of our community moderators and he's a great writer and he also has a background
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in journalism. So this came in and was a great story based on open source for journalists.
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How did he hook up with this with Kaiser-Brill? Do you remember how he got in touch with them?
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I don't, I mean, how did this story come about? I'm not sure how it came about to be honest with you.
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Scott just has so many connections and stories in the works that this was just one of his many
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connections as far as I know and maybe he just knew the story was there and needed to be told.
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So he connected with Kaiser-Brill and got this great interview. Yeah, it was an amazing interview.
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I really enjoyed reading it and I'm reading a lot more about journalists now doing sort of
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data journalism. Data journalism is obviously a large trend right now and it's something that folks
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on our side, they come to our side looking for I feel like and it was just great to offer those
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folks something to read, which is great. And I guess as con, oh I'm sorry, go ahead.
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Yeah, I totally agree. We don't typically cover journalism but honestly the few times that we do,
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it does really well on the site. Our readers really pick it up. We covered .rive
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several months ago and that is a product that actually one of our local news reports came out with
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an open source data product. So it is great to see this content on the site.
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Really great. Yeah, really great. And I was at an open source conference about two years ago and
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it was almost entirely, it was a small conference but it was almost entirely computer science folks
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that were attending this conference. But there was a journalism professor there and I interviewed
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her for that conference. I said, what brings you here? And she said the future of open data is the
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future of journalism and vice versa. And she said open source values like transparency and
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collaborative storytelling and sifting through the ability to sift through open materials.
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Those values align very, very well with journalistic values from any era. So she was very,
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very interested in this thing called open source and so it was a great, she was a great person to
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talk to. And you can see that with, you know, in the very intro of this article, Nesbitt talks
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about the New York Times has recently unveiled an open source content management system and they
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also recently open source data editor. Yeah, that's right. That's right. If you get a chance to
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check those out, I did that earlier today and they're very interesting. Yeah, that sounds cool,
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very cool. So this must get you pretty excited when an interview that's this strong,
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comes in your content manager at opensource.com. So tell us a little bit about what that means.
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What does it mean to be the content manager of open source.com? What kinds of stuff do you do?
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So I maintain relationships with our writers. I am their port of contact. So they contact me and
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say, hey, I'd really like to write about this. What do you think? And so we brainstorm a little bit
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about topic ideas. I also just feel just straight up submissions that come into our web form,
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our contact submission form, and review those that give back to people. So basically,
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you know, taking articles and whatever stage they're in and turning them into publishable content.
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Right. Yeah, content ninja, right? I mean, you can do just about anything with anything as far
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as I've seen, right? We get stories from all over the world in all kinds of preparedness,
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from short paragraphs saying, I'd like to do a story about this from a full fledged. Here's
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an article that I just whipped up today and I want you to edit it and get it on the site. So,
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you know, we take stuff from from all over the place and all sorts of readiness.
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States of readiness. It's a fun job. It's challenging and I like it that way. Yeah, great, great.
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Next up is a tutorial first published by our friends at Fedora magazine writer Joe Brockmeyer teaches
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us how to use the open source command line tool pass to save and most importantly, to protect
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our passwords. It's never been a good idea to use the same username and password with multiple
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services, right? It's Brockmeyer. But in today's world, it's potentially disastrous. So Brockmeyer
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suggests the tiny but effective pass for creating an encrypted file containing all of your passwords.
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The application hooks into tried and true utilities like GNU PG and PW Gen to automatically generate
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difficult to crack passwords and stash them in a local encrypted master file. Users can even
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manage versions of this file with Gid. I've been using pass for some time now and it's been a
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life saver, Brockmeyer says. I hope it serves you as well as it has me end quote. So, Jen,
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how do you store your passwords? How do you remember them all? I used last pass. Last pass, okay.
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He was using a Google dot before and now using last pass. So I feel good about it. So in his last
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pass, I don't use last pass, but I've been meeting to to check it out. Does it automatically generate
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passwords for you? It does not. Okay. So you generate your own password and it stores it
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encryptedly for you. You know what? I shouldn't. I don't know 100% sure if it does not because it
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possibly could, but we, I did not do it that way. Okay. Gotcha. So you create your own and then
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you stash them in there and it encrypts them and keeps them safe. Right. Very cool. And so there's
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a pass phrase to get in. Right. Right. Right. And last pass. Is that open source? Is last pass
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a source? I don't think so. Oh, okay. All right. Great. So I know there's last pass and there's
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last pass. Which one were you saying? Last pass. Last pass. I thought there was another one called
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last pass, but I'll have to check that one out sometime. But, yeah. This is a, you know, podcast
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goal right here is Jen and I get on our computers and start googling and start googling for password
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management tools. But I could be very wrong. But last pass is what I've heard most people use and
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I think I'm going to get my parents on this. Right. And their Christmas gift is going to be a,
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it's a yearly subscription fee to use last pass or not. I'm using the free version. Okay. Okay.
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And it's, it's great. It, you know, pops up whenever you enter a password and ask you to save
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and then it remembers your passwords for you and. Gotcha. It's very convenient. Yeah. Well,
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this was a great, um, great article for opensource.com, uh, on pass and, uh, it did really well on the site.
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Right. It did very well. Yeah. Um, we occasionally repost content that's been previously written
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and published elsewhere, um, that might do well on the site with partners of ours and Fedora
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Magazine is one of those great partners. Um, and it did very well. We had a lot of people interested
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in passwords as is, I guess not too much of a surprise, you know, security is a big issue right now
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and we've seen some kind of crazy things happening. Yes. To passwords. So, yeah, it's top of mind,
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I think, for people. I think that's, uh, well put and, um, you know, I think that, uh, you know,
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doing it the open source way, doing password management, the open source way has been, it was a,
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it was a nice hook for people. Um, we had a lot of folks in the comments recommending their favorite
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tools. We had a lot of folks in the comments trying to, um, think about holes in the past system,
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right? So is this system secure? Here's, well, here's how, here's one way that it might be
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insecure, right? Right. Which is the great sort of cat and mouse mental game you get to play with
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yourself and with others when you're talking about any security solution or any kind of password
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management solution. But what's really great about this article is that it's, it's, um, it does
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a command pass as a command line tool. Uh, and so it's great for folks who spend a lot of time in
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the shell. It's great for folks who spend a lot of time in the command line. But the tutorial
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makes it super, super easy to understand, um, you know, Braggmire just did a great, great job,
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um, giving readers step by step instructions, which for our readers is something that we want to
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provide. I mean, opensource.com, obviously, interested in helping folks who are new to open
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source, who are exploring open source, um, and sort of empower them to, to learn more and to do
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more with open source tools. And that's why we love articles like this is because it, you know,
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the reason is, is because it takes something that seems like it could be a herculean task,
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like managing hundreds of passwords, uh, with that, with, from an interface that doesn't even
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have pictures, uh, and, and makes it so super easy. So I think that's another reason why I did
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really well. No, that's exactly right. A lot of what we try to do on the site is demystify open
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source. Mm-hmm. And so articles like this, um, help us do that. Yep. Well put.
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And finally, Jen brings us an interview with Zack Supala of open source electronics company,
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Spark, makers of Spark Core, a development kit for open Wi-Fi, on a Wi-Fi enabled devices.
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Supala explains his company's incredible success on Kickstarter and shows us its newest project,
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a nest-like thermostat you can build yourself. All the plans and the software are online.
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Just visit spark.io. I think that electronic, the electronics world has been proprietary for a long
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time, Supala told Jen, but open source is taking its hold and will eventually play a huge role,
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just like it does in software. The internet is built on open source underpinnings like
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GNU Linux, and I hope that soon the hardware world will be too, he said. Great interview.
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Great interview. Zack is an interesting guy doing some great stuff in open hardware,
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and if you get a chance to check out this article or check out spark.io, there's a neat video on
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homepage explaining how he's building some neat products for the internet of things, which is
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another topic of interest for people right now. Yes, absolutely. Absolutely. And not a day or two
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after we published this interview initially, when we initially published it, we read that spark
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did very well. It was raising some venture capital, $4.9 million. That's right.
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So there's a future in open electronics, I think. I think so too. It does seem like another
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interesting point on this interview is that Zack's father is deaf, and so that's where he got his
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start in his business to connect products and hardware. So in your interview, he's talking about
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that his initial design, and what was that design for his deaf father? It was called the spark
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socket. And he put that on Kickstarter. It didn't do so well, but he has a great point about
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Kickstarter is that you can learn what people want from Kickstarter. If it doesn't do well,
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it's not such a bad thing because you're testing your product with prototyping and iterations
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and the open source way of creating and building. So then he created spark core, which did wonderful
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and Kickstarter had, let's see, they were asking for 10k and they raised over $600,000 in 30 days.
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Yeah, in 30 days. That was obviously not too shabby. People wanted.
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Yes, right. And the thermostat, of course, really huge right now when we're talking about,
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you know, it says everybody's comparing it to NEST, right, the recent Google acquisition.
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But it's a neat little thermostat. Home automation is just, on everybody's mind right now,
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in terms of, because Google was introducing their sort of home management solution in their
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rumors that Apple's going to enter that market and home automation. And as you said, the internet
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of things earlier, it just really, really trendy right now, right? So, right, it's like it's the
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next big thing is, you know, how do we take the internet off of our laptops and into our homes?
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Right, right. And now you can build your own internet enabled appliances and electronics where
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all the code is open. So folks who are worried about, for example, whether or not their thermostat
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is collecting data about them and reporting it to advertisers or other companies can rest
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more easily now if they can build their own open source and open hardware thermostat, which is,
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which is really neat. It's also neat because you have the concern that things are going to be too
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expensive for everybody to have. And so, open sourcing them and allowing other people to build them,
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produces cost and hopefully opens up the technology to everyone. And what a cool project to do with
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your family, for example. Yeah, very fun. And then when people come over, I mean, the thermostat's
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out. It's out in the open. So people can comment on it. You can show it off. You can show off your
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project and it has some utility. You know, it's pretty neat. It's really neat. And there's, of course,
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as part of the article and the links we have coming from the article, you can see the thermostat
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in action. And you can see, you know, folks putting mirrors together and you can see, you know,
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the boards and the circuit designs and everything. Even the laser, the laser cutting, it's neat to watch.
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It is very neat. Well, folks, that's all for this open source news break from opensource.com.
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My thanks to openstores.com content manager Jen White for chatting with me today.
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Jen, while you tell everybody how they can get in touch with us and how they can submit their
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stories to opensource.com where they can find us online. Absolutely. Please do. If you would
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like to submit your open source story to us, please email us at osdc-admin at redhat.com.
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You can find those links at the top of our homepage at the submit your story page.
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And we would love to hear from you. Great. Sounds wonderful. And as always, folks, you can follow us
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on, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter at opensourceway. You'll find links to the stories
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we've discussed in this show, in the show notes for this episode. Until next time, HPR friends,
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this is semiatic robotic wishing you peace, love, and open source.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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