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185 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
185 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 873
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Title: HPR0873: Philip and Rebecca Newborough of CrunchBang
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0873/hpr0873.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 03:53:26
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---
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profit.
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Hello ladies and gentlemen, my name is Ken Fallon and I'm here at Aug Camp 11, standing
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outside in the cafe, people on a Sunday and I'm here with Philip and Becky, who you might
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know as, what's your handle?
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Corn almanoe.
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Corn almanoe.
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And you might know them, who play online as the inventors of crunch-bang linux, would
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that be correct?
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Yes.
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So take us back, take us back to the start when you decided one morning that you wanted
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to develop a linux distra.
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Well, see, this is where I fail, I'm rubbish at speaking about these.
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Well, I got out of bed, I had some breakfast, I don't know.
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No, well.
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No problem, let's go back further, when did you get into linux, when did you get into,
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when was your first computer?
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My first computer, okay, that was probably a Commodore 16, or a Commodore, yeah, Commodore
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16, so yeah.
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And then I progressed from that to Commodore 64, then I didn't use computers, I didn't
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touch computers until rarely, and all through school or college, but when I came out of
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college I got interested in computing and purchased a PC from, you know, High Street Retailer
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down the street, you know, just down the High Street, it was a very early 486 DX2, maybe,
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something like that if I remember right, so probably had about a mega ram in it, and,
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yeah, I bought that for playing X-Wing, which was a brilliant game, X-Wing, and then TIE Fighter,
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because the big Star Wars found, yeah, and then progressed from playing games, which
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I don't play games at all anymore, unfortunately, to just dabbling with a bit of web design
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and stuff, that was very early, that was on Windows, and then I picked up a job working
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in doing web design professionally, and found that I was using linux more and more on
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the server, and I think it was just a natural progression going from the server to the desktop,
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so, and now I'll just use the next full time, too.
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Okay, and I kind of know the story of a behind-crunch bank, so you're scratching your own
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niche, or was it some other need that you wanted to do your own district?
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Yeah, I know very much scratching my own niche, it's, at the time, I was using Ubuntu,
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but with open box instead of the default no installation, and I've got a fair number
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of computers, probably like a lot of geeks and stuff, so I decided it might be fun just to
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try and build an ISO image so that I could put crunch bank, or want even name crunch
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bank, then it was just so I could put the same set up on all my systems, really quite easily,
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and yeah, that's how I started.
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And was it your personal preference?
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Had you gone through GNOME, had you gone to Kitty, what made you select the window manager?
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Can you tell everybody what the crunch bank is essentially?
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Well, crunch bank is just a rip-off of, it's a rip-off of what I was a rip-off of Ubuntu,
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but just with open box as a window manager on top, and then,
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well, open box is all XFCE, so I'm not, well, at the moment I'm preferring XFCE,
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but it was just set up a lot differently to the default Ubuntu distribution at the time,
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so whereas Ubuntu would chip with quite a lot of pre-installed software,
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the idea behind crunch bank that it would maybe not have as much software on it,
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and you could just select what you wanted after you'd done the install.
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I like the, I'm running out of the home, obviously.
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Obviously, I don't work, it's cool, one big terminal window.
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Where did you get all the artwork and design from?
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Most of the artwork is contributed through the community, through the forums and stuff like that,
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so the actual artwork, the shifts with, I don't mean you really call it artwork, could you?
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Yes.
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Right.
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What are we talking about, like the wallpapers?
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Yeah, wallpapers, the look and feel, how the windows are all tall, the black, the white,
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the hatch sound. Where did the crunch bank come from, by the way?
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Ah, well, the crunch bank, it's a, again, a bit of a rip-off of the Shabang,
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obviously, with, well, crunch bank was the name that I chose for my personal domain,
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for my blog and stuff, and I didn't really have a name to call, you know, a Linux distribution,
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if you can call it that, so it just became crunch bank, you know, Linux.
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Sorry, so I mean, developers are working on crunch bank at any given time?
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Well, you got all the devian developers at the moment, as it's now based on devian,
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so thank you to all the devian developers, and me.
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Oh, and, well, that's, yeah, it's not really, we don't really have any shared repositories
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or anything that people can, you know, contribute to, but the main idea behind crunch bank is
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somebody will run it, and then if they want to contribute a script or something like,
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you know, a menu item or something, they can just include it, they can post it on the forums
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and it will get included. I think we've got a chap called John Raff on the forums,
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who's contributed a pipe menu for open box, so now you, that will navigate your file system
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just for the open box menu, so that's the stuff like that, you know, you can post it in a forum post
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because it's just a script basically, and, you know, if people like it and vote it up,
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they'll get included. Okay, fantastic. I think you're kind of unique,
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unique as a small distro to have a dedicated community manager,
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so I'll talk to the community manager here, how are you doing?
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I'm fine, thank you, how are you?
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Can you tell me how you got involved in the project?
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I married the lead developer.
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I think that's really showing your commitment to the open source philosophy.
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Yes, definitely. No, I do everything to support Philip and, you know,
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and the project, let's say community manager, I go on to the forums,
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we'll create the forums, we've got an excellent forum community,
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it's like when you said about who are the developers,
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and Philip quite rightly has said, you know, the Debian developers,
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but equally, the community, they contribute, even with just the ideas,
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you know, as in what packages the next relationship with,
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they will give us ideas.
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I think in the greater broadcasting community,
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the crunch bank forums are well known for the friendliness,
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and the speed of reply to any of the polls.
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How much time a week do you dedicate to crunch bank?
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For me, daily, I go on there every evening, you know,
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checking for welcomes, introductions, you know,
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just general housekeeping around the site and that,
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and same for you, really, isn't it?
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It's with us daily.
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Yeah, I'm not dedicating as much time as I should do at the moment,
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so I apologize to everybody.
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Okay, that's cool.
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Anything else you want to add? What's coming in the future?
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What's coming down the pike?
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Well, at the moment, I'm working on,
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well, the current release, the stable release called Staller,
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that's based on the Debian squeeze.
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I've been working on a point release.
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It's probably, I might upset a few people,
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because it'd probably be only XFCE, mainly because, you know,
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I've got, yeah, that's quite exclusive, I suppose.
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I don't know, I'm told anybody.
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So mainly because I don't want to get lynched.
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But the, well, the thing is,
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open box remains the most popular of the two versions,
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because we have an open box in the XFCE version.
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But the problem is, I mean, I'm not,
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I'm not used, you keep pushing that microphone,
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it's closer and I keep moving away.
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I've not used open box consecutively.
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Well, I'm not used it really properly for maybe
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the six months to a year.
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I've been using, well, I've been, I'm actually,
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don't tell anybody this.
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Oh, no, you're sick of safe with us.
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Well, my works machine at the moment is running
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Ubuntu Natty and Unity, because I installed it just as,
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you know, have a look, see what they're doing.
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I quite liked it and it's stayed on there.
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But I mean, I've had enough of it now and I'm moving back to,
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well, I've installed statler with the XFCE version.
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And I'm actually working on putting out a point release,
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which is going to tidy that up and just include some
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nice, hopefully some nice little features
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that we're missing in the XFCE version,
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which were previously in the open box version.
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Okay, I guess this is such a personal project to you.
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What, what do you do if you decide, okay,
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I don't want to do this anymore.
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I'm tired of this.
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Do you feel like this is becoming a ball and chain
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around your restriction, your use of other software?
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No, not so much a ball and chain.
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I mean, the thing is, I'm going to use it anyway.
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So, but I do find that I work quite intensively
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for, say, six months and then I'll take a break.
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So, you know, just to try and avoid, well,
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burnout, I suppose, you could call it.
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Anything else?
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No, that's fine.
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Listen, thanks very much for the interview and thanks.
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Yeah, yeah, sure.
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So, a big shout out to OMS and Anonymous
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and all the other forum moderators and stuff on the forums.
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You guys are great and, you know,
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the forums really wouldn't exist without them, wouldn't they?
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No, so huge thank you for me as well to the guys.
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Fantastic, and thank you for me.
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