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161 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
161 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1726
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Title: HPR1726: 15 Excuses not to Record a show for HPR
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1726/hpr1726.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:17:36
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---
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This is HDR Episode 1726 and titled 15 excuses not to record a show for HDR.
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It is hosted by Nightwise and is about 19 minutes long.
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The summary is, inspired by a recent meeting with Ken Fallon.
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Nightwise presents 15 excuses not to record a show.
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This episode of HDR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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On the edge of real and cyberspace, there's one place you can go.
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Welcome to Nightwise.com
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Tired of choosing between Max, Linux, and OSX, listen to the Nightwise.com podcast
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and learn how to decide from operating system to operating system using our
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hack tips and tweets for cross-platform geeks.
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Two tech into your way of life and let technology work for you instead of the other way around.
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Hello, Heiko Public Radio. This is Nightwise, checking in with the show for HPR
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entitled 15 lame reasons why not to record a show for HDR.
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This show was inspired by me meeting Ken Fallon and some of the other HPR crew
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on the latest episode of Fostim and Ken telling me about the fact that he needs more shows
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and people don't record shows and why don't people record shows.
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So I thought, you know what, I'll create something, a little show a sound bite that
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Ken can use to slap people around who say that they cannot record a show for one of the following
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15 reasons. So here we go. 15 lame reasons why not to record a show for HDR.
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15 lame reasons why not to record a show for HDR.
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Reason number one, and you have the right gear.
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Roughly translated, I don't have the right gear.
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Buhu, you don't have the right gear. You don't have a twitch brick house. You're not
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little apart. You might not have a plop filter, a pre-amplified condenser microphone,
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a 24-slide mixer, or I don't know your own space station orbiting the earth where you can record
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your shows in silence. I don't care. You don't need a lot of gear. Do you have a device
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that can record audio digitally? Like for example, your phone or an MP3 player or your computer?
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Well, that's good enough. If you can record on it, record on it. Okay, the quality might not be
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so high fidelity like it was recorded in Abbey Road Studios in London, but we don't care.
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It's about the content. Case in point, I'm recording this on a 11-inch chrome book running
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Ubuntu on the side and talking into my Apple earbuds. That is what I'm recording on.
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Lamex used number two. It doesn't sound improvised. Translated, it doesn't sound so polished.
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No, it doesn't sound so polished. There might be some umbs and urbs there. There might be
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some background noise. You know what? We like that. We don't really care for shows that,
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you know, we like shows that are well produced, but they don't have to be because with HPR,
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it's all about the content. And let's face it, there's nothing more fun than listening to
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somebody do a show and then suddenly hearing in the background, honey, you left the toilet seat
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up again. Which is absolutely brilliant. It are these little things in the background that don't
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make it sound polished that make you sound human. And that is something HPR listeners relate to
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other humans. So please don't be the next Adam Curry and make it sound all super polished.
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It's good the way you do it. You're human. We appreciate it.
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Reason number three. I don't know how to upload. Well, you've recorded a show and you don't know
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how to upload. Go to the HPR site and it is explained to you in ridiculous detail. If ridiculous
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detail is not enough, go to the HPR IRC channel and wind about the fact that you cannot upload,
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you have great content and there is no way you can submit it to HPR. Can Fallon will pull on
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blue tights, is red cape and fly over to your house to help you. Next excuse.
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Translated. I don't have a radio voice. Well, it's a good thing you don't have a radio voice
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because everybody at HPR would sound like this. You don't need a radio voice. You need a human voice.
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You have to be intelligible so we can understand what you're saying. But I don't care if you sound
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like an umpalumbai who has his testicles caught between a vice. As long as I can understand what
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you're saying, I don't really mind your voice. It's the content. Next excuse.
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You don't have the time. Interesting you don't have the time. I am here in the morning
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in between a quick coffee because I left early from home to beat traffic and a business meeting.
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I have exactly 20 minutes record this show. I make the time. It doesn't have to be an audio
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version of the Lord of the Rings that you're going to record. Something short and sweet is
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good as well. Next reason. I'm shy. What was that? I'm shy. Oh, you're shy. Well,
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recording a show for HPR is the perfect way to get out of your shy zone because you are behind
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a microphone. Nobody can see you. You can record as many times as you want until you think that you
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have it right down to a tee and want to submit it. This is a great way to hide behind the curtain
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and still be the powerful wizard of Oz. You're shy. Use HPR to get over it. Perhaps you can
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later on even talk to girls or other boys or girls or other girls or other humans or non-humans
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or animals. I don't care. Use HPR as a kind of a soapbox to stand on and share your content.
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You'll get good feedback and that will help you get over your shyness. Believe it or not, it's true.
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Now, reusing gear like this is interesting, especially when your screen locks.
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And I have to lock it in our record. Next reason.
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Translated. I don't have anything to say. Well, we'll be judged that you don't have anything to say.
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Just pick something that you're enthusiastic about, whether that be electronics, tech, internet,
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cyber stuff, hacking, or the fact that you love strawberry racing, where you actually race
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life strawberries across a maze. No matter how strange your topic is, there will be somebody who's
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interested. And if they're not, they'll just skip your episode. That's the great part about HPR.
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Next reason.
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The stuff I know about is really niche and nobody is going to be interested.
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Again, if it's strawberry racing, that's your thing. Tell us about it.
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Perhaps we don't know it exists and we are very interested. Perhaps we're not interested and
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then we'll just skip your episode. Try it. Try us. Record a show about life strawberry racing
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and see how popular it is. Next excuse.
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Translated. What if I get negative comments?
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Well, my dear boy, slash girl, grow a pair. Grow a pair of testicles or whatever goes to
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goes for a sense of, you know, being able to hold your own on the internet. What if you get negative
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comments? Probably you won't. And if you do, well, just deal with it. Everybody likes or dislikes
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a show and if there are trolls out there, we'll beat them up for you. Next excuse.
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Who would listen to my show anyway? Again, we'll be the judge of that. If you don't submit
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one, nobody will listen to your show anyway. So if you submit it, somebody listens to it and you
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thought, what the hell was this about live strawberry racing? He might not have liked the episode,
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he might found it weird, but he will be entertained and somebody will have listened to your show.
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It's not a reason not to record one. If you don't record one, nobody will listen to it.
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Then the five final excuses, what I call the procrastinational ones.
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Translated, I've never done this before. Well, yes, you've never done this before.
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We never walked on the moon before. That doesn't mean we didn't try and we did. So if you haven't
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done this before, do it the first time, just do it and you'll be rid of this excuse. Next excuse.
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Oh, you'll get around to it someday. And when someday, when the HPR feed has been silent for
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months and everybody has stopped subscribing because nobody has submitted a show, because
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everybody said, we'll get around to it someday. Well, someday might be tomorrow or the day after
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that, but I prefer someday to be today. Next excuse. I recorded a show and things to me.
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I recorded a show, but I'm too afraid to submit it. Yes, I know where you are. You've recorded
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a show and you've listened to it over and over and over again. And you thought, oh my god,
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I sound so lame. Well, that's in your head, not in ours. Just submit it. It doesn't have to be
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perfect. Please, as my old boss used to say, and he was Dutch, and the Dutch guys will understand.
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Her best is the valence of the Toute. The best is the enemy of the good. If you keep looking for
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perfection and cutting out things and re-recording and re-recording and re-recording,
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you'll kill the spontaneity of it and you'll also kill the chances of you ever being satisfied
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with what you do, because you will never be satisfied with what you do. We might be perfectly
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satisfied with you too. Just submit one. If you don't fart halfway through and we can hear it on
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the microphone, that's fine. If you do fart halfway through and we can still hear it on the
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microphone, that's even better, so please submit it. It takes me a long time to connect and uh.
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Translated, it takes me a long time to edit out all the ums and the urs. Well, then don't.
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I don't care if you say um and ur. If I talk to regular people and they say um and ur,
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I don't slap them around with a keyboard and I say you better edit out those ums and urs,
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because it really annoys me. Everybody says ums and urs, because it's human your brain has to
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look for information and then go um uh uh and then submit it. It's the natural flow of conversation.
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You're not, you know, voicing an audio book. You're doing a podcast. Ums and urs are fine.
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And the final episode and the final excuse, sorry, see, even I make mistakes. I don't cut them out,
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I just do it. I don't know, I love you editing it. Your excuses are becoming more and more uh
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susceptible to me, but what I could make from that is I don't know enough about audio editing yet.
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Well, if you can press the big red button, you can record and you can save the file
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and you can submit it, I think that you know enough about audio editing. You don't have to be
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somebody who masters all the filters and the compressors and all of the ding dangs that make
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you sound like the freaking voice of God. If you can cut out the big the bit in the beginning
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where your wife is saying, honey, you left the toilet seat up and the stuff in the end where you
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say, oh my god, I finally did it. Internet fame is mine. Then and you can you know,
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save and export that and upload it. We're happy. You don't have to be an audio editing wizard.
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Just record a freaking show. So that's my submission to HPR today. It's not a perfect show. You
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might hear some crackling and some overmodulation. It's not the perfect audio quality. It's not
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the perfect voice. I even have an accent because I'm not a native speaker and I even have
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ums and urs and I made some mistakes and still I submit the show because the content is important.
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I make mistakes that makes me human that makes you guys relate to me.
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And that is what HPR is all about. I have talked about an obscure topic. That's something you
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might not know about yet and you might be interested in now. I have not talked about life's
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strawberry racing. I'm sorry, I'm not really familiar with life strawberry racing but I would
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love to listen to an HPR episode of somebody doing an episode about that. This episode is short.
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It's not as long as the audio version of the fellowship of the ring. That's okay.
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So you see, I've debunked a lot of lame excuses and most important one is I've submitted a show
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to HPR and that is what important. See, errors. That is what is important because that keeps
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HPR going. It keeps you guys interesting and it keeps Ken Fallon from going absolutely insane.
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Until next time, this was Nightwise from the Nightwise.com podcast,
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podcast with hacks, tips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks over at www.nightwise.com saying there are
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no excuses not to record a show for HPR.
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Nightwise.com, the podcast with hacks, tips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks.
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Tired of choosing between Max, Linux and OSX? Listen to the Nightwise.com podcast and learn how
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to decide from operating system to operating system using our hack, tips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks.
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To attack into your way of life and let technology work for you instead of the other way around.
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You've been listening to HECKAPublicRadio at HECKAPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it
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really is. HECKAPublicRadio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com. If you have comments on today's show,
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please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative comments,
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attribution, share a light, 3.0 license.
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