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263 lines
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263 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2255
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Title: HPR2255: The Good Ship HPR
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2255/hpr2255.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 00:28:52
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,255 entitled The Good Ship HBR.
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It is hosted by Dave Morris and is about 26 minutes long and carries an exquisite flag.
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The summary is, HBR is a wonderful yet fragile project completely dependent on a steady flow
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on shows from hosts.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello everybody, this is Dave Morris and welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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HBR is the subject of today's episode.
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I've called it The Good Ship HBR and the reason why will become apparent as I continue.
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In case you don't really know much about HBR perhaps you just picked this episode up
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and wondering what it's all about.
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I thought I'd start by introducing it a little bit, you might not know all the ins and outs.
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So what is it? It's a pretty amazing thing actually.
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I've known it for a number of years now but it was quite astonished when I found it.
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It's been producing one episode a day every week day for quite some time and all the episodes
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that year on HBR originate from the community. I had somebody refer to HBR as crowd sourced
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which I thought was a pretty nice idea. Nice way of putting it because it is.
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The community of listeners has listeners and others actually has sort of transformed into people
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who've contributed shows and that host community continues to grow and to produce shows.
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And the shows are open access. They're under creative commons and licenses of various sorts.
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CCBISA is the default. The content is very broad. It says that content is all of interest to hackers
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but well first you have to define what a hacker is and then you have to define all of interest
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and that leaves you with a lot of possibilities. A lot of people have interpreted it in a wide
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variety of ways. So you can get to all the shows through the HBR site. You can go all the way back
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to episode one and there you can see the whatever notes there are and read them and you can play
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the show. There are also feeds that you can download stuff to a podcast or pod catcher and you can
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get shows. You can also get stuff by series by the comments that people submit to shows. You can
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also follow email through feed. We're in the process of uploading things to archive.org.
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At the moment within a few days of appearing on the feed, the main feed that is shows are uploaded
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and we're gradually working backwards through the older shows and uploading them. So what we
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want to achieve is to have everything on archive.org. So if you want to look up show 1999 for example
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on archive.org, I've put the URL of what you would need but it basically ends with HPR1999.
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And you can also browse the entire HPR collection that's been uploaded and you can search it too
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on archive.org. We can't do searching very much on the HPR site but it's something we're working on.
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So I thought it was worth just mentioning some of the history of HPR other than what I've already
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said is which is quite general. There's a website stats page which is not very, not a very
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friendly page but it does give you information about what's happening on HPR and when it was
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created and that sort of stuff. So HPR itself was actually came into being as HPR nine years ago
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but it was preceded by today with the techie 11 years ago. You can see the actual dates and so forth
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in the file. I've put them in the notes as well and there's long notes which I've added to this so
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that you can read the contents of essentially what I'm saying. I'm not reading them out to you. I'm
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just sort of ad-libbing off them but you'll get the general just so you can read it again if you want
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to rather than listen to me. I've also produced them as a EPUB version. A ChoZEPUB because I find it
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more usable. It didn't bother with PDF. So the frequency of show release wasn't what we have now
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five per week every weekday. There were gaps and sometimes there were quite long gaps and occasionally
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there were shows coming out the weekend in the early day but I did a little scan through the database
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to see where the gaps occurred and there were quite a number of them but I didn't do a complex analysis
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of them and I should say I would have liked it but stability of five shows a week every weekday
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happened in October 2012 and there have been no gaps in thin which I think is quite significant.
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It's a very important feature. It is something you can rely on and it's something we want to
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maintain is the reliability of HBR's show release cycle is something that really I think should
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continue and that's one of its selling points I think. So there are currently 280 people hosts as
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we say who have contributed shows throughout the history of HBR and just now in February 2017
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show number 2230 has been released which is pretty impressive. That's a lot of shows. We will
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incorporate the today with a techie shows and hosts into the into the system and the archive
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in due course. So HBR has been pretty good. It's been very successful over the years however there's
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a certain fragility in the way that it works and that's the reason for for doing this episode.
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So let's look at that. What's the fragility? What's the problem? Well the big gotcha is that HBR
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needs a steady supply of contributions to keep doing that thing of releasing one show every weekday
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and sometimes the supply nearly dries up. So HBR needs five shows a week, 52 weeks. That's
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260. It's not precisely that number but it's around that area depending on the number of days in
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year and where they align and so forth. I did say here that given that we've got 280 people registered
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there if all of them provided a show per year, one show per year we'd be fine we would have no
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problems with shortages but the rate of supply is not reliable unfortunately. Sometimes there are
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plenty of shows in the queue at this precise moment there are plenty but at other times the
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supply dwindles and the future HBR looks very much in doubt and that future I think it needs to
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be said the future of HBR in terms of reliability of producing a show per day every weekday.
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We do keep a small buffer of emergency shows which are there in case there's a gap in the
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schedule 24 hours prior to release so if the next next day has not yet been filled the next slot
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then we would use one of the emergency shows there's only eight in that queue we don't
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want to have too many anyway because they they need to be special in that they they sit around
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for a long time so they need to be timeless in some form. There's been debate over whether we
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should even be keeping it an emergency collection at all. At the moment the decision has been yes
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so we are. So I started thinking about this well actually in 2015 I started thinking about this
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it's another show that has taken me an enormous length of time to get to and get done but when I was
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planning doing this planning for this in reality actually writing stuff HBR just been through
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quite a crisis in terms of the supply of shows there were just a few left and it was about to run out
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we put out emergency appeals for for shows and people stepped up and provided showed as a consequence
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it was really good to see but then things went quiet and the state of shortage started to loom again
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it didn't become quite as severe but it took another appeal on one of the monthly community
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new shows to to restart the flow then another shortage occurred in August 2016 and so it went on
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and this is how it does go on you only need to look at the calendar page I've linked to it where we
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keep a diagram a plot of the peaks and troughs in supply and you'll see it's a sawtooth. HBR is an
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example of what tended to be called community internet radio it's not radio at all really because
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it's narrow casting rather than broadcasting but that was the term that was around nine years or
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so ago and it's still a useful thing to refer to but in particular the way that things are for HBR
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is that we see a feast of shows followed by a famine followed by a feast and so on and so forth
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now the reason that the goodship HBR idea came up was in a recent conversation about the problem
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I likened our situation to being in a leaky ship the ship is always in danger of sinking unless
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we keep emptying the water out by Bailey there are at least 280 crew members who have buckets and
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can help with emptying the water but there's also there are also many more passengers who could
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grab a bucket and join in so everyone needs to take a turn it's not reasonable to expect just a
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few crew members to keep the ship from sinking beneath the way so there is a certain need for
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the listeners and existing hosts to step up and provide more shows for HBR so I reiterate here the
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the fact that we had this rather desperate situation run about the 12th of April 2016 and we had to
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go into emergency mode to put out requests for more shows we had people stepping up to help and that
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was that was wonderful but it's not really the the way we wanted it but it's not the way to run
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using the ship analogy again you can't get the point where the water is washing over the decks
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before we start bailing it needs to be a constant process I thought it would be useful to look at
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some of the statistics that I collected yeah today today I put today's date in the in the
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the notes I'm not going to go into a lot of detail there because it gets quite tedious and I've
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made some table see that you can look at so in the last I've computed the number of hosts in the
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last 12 months and the there have been 67 hosts not all new that have contributed to the 260 shows
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that have been needed in that period so 67 people have contributed shows in the last 12 months
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but in that in that period we also had 22 new hosts and they've done their first show in it and
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in several cases have gone on to contribute more totaling 56 shows in total between them so I've
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got a table that shows the number of people contributing greater than 10 shows between five and 10
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shows and less than five shows over that year period and the number of shows each group has
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produced as a consequence and what percentage that represents in relation to the need for shows
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over that period so just to skim through it quickly five people did over 10 episodes in the last
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year producing 87 episodes which is 33% of the requirement there were 10 people contributed
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between five and 10 shows and that produced 73 episodes which is 28% the remaining 100
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shows came from people who were contributing one show and less than five show obviously one show
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why did I say that and so there were 52 people who did that 100 shows that was 38% of the of the need
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the requirement for that period I made some other analyses of things going on I showed the number
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of new hosts arriving joining within calendar years remember that HPR was begun in 2007
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31st of December in fact so there was only one day for it in 2007 so we had one new host in that
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that time it was our founder stankdog and then after that there have been different numbers of hosts
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joining per year obviously 2017 we're only into February so far so we've only got two hosts
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today but in other times we've got a various numbers 47 in 2008 we've got 2016 had 22 I'll
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leave you to look at that it just gives some idea of the the rate or at which people are joining
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and contributing shows at least contributing their first show so how do we solve this shortage problem
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this this issue has been kicked around a little bit but I thought it was useful just to
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trying to collate things together and have a further brainstorm about how to to deal with it
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there aren't any simple solutions obviously people are contributing episodes and the HPR project
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is still going but it's the steady state that we want and we're not getting and we recognize this
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problem for as long as HPR has been around I guess nobody's really found a solution I've got a few
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thoughts and comments here to try and raise awareness and get suggestions from the community
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thought I better start with some assumptions and caveats thinking about this I keep on falling
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into ways of thinking which are not quite right and I thought it's worth just spelling these out
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spelling out the things that you need to have clear in your mind there is an attrition process
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amongst contributors so there's a proportion of the host population that have done one show
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and then never been seen again others have done maybe more than one up to quite some several
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and then effectively disappear I won't name any names but I could do obviously because I had to
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analyse the show release dates and hosts in order to come up with this sort of stuff so the fact
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that there is an attrition process means that we do need to be recruiting new hosts and
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but HPR continues to function because of repeated contribution from people so we can't just function
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on the basis that we want new hosts and a new host by definition brings with them a show but we
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need there to be more than that one so encouraging existing hosts to continue contributing shows
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is one of the things that we need to do in order to continue and solve for shortage HPR needs listeners
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and it needs to have a reasonably high visibility and but in terms of the supply of episodes
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contributors are more important than listeners though ideally said all listeners if all listeners
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were contributors that would be wonderful one thing that hadn't quite occurred to me until recently
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is that not all contributors necessarily listened to HPR some people might have heard of it
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in passing and want to produce a show they might use it as a springboard to doing something else
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doing a podcast of their own or something like that or they might just like the HPR concept and
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want to make their own mark by producing a podcast I mean there is something quite nice but being
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able to say that you have produced a podcast a show an episode of your own and it can be heard
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in perpetuity on HPR and on archive.org so my next topic was raising the profile of HPR and this
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was really following on from what a show that Drupes did 2035 he did a show I think the argument is
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the more HPR is known about the more listeners they'll be the more listeners there are the more host
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there are likely to be though listeners and hosts don't don't correlate necessarily not everybody
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you he listens wants to contribute and the more hosts we get the more new hosts we get the more
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shows there will be was one of the the think one of the pieces of thinking here though that's not
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as clear as you might think as I've already said so just to skim through the points that Drupes made
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he was suggesting that we transcribe shows so there was a written written notes that's a huge
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task it's a massive task I can't honestly see how we can achieve that it's it's more than more
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than I could take on and I suspect there won't be many people who would want to to get involved
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with that I can't think of an automated way of doing it he suggested we get well-known podcasters
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to guest hosts or advertise advertising I think it'd be a great thing we need more more advertising
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but not sure about the other interview more people definitely definitely because they'll
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mention the interview on their blog or social media we're seeing that now with with Ken's stuff
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from Fosdem for example offer a phone app to simplify the recording and submission of shows
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definitely collect more topics through a survey or submission form yep generate host photos with
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show titles for social media we're doing some of that make a video explaining what HBR is yeah
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sounds good and comments on the tags thing well I've already said that the tags were working on tags
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and I've got a couple of three shows eventually coming up about this not sure where this show
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will come out in relation to them but it's a it's an ongoing topic anyway so we need more shows
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about cool software books or documentaries says Drupes and an HBR shop with stickers t-shirts and
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tote bags yeah it's an interesting idea I'm not sure it take some of them take us into realms that
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we're going to be very hard to to sustain that suspect but not want to call a poor cold war
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drone so I wanted to comment on the need for for new hosts and I sampled the HBR database again
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and found that quite a number of registered hosts in the period up to the end of 2015 contributed one
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show and never seen again and I found there were 87 people who had become a host done the one show
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and then I'd gone so that was around 31% of the host count contributed to their one show before
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the start of 2016 so that was just really making the point we need a constant stream of new hosts
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we need to have some means of attracting potential new hosts to make it contribution
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in people are often impressed by the HBR idea and but going from there to producing a show of
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the Romans it's not necessarily doesn't necessarily follow perhaps there's mileage in someone doing
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a show or video about breaking down the barriers for new hosts I've been to a number of conferences
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and things like our camp and stuff and people where we have a table and people come and talk to us
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about who we are and what we're doing and stuff like the idea of of HBR but when the thought of
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actually doing a show themselves comes up they say well what would I talk about and then they say
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why would I have the stuff that that that I need to do it you know there's this kind
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there's thinking they need to be ultra technical and that they need to have a studio or something
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and there's a comment I feel stupid recording myself or I hate this animal voice
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these are sort of some of the barriers that need to be overcome in getting new people to come
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and join in simplifying the submission process would be a good thing it's already quite streamlined
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compared to what it was but the idea that Drup suggests to making a phone up is very good I think
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anyway I wonder if there's anybody in the community who could do such a thing and maybe something
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like a a YouTube video or something like that explaining how you become a host could be could be
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could help to get people in the even though it's a lot more streamlined than it was it still
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seems to confuse people to some degree one of the factors is the need for more than one show from a
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host so I wanted to comment on the incentive to do show number two and and further shows I think
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it's really important to give feedback on shows I've wondered how valued contributors feel especially
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after the first show and to what extent lack of feedback in the past has dissuaded people from
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doing more shows I can envisage a case where somebody's thinking I did a show for HBR and I thought
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it might be interesting but nobody's said anything about it I don't know if I'll bother to do
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another one I don't know I have no evidence for that but it just struck me as a possibility when
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I first heard HBR I enjoyed the community news shows and was impressed the way that it reviewed
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the the previous months episodes I think it's a really important part of HBR and it's
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something that does give feedback in lieu of comments or others other sorts of feedback so it
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and the comments are really important I believe I've wondered if perhaps a like button would improve
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things the way of giving feedback and could help with encouragement the trouble is that this would
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not be trivial to implement especially in us if we want to keep the the website and so forth
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and the code that drives it as simple as possible what is an HBR show anyway that's something that
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needs to be considered the range of stuff that's already been submitted is very broad but maybe
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people get the impression that HBR is all about highly technical topics scripting programming and
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that sort of thing and that's an element but we've had very broad range of stuff as I've said
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I'm reminded of an episode on swimming in a wild swimming in river in France
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cooking of various sorts making coffee mental health building a bicycle we've had a lot
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interest the term interest to hackers means interest to hobbyists and makers as well so it's
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it's really broad the description is so wide that there's hardly anything that's not acceptable
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and perhaps we should make more of explaining this to people so should we be advertising HBR
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and should we be saying to people to who are potential hosts that here is a platform for them
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to come and talk about their particular interests and everybody has interests of various sorts
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maybe they don't fully appreciate that there's an audience potential audience out there who
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would listen to them talking about maybe the family abort when they're talking about it but
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I suspect that there are people on HBR who would enjoy enjoy whatever it is so I did
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been thinking more about statistics since I've been digging around in the database in the past
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week or two and I think it would be quite interesting to maintain a page of statistics about
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the number of hosts and shows and so forth just not necessarily going into detail but just to
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give people a existing hosts and potential contributors an indication of what's happening
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and how there's a constant need for shows and I've linked back to the statistics I've produced
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earlier on in these notes as maybe an example of what could be displayed I did have a few thoughts
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about perhaps doing things around things a bit more competitive around this around statistics
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I mean should we be displaying details about the longest show in the last year or the last month
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the shortest show the host of the show with the most comments the host with the most shows in the
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last month or a year should we be doing something like that it would be possible I've done it myself
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to be honest just to see but I don't know I'm not personally that keen on that that sort of thing
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I think it might be more discouraging than anything else when I'm interested in what people have
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to say about it and the last thing I was going to say was a really absurd one should we send out
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begging letters should we be doing something like dear ex HBI is constantly in need of shows you have
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been a contributor in the past but we've not heard from you for a long time perhaps you could
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record another show for us would be very helpful to the survival of the project do we do something
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like that I I noted here I get stuff like this from various various sources from schools my
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children have been to in the past from universities I've been to etc etc effectively well they're
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looking for money rather than than shows or anything that sort but there's something about that
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that says oh thank you very much for your contribution oh now you're a victim I'm going to
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keep hassling you forever now which really bothers me so I think my vote would be against but
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I thought I'd throw it out there just to see if anybody had any any comments about it okay so we
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we've looked at this concept of the good ship HBR and the fact that it's a leaky ship and
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could sink at any time I've offered some thoughts some mind some not and obviously have no absolute
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answers but I'd be very very interested to get we all would be interested to get more comments
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and contributions to how we solve the problem of continuing the HBR model and ensuring that we get
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a more steady stream of contributions to it okay that's it for now then bye bye
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today show like all our
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shows was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
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and click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's show is
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released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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