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131 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
131 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1482
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Title: HPR1482: 02 What is on my podcast player
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1482/hpr1482.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:53:35
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---
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Hello, this is Ahuka. Welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio. I'm going
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to do the second of my podcasts on what is on my podcast player. Just a little light entertainment
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here. Nothing terribly outstandingly. A couple of things I just want to mention here.
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First of all, the show notes will have all of the URLs for the RSS feeds for every podcast
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that I mentioned. If anything happens to peel to you from this discussion, you'll be
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able to just go to the show notes, click on it, and you'll have the feed. You can add it
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to your pod catcher of choice. So that's the first thing. Second thing, I do like to mention
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I like to speed up my podcast a little bit. So that's something I do in Audacity. I created a script.
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Audacity will speed up the podcast without changing the pitch in any way. So I really like that.
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So I speed it up 50% and I usually add a few dB of gain onto it as well. I have a fairly
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simple primitive player and I kind of like that. So that's how I do it. I'm just reading through.
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This is all the stuff that I have on my pod catcher right now to pull these things down.
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Some of these are very regular. Others are very irregular. Some of them may even have
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popped all together and I just haven't figured it out yet. So with that, let's continue. This is part
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two of what's on my podcast layer. The first one I mentioned and we're going through this in
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alphabetical order is muggle cast. And if you know anything about Harry Potter, you'll recognize
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muggle. So this is a podcast devoted to the Harry Potter related things. It's probably kind
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of winding down at this point. But you know, there's occasionally news. I'd have to say the last
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couple were about the JK Rowling's newest novel has nothing to do with Harry Potter.
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But you know, if there is news, it's a good way to hear about it. Next is the Science Friday
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Audio Podcast. If you're outside the United States, possibly you haven't heard about Science
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Friday. This is a program that is on national public radio and it airs Friday in the afternoon.
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And it's a program devoted entirely to science. And so they have various scientists come on.
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They're interviewed about their work and you know, maybe issues of the day. Sometimes they'll have
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two or three scientists on debating an issue. I like it. And you know, they took the radio program
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and turned it into a downloadable audio podcast, which is great because Friday afternoon when they're
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airing it, I'm at work and it's not really proper me to listen. So I download it Friday evening
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when I get home and then Saturday I listen to it while having a large cup of coffee before I do my
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Saturday morning exercising. So part of my routine. Then there's a podcast called Security Now.
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And this is on the Twitch network and this is the one with Steve Gibson and you may know Steve Gibson
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from his spin right or shields up among other things that he's done. And this is a very interesting
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one because it really digs into the details of security related topics. So you can learn things
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like how encryption actually works. And of course, any news that that happens every this is a weekly
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podcast. So it's just any security related news. They bring it up. They talk about it.
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This one I enjoy a lot. Then there's a space dog podcast. Again, very irregular. They
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haven't done anything in a year or more. And I don't know if they ever will again. But this was
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there's something called the Science Fiction Oral History Association that has been getting recordings
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of various science fiction authors. And so this podcast was basically putting some of those
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recordings out. So good listen to Isaac Asimov and Lester Del Rey and people bad. So I hope
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something may show up. I will leave something like that in my pod catcher even if I haven't heard
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from them in a while because what does it cost me? It just means everyone's once an hour or something
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pod catcher just checks in to see if there's anything. Then there's a show called Star Talk Radio
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with Neil deGrasse Tyson. Now if you don't know Neil deGrasse Tyson, he is the coolest human being
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in the world. He works for the American Museum of National History, Natural History. He's the
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director of the Hayden Planetarium. And it's an astrophysicist. So this is a program that is
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devoted entirely to really space-related kinds of talks. Then there's Stephen Fry's Pod Grans.
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This is another one that I haven't heard from in a while. But Stephen Fry was putting out these
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little things. And you know I will listen to Stephen Fry at any opportunity. So this is one I'm
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just leaving it in the pod catcher. Maybe it'll come to life. Next is Sunday Morning Linux Review
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with Matt Tony and Mary. These guys are friends of mine, but I have to tell you I think this may be
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actually the best Linux-related podcast that I listen to because it is just so full of good
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intent. It's just solid from beginning to end. So they do the news of the week. They take a look
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at what's happening with various distros, what's the latest news on the kernel. Mary does each week
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a review of a particular distro. And you know she'll create a virtual machine, load it up,
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fires, put it through its paces, and tell you what she found. So there's just so much good stuff
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on it. If you're only going to have one Linux podcast to me, this is the one. Then one called
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Talk BMC. This is related to my work, you know IT service management. So you know this is a is
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put out by the vendor, the product that I'm in the middle of doing a big upgrade project on.
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And I will probably be working on this for some time because once we get this initial upgrade
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out of the way, there's going to be future phases and additional things done. What have you?
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So it's specialized. If you're not into IT service management, you probably wouldn't be
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interested in that one. But the next one is the bugle, which is about half an hour pure bullshit
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once a week. John Oliver and he's Altsman and you know a couple of comedians that just get on
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there and they take the news of the day and skewer everyone. So it's a lot of fun. Then there's
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one called the command line. And I just want to make sure that if you haven't encountered this one,
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it is not a podcast about opening up a terminal and issuing commands. It's the command line is
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sort of the nickname that the guy who does this. So it usually has a lot to do with a consort software,
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the fellow who did this converted over almost entirely to Linux. And he's also active in
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technology advocacy and free culture. He's a friend of Cory Doctoro, etc. So I just I find it
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interesting. He's a fun guy and he usually has something interesting today. Then the infinite
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monkey cage. And this one is a BBC production. And it has a scientist Brian Cox, a comedian,
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and you know they they will put out about five or six shows and then go dormant for a few months
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and then decide it. It's time to put out another five or six shows. So and they're usually interesting.
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Then there's the Linux action show. Now this one I have subscribed and then unsubscribed and
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then subscribed again. So you know there's I am subscribed. There's some interesting stuff going
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on there. And then there's the Linux link tech show, which is one of the older Linux related
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podcasts. This is the podcast that Dan Washco does. And Dan is the fellow who does that absolutely
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wonderful Linux in the Shell series. And boy if you're not paying attention to that Linux in
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the Shell you're missing something really special. So this is this is his podcast. He and several
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other people. Then I'm subscribed to one called the project management podcast. I'm a project
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manager by trade. So again this is kind of work related about topics about project management.
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So you're interested in that a lot of interviews with project managers talking about different
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topics. Then there's the techie geek podcast. That's Russ winner and Tracy Holtz. And you know
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they're both good people. And I enjoy listening to their podcast. That scene is more like every
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other week though. A little bit irregular. Then there's this week in Google which is from the
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Twit network. And that's Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, Gina Treppani, and then frequently a guest
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of some kind. It's not just Google. It's everything about the online world, the cloud, whatever you
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want to call it. So they don't just talk about Google. But they do talk somewhat about Google
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for at least part of three week. Then there's one called this week in science. And that's with Dr.
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Kiki Sanford and Justin. So I've just a one hour week devoted to discussion of what's the news
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in the world of science. So basically just a weekly science news update. And then there's this
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week in tech which is the original Twit network program. So it's basically some pundits
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getting together to talk about what the news of the week is. And you know it's usually interesting.
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So I'll listen to that. And then another one from the Twit network called Triangulation. And
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that's an interview with one person. So they will bring in one person and say, okay, let's have
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a talk. Let's find out what's going on. And it's usually some interesting people. So for instance,
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this current show that just came out was interviewing the fellow who created the Geek Squad,
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which was then bought by Best Buy. And so it's interesting. Interesting things to say about that
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experience. Then there is the TuX radar Linux podcast. Now this is put out by the people who
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publish the Linux format magazine, which is published in England, but available here in the United
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States because I subscribe to it. And so they do it interesting little. This is biweekly. So every
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other week you get a podcast from them talking about what's going on in the world of Linux.
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And then there's the Ubuntu UK podcast. And that has Alan Pope,
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only with more Laura Cowan and Bayesianly other people. And it's mostly Ubuntu oriented.
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But they sometimes talk about general Linux topics as well. And this is also a biweekly. So
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every other week you get a podcast. And it's usually about an hour or so in length.
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And then the last one on my alphabetical list is our reason, Z-A-A-R-E-A-S-O-N, which you may know
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as a company that makes hardware that is sold with Linux and free software on it. They're
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real good people there. And they do this podcast. And it's pretty irregular. But from time to time
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they'll decide to put something out. And so they know what they're doing. So this was the rest of it.
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So it ended up being two programs for me to go through everything on my podcast player.
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So again, if you any of these are of interest to you, just take a look at the show notes.
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And I've got all of the RSS feeds or linked there. So you can just cron it and take a look.
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So I hope you maybe you find something interesting in all of that. And this is Huka signing off.
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You have been listening to HackerPublic Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. We are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our
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shows, was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself. If you ever consider recording a podcast,
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then visit our website to find out how easy it really is. HackerPublic Radio was founded by
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the Digital Dark Pound and the Elfonomicum Computer Club. HPR is funded by the binary revolution
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at binref.com. All binref projects are crowd- Exponsored by linear pages.
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