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671 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1639
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Title: HPR1639: Ken Starks at Ohio Linux Fest 2014
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1639/hpr1639.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 06:12:44
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---
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It's Thursday 13th of November 2014, this in HBR episode 1,639 titled, Ken Tarks at Ohio
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Linux Fest 2014, it is hosted by a huker and is about 40 minutes long.
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Feedback can be sent to Wilnik at Wilnik.com or by leaving a comment on this episode.
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The summary is, Ken Tarks builds computers for kids who need a hand.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.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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Anybody here?
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Test, user test, back broke, can you hear me?
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I'm sorry, I thought a few of you would have stayed, but never mind, here we go.
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Yep, that's right.
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Wait, why don't we go ahead and do it?
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Here we go, for me.
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I'm here.
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I'm here to use the gentleman.
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Sure.
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This was going to be a surprise for him.
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All right, thanks everybody.
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To introduce our closing speaker, I want to bring an Ohioan up to the stage here
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who has a lot of history and background with Ken.
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Mark McGrew.
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The closing keynote speaker for Ohioan Express 2014 is Ken Tarks.
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By day, a modest tech support guy and by night someone who takes cast-off computers
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and puts them together for the cast-off kids in his community.
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Online he goes by helios, the day sun who brings light even to those in the shadows.
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To those who observe more mundane matters, he is someone who fixes things.
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In some quarters a fixer is someone who changes the odds in favor of some person or party.
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For Ken Tarks being a fixer means fixing the imbalance that someone else created
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so that any person or party can be a winner.
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To the fixer's only one can be a winner.
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In the world of helios, any and all can be winners because being a winner doesn't mean being the only winner.
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Ken Tarks brings winning to everyone not just to the favor.
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For myself, he is a hero.
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I know from experience what the title hero means.
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A hero is someone who shows up at the right time bringing the right solution to a situation.
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Maybe it involves incredible powers and maybe not.
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Sometimes a hero is someone who demonstrates by example.
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We all have our personal heroes like this.
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Ken Tarks is such a hero to me.
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And sometimes a hero is someone who actually brings real results to real people who need a hero's help.
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Ken and the regular team have done so much for so many.
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Like good teachers, they have also learned from their students.
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With little to no regular experience using a computer, many of these students are essentially blank slates.
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Free to learn their own ways of using the computers they get from RIGLU.
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This frontline experience, observing how the students learn.
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Next, Ken Tarks and the RIGLU team particularly qualify to talk about Linux and free software on the desktop.
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Please welcome the fixer, the hero, the man who has brought to so many the freedom that free software is all about.
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Mr. Ken Tarks.
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Okay, I guess just got to be smarter than the button, right?
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Here we go.
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My name is Ken Tarks and I do run an organization called RIGLU.
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It was started in 2005.
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After I had been injured and I was born to death and we took a computer apart.
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And I saw that it was an electronic tenter toy.
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I couldn't even screw it up.
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So from a couple of guys helping me in my house to where we are now getting ready in December to install our 1,070th other computer.
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I come before you today and want to make sure that each and every one of you actually know that without you, we would not exist.
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And I mean, we wouldn't do it now.
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I ask your indulgence for just a minute because I want to do a little house key.
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And where's Vance? Vance for you.
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Vance?
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Yeah, no, I just wanted to know you're okay.
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There's a lot of people here and I just wanted to make sure that you did not tell them I had arrows to the dance.
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I'd like to do a little house key if I could take two minutes of your time.
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We always use this time of year to announce our RIGLU volunteer of the year.
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Now that's kind of a big deal because we have a pool of 166 volunteers that were, of course, at their own pleasure.
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But they do everything that we need them to do to let us do our job.
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Unfortunately, we're in Ohio and our volunteers are in Texas.
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So what am I doing announcing here?
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Because the esteemed position of volunteer of the year is now in the audience, Mr. Randy Norseworth.
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You have no idea what I had to go through to get him in that seat today for him to be here.
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When I was first approached, I asked him, I asked him speaking issues.
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That's fine, but I was asked to give a keynote and I was more than happy to do so I thought, well, I'll go next.
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That's a nice thing.
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So it wasn't too long before Vance sent me the little worm on the website showing that I was going to keynote in a really nice little paragraph underneath.
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And I do want to thank him at this time for using the only picture in existence.
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It will not make me look positive.
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So here I am scrolling down the, you know, and I'm sitting in that picture.
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I'm seeing all the nice things they say.
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But at the very bottom of that screen, there was something else.
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So I rolled past that.
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And holy freaking cow, John Madduff Hall is presenting keynote here.
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Now, I've never been to one aisle, but it's just, I don't know how it works.
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So in my mind, I had to follow Madduff on the podium.
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How do you even frame that in your mind?
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I mean, I'm like, oh, you know, scared of that.
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So anyway, I talked to a friend of mine, a good friend of mine in California, Larry Cafiero, who also was known as the Freestyle Opera guy.
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Yeah, of course, Linda.
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And he even said, I can't help you, pal.
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I don't know what you're going to do.
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So I'm one of the few times in my life, I was speechless.
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Like I couldn't frame the words, but I was pretty much able to put it together in graphics.
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Pretty much.
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Pretty much.
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Okay.
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So let me just hand its challenges on the desktop.
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There are a lot of us working the server rooms.
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We work at the out desk.
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We work in positions where Linux as a desktop is not even an issue.
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We don't know what's going on.
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But it told that it can price us one percent of computers.
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Now we're up to five and probably 15.
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That doesn't make any difference.
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Because I can show you almost 1,700 kids that use Linux on a day by day basis.
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And are even in graduate school now.
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And we're going to talk about that.
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Well, I started to research where is all this Linux stuff on the desktop.
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Me and me are going to introduce you to Dr. Evil.
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Only on Celeste.
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And I'm going to avoid 30 seconds of awkward silence.
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And I'm going to read along with it.
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The meat of it is I never recommend Linux systems as a desktop environment.
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Anyone who is in a programmer, even then they'd be better off on macOS or virtual machines.
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To launch Windows or Linux.
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You've got to be kidding me, right?
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I mean, there are, by the way, Dr. Evil is not.
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Nobody in here on sliced up with that last name is there.
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Okay, because I want to fix the nervous feeling.
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So, I got to thinking about that.
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And it's not really a matter of somebody reading that on sliced up.
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There's an extremely focused group of people that read that.
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But when that gets hard into the wild where mom and dad, sister and brother, cousin and niece can read that.
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It's said in such an authoritarian way.
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It must be true.
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So, that's one of the things that we've banged our head against.
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Well, I think Dr. Evil really should have before.
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He said that.
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Dr. Richard and Randy Melvinado and their mom rose.
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I don't know if you could see it on there.
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I met these kids and their mother in 2008.
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Actually, a next-door neighbor who knew a friend of mine talked to him and got a little means to look.
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There's this mom working two jobs.
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No father in the picture.
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These are brilliant children and they really need some help.
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So, that's what we do.
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So, I got my car loaded up and I made the trip to Kyle Texas.
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It's a room that's as big as a town by the Biggest Room.
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And I made the visit.
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And what I found was two amazing children.
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Now, one of them is a junior in high school at the time.
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That would be Richard.
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Randy was just getting ready to enter her senior year in high school.
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Fast forward to today.
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Richard has completed college.
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He has his bachelor degree in justice.
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And is now a probation officer in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
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What makes Richard a little unique, even as a probation officer,
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is that he is set up a small clinic on his own money
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to bring in six at-risk children twice a week
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to a little facility that he's built.
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He's built it using Linux.
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I know he did because I went and said to computer that's a long time.
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But I actually, I was so proud to know this guy.
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That the only thing that could really be clear is what he's done.
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He was actually outdone by his sister.
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Randy were the Y.
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She wanted me to make sure you knew it was the Y.
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It's now in our second year of her graduate studies
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at Johns Hopkins University.
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She got a free ride.
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She has to be very little.
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I know we made sure that Randy had a brand new computer
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that we bought from System 76 for her to go to college.
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We had a lot of good and nice stuff that I wanted her to go to
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graduate school with something that handled the horsepower
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because Randy is studying.
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I want to get it right.
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My own medical engineering is that there's a reason for that
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and I'm going to tell you.
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The closest thing to a father that Randy ever had was an uncle.
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And he came home from...
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at Namaste, Michigan, on.
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This is kind of hard for me to get through, apparently.
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Randy told me,
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a heart,
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I'm going to build the on that you use for the rest of your life.
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And I'll be done if she isn't doing just that.
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What an amazing young lady.
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Randy will graduate in a couple years
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and hopefully she'll go on to get her doctorate.
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But Randy Malvinado is the epitome.
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What we try to produce when we're giving these kids
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regular computers.
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Now, her mom is an amazing woman.
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She's worked two jobs,
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so he needs to get them to go to school.
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But the one thing that Randy wanted to make sure that I told you
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is thank you,
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because without you,
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there would be them.
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And I want to applaud you.
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Thank you.
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Thank you very much.
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Okay, but we've been asked,
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can't handle all this,
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all enough to get a regular computer.
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We don't have anything set in stone.
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We don't even have a matrix to pay,
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she makes it up money.
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And it does,
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we all do this for various reasons on a gut level,
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because that's where you're going to get to make those decisions now.
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Joe Patrono is a hard-working man.
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He works two jobs,
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so his wife can stay home with all the children.
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We gave him that time,
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but it was considered to be a model line,
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pretty much stadium stuff for our donations.
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And it was a nice tool for him,
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the four kids ran,
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and the only problem we had was a CRT marker,
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and those,
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I don't even give you a start.
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He called me out,
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and I get a call from
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Eloisa.
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And she said,
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you told me
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that when our computer got old
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and wasn't working anymore to call you,
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I said, okay.
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Now, the matrix is a little bit
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to let you know how important this is.
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Once a regal kid,
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always a regal kid.
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I don't care,
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I don't have much money you make.
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I don't care what your situation is.
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We're going to see that one child
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all the way through school,
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even in graduate school.
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So,
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I went to Joe's team the first time in 2010,
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and he very modest
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government housing, if you would.
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And
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that was very clean,
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two room apartment bedroom,
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one bedroom,
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and one kitchen that acted as a dining room,
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and all of these people
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fit into there.
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So, Joe sent me down on the couch
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and said,
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ask me what the prerequisites were on,
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I said, well,
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to be honest with you, Joe,
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I think your kids are a little too young right now
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to really benefit
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from what we had to offer,
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and he looked down at the coffee table
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and he nodded me,
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chewed his lip for a minute,
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which sent me the magazine
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and he handed me a piece of paper.
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What that piece of paper stated was
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that his oldest boy
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in the top picture,
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all the way to the left,
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is a mathematical prodigy.
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And that he had been accepted
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for the prometious learning project
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at the University of Texas,
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where the kids spent half the day
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at school,
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and then half the day, you know,
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pardon me for my voice treatment.
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So, I could not tell Joe no,
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because the last thing he said to me
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before I made my decision was,
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I don't want my boy to grow
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up as stupid as me.
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And,
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I don't know how stupid Joe is
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because it worked,
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I gave the kids a bit.
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So, we've got a child,
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oh yeah, actually,
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his name is Armando,
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but he's called Tony,
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and I couldn't say no.
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To them, I couldn't say no again,
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when I came to see him,
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in the bottom picture.
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I mean, the kids,
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I haven't obvious to the left
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that they all grew,
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and that's a family picture
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before and after,
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and they're living,
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they've actually had enough
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money to buy their own home.
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I don't care about that,
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once the regal kid always
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a regal kid.
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So, we get wrapped up,
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and you should've seen this computer,
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yeah, I couldn't get a sweater
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from the stuff that was inside of it.
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I mean, Joe,
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get a can of air or something
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all we can.
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So anyway,
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we wrap up,
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I get the new computer set up,
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we got a nice 22-inch
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remote armando's already
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kicking tough mass butt,
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and the other two are fighting
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one, you get on it,
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and Alyssa,
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pulled on my shirt
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as I was leaving the house,
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she said it looks
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to a sandwich for all the way home.
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You know, I don't want to
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keep your tupperware,
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she said,
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no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
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mail it back to me
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if you feel like that,
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eat it on me
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on the way home, I know.
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Okay.
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Morning,
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she said,
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which I'll take good
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any day,
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so I'm driving home,
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and I'm on I-35
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and in the Round Rock,
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and I heard a morning
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and she said,
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what's calling my name?
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And so,
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I got the password
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by the app,
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and I looked,
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there's a bread cutting out.
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I picked a piece up,
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and it's two pieces of bread.
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You know,
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a sandwich in there.
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There was three
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one hundred dollar bills,
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and she had paid for us,
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to do that,
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and I emailed her later,
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and I said,
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you didn't have to do that,
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and she was,
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put a computer
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or two in another kid's home.
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It's an absolutely amazing way
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to spend my time,
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by the way,
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I don't make any money,
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I'm disabled,
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retired,
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and I'm just the figure
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had more,
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and thing else,
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people like,
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Randy,
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people like,
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Alan Daycy,
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you'll see him join.
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It's the,
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over one hundred people,
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that let us do what we do,
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because without them,
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it will not be possible.
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So,
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in everything that we do,
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we always try to,
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include the,
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community.
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Does anybody recognize the name,
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Bruno Nappin?
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Bruno is my hero.
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When I first picked up,
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Linux in 2004,
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Bruno was the,
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lead guy on Scott's newsletter,
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which did nothing but Linux.
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Bruno Nappin answered
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forty thousand questions
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in his time,
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within that website.
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Now,
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aside from that,
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he drew to me
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and,
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and programming started
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with my thought.
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I mean,
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I know what an idea he is now,
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you know,
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but he took his time
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living in,
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in,
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Alan.
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And teach me
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about Linux.
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Not only did he do that
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with me,
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he did it with hundreds
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of other people.
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Bruno passed
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from,
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right,
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cancer,
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a few years ago,
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and
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before he died,
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we set up a 25
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computer learning lab
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in East Austin,
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where all the kids
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can go and use
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a computer a couple of hours
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a day under adult supervision.
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And I was so happy
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to be able to
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email Bruno
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before he died and say,
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here's your legacy found.
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And I've never been happier
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in my life
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than to do that.
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Now I said,
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volunteers,
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wow,
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who is this guy?
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The amazing Christian.
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Now, this is,
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this is the patient
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I'm,
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a patient I pulled off the
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lip.
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The man's name is
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Alan Dacey Jr.
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Who is he?
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Nobody more important
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than you and I.
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Why he's here
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is important.
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We have a distribution
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that we use
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based on A to E.
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One of the pages
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that we have
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is called World of Goo.
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Now World of Goo
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only works
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if I can get a two install.
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All of a sudden,
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the dead file
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I was pulling
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dependency errors
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left and right.
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So I get old,
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Kyle Gagler,
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who is one of the two
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members that make up
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2D boy.
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In fact, I'm proud
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to say that I broke
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the story
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about them releasing their
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game under Linux.
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So I said,
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Kyle,
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who's your biggest guy?
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He goes,
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I don't know how you are
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and I'm not
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good at it.
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Freaking great.
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So I'm active on
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G+.
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Google+.
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And that's what I call
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Facebook for nerds.
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And I go to
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it out there that I was
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having these problems
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because I can go like
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10,000 people
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that could probably fix this
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within an hour.
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And he had not
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only contacted me back.
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He had fixed the
|
|
problem.
|
|
He wrote a script
|
|
that automatically
|
|
went out and found
|
|
those dependencies.
|
|
Fixed it and then,
|
|
as long as the
|
|
folder was in the same
|
|
directory,
|
|
it would go ahead and
|
|
phone home and install
|
|
the world of Google.
|
|
Anybody
|
|
here know the world of
|
|
Google?
|
|
Have you ever played it?
|
|
Oh, I tell it's
|
|
amazing.
|
|
I know very easy.
|
|
I don't know the
|
|
mind.
|
|
Well,
|
|
I have hair
|
|
just looking
|
|
like my luck.
|
|
I don't do anything on
|
|
that special.
|
|
You guys don't care if
|
|
you just answer a question
|
|
in the forum.
|
|
If you provide
|
|
to the colonel. Everything you do, every person in here. All that funnels down into my
|
|
pool and I call that the sea of Linux. And I use that to make a kid's life just a little
|
|
richer and allow them to compete for grades and say these words and ultimately in college
|
|
and life now. I want to make sure that you all know Linux does not have a problem with
|
|
these kids. When I go in and I'm setting up a computer, I got kids trying to elbow me
|
|
out of the way. They got this. I got this. You know, to see if I can click and I can't
|
|
stuff happens. Right? I mean, it's just that easy. These kids don't care about the next
|
|
day of people. When this is met, they care about I have a computer. I'm going to make
|
|
this work for me. So all the religious wars, they get through them to the side because
|
|
these kids have a few other parents. Now, that's not the same story all the time. Sometimes
|
|
we get a live-in boyfriend, sit around the computer all day, it plays World of Warcraft.
|
|
Until he finds out that World of Warcraft doesn't work a little. Susie's computer. So God
|
|
tax a friend. Friend brings over a crap copy. It would do seven. Susie comes home and says,
|
|
where is Doc's math? Where is my algebra app? Sorry, kid. You know, so now they have to
|
|
sign a research saying that if you put Windows on this, it's going to be a little longer
|
|
to support. And as though that sounds a little cruel, it stopped that problem almost completely.
|
|
So my time is over because my voice is almost not existing. I want to thank you for making
|
|
me feel so well in the home because I want to thank each and every one of you because a
|
|
lot of you have come up to me and talked on my sleep because I know you've been to the
|
|
most office. So I am more than willing to answer questions or leave, just depending
|
|
on how much you all want to do. So, who's there any questions for me? Yes. No, you.
|
|
You mentioned that you were, you put your own distribution on, like that distribution available
|
|
to download or something you rolled yourself or? No, it will be. Randy's got it on mega.
|
|
And so Randy knows where he created those resquins of KDE mint that has our programs on
|
|
and yes, I'll try to get you that link or join G-Post and look me up. But I don't have
|
|
that with me right now. Is it more geared towards, like, in probably like ages? In most
|
|
different ways. Right. We haven't pulled anything out of it. We've just added to it. From
|
|
child's play all the way up to hologramatic equation software, you know, the software,
|
|
you know, the software should help that child all the way through school.
|
|
Yeah, Randy does all our weeks in work and that's why he's came to it all right now.
|
|
Because he's amazing. Anybody else? Yeah, you can't miss the news, sir.
|
|
Excuse me, can we have a city of privilege to use in this program? Is that all on the
|
|
level? Yes, it is. And we can do that all right. That's, and I will try to get a link up
|
|
full of that and buy us some on Brickloo Dollar. But yeah, you can go to Brickloo Dollar
|
|
and find out just about anything you want to know.
|
|
Brickloo Dollar.
|
|
Sorry, sir.
|
|
Do you ever plan on having chapters in different states?
|
|
Sorry? Do you ever plan on expanding out from Texas?
|
|
Oh my gosh, no. I am exhausted.
|
|
Many of you may know that I'm recovering from cancer therapy. My cancer, we killed the cancer.
|
|
It's the treatment that kicked my butt. That's why my voice sounds like the cross between
|
|
a chainsaw cutting through a block of sandpaper. But I want to thank you for your concern.
|
|
I just want to add that if you take a look around, you're going to find similar programs.
|
|
I just the other day called up a guy I know who does the same, he builds computers out of old
|
|
parts to give the kids. And I cleaned out my office. I didn't know about like five boxes
|
|
and stuff. Maybe half of it's crap. I don't know if he can use all of it.
|
|
Oh cool, awesome. Take it away.
|
|
It's very easy if we've had a lot of, I'm tired by the amount of people that have asked me
|
|
how to start this up on their own. So yeah, it's been rewarding.
|
|
Anybody else? Oh, funning. Yeah, somebody asked me about that.
|
|
Oh, we're funded by you. I didn't come up here as money. But we're funded by everybody here.
|
|
The grants they're available now, they're not discretionary spending grants.
|
|
They want me to promise and approve that I bought certain things with them.
|
|
But what's good is a car if I can't put fuel in it, right?
|
|
So yeah, we're funded by you guys. If you visit www.weglue.org, they'll explain it all.
|
|
Have I stayed with www.weglue.org enough?
|
|
Yeah. Any more questions?
|
|
Good.
|
|
How much do I owe you for that?
|
|
One charge.
|
|
Hello, I'm Michael Shultice. I'm the registration chair infrastructure lead
|
|
and nearly appointed volunteer coordinator for Ohio Linux Fest.
|
|
In addition to helping organize Ohio Linux Fest, another way I get back
|
|
to the free and open source software community serving as a treasure of software
|
|
in the public interest, a 501c3 non-profit organization which was founded to help organizations develop
|
|
and distribute open hardware and software.
|
|
And Starks is project liaison for the Helios Project, an SBI-associated project
|
|
that provides Linux computers to underprivileged juice in the Austin, Texas area,
|
|
who otherwise wouldn't have access to a computer.
|
|
The Helios Project is a previous version of the current www.weglue.org,
|
|
but the Helios Project, before we glue existed, used SBI as a fiscal sponsor,
|
|
so people could make tax-aductable donations to SBI that were earmarked for the Helios Project.
|
|
So they didn't have to set up their own or go through the considerable time, effort,
|
|
and expense to obtain their own 501c3 status.
|
|
And we're able to focus on their mission of providing computing to Austin's underprivileged children.
|
|
It's been a great pleasure working with Canada over the past several years.
|
|
And without further ado, I'm going to turn it over to one or more our 2014 conference chair
|
|
that it closed out the conference.
|
|
Thanks, Micah. That was great stuff. Thanks so much to our keynotes.
|
|
Last year, at the end of 2013, we sent out surveys to you asking for your feedback
|
|
about how we could improve Linux faster in the future.
|
|
And this year, we acted on that feedback between reintroducing the badges.
|
|
Oh, shoot. I have to go to my list here.
|
|
More developer and pro-content, professional content, we had presentations about Android
|
|
and developing for hardware.
|
|
We changed the Expo. We brought back. I think we've had it once or twice before.
|
|
We brought back a pre-party.
|
|
Lightning talks. Thanks to Skippy. That was the first grass this year.
|
|
And I think that was a great success. I hope you had as much fun as I did.
|
|
Do we have sponsors in the room here? Any sponsors? Could you stand up, please?
|
|
Speakers. Speakers in the room. Could you stand up, please?
|
|
So thanks, everyone. Linux Fest is about you. It's about our community.
|
|
Without you, we wouldn't have Linux Fest. So thank you.
|
|
So this is really among my favorite OLF.
|
|
We've had so many successful Linux Fests in the past, and I look forward to many in the future.
|
|
And this is all thanks to our hard-working team of volunteers.
|
|
We have a team of eight, nine who have barely slept for the past month.
|
|
And before that, they've been working on this conference the year before,
|
|
ever since the last year working to bring this to you today.
|
|
So Linux Fest staff and volunteers, could you come up to the stage, please?
|
|
You guys are awesome. This is great. The team right here, and unfortunately a few others who aren't here,
|
|
right now, but look for them later. Either a green ribbon for volunteer or staff,
|
|
some of them have this name badge right here, shake their hand.
|
|
So this is almost the end of our official project.
|
|
I'm going to show you a little bit of what we're going to do today.
|
|
I'm going to show you a little bit of what we're going to do today.
|
|
Shake their hand. So this is almost the end of our official presentation content.
|
|
We're going to Kirk here who's going to be doing our final raffle drives,
|
|
and then our actor party at 9 p.m. So I hope you can join us all there later.
|
|
Thank you so much.
|
|
All right, can it burn air me?
|
|
All right, so my name is Kirk, and I'm going to give still away.
|
|
So it's actually changed. So now with each lot,
|
|
you're also getting a free HP laptop bag.
|
|
Cooler, excuse me, it's a laptop bag.
|
|
It's really cool because it just folds out in pockets and everything.
|
|
So it's just a nice little hat.
|
|
So yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So the first thing is for...
|
|
This is a lot raffle hole number three.
|
|
Cooler and this wonderful Nerf Gun.
|
|
You might have seen the other little Nerf Guns that Silicon Mechanics has been giving out.
|
|
They just got up their game to the super mega size.
|
|
So that's what Nerf Guns do.
|
|
What do you put your phone number on?
|
|
All right.
|
|
You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HP R listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
|
|
Hecker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
|
|
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
|
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly,
|
|
leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
|
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
|
|
Attribution, ShareLife, 3.0 license.
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