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791 lines
54 KiB
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791 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1874
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Title: HPR1874: Interview with Droops
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1874/hpr1874.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 10:41:59
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---
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This is HPR Episode 1874 entitled Interview with Groups.
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It is posted by Ken Fallon and is about 54 minutes long.
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The summary is to mark the 10-year anniversary on HPR we talked to Groups one of the founders
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on today with a techie.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker
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Public Radio.
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Or is it?
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Or is it another episode of today with a techie which started this weekend, coming
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10 years ago, folks, 10 years ago?
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And, therefore, I have online live from the U.S.A.
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One of the many started it all, Mr. Troops, how are you doing, Troops?
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Hey, Ken, how are you doing?
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I'm excited to be here.
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I'm not doing too bad at all, not doing too bad at all.
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So, for those of you who don't know who Troops is, can you give us the rundown, please?
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Well, that's kind of put me on the spot.
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I'm some guy who a long time ago in college was really into internet radio.
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And so we created this really cool thing that didn't work.
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And so we created this other cool thing that didn't work.
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And then we created this other thing that was really lame.
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And eventually we got to the point where we created something that was actually really cool.
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And it was so cool that other people took it over and have done a much better job than we ever did with it.
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And have created this whole hacker public radio thing.
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It's very awesome.
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Okay, so 10 years ago, you started today with a teching.
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Now, before that, there was, when I started way back when I started listening to tech shows,
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I did a search for podcasting, no idea what it was.
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And I listened to, I don't know, did something on something show.
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I think that was required for everybody at the time to listen to.
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And then I searched for some Linux podcasts and came across the Linux tech show, which is still going.
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And they were recommended to other shows that were going at the same, at that time,
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almost in phenomenal radio.
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And the other was BinRab radio.
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So you are behind in phenomenal radio.
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So how did that, how did that kind of go?
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Okay, so I've taken a bunch of notes as I like to write things down.
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And this is all from memory.
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Like, I don't have records of the sort of thing.
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So if I, if I don't get something correct, please forgive me.
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And like, I was just living in the moment.
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So it's just how I remember it.
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There was a fellow named dual parallel who had a show called Radio Freak America.
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And this is before, there was a thing called podcasting.
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And it was just internet radio, like, go you download it, you burn it onto a CD,
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you ride around in your car and listen to it.
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Like, on the way to school or the way to work.
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And no one had really nice AP three players that could hold this much data.
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And I eventually got a PDA.
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And I used to go to a friend's house, we were at wireless internet.
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And I would download shows to my PDA and listen to them on my headphones that drove around.
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And we were doing that sort of thing before podcasting came out.
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Like, in phenomenal radio started without an RSS feed.
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We had to go back and create one.
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And we realized how awesome that distribution method was.
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But anyway, we were riding around listening to Radio Freak America,
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which was a show by dual parallel.
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And it was just, it was the most different thing I've never heard anything like that for my life.
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And it was essentially just conversations people were having about technology and about the hacker culture.
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And that was just awesome.
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And like, these people didn't know who I was, but they became my friends.
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I was essentially just listening to their conversations.
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And that just stuck with me my whole life.
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And eventually I got to the point where they can, you know, these guys are just talking on the phone to each other and recording it.
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Heck, I'm having these conversations with my friends.
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We should start recording it ourselves.
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And that's a big step.
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Like, it's scary to go from, I'm just some guy who's consuming to, I'm some guy who's creating.
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Or I'm some guy that people are going to listen to and they're going to think,
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hey, it's just full of himself. He has no idea what he's talking about, which, you know, that happens sometimes.
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And sometimes you think, you know, at all, you don't, sometimes you do, and you're smart.
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So we decided, or I decided I would start recording something.
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And I just can't put it off and put it off.
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And the guy, dual parallel, involved Radio Freak America, was involved with the club called the digital dog pound.
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And one of their major contributions was this thing called Benrev, which was an idea.
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It was a show. It was a forum.
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They had a TV show for a little while.
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And just an awesome place for hackers to learn.
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And so they started this radio show called Benrev Radio.
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And it kind of took over when Radio Freak went away.
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And it was awesome. It was just, it was very good.
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It was hosted by a friend of mine named Stankdog.
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We all have very interesting names.
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And I was like, well, Stankdog, do what I can do this.
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And I started this little show called Drupes Radio, which was horrible.
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And I made a friend who listened to this thing because there was such few podcasts or they weren't even podcasts.
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But the internet radio shows about this content when something new came out.
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You listen to it because there wasn't a lot of content like you'd wait a week for Benrev Radio episode to come out.
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And I was really excited when it came out because there was nothing filling that gap in between.
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And we started this show called Infinomicon, which was kind of cool.
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It was kind of lame.
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And it just, it kind of drug on.
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And we should have ended it long before it ended.
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And sorry, I keep saying, and I'm watching.
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I've never used mobile before.
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And I'm watching the little meter.
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And it's very neat.
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Anyway, Infinomicon should have died.
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And when it finally kind of folded.
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The idea that had been proposed by dual parallel from Radio Freak America.
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And he said, there ought to be this thing called hacker public radio, public radio for hackers.
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Technology and news that should come out every day.
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And it should, you know, it should be like NPR.
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There should be shows on it.
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There should be, you know, he was envisioning like this network.
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And I'd always kind of wanted that.
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And when he quit doing Radio Freak America, he had promised he was doing that.
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And I was, I've been waiting years.
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And some friends and I were talking about, well, we should start something like that.
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And we should try to do this.
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And we kind of figured we'd have, you know, 10 episodes and we'd do half of them.
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But we would have attempted this idea.
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And so we were trying to come up with a name for our show that was going to be a network of shows.
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And we came up with today with a techie, which was a reverse acronym.
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We actually just came up with a profane word to make fun of the old report who had a show called TWIT.
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I don't, I don't know why that was, that was entertaining at the time.
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But, you know, 10 years ago when I was in college, that was hilarious.
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And so we came up with a show in DOS Man and I was recording our conversations.
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And it was surprising when someone was like, hey, this is actually kind of cool.
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I'm going to send one in.
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And we were like, oh, all right, we've got one.
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So we recorded a few shows to get it started.
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We gave ourselves a couple days.
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And there was such a small community.
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People that were into this, it was really easy to get in touch with people who were doing shows,
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or get in touch with people who wanted to do shows.
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Now, somewhere along this time, it was a website called Hacker Media,
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which has not been updated in a long time.
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And that's my fault.
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I'll take full blame.
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But Hacker Media listed all these shows.
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And it was a really cool thing.
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A guy in Kizzle started it.
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And he passed it on to me as he got out of the scene.
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And so we kind of knew a lot of people in this thing.
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We had a website we called podcast fertilizer,
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which gave free hosting and set up the RSS feeds for people.
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All they had to do was record a show, give it a name,
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but host them for their first 10 episodes or more if they needed it.
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And we had two shows make it all the way through 10 episodes.
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It's hard to sit down and say, I'm going to record a show and be responsible
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for doing this thing week after week after week.
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And there's the whole people feel that they have to have something produced
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by a certain amount of time, which really hurt a lot of shows.
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Like I did an episode of Mid-Rap Radio one time.
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But they needed someone to host it.
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And we're going to host it.
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And I just had to fill an hour's worth of time with no preparation.
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And like that's the worst episode of that show.
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But you're under this impression that you have to have media produced
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by a certain time.
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And professional news organizations have a lot of people.
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And they have a lot of people working on that problem.
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And you have just a podcast.
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It's hard to do that.
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So coming back to Twatches Radio.
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Truth.
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Truth. I completely and totally dropped out there.
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OK.
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Right.
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I've just been talking.
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Yeah, from right to the beginning.
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So you're going to call what you want to do.
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What would be covered?
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Oh, man.
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I've just been talking about history and how awesome you are for running Hacker Public Radio.
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I don't know what to do.
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Because you were recording.
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I wasn't.
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Well, I mean, we could just keep going.
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I have a recording.
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I can give to you.
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OK.
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Cool.
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Yeah, sorry about that.
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I never had this happen before.
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I just completely dropped out.
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So.
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Let me finish my thought.
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And then I'll show you a question.
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We're on.
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That sounds fair.
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Yeah, go ahead.
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OK.
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I just thought you were being very patient.
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I'm sorry.
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So.
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One of my original ideas of a twat tech radio was that we would get people to send in there.
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Like six months or three months or one month.
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Really cool thing.
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So as you're learning about technology and you're coming up with stuff.
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Everyone's why you're coming to something like this is this is pretty awesome.
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And that this is pretty awesome idea.
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We're like, why don't you record that submit a show.
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We have enough people submitting there.
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This is really awesome.
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And the whole show will be awesome.
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And so we'd ever set a limit on my quality or content.
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Like.
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I'm assuming the rules would be the same.
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Like if someone just recorded a show and they thought it had something to do with hacker public radio and they thought it was neat.
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I'm sure they was so published.
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Because.
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I mean, who might judge or who is confined to judge what's really appropriate and good.
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I mean, if it's just a stream of profanity, that probably would be wasteful.
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But to be honest, we just check it in three places to see that the audio is OK.
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And I don't listen to it until they publish it.
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It's a rule.
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That's awesome.
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And see like that's a true voice of the community.
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And that's very cool.
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So we were doing our twat tech thing.
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Bit of radio was kind of fizzling out a few other shows were kind of fizzling out.
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And we said, you know, we should really just call it hacker public radio.
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The name is is sophomore.
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It's immature.
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We should.
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It's embarrassing to walk around with a big twat on your shirt.
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To explain what that means because over here, we don't don't actually know what that means.
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It's slaying for vagina.
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Like.
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Again, I still apologize about that name.
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So we got in touch with tool parallel.
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We're like, hey, are you ever going to do this?
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And he's like, no.
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And we're like, can we steal your name?
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And he's like, it's not really my name.
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It was just an idea in the community.
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So we're like, OK, let's do this.
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And we registered hacker public radio.org.
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And we kind of folded into it and twat tech kind of folded into it.
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And we started something and we hoped it would work.
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And now with twat tech radio, I didn't update it every day.
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It was hard to get shows.
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The hardest part of the thing is finding actual shows that people will submit and getting people to contribute.
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And that's also the coolest thing of it because you meet all these awesome people.
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And you learn to rely on people that you've never met.
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And I think it's awesome.
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I actually wrote a paper in college about organizational behavior and how you can do this sort of thing
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and get people to work for free by contributing to the community.
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That's kind of shady business school stuff.
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That's what it was.
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And so we had this cool name.
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We had this school show.
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We had all these people who had contributed.
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There was a guy named a negma that used to run the show.
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He used to be the Ken Fallon of twat tech radio.
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And then he went away.
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And it was a guy named Patrio.
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And he went away.
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And like with twat tech radio, we thought it was the coolest thing.
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Like we had our first international person.
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It was a guy named Seal from Canada.
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He contributed episode.
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We're like, oh, we're an international show.
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And like, how can public radio is?
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I think you're out of the Netherlands.
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That's insane that there's this whole world that works on it.
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And that's very cool to me.
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Okay.
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So I've talked about starting twat tech, the intention.
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And I kind of told the history of RFA in Phenomocon and Ben Rev.
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So that's where we are, Mr. Fallon.
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Cool.
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There was an interesting discussion this week from one of the old timers.
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Because I have always had the feeling with the HPR that,
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and as I say, I come into this whole thing way later.
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I was listening to Tee guys and then I went back and listened to the RFA stuff.
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Which, by the way, is as completely as up to date now as it was back then.
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Because there's still a lot of technology that's in place.
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It's fecking scary.
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I'll tell you that for nothing.
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Those guys were way smarter than I ever have been.
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And like they're all the whole philosophy of we're here.
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We're in the student.
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We're not going to hoard all this information.
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We're going to share with the community.
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That is what the philosophy of HPR is.
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Our least, you know, we.
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Has been so that the discussion lately has been.
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We've had a look at the number of subscribers we've had.
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Which is about, you know, 16 and a half thousand a month.
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Wow.
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Yeah.
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But we want you.
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Wow.
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Yeah, it's awesome, isn't it?
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We only had two hundred and sixty holes in the totality,
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which is awesome to get me wrong.
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That is awesome.
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But how is this, you know, as Dave Morris said, like we're in,
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we're all in the sport together.
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And, you know, it's leaking water.
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And a few of us have to build the water at all time.
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If everybody helped out, then you know, we'd have shows for the next 85 years.
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So that one of the most frustrating, one of the most fulfilling things is doing this,
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is doing this, but the only most frustrating things is trying to get people to submit shows.
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So what is it that's stopping people from submitting shows?
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And the original question was, I always had the assumption that there is an
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almost some people who listen to contribute back, but not everybody agrees with that.
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And I can't remember where it was that I came up with that idea,
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or was that ever agreed, or was that just assumed on my part.
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Jason Scott from textfiles.com told me one day that 99 points,
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something percent of the people consume,
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and less than one percent of the people contribute.
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And I just did the math.
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That's where we're at right now with HPR.
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And I think a lot of the reasons people don't contribute is they seem that it's hard,
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or they say that maybe I don't have anything to talk about.
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That's like, I'm not afraid to talk on the voice that are on the radio.
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I'm not afraid to sound like an idiot.
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But like, I'm going through my life.
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I'm like, well, I just don't really have anything to talk about.
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You know, no one's going to be interested in this.
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And like, that's a bunch of bull.
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Like, the things that, you know, we come up when we think there's cool,
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other people think it's cool.
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Exactly. I know that I think,
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you know, that's why people won't do shows.
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But would you agree that people who submit shows,
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people who listen, should contribute,
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or would you say, no, we release it and create a commons license
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and yeah, whoever, whoever wants to can.
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But I think everyone should do it.
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Like, one of the really nice things I didn't start
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if an Amakan radio to do,
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but something that really happened
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is that I got smarter.
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Because I didn't want to sound like too much of an idiot.
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And so I would spend some time actually researching and learning
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and coming up with things.
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And that kind of motivated me to learn.
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And like, I would, I enjoy listening to HBR now.
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I don't listen to every episode.
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As I imagine most people, you know, download them
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with their little podcast aggregator,
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but they don't actually listen to every one of them.
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It's about 50%.
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I guess.
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Okay.
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But I really enjoy hearing that neat thing.
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And like, it doesn't have to be the most elite content.
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But your neat thing is neat.
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And that excitement comes through.
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And it excites me.
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And maybe I'll learn something that I didn't know.
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And I think everyone should contribute.
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That would be outstanding.
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We'll be outstanding.
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And of course, the license is,
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you can take it.
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You can do it.
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What you will.
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Yeah.
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It's totally hacker.
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Eat those.
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Don't sell it.
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But you can do whatever you want with it.
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Like, you could take this episode right now.
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And you could change the words that I'm saying
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to be something else.
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And like, that's Hacker Public Radio.
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That's awesome.
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Cool.
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So, did it go as you expected, would you say?
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Yeah, we really expected to have like 10 episodes
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of Twatchek Radio,
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where we would have recorded half of them ourselves.
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And maybe we were excited to get like five people
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to contribute.
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And so, no, it was infinitely more successful.
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than we expected.
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And now, originally back on Radio Freak America,
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his, if you listen to the last episode of RFA,
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where they talk about HPR,
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their view was to have a roundtable discuss some politics
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where anything was open and that sort of thing.
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Are we not fulfilling the dream by doing what we're doing?
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Or, you know, should have gone another direction
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while you're acting?
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I really think, I think I'm not a scholar of this.
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But I really think the duality,
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the duality,
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the duality,
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the duality,
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the duality,
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the duality,
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the duality,
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the duality,
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I don't know this.
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But I really think the dual wanted to have a network
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of different voices,
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different opinions.
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Like whatever he says isn't always the truth,
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and whatever I say isn't always, you know,
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they end up the story.
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Yeah, exactly,
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and tell me just right here.
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And so having more people can contribute,
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you know, the smarter we all are as a whole.
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So, I mean,
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I don't think we're,
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No, that's, I mean, I have no idea what you said up until now, so I'm looking forward to hearing this.
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Yeah, me too. I'm always embarrassed to listen to myself, but that's okay.
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All right, so the next question was talking about who code did the site,
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who helped out, who should get more credit. I was learned in PHP and I wrote a lot of it very
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poorly and trying to think of all the people who helped out. Everyone's got all these weird names.
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There was a young guy who was younger than I was who redid a lot of it for me after I did it
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and explained to me why I was wrong on a lot of things, which helped me a lot.
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And trying to think his name, I've been trying to think of it all day,
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there was just people hanging out in IRC, which is helping contribute in an offer to help.
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And so I don't have a definitive list, but it was a lot of folks that helped contribute to everything.
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|
So are you still there, sir?
|
|
I think we've lost him. That's okay. It's been a keep going.
|
|
That's all right. One of the questions was who paid for all this. So I had a blue host account
|
|
that I was paying a little bit of money for. And so I just added, you know, I bought a domain name
|
|
and we added to it. It didn't really cost us anything extra except paying for another domain name
|
|
every year. Eventually, Ben Reff took over. I actually don't know who's hosting
|
|
HPR right now, like it's kind of cool that it's just kind of going.
|
|
At Hacker Public Radio, I don't know if a lot of the international listeners know this,
|
|
but in the United States, there's a thing called National Public Radio.
|
|
And National Public Radio is a radio network. If it's a non-profit, it doesn't give a lot of
|
|
government funding. It's run essentially paid for by the listeners.
|
|
And so I listened to a lot of APR. It's a lot of talk shows. They have classical music, which I'm not a big fan of.
|
|
They have a lot of just smart comedy shows. And so my vehicle is set on right now.
|
|
I was just riding around a few minutes ago, getting fresh air. I listened to it.
|
|
And so stealing the HPR, the Hacker Public Radio, was for the Hacker community, not just the American
|
|
nation, but kind of for the worldwide community. And that's awesome. Some of my favorite shows,
|
|
excuse me, I don't listen to a lot of paid. I dropped out again, but go carry on. I'll listen to this afterwards.
|
|
I'm just rolling through a lot of the shows that I listened to in the beginning. I've
|
|
mentioned RFA in Ben Rev. There was a show called BassNet that was run by some of my friends.
|
|
And I had met them through the internet. These were people I had met in real life.
|
|
I met some of them at Defcon and different cons over the years. BassNet was awesome. They
|
|
contributed a lot in the beginning of Twatt Tech Radio. Pony Boy had a show, Elk Core Radio.
|
|
I think it was called Low Tech Mystic had a show, bottle of the mix links and the links link
|
|
tech show that you mentioned are awesome. I know that's so cool. Those guys are, I don't know
|
|
how they do that in their lives to find the time to do all that. I dropped out of the whole scene
|
|
eight years ago. Coincidentally, I have an eight-year-old child and another one.
|
|
I kind of had to grow up and make money to feed them. They like food, shelter, all these things.
|
|
But that's okay. Frustrating parts of the project is finding people to record episodes. You
|
|
always feel like you're a beggar. I hear you, man. I don't know if I've said this yet today,
|
|
but like Kim Falon has done this project infinitely longer than I was ever involved with any of it.
|
|
And like this is, this is, we're talking about his show. Like I was involved in the beginning,
|
|
but like this is not my project. This is not my show. And he's a hero for making it last this long.
|
|
Can I just interrupt you to say I am only here on a temporary basis until we get the whole thing
|
|
all admitted. And I'm out of here. Out of here. We'll continue contributing shows, but it's only
|
|
a temporary thing. How have we not automated this thing yet? Oh, don't start. Don't start.
|
|
You know those baby things that come along? Oh Lord, I think you have some questions about
|
|
what's going on now in troops world. Yeah. So I finished college and I was a hippie computer programmer
|
|
for a while and I worked for a bunch of little small clients. And now I've ended up somehow as a
|
|
high school teacher at a boarding school. And I am the entire computer science department here,
|
|
which is really awesome. And being a private school like there's no oversight to what I do,
|
|
which makes my life happy so that I can kind of just roll with it and go with it. This is my fifth
|
|
year teaching. Right now I'm teaching a project lead the way class on computer science and engineering
|
|
and project lead the way as a nationwide computer science initiative. Yeah. And I went and took
|
|
this two week long intensive class at a very highly respected engineering school. And like
|
|
like this is stuff like it makes the paper when your school starts teaching the stuff. At the
|
|
programming class I was teaching before. I think it was much better than this fancy honors
|
|
project lead the way class. So by doing this to make my school happy, I've kind of screwed up my
|
|
whole programming class that I was teaching before. But that's okay. Fair enough.
|
|
Like I was teaching it seems much more like college level. What's that? See that commentable
|
|
putting food on the table. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. I teach a microcontroller class where we do cool
|
|
stuff with our dreamers. Right now we are building a whack-a-mole game. They have figured out how to
|
|
read buttons and how to read a potentiometer and how to light up LEDs and pick random numbers.
|
|
And now we're trying to throw all that together. And the biggest sketch that they've written so far
|
|
in the microcontroller class like school just started. I don't know 20 lines long and whack-a-moles
|
|
is much more logic. We're just doing basic things. There's no like objects and crazy things. We're
|
|
just reading pins and pushing buttons. We have a lot of fun with that. There's been no burning
|
|
incidences with the soldering irons in class which is cool. But whatever that's part of learning.
|
|
I teach a junior high class to a couple sessions. I would be much here. How old was it?
|
|
I don't know how old you're 13, 12, 13, 14. And to get them ready for high school. And so we're
|
|
learning to use computers not just to play games but to create things. And things that kids are lacking
|
|
is like just basic troubleshooting skills. They can use a computer all day and look all smart but
|
|
they don't actually have to solve a problem. And so we've literally gone into the basics like how
|
|
email works and like how we do this and what if this doesn't work or how to take a computer part
|
|
and put it back together. And like these are kids you tell them make me a word document and like
|
|
they're done and they've got it and they've laid it all out because that's kind of the digital
|
|
intelligence they have. But they don't have a problem like if there's a problem how do you actually
|
|
solve it. And I think that's very unique and like it's hard to find curriculum for junior high
|
|
kids how to solve problems and technology that's not just here's how you make a word document or
|
|
here's how you do this. Every Thursday is a code day in that class and we've been doing scratch
|
|
which is a lot of fun we did like by the other day and just trying to get them thinking that mindset.
|
|
And I also make all my classes read and take notes by hand because I'm a jerk I guess but as much
|
|
as I love technology and I love computers and all these things and so I make my living
|
|
if you don't know how to take notes and like organize your thoughts so computers are really going
|
|
to help you. It's just it's just just kind of a fill in and so I've been supported by that research
|
|
from the OCD show that's more than 20 minutes on the computer a day and you're actually the kids
|
|
are not benefiting from us. Yeah that's awesome. I taught a reading class this summer and one of
|
|
the kids wanted to type up his paper and I let him it was I mean it's four kids in the class I
|
|
kind of read on the social experiment and I don't know if I could do this at public school without
|
|
being fired but it's private schools kind of neat. I let him type his papers and I let the others
|
|
hand write it and so that as they're drafts like I they go through a draft they turn it in I'd fix
|
|
it and send it back to them to fix it. Every draft they wrote it got progressively better and
|
|
better and better. Meanwhile the kid who was typing it he'd write a draft I'd tell him what to fix
|
|
and he would just edit that same document and so at the end of the week of writing this paper
|
|
I mean we didn't like spend all day on this we were reading books and exploring and doing cool
|
|
things bad everyone's drafts and they were all like they all agree that his sucked like his was
|
|
just bad compared to theirs and we tried to figure out why his was so bad compared to everyone
|
|
else's and they were looking at the drafts and they were like because he's not rewriting the thing
|
|
he's not thinking he's just oh I have to change this word I'm gonna change it I'm gonna change
|
|
this word I'm gonna change this one word and kind of the whole class kind of came to the realization
|
|
in seventh graders it's you know 13 year old boys they came to realization that they got better the
|
|
more times they did something and like that that was awesome that I could teach them yeah yeah yeah
|
|
so I'm not necessarily to say that you can't do that because I quite often will write four paragraphs
|
|
of text and then just take a few sentences and re-write it and re-write it and re-write it and
|
|
re-listen to it but he was just trying to be quick and get done I know what you mean yeah
|
|
and that's that's part of life too yeah and if you have to write it out you are forced to rethink
|
|
the second time so it's going through the second time so I'm sitting in my desk right now I've
|
|
got my Linux computer on it I have several Linux computers and Raspberry Pi's in the classroom
|
|
some servers I've got just components laid out from kids building stuff with our dweenos I've
|
|
got to clean up what do you what do you run on as a distra I haven't asked I'm a straight up devian
|
|
user so for the students I'm letting them use xubuntu on the desktop computers in my classroom
|
|
okay cool you I was thinking of you should then perhaps get them to record shows for HBR
|
|
so I thought of that and one of the lessons in my junior high class this year is going to be
|
|
record a podcast and if we can record something that's kind of cool I will totally contribute it
|
|
I just have to make sure we take the school's name out and their name out and you can put it on
|
|
hobby public radio if you want yeah hobby public radio might be better for the parents
|
|
yeah that'd be true I don't know it's cool don't you do it early stuff we have a maker space and we've
|
|
been building crazy things in that I'm trying to involve more kids and just creating if you actually
|
|
just take a mic and have a go around and have them explain give us a tour of your classroom
|
|
on what they're doing that would be cool that would be cool then we could all send in postcards from
|
|
different parts of the world what do you reckon that'd be me get them to send them to you you can
|
|
scan them oh look something different getting them physically come on and like technology wise I
|
|
just went on a road trip this summer as a teacher I get these brakes now and we spent 40 days on a
|
|
road trip across the country my wife and children and I and I didn't even bring a computer with me
|
|
I don't own a cell phone anymore I exist for work and then the rest of the time is mine to read
|
|
and to experiment and do things cool what you're reading anything cool right now I'm reading Walter
|
|
Isaacson's book hecklet's name it's not the Steve Jobs when it's the inventor's one but the history
|
|
of technology so you're still keeping your keeping your tools and even when you're offline but I
|
|
make the kids read in my classes like we've made books outside of class just like you'll do in college
|
|
and the I've I don't know 50 high school students that are all going to read free is in freedom
|
|
by richer installment by the end of the year awesome and I told them all not to buy it from Amazon
|
|
I told them they needed to buy it straight from the free software system or foundation
|
|
excellent I love that I love that so if anyone from there is listening I deserve a t-shirt for that
|
|
absolutely um then we started with a simple book about kind of interaction with people
|
|
because I think a lot of technology kids want to live on that machine and they don't want to
|
|
interact with each other work together all my high school classes we do like we do programming
|
|
it's paired programming so my micro control class my programming class we work together as teams
|
|
and like that's hard for high school kids to do and like to work together effectively but I think
|
|
that's an important skill that I need to be teaching them yeah actually that's hard full stop doing
|
|
though with somebody else and I just thought a big battle this year they want us to use the computer lab
|
|
for all my classes and I don't want to use the schools computers for my programming classes I had
|
|
to last year um because I want them to learn to use their computer for work and their computer
|
|
I don't want it to be seamless whether they're sitting on the couch in my classroom or sitting at
|
|
the table or sitting in their room that they've got their work environment with them and that's
|
|
like I have to you know walk around and make sure they're not on Facebook because we're not
|
|
filtering what they're doing on their computer or playing stupid games but I don't really have
|
|
that trouble yet and I think that's a good lesson because they get to college no one's looking for
|
|
that you know some kid wants to just waste their tuition money so they can play on Instagram all day
|
|
this professor's not gonna stop them yeah turn off the don't care and so I'm trying to instill that
|
|
lesson now and I think we're doing a lot better in all of my classes this year not using the schools
|
|
computer lab because like I have a bunch of couches I got at secondhand stores and like I turn
|
|
the lights on to them and I have all these layouts and like we sit around and we argue and we
|
|
we write stuff on those I want to be in their last troops sounds cool
|
|
we're doing scrum agile developments oh my god like like our first major assignment in the
|
|
project lead the way class was a scratch game and four of the smartest kids in the school got
|
|
together and made a crappy scratch game because they didn't take it that seriously so they got a
|
|
crappy grade they started and I think this is the lowest grade any of them have ever gotten in
|
|
high school I mean it was like a C I mean it's not like the end of the world it came from you
|
|
and it came from me and like that was kind of a big wake up and so we had to turn in our first
|
|
list of tasks our first scrum for Friday and like those kids they had a list they were they were
|
|
ready their user stories were very good they were they were ready to roll and like do a good job
|
|
with it and like they've been emailing me incessantly we're working on android apps using
|
|
app and vendor right now and they just keep emailing me try this why does it this far try this
|
|
and asking the questions about it and I'm excited about that I don't have a cell phone so it
|
|
doesn't bother me all the time I consider my computer and you know answer all their questions
|
|
then go yeah awesome excellent how is up inventor what's that how do you find it up inventor well
|
|
it's part of the curriculum that we have to use in that project lead the way class but uh it's
|
|
cool and like they're not learning to I don't know they're learning how loops work and they're not
|
|
having to worry about sim and colons and in current places and worry about putting all this formatting
|
|
that like when I learned a program that was what my life drove around was the logic and then all
|
|
this you had to get everything just right that attention to detail and like with app inventor like
|
|
if the block doesn't fit it doesn't work and so they really learned it a lot more about the logic
|
|
in the beginning than just the formatting of things which I don't know if that's good or bad but
|
|
it's it's neat I am really annoyed with you that you have not already sent in several a whole
|
|
fracking series on what you do and over there all right so I'm a prick and I had it in that I'm
|
|
sorry yeah there you go yeah well one of us had to say it as well but now that I know you exist
|
|
we fix that now that sounds awesome and the other cool stuff you do I found a strobe scope the other
|
|
day while cleaning out the little storage room in my closet a strobe a scope do you know what that
|
|
is and no clue well the front of it it's that strobe a scope and it's like it's this old machine
|
|
like the 60s as we have all this old technology that people use to teach electronics with like
|
|
you know function generators and all this stuff and it's a strobe scope I said what the hell is
|
|
this and I look at the other side it's strobe light it's a scientific strobe light and so I just
|
|
set that up my classroom I think it's kind of play with it and we have like a little raid before
|
|
class in the day with the scientific strobe scope because it's science science science there you go
|
|
like a couple my kids are responsible enough to have a laptop like what I'm a senior in high school
|
|
he's about to go to college and he had some like pornography on it and his mom took away his computer
|
|
right but like he's in my programming class like he needs a computer so he's using a raspberry pie
|
|
in the back to do all this classwork and like that's just awesome it is so cool actually
|
|
what does how does come on it's awesome it's slow but he's either done speaking of 1960s technology
|
|
my father and all uh he's an ex-teacher and they were carrying out all the old analog stuff from
|
|
school so I have a two-channel oscilloscope lots of function generators counters and a bench
|
|
multimeter in my possession else it's very very happy they were cleaning out some stuff this
|
|
summer to it added a new classroom and there was a bunch of all the oscilloscopes and I tested all
|
|
of the one of them worked oh and I've got it now the other ones should go on eBay for parts
|
|
they're beautiful old machines and it's probably like a fuse or something yeah exactly it's
|
|
missing and they're not using that class I don't know where they've all put them to have they
|
|
it done away yeah exactly I know the guys in work they they'll take the oldest oscilloscope because
|
|
they think they're more actors for what they do but they're heavier and can take more stuff yeah I
|
|
mean if you dropped one of these things on your toe you would definitely yeah that's what we're doing
|
|
the cool project in my classes this year they're projectly the way I think the Android apps are
|
|
the coolest thing that they're gonna do then we're gonna get the Python and PHP and it's just kind
|
|
of an overview of computer science it's not like we're really gonna make much like most of the
|
|
Python's I even write in Python code it's just ending someone else's Python code yeah just I
|
|
don't think that kind of takes away some of the creativity of it so yeah on the other hand I mean
|
|
when you when you do blogs to work you one of the functions you have to do is take somebody else
|
|
that's cold and improve it you know it is a thing that is true if my programming class we're learning
|
|
command line PHP this semester next semester we're gonna learn processing first year I just did
|
|
a whole year worth of processing for my programming class and it was it was awesome what do you
|
|
mean by processing? there's a language called processing they have the whole little environment
|
|
some guys MIT started it and it's essentially you just write and see with all these graphical
|
|
libraries and so hello world and processing it doesn't say hello world it's just
|
|
just draw circle on the screen make it move around cool that would be another show probably
|
|
for me gender pressure and then the microcontroller class we obviously want to build robots that
|
|
find each other so I think that's gonna be a big highlight and the PHP command line PHP class
|
|
the major project of the year is going to or the semester is gonna be we're gonna build a
|
|
radio station broadcasts in the classroom that's all running on Linux and command line PHP and
|
|
you know have a catalog of shows have a catalog of commercials and every day I'm gonna come in
|
|
and say this is what we need to do to add to our radio station and the class is as a whole it's
|
|
gonna have to continue broadcasting the radio station while they come up with the solution
|
|
and I'm gonna have at least silly printers like you can only play one song in a row and then you
|
|
have to have you know a minute of talking and so 30 seconds of talking station identification
|
|
all this crap and we're just gonna pile it on so they're gonna be in like an intense they're
|
|
gonna come to class and be in this work mode where we have to keep this going while we fix this and
|
|
I hope we don't break the radio station yeah yeah and I think that's gonna be really cool god this
|
|
used your class sounds like a Sunday Sunday movie thing you know where are they
|
|
where are they out of the box thinking teacher comes in and affects all these kids' lives
|
|
I don't I don't know how lucky these guys I hope these guys realize how lucky they are
|
|
I think one day they will I have one of them right now that is from last year who works in our
|
|
dining hall at the school and he it's a he didn't do very well he worked out through high school
|
|
it's a little boarding school and he just needed extra money yeah and so he worked in the dining
|
|
hall he's going to college now but he works at night in the dining hall so I see him all the time
|
|
and he was one of my star students he's working on computer science he's taking all the first year
|
|
classes and to use some profanity he's like college's bullshit like I could do all this stuff
|
|
already and like that's awesome so he's learning all these things on his own much less you know
|
|
the basic college stuff he's so far ahead of the kids who've gone to fancy school for computer
|
|
science excellent excellent excellent excellent and what better way to finish their projects
|
|
than to submit a show here for a HPR a whole series in fact
|
|
awesome awesome awesome awesome stuff well I hope you mentioned as many people as possible
|
|
because as I say I don't even know who to contact from way back when and when I just took it over
|
|
all I really was in contact with was Enigma and I got basically here are the keys good luck
|
|
yeah that's how these things yeah it is yeah and it's what I've been doing for the for the last
|
|
while as Dave Morris and John Colton everybody else will attest to I don't know I've said this
|
|
enough but you're you're doing an awesome job with it and the community appreciates it whether
|
|
they tell you that or not yeah but it's it's actually I'm not I'm not really I really don't feel
|
|
that I'm doing anything it's it is the community and I know that sounds cheesy and all but really
|
|
all I'm doing now is posting the shows I've got just think of it this way there's a lot of people
|
|
to do all the stuff so it's they would probably also sporting those shows and learning that
|
|
knowledge and getting that glamour and perfect for you know if you haven't if you have not started
|
|
to watch videos 10 years ago saying hey dude record me an episode and you put it up there and you
|
|
encourage it though they wouldn't be doing any of that work yeah but hopefully we can get more
|
|
people people who listen to the shows to start to start also send an in shows but also
|
|
going other people to come on and to send in shows because then we like we have a list of
|
|
really cool stuff that we can do I would like to be doing rather than you know begging people for
|
|
shows is actually the last the last thing on my list but I don't want to be doing so do we miss
|
|
anything that we should have been talking about to have a chat actually oh I'm sure that we have
|
|
I don't think I've ever talked to you this long I actually have one you ever talked to you I think
|
|
I don't think we have have we ever had a conversation I don't think so I don't know on the
|
|
email we have you see this is weird because I've you're listening to so yeah exactly I've been
|
|
listening to so many of your shows that yeah I know stuff by the way you're um you're
|
|
geocaching do you get geocaching still oh some um it's kind of gotten overrun with the popularity
|
|
yeah and it's not as interesting as it used to be like it's it's become a game of let's see how many
|
|
we can find as compared to let's see how awesome of a cache I can make this one yeah you know
|
|
that one you did on the canoe did anyone ever find that okay so two of those we hid that day with
|
|
the canoe one of those has been found once by a guy who has like thousands of geocaches found and he
|
|
wrote like an essay about how awesome of a time he had finding this geocache and how it was like
|
|
one of the greatest ones he'd ever found he went to the spot he had a bar of a kayak he fell over
|
|
he almost drowned there were alligators like it was awesome um he also found the one that climbed
|
|
up the the tree I've checked on both of them with like last couple years they're both well the tree
|
|
I don't know if it's I don't think it's still there I can't get up there to get there the trees
|
|
falling over all the way the one in the water is still there and dry and then some guy who was
|
|
fishing just randomly saw the one in the tree I bet his kids were climbing on it they found it
|
|
and he posted on there that he had wanted to start geocaching but you know he'd never really
|
|
tried and had bought a GPS yet so uh there's that like we we drove 40 days the summer across the
|
|
country like we went to the upper peninsula of Michigan all the way down to the Gulf Coast
|
|
of Louisiana and in geocache at all we rode bikes and explored camped out and shot snakes and
|
|
cool stuff yeah as I've said before I'll say it again my plan is to like one day get a
|
|
go with the kids and just go visit all the podcasting people around the state it would be awesome
|
|
see we made our plan that we would just kind of explore like my grandpa was from upper
|
|
Michigan and like I went there as a little kid but like he died but I was like four so like we'd
|
|
never gone back and so like we just kind of went to look at his whole town and we had written the
|
|
I knew his address it's our letter the people that live in his house it's like can I stand in your
|
|
backyard and like just look at my grandpa's view over the water and they were they were very welcoming
|
|
and like they knew people that used to know him so like they took us around and like introduced
|
|
us to all these people who like knew me from being a child which was cool and like they suggested
|
|
to do stuff and like our whole trip was just kind of suggestions people were like oh you should go
|
|
look at this it's real pretty and we're like well that's only you know 400 miles an hour let's do it
|
|
we were I don't like driving on the interstates we like just kind of ambled along back roads
|
|
and we had we're driving through this town on the way to a cave that my son had been reading about
|
|
in a book and he was like well you know we're going to Kentucky you know mammoth caves in Kentucky
|
|
so let's go there so we're driving there and we're driving this little dinky town and there's a town
|
|
built on top of a cave and horse cave Kentucky so we stopped there to like look at it and they like
|
|
they were like how old are your kids and we're like oh they're you know seven and eight you know
|
|
like well they're supposed to be 10 to go like legit caving but you know they seem up to it's
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it's like if you have any boots and I'm like no you know I just bought sandals on this
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road trip and then like oh we've got some boots you can wear and like you know we've got all
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caved up and like helmets and flashlights and spent like three hours crawling through mud in a cave
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and I'm like trying to fit through all these little tunnels and like have this awesome experience
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and like we weren't planning on doing that at all that day and then the guys like oh you've
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ever seen a moon though and we're like what are you talking about he's like there's a waterfall
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the full moon hits the certain waterfall in the Cumberland gap of Kentucky it makes a rainbow
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but it's white because it's the moon and we're like oh that's awesome so we're like you know
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coming as they know we're there and like there's no full moon inside
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we're playing very well but like they were like oh that's kind of this place where all three
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states meet like we just kind of yeah of course we just aim but along the country for 40 days
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also all of which would have made valid chills just by the back. Well sorry I don't have
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anything to record on like I brought the tip up just the old school candle like the
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same it has books that was the only technology I brought my GPS I call shenanigans and that one
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this is from somebody who posted a show from someone who had recorded on there with the left
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ear of headphones. Okay so I have a tape recorder I will bring that with me on my next adventure.
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Thank you thank you if somebody can record a show while swimming down the river in front I think
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you surely can record a show. This shows it's because they're full of excuses like myself.
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There you go there you go I'm not buying them from you though you got me into this mess thank you
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very much. Boss here's the thing actually you know my experience with this HPR thing is that
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people have been universally nice. Yes and there hasn't been any negativity at all in this
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entire time that I've been involved with this how how is this possible when you turn on the news?
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We're all the bad people we're all the nasty people especially when you when you think of like
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attackers and they're bad nasty people. That has a sub in your experience as well or are we just
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lucky? I don't know I think it's kind of a small town in that we all kind of live in this community
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and we all want to help each other out. Cool. Did I? Yeah. We never had any trouble either with
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anything now that you mentioned it like I don't know it's just been it's been a overall positive
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experience it's neat to go to cons and like you have this relationship established with people you
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have never met. Yes exactly and the fact that this is the first time that we've actually spoken
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to each other and have not realized that this is the first time we've spoken to each other it's
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kind of weird. Yeah this cool. Okay so I'm going to get off my lazy butt and do that. Why do we not
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have a Wikipedia page after 10 years? That that is very strange to me. I think part of the the
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Wikipedia rules are you're not allowed to make a Wikipedia page about yourself. And I think that
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everyone that knows about HPR is involved in HPR. So that would be against the results right?
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Yeah that's actually on the on the on the subscription page things you need to know
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and the last of is once you submit a show you can no longer edit a Wikipedia page. So pretty cool.
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So I think I think we've covered everything that's on the list. Did you ever get that
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do you remember getting an email from me say about 10 years ago saying I would do a show about a
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satellite dish pointing thing? No but I have a copy of it that you said to me the other day
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and I'm going to search my Gmail because I never delete anything and I'm going to find it respond.
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Thank you very much. This folks procrastination I think this is one of the things that I find
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the road to hell is paved with good intentions. We have the same
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it isn't a show unless it goes up unless it's on the server it's another show. And 10 years ago
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I wrote to troops go hey I've got this great idea for a show now I've got kids and stuff so I can
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take on whatever but I can definitely do a whole series of shows about satellite dishes the
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pointing and DVB and all the rest and have it done any of them? No. So anyway this is my excuse.
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I'm totally promised to make a lot for shows that I've made. I think every time we talk I'm like
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well I'll do this so that I never do anything and I'm also really mad about this is part one
|
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like part two never. Yeah I just started a series on oh god here we go again. I'm talking about
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my own shows as well if you go back to my my first ones now I just record them and just throw
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them up I don't care that's the easiest way. Although sometimes I start them and like it goes wrong
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it's the show is completely jinx year you recorded 14 times and the battery goes oh Kevin.
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There's a Kevin. Okay so I recorded a show once for Empanamacad and we were drinking during the
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|
thing and we had gone outside and we came back in and we forgot to hit record and we spent like
|
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40 minutes recording and then we discovered that we had not hit record at all and yeah no that's
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I have I've done that and thankfully I have like a Sansa clip for getting back up interviews but
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I really had to go back to my Sansa clip several times. So that's how that works. I wish more
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people record shows I wish I would contribute more I will try my darkness to do more of that when
|
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it gets in big diesel battery so I can get my tape player going or tape recorder. So basically
|
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there nobody is required to submit yours but you're encouraged to submit yours that's all we're
|
|
saying is it. I mean you should be some of the people who contribute like you should be some of that
|
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1% like let's make it 2% like if 2% of the people that listen to this thing submit it stuff like
|
|
the like the world will change. It would it would make your life so much easier yet.
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Drew's thanks very much is absolutely great to hear from you again and it's good to hear that your
|
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family is doing good and I'm very interested to go back and actually hear the rest of this interview
|
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but unfortunately I can't do that because I only listened to the shows once we're posted so
|
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Well I've got to go to a football game and help officiate so I've appreciated this time and I
|
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appreciate all your work that you've put into it and all the people who contributed to the show
|
|
and made it what it is it's infinitely better than anything we had ever thought we would have
|
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and if you can get in touch with some of the other guys that really love to have him on as well
|
|
especially coming up to episode 2000 and 2048. But I talked to my to Dawesman and he has like a
|
|
lot-picking thing he's doing today. Oh excellent so yeah get in touch also can you email me
|
|
the the shower uploaded to the FTP server or something like that though. But I certainly hope that
|
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my little laptop here will handle this 58 minute long recording and I hope so because I don't
|
|
have a recording of this. Awesome this might be the episode just you and I here.
|
|
All right was you talking to yourself mostly so excellent. Anyway folks thank you very much thank you
|
|
troops. Thanks all the guys who set up. Let's go back to Radio Freak America, Infanomicon,
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bin rev, today with a techie and everybody who's been on the HPR. June and tomorrow for another
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|
exciting episode of Hacker. This is where you say public. Oh I'm sorry public. Radio.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot 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 an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a
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podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
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founded by the digital dog pound and the Infanomicon computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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|
at bin rev dot com. If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a
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comment on the website or record a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise status. Today's
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show is released on the creative comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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