- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
380 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
380 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2165
|
|
Title: HPR2165: Get the most out of your commute with these great audio suggestions.
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2165/hpr2165.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-18 15:11:03
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HBR episode 2,165 entitled Get the Most Out of Your Commute with the Great Audio Suggestions.
|
|
It is hosted by ITWI's and is about 36 minutes long.
|
|
The summary is ITWI's talks about ways to stay entertained during your commute to work
|
|
by listening to podcasts.
|
|
This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
|
|
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
|
|
That's HBR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
|
Hello Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
This is Nightwise from the Nightwise.com podcast.
|
|
I'm not casting or recording where I'm usually recording in a driving car and I decided
|
|
you know what?
|
|
I'm on my way home.
|
|
Anyway, let's just record a show for HBR about what I do when I'm in the car.
|
|
Just a little bit of background for the people who don't know me, I am an IT consultant
|
|
and I have been a IT consultant for about well almost 20 years now and the last for the
|
|
last 12 years of that I have been doing long commutes.
|
|
It started out all in 2004, 2005 when I was asked to do an assignment in Antwerp which
|
|
is about an hour drive away from where I live.
|
|
So this little farm town boy who never worked anything more than 20 minutes away from where
|
|
we lived suddenly had to take on these pretty long drives to Antwerp and beyond.
|
|
Now to stay sane I did a couple of things.
|
|
I tried listening to CDs which got old really fast and I tried listening to radio which
|
|
got old even faster and then I discovered podcast and I started listening to podcast
|
|
and I've been listening to podcasts in Macon ever since for the longest time and this
|
|
year marks the 12th year of me being on the road and in my recent assignments I have gotten
|
|
a one hour and 15 minutes commute to Gondig which is also near Antwerp which means that
|
|
I get up at the crack of dawn and I leave for work early and I come home pretty late and
|
|
I kind of spend two and a half hours, sometimes three hours, sometimes even more in the car
|
|
and there are, you know, not a lot of things you can do in the car and that's sad actually
|
|
because it's wasted, it's time has really wasted.
|
|
I haven't had the chance to have an assignment where I could go to work by public transport
|
|
like train or something which would really be a big change for me.
|
|
I would be able to sit in the train and watch videos and study and God knows what but when
|
|
you're doing that in the car well it doesn't really work that well, does it?
|
|
So I'm always challenged with the fact of what do you do when you're in the car, how
|
|
do you take your commute time and use it as productively as you can and I've got throughout
|
|
the years I've gotten a couple of tips and pointers that you guys and girls might find
|
|
interesting if you're just getting started on doing more commutes or you're absolutely
|
|
done with morning talk shows or listening to your own CD or MP3 collection.
|
|
Now of course, the number one thing you can do in the car is listen to podcasts.
|
|
That's, you know, I don't know if I should explain to you what a podcast is, it would
|
|
be a very awkward situation because you're listening to them.
|
|
I have been listening to podcasts since 2004, 2005, I think I got the first, I picked
|
|
up at the first 20 episodes of the Daily Source Code and you know, listening to podcasts
|
|
is a very interesting way to kind of make that commute that you have as productive as possible.
|
|
There are podcasts on all kinds of topics just, you know, think about it and it exists.
|
|
What you need to do is make sure that when you're listening to podcasts you have enough,
|
|
you know, attention left in your attention span to focus on the road while still listening
|
|
to something that is interesting and if possible, something that helps you learn.
|
|
When I started listening to podcasts, we had the iPod and we used to have pod catcher
|
|
applications like, for example, juice that would download podcasts through the hard disk
|
|
and side load them onto your iPod and then every morning your iPod would be loaded up
|
|
with fresh content and then you could leave for your commute listening to that and sometimes
|
|
there was no fresh content or that sync didn't work and you didn't get your fresh content
|
|
which was really annoying but hey, you know, that's what it is.
|
|
These days we all have smartphones at 90% or 95% of those smartphones have the ability
|
|
to download a podcast catcher or pod catcher that does it all on its own and you can subscribe
|
|
to podcasts, it will download the podcasts, it will store the podcasts, you don't need
|
|
a computer, you don't need to synchronize.
|
|
The only thing you need to know is that it is available, you know, that you have a connection
|
|
to the internet so your podcasts get downloaded automatically.
|
|
If you're using a pod catcher on your phone, like, for example, dog catcher or, let me see,
|
|
I forgot a name of the iOS one, maybe you're using the native iOS pod catching app that
|
|
can also be a thing, make sure that you have your phone connected up to Wi-Fi in the morning
|
|
and that you download your podcast before you leave.
|
|
The second thing that you want to do is make sure that those podcasts get deleted automatically
|
|
because, you know, otherwise your phone will fill up with podcasts you've already listened
|
|
to and most pod catching clients have the ability to either delete shows that are older
|
|
than two weeks or for example, delete shows that you already listened to.
|
|
I found that streaming podcasts, most pod catchers like, for example, dog catcher and
|
|
pocket cast on Android also allow you to stream the episode so you don't have to download
|
|
everything.
|
|
This might be an issue if your internet connection is metered or you have a bandwidth
|
|
cap, it might be an issue but, you know, streaming them is going to eat away your data
|
|
cap on your mobile subscription and you might not want that.
|
|
Now what can be interesting is doing a combination of both where you download the shows that you
|
|
listen to regularly and where you stream the shows that you only listen to when there's
|
|
a topic that is interesting and most pod catchers allow you to set how many episodes you
|
|
want to download per podcast feed so that might be a nice trick for you because you don't
|
|
have to download every podcast but, you know, it's just a couple of megabytes who cares,
|
|
you never know.
|
|
The second thing that's important is of course the quality of those podcasts.
|
|
I mean, there is, there are a lot of brilliant podcasts out there and let's face it, there's
|
|
a lot of junk out there and a lot of podcasts these days are basically radio shows, sound
|
|
like radio shows, have ads like radio shows and get produced by radio shows, which sometimes
|
|
is fine but the thing that I've always thought it to wonder is then what's the difference
|
|
between listening to a podcast and listening to the radio?
|
|
Okay, for me it's interesting to listen to stuff like NPR and God knows what because,
|
|
you know, I live in Belgium and Europe and we don't have NPR.
|
|
So downloading a NPR show is fine but, you know, is that really, you know, something
|
|
you're interested in?
|
|
I always have a hard time with picking the right amount of shows that I want to listen
|
|
to.
|
|
Always make sure that you have enough podcasts on your phone or podcast player but also make
|
|
sure that you just don't have too many on there that you never listen to.
|
|
You know, stuff you subscribe to because you subscribe to it.
|
|
You don't really have to have to do that, to be very, very firm with that, only subscribe
|
|
to the ones that really interest you and I go even one step beyond, I only listen to
|
|
the ones that really interest me.
|
|
One of the things that I used to do is I used to be subscribed to a bunch of podcasts
|
|
and I would listen to them even if the topics were not very interesting.
|
|
I have pretty much learned to let that go.
|
|
If there's a topping on there that interests me, I listen to it and if there's a topping
|
|
that doesn't interest me, I'll just skip that one show.
|
|
I have enough shows on my podcast to compensate and keep you busy.
|
|
The second thing that you want to be able to do is skip ahead and skip back because
|
|
a lot of podcasts have ads and I know, you sit back, you're driving, you're kind of
|
|
gazing in front of you and there's an ad about shaving cream or God knows what.
|
|
You know what?
|
|
Skip that ad.
|
|
You can't do that on radio, but you can do that in a podcast.
|
|
So just tap tap quickly forward and skip those ads because yeah, they make money off
|
|
the ads and that's why the podcasts are free, but there are also a lot of podcasts that
|
|
get supported by other means and the one thing that I think is very important to
|
|
listening to podcasts as opposed to listening to the radio is that you can really
|
|
be the master of the content.
|
|
You can say what kind of content you want to listen to.
|
|
You can crawl into the darkest regions, you know, I didn't care if you want to listen
|
|
to a podcast that deals with fan-fixed stories about
|
|
Transformers, about Hentai Transformers, writing Pink Fluffy My Little Ponies through
|
|
time and space using a steampunk S&M leather version of the Tartus.
|
|
I mean, there's got to be a podcast out there about that.
|
|
And if that's your thing, listen to that, but make sure that you really determine the
|
|
quality of what you want to listen to.
|
|
And if there's a podcast that doesn't interest you, if there's a topic that doesn't interest
|
|
you, skip it.
|
|
If there's a podcast that isn't really interesting anymore, delete it, choose something else
|
|
on subscribe.
|
|
And if there's content in a podcast that you don't find very interesting, just skip it.
|
|
The thing that you want to do is maximize the time that you have in the car, listen to
|
|
the podcast.
|
|
You know, gather as much useful or interesting information as you can, because you can,
|
|
because it's not linear radio, because you don't have to listen to the ads, because you
|
|
don't have to listen to a radio DJ talking on and on about himself.
|
|
So yeah, the second thing that you want to do with podcasts, and this is something
|
|
that the big podcasts don't do anymore, and I think that that's sad, is, you know, get
|
|
audio feedback from their listeners.
|
|
There used to be a time where it'd be so great that you would, you know, get an MP3 recording
|
|
from a listener, and you could play it on the show, and there it was the show that you
|
|
really liked, and you would listen to it, and you would send in your comments and a podcast
|
|
would think, that would be great, and you would play it, and you would be swell, that
|
|
you were on that podcast and stuff.
|
|
That was a really fun time.
|
|
You really got to interact with other, with podcasters, with other podcast listeners,
|
|
and you know, podcasting is such a great, great meeting, that it allows you to do this,
|
|
you know, sending in your own MP3, it's up a standard small MP3 recorder on your phone,
|
|
to record a voice memo, and just, you know, when you get to work or when you get home,
|
|
you just send that MP3 file to the podcaster with your thoughts and comments, because, you
|
|
know, it's the listeners' comments, the listeners' contributions that really make a
|
|
shine.
|
|
So, I've had, yeah, do it, I've had the greatest fun doing stuff like this, I've done feedback
|
|
for Linux podcasts, for all kinds of techy podcasts, I've even recorded a Klingon ad
|
|
for a car repair guy on a Mac podcast, you know, the people you meet and you interact
|
|
with by giving feedback to a podcast is amazing, you get to interact with your favorite
|
|
podcast here, a kind of podcaster, you form a bond, you produce something together, very,
|
|
very valuable, and because podcasting is such a great medium that allows you to do this,
|
|
don't just sit there and listen and don't say anything, I mean, I find your feedback,
|
|
it's the feedback of the listener that enriches the podcast behavior, the podcast experience.
|
|
Support your shows, if your show has a donation button, if you're listening to it and you
|
|
really enjoy it, support them, if they're a Patreon show, you know, get them something
|
|
on Patreon, these people put these podcasts together for you, and if you can't contribute
|
|
your content, because that's valuable, and you can't share the podcast with your friends,
|
|
because that's also very important, share the content that you like, bring more listeners
|
|
to the podcast, that's also very important, you want to give them a tip, money is always
|
|
good, but, you know, contributing to the podcast and sharing the podcast, getting more listeners
|
|
out there is even more important than just giving them a tip, giving them a donation,
|
|
which is nice, but, you know, it's just that, it's just money.
|
|
So yeah, that's the whole podcasting thing, and if you are tired of listening to podcasts,
|
|
there are also, of course, a lot of other things you can listen to.
|
|
One of the things that I found is that while I'm at work, or while I'm at home, or when
|
|
I'm out and about, I find this really interesting article on the internet, and I go like,
|
|
this is a really interesting article, and I want to read this, but I don't have the time.
|
|
So yeah, I'll bookmark it, and you know, you bookmark it and you never read it.
|
|
So what I've started to do is, you know, put these things into pockets, market is this
|
|
little web service that stores web articles for you, so you can read them offline and, you know,
|
|
keep track of them, and store them in archive them. But this is nice, but the great thing about
|
|
pocket, and I think Instapaper supports this too, is that it will actually read those articles
|
|
out loud for you. And that's awesome, because then you can, you know, put together your own kind
|
|
of audio feed and have the articles read out to you. Now, it's a robot voice that does it.
|
|
It sounds pretty good, especially with some of the voices in what's it called in pocket.
|
|
But it's still a little dirty, but you know, if there's really that one piece of content that you
|
|
want to listen to, that very specialized article, you can build your own article feed just like that.
|
|
That's perfectly possible. I bookmark a lot of articles on pocket, and whenever I have a shorter
|
|
piece that I need to drive, not the one and a half hour commute that I'm doing normally,
|
|
I hit a pocket, and I just, you know, select some of the articles that I want to listen to,
|
|
and then have them read out loud. There are, of course, other alternatives to this, you can roll
|
|
your own if you want to. You can set up an if-distant.script that gets the RSS feed of your favorite website,
|
|
dumps the text of that article into a text file, and you can output that text file to whatever text
|
|
the speech engine that you're using, for example, on a Mac, I think it's the speech command, and you
|
|
can just, you know, take that text file that you created using an if-distant.rule that says,
|
|
when there's a new article on this RSS feed, pipe out the content into this text file,
|
|
and pipe out this text file into this text-to-speech MP3 file, and then you can listen to it online.
|
|
So you can roll your own if you want to. That's also a great way to kind of make your own audio
|
|
podcast if there's no audio feed for that website that you can listen to, and that way you can still
|
|
have, you know, website content, written content in an audio format in your car.
|
|
Also a great way to pick and choose whatever you want to listen to.
|
|
Another option is to learn. There are a lot of cool apps out there that allow you to learn stuff
|
|
while you're in the car. I wouldn't say stuff like Jewellingo that let you, you know, learn
|
|
another language because most of them involve typing and stuff, and I wouldn't do any typing
|
|
while you're behind the wheel. You're not only responsible for your own safety, you're also
|
|
responsible on the safety, and for the safety of all the drivers around you, so, you know, don't
|
|
tap around on the screen. Everything that you have to experience while you're doing your
|
|
commute is, has to be completely hands-free at completely audio center. That means that
|
|
there are great apps out there like, for example, the Khan Academy where you can select a certain
|
|
topic that you want to learn something about and just watch, you know, have a video play or an audio
|
|
file play about sit topic and learn something. And Khan Academy is really great when it comes
|
|
to learning about stuff that has to do with math or physics or computer science. And there might
|
|
be things out on there that are really interesting. So, I would be very careful with watching videos.
|
|
Don't, if you can, don't do it because never mind that you're still watching the road. And if
|
|
there's a video playing on your phone and your phone is mounted on your dashboard, your attention
|
|
will be distracted and you will be watching the video. So, don't do that. Just choose the audio.
|
|
Speaking of audio, if you are on iOS, why not go for IQU, which is this great service, this great
|
|
platform that you can use to download content from universities regarding all kinds of crazy
|
|
things you want to listen to. And I really like stuff like IQU because you can listen to a professor
|
|
doing a lecture at MIT or at Cambridge or at Yale about this crazy subject like, for example,
|
|
math or science or politics or quantum mechanics. And it's free and you can download it and you
|
|
can listen to it in the car and learn something. So, you know, just think about this. While you're
|
|
driving, the guy next to you, you know, he's driving as well. And he's listening to the radio.
|
|
And he's listening to this morning DJ that has this toothbrush stuck in his mouth,
|
|
brush his teeth while humming a pump song. And people calling and have to guess the pump song.
|
|
So, that's what this guy's listening to. And you, you are listening to a professor talk about
|
|
quantum mechanics. And it's a professor that's, you know, teaching at Yale. This prestigious
|
|
university that only, you know, that you never had a chance to go to, but you can listen to it in
|
|
your car on your way home. That is, that is so crazy. And that is so cool that you do not have an
|
|
excuse to listen to the radio DJ brushing his teeth while humming a pump song. You've just
|
|
got to listen to this other thing that is way more interesting. And you're a geek. So,
|
|
there. So Khan Academy, I choose you both great services to listen to. What about crazy things?
|
|
The other thing that you can do, of course, is listen to audiobooks. Get yourself an
|
|
audible description or download some audiobooks or look for some free audiobooks or look for some
|
|
free e-pub books. And see if you can convert them to an empty three. And you just listen to a
|
|
book in the car. Now, these audiobooks go on for hours and hours. And they might be very, very
|
|
entertaining. I know that, you know, when I have a pretty stressful time or have a really long
|
|
commute to get through. And I kind of want to relax and wind down. I'm not going to choose the
|
|
quantum mechanics talk that I just downloaded from MIT. I might just want to go for something more
|
|
relaxing. So sometimes I download a book that's fiction, you know, a Star Trek audiobook with some
|
|
sound effects or a Star Wars book or some other book that's novel. And it's really nice and
|
|
entertaining to listen to that. You know, you're getting gulfed in the story and there might be
|
|
different voices and sound effects. And it's nice. It's not very monotonous. So, it's pretty
|
|
entertaining. And still, you're listening to something that really interests you. So, not
|
|
the guy with the toothbrush. I mean, the pop song people have to call in to get the pop song.
|
|
Better. You can take it one step beyond and go for, you know, a book that you really want to learn
|
|
something from. So, for example, I've been listening to some books that are biographies,
|
|
which are really cool. They're nonfiction and they're still entertaining to listen to. Because
|
|
if you have to listen to the audio book about CCNA or something like that, I don't know,
|
|
that might be very dry material to get through in the car. And we don't want to put you to sleep.
|
|
But I especially like listening to biographies while I'm in the car. So,
|
|
I listened to Ghosts in the Wires from Kevin Midnick a couple of months ago. I listened to some
|
|
books from Malcolm Gladwell, Blink and the Outliers and all of those classics. And at the moment,
|
|
I'm listening to the innovators from Walter Isaacson, who talks about the history of the computers
|
|
and where he came from. So, these are all interesting thoughts, things that you can listen to.
|
|
And you can try to download the audio books via Audible or you might want to go out there and
|
|
seek your own audio books on whatever tour inside that you want to. I don't care what you do with it.
|
|
But there's a lot of content out there that can keep you entertained.
|
|
And those are kind of the important things that you can do. The third thing that you can do is,
|
|
talk to people while you're in the car. There are a lot of cool apps that allow you to do voice
|
|
communication with people all over the world I've had. By the way, before we go into that,
|
|
I just want to say that on Android, Mort Player, that is M-O-R-T Player, is a great player for
|
|
audio books. It offers you variable speeds. It picks up where you left off. It's a really good
|
|
audio player for these long audio books that you want to listen to.
|
|
And then, of course, there's talking to people. You can talk to people in the car. I mean,
|
|
you can phone people up. That's great. But I leave for work at 5.45 in the morning. So, I don't
|
|
call up my friends at 5.45 in the morning. That's not really pleasant for them. But, you know,
|
|
take that time in the car to call your friends and your family. And you can also talk to people online.
|
|
And it doesn't have to be a synchronous communication. It can be an asynchronous communication.
|
|
Like, for example, there are cool tools out there like boxer and telegram and WhatsApp
|
|
that allow you to send a voice message instead of typing something out.
|
|
Because typing something out on your phone is texting and texting is illegal when you're driving
|
|
and it's dangerous and you might run into a tree. The chance that a tree is running into you is
|
|
kind of small, but that is because I've never seen a tree texting while being a tree.
|
|
So, I have this theory that says that texting makes you run into a tree with your car. And if you
|
|
don't text, you don't do it because trees don't run into your car because they're not texting.
|
|
But that's a whole other issue. But what I was saying, not texting to communicate is a good thing.
|
|
Send voice message every single instant messaging app these days has a voice mail option.
|
|
And I know you might be a little self-conscious, but what the hell get over it.
|
|
Once you are in a discussion with somebody else and you hear them talking and they hear you talking,
|
|
your self-consciousness will go away. I don't know, Facebook Messenger has an audio option,
|
|
Telegram has an audio option, Boxer has an audio option, WhatsApp has an audio option, so
|
|
use voice messages. And the great thing is you can communicate with people who aren't awake
|
|
at that moment. They'll get the message when they're online and they can just send you a message
|
|
and when they get when they're awake. And that way, this way I've spent hours in the car talking
|
|
back and forth to people all over the world. You can even take it one step beyond,
|
|
but this kind of depends on your data plan, but you can set up a mumble server at home.
|
|
You know, mumble is a free VoIP server that you can call into and it is actually used
|
|
for a voice over IP voice communication network for, for example, gamers. So you're gaming and
|
|
you need all the bandwidth that you have and you have a very low ping, and you want to keep it that
|
|
way. So you need a way to talk your teammates, you know, and counter strike, or you want to say
|
|
the terrorists are over there, or the counter terrorists are over there, or go, go, go, or rush,
|
|
rush B, rush B, you know, you want to do things like that. So you want to talk to your friends,
|
|
one of the apps that is used a lot is mumble. Mumble is free and open source.
|
|
Mumble allows you to do voice conferencing with other people, with multiple people in the same
|
|
room and your different chat rooms and stuff like that. So that's cool. And what you want to do,
|
|
what you might want to do is use that in the car because mumble is built to function under a low
|
|
bandwidth. So you can set up your Raspberry Pi with a mumble server and invite your friends over
|
|
to that server and install the mumble client on your phone and just talk real time with people from
|
|
all over the world. So that is also a good use of your time. You can even record a podcast while
|
|
you're in the car over mumble, should you want to. So also that communicating with people,
|
|
interacting with people, doing discussions with people in the car is also a great way to have
|
|
a productive or at least a sensible commute. There were some other geeky things that we might,
|
|
you know, get into, you might want to, I don't know, parse the logs of your favorite IRC
|
|
channel and, you know, pipe them into an MP3 file and listen to the logs of your MP3 channel
|
|
while you're driving in the car. That might be your thing. There are also some IRC channels that
|
|
IRC apps that do text-to-speech mumble, even those text-to-speech so you can chat in the chat box
|
|
typing on mumble and it will read you out of the chats while you're in the car so you don't have
|
|
to type. Stuff like that. They're really, really nerdy, nerdy things that you can do but I'm not
|
|
going to go into the depth of whatever. I don't care if you, if you have your var off log file and
|
|
you want to read that out into an MP3 file and you want to listen to that at six o'clock in the
|
|
morning while you're stuck in traffic, listening to a robot voice reading out all the missed
|
|
authentication attempts against your SSH server. Well, if that's your thing, fine. The great
|
|
thing is you can, you can turn information into audio and listen to said audio. So rounding up,
|
|
what is very important is that time spent in the car is time that is important because you have
|
|
to pay attention. If you don't pay attention, you run into a truck. That is not what you want. You want
|
|
to pay attention to traffic and you want to make sure that you are a sensible and a safe driver.
|
|
That's good. But all the rest of that massive brain of yours is basically idling. It's doing nothing.
|
|
There are like four cords in your little brain and three of them are just sitting around going
|
|
like, Jesus, what are we going to do? So you might, you know, sit there and be bored and or start,
|
|
you know, really grinding down some bad thoughts in your head, you know, worrying about stuff
|
|
or or, you know, just, you know, basically getting yourself depressed by worrying a lot or
|
|
getting very anxious or getting very nervous. You don't get happy by yourself, seldom do you do that.
|
|
So you might want to not want to do that. So you want to have a distraction. Yes, that can be
|
|
the radio. And yes, yes, yes, you can listen to the DJ brush, Steve, then sing a pop song. And people
|
|
have to call in and guess the pop song. And, you know, that might be your thing. That's okay. If you
|
|
think that that's exciting, fine. But you're, when you're doing this and you're listening to the ads
|
|
on the radio and you're listening to, I don't know, the new head from Katie Perry or whatever pop
|
|
artist is, is, is, is popular that day. Probably the one that the DJ with toothbrush was just humming
|
|
and the guy called in and he said, that's a Katy Perry song. And then the DJ said, yes, it's a Katy
|
|
Perry song. And now we'll play the Katy Perry song. So, you know, what I'm getting at is that
|
|
basically it's a waste of time. There are three cores in your brain doing nothing. Why not do
|
|
something sensible? So try to cultivate the content that you consume during those commutes and
|
|
get the most out of it. Try to find that balance between something that is productive or efficient
|
|
or at least entertaining. You know, it doesn't have to be nuclear physics, 101,
|
|
red by professors, Stephen Hawking, all 3,000 page volumes. So that might be kind of dry,
|
|
but it doesn't always have to be as as futile as I will now brush my teeth with a toothbrush while
|
|
humming and song. And you get to call in and guess that song. And if it's a Katy Perry song,
|
|
will play the Katy Perry song, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So kind of try to find the
|
|
balance between entertainment or something light and something that lets you learn,
|
|
but make sure it's something that entertains you, that keeps you on your toes,
|
|
but make sure that it's something that matters. You have got the time to listen to whatever you want to
|
|
because you're in the car on your way to work, probably alone. That time is wasted if you just
|
|
drive. That time can be used to do something more productive or entertaining. And you have
|
|
access to the technology to make sure that you choose the content that you want to consume,
|
|
and you even have access to the technology that helps you, you know, communicate and produce
|
|
content. I've been doing this for the longest time, well, not since, you know, dinosaurs,
|
|
but since 2005 or something. I have just spent 30 minutes of my daily commute, which I can drive
|
|
with my eyes closed, but I don't, because when I close my eyes in the car and I continue to drive,
|
|
you can bet your ass that the trees are going to start texting and they're going to run into me.
|
|
So what I was saying, what I mean is, I just spent these 30 minutes at the car, which otherwise
|
|
would have been an uneventful 30 minutes listening to a radio DJ, brushes teeth, humming glaze,
|
|
and you would call it and say, it's my lyrics, sorry song. And then you would play the
|
|
my lyrics, sorry song. That's not, that's not what I'm going to do. That's not what I did with
|
|
these 30 minutes. I decided to do something else. I decided to contribute to you guys,
|
|
and girls, to kind of put my thoughts out there and make a piece of content that you can listen to
|
|
when you want to, perhaps on your commute. So if I have, you know, given you some inspiration,
|
|
taught you something, or kept you entertained, or stopped you from listening to a radio show,
|
|
or the DJ is bloody brushing his teeth while humming a mylerary sire song. And then you call
|
|
in and he said, it's mylerary sire song. And they played a mylerary sire song. If I've kept you
|
|
from doing that, that I have done something good. I hope mylerary sire's might not agree.
|
|
I don't care. But that being said, until next time, let technology work for you.
|
|
Make sure that you keep yourself entertained in the car while you learn something or at least
|
|
spend your time wisely. So I don't care if you want to listen to content, or if you want to
|
|
produce content. The only thing that you need to remember is that you have the technology
|
|
to make it happen. And the only thing that you need to do is make that technology work for you
|
|
instead of the other way around. See you guys. Bye-bye.
|
|
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 HPR 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 dog pound and the infonomicon computer club. And it's part of the
|
|
binary revolution at binwreff.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 on the Creative Commons
|
|
Attribution, ShareLight 3.0 license.
|