- 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>
179 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
179 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 824
|
|
Title: HPR0824: Opentech Conference 2011: Paula Graham, FOSSBox
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0824/hpr0824.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-08 03:04:21
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Full Circle Podcast on Hacker Public Radio in this episode, Open Tech and Thoughtsbox.
|
|
Hello world, and welcome to the Full Circle Podcast on Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
With Mr. Les Pounder, good evening Les, good evening and we are continuing our series
|
|
of interviews that Les recorded at the Open Tech Conference which was held in London in May
|
|
and this is our second in the series of three interviews.
|
|
The Full Circle Podcast is the companion to Full Circle magazine, the independent magazine
|
|
for the Ubuntu community. Find us at www.fullcirclemagazine.org forward slash podcast.
|
|
Next up, Paula from FOSBOX, a very interesting topic, a conversation.
|
|
Paula is passionate about free software and open source Ubuntu. As you hear, they have
|
|
FOSBOX Fridays which is one Friday in the month where people can come along with any
|
|
problem they've got, talk to someone and get it resolved. Free charge, no pressure, just
|
|
turn up and they'll help you as best they can, which I think is really good, it means it's
|
|
nice. That's what I didn't know, barriers to entry just turn up and they'll sort you out.
|
|
But they also do more bits and pieces such as their projects around the area which help
|
|
in local communities with the IT related issues. They mainly favor open source but obviously
|
|
they cover a broad spectrum of support. Okay, Les and I are wasting more time, we'll
|
|
play that one in and we'll see you on the other side of this one.
|
|
Full circle interview. Okay, here I am with Paula Graham from FOSBOX.org.uk and we're
|
|
going to be talking about FOSBOX and OpenTech 2011. Hi, Paula. Hi. Start with FOSBOX,
|
|
first of all, what is FOSBOX? Well, it came out of a project we were doing some work
|
|
with some volunteer sector infrastructure organisations for a couple of years and we
|
|
did some pilots with Ubuntu, well we have the time and money and FOSBOX sort of came out
|
|
of that. So we found to kick when the original project finished and we carried on working
|
|
with infrastructure organisations. It turns to do two things really, partly just straightforward
|
|
V2, to move people towards open source, green open source software from the Microsoft
|
|
addiction. But also trying to kind of affect a change in the way people deal with information
|
|
and knowledge. There's a tendency to hug it to people's chest and we're trying to get
|
|
more awareness of things like open culture and open access in that sense.
|
|
Brilliant. Is Ubuntu a chosen distribution based on its merits or is it because of
|
|
your proximity to canonical perhaps? No, it's really, I mean, it's very difficult, isn't
|
|
it? Every distro is good for something in someone. So it's not that it's the best distro.
|
|
It's just that it's most acceptable to the people that we work with, really. It has
|
|
the best balance because really we're kind of free software. But to do what we're doing
|
|
you have to be pragmatic and I've always liked where Ubuntu has trodden that quite
|
|
well in my opinion. They can use something free and open they will, but they also have
|
|
quite a pragmatic approach to providing a usable experience for non-technical engines
|
|
as well as the reason we're really going through Ubuntu.
|
|
Right. I notice as well as is there something called FOSBOX Fridays as well that you do?
|
|
That's right, yeah. We're kind of over the two. We're running for two years and we've
|
|
kind of tried everything to work with quite a few organisations and go as much feedback
|
|
as we can and we've ended up with an approach to a mix of training and at the moment
|
|
we're in the process of expanding our training we're going to stop providing a basic Ubuntu
|
|
maintenance course which is for non-technicals just to get the labels to look after their
|
|
own conclusions. So that's to be realistic. They need some kind of resource on going.
|
|
So we started with a kind of lug source of arrangement but that really didn't work.
|
|
It's just too intimidating for non-technical people. So we do something much more laid back,
|
|
volunteers come and hang about, people from the launch sector come and we just sort of
|
|
match people up on the spot. So they've got that ongoing resource. We also kind of put people
|
|
into the Ubuntu chat channel where we can, that people prefer quite often just to talk
|
|
to us. So that's another part of it. So it's kind of a Ubuntu. We teach them how to
|
|
install and maintain it and we provide that ongoing resource so they kind of trust and
|
|
know that that's there. It's sort of safe to, you know. So that's really what the FOSBOX
|
|
Friday is for. And obviously it's an opportunity for us to hang out and sort of bond because
|
|
obviously we're quite a volunteer little organisation. So it's FOSBOX just localised to,
|
|
is it a London area that you're based in? We're based in East London and we work with
|
|
infrastructure organisations mainly in East London but because we're pretty much now the
|
|
only organisation in the UK doing this apart from a group in Manchester and there was
|
|
a group in Birmingham but they kind of disbanded really. So it's pretty much us and an organisation
|
|
run by someone called Anne and Manchester doing this. So we get people calling us from
|
|
Wales. Yeah, of course. But obviously the bulk of our work is so that it's on the boroughs
|
|
of Ends of the city. Yeah, just a quick aside. The Onin Manchester. That's not done by Anna
|
|
Morris, is it? Yeah. Ah, that's okay. Computer. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. I help at that.
|
|
Oh, did you? I thought it was wonderful what Anna does. I've really got a lot of sign
|
|
for Anna. I think she's great. She's really fantastic. Yeah. I think we're going to try and
|
|
work together more in the future. She's done a good event, it's really us. There's another
|
|
one for the end of the year as well. Okay, computer too. We were talking a lot before she put
|
|
that event on and we're kind of developing together now, you know, like sort of approaches
|
|
that kind of, just to be able to work effectively with non-tech years. Yeah. It all helps, doesn't
|
|
it really? It helps raise the profile of Linux and Ubuntu. Exactly. Exactly. It's all
|
|
good stuff. I think we're talking about doing more stuff with women as well. I think we've
|
|
been talking a bit about forming some kind of women's group maybe with the SSD, but I don't
|
|
know yet, we'll see. But I think we'll start, we want to develop because we've worked
|
|
supporting a lot of women. Yeah. But there's very few women available to kind of help other
|
|
women with training and social. So we're going to look at how we can work with that in
|
|
future. Yeah. It's interesting. Yeah. There is, I know a little about it. It's the Ada
|
|
Love Lace Day, isn't there? Very indeed. Yeah, I need to contact those with them. I don't
|
|
actually know those women at all. I don't have a very good link with some Linux checks
|
|
because they're much more open source here and kind of corporate. Yeah. So I know the
|
|
people from eclectic tech can't have been much better and women who are more free software
|
|
oriented. There was a talker. There was a talker open tech regarding Ada Love Lace
|
|
Day. Yeah, but I didn't manage to grab the woman. Unfortunately, so I need to contact her.
|
|
There's something called eclectic tech carnival in which runs in Europe and we can't
|
|
run it in London because we're not in Shankham. I'd quite like to do something else if we
|
|
can in the UK. So it'd be based around the gender changes and eclectic tech carnival
|
|
all the way there. Yeah. No open event, basically. Yeah. That sounds interesting. On about
|
|
events, open tech, what I mentioned a few seconds ago. You were there on the day, weren't
|
|
you? Yeah, I was there all day. Were you doing a talk on the day? Yeah, I did a talk
|
|
later on in the afternoon. What was your talk all about? It was about the kind of action
|
|
research approach that we used to put together a kind of effective way of bringing in non-tech
|
|
ism, supporting them in a way that worked for them, basically. We had an action research
|
|
approach that we started when I was, because I used to work with a group called Done Technology
|
|
and Social Action, which was a ESRC funded project about human computer interactions
|
|
of the voluntary sector. So we used those kinds of methodologies to work with our, you
|
|
know, we did some work in depth with some groups just to work out what was needed. So I
|
|
talked about that. Did you go to any of the talks on the day? Yeah, I saw the guy from
|
|
London, his name. I saw the guy from, I think he was UK on Kant, who did a talk in the
|
|
morning with Bill Thompson. And the woman, he was talking about Ada Lovelace, who was
|
|
the major lover of the talk, as well as I saw that. Were there any talks on the day
|
|
that really piqued your interest? That was really made you think about things? Yeah, obviously
|
|
the Ada Lovelace talk, I was particularly interested in. Was there anything else about
|
|
the event that you liked other than the talks? I mean, the chance to network with other
|
|
people? Yeah, that's great. I met a lot of really good
|
|
contacts. And I, I, a chat with a guy who was also talking the afternoon in the same
|
|
slot as I did. He's doing work with bringing kids into programming and some of the methods
|
|
that he is and I really like for kids, but I think they can also be adapted to women.
|
|
And I've seen some work in Sweden during the summer. So that was one of the best contacts.
|
|
And I also actually finally met, I know there's another group of women doing some staff
|
|
around North London, but I didn't know who they were. I actually ran into them there and
|
|
made the contacts. That was really good. Has boss box got any events that you want to
|
|
talk about that coming up? Any meetings or any outings, anything like that? You want
|
|
to mention? Well, at the moment, we're fundraising
|
|
like that because we've got hit quite badly by the cuts, but we're also working on developing
|
|
the Ubuntu maintenance course, which will make a nominal chargeful. And we're looking
|
|
at the women's events. Richard Melville, actually, we've been working with Richard Melville
|
|
was developing low power, really small form factor PCs. He's got really some really good
|
|
ideas for reducing maintenance, like he's plugging the upgrades. He's sending the operating
|
|
system in the day to complete this. The operating system can plug into the, you can actually
|
|
plug in on a module. You don't actually have to install it. And various other things
|
|
he's looking at, developing a kind of backup system that distributes all the data across
|
|
all the nodes on a network so that you can back up about, is a kind of form of, you know,
|
|
umber reflexive backup, basically. So he's looking at some of those ideas and he's
|
|
got approached back to the box. We're looking at developing that because it was shifting
|
|
in quite well with all the other things that we're doing. You know, it would take out
|
|
the bad hardware compatibility and that stuff. So we're quite interested in that. Yeah.
|
|
But yeah, basically, we're just developing, you know, we'll do software freedom today,
|
|
in the summer. And we're going to start another round of training in probably about three
|
|
months. And obviously, the software doesn't carry on. But we just done dozens of years. We
|
|
had a wheel up between Christmas and March. We did about eight events. We'll do another one
|
|
in about three months time. But at the moment, we're concentrating on restructuring, basically,
|
|
to deal with the new environment. We've got enough work in there that we know we're okay,
|
|
because for a while when the cuts were hitting, the work was drying up and we were really
|
|
panicking why the road, but it works because everyone now can see what they've gotten
|
|
who's left and what rest of it is starting to move again. And we're getting enough
|
|
work in from selling services that we know we're going to be okay. Yeah. But that's obviously
|
|
been the last couple of months. It's all kind of kicking in again now and it's just
|
|
the future. So we're really exhaling and starting to plan the courses that we're going to run.
|
|
That's good to hear. All right. Well, last question. Oddcamp is going to be August this year.
|
|
Are you going to Oddcamp? Oddcamp is going to Oddcamp with a camper.
|
|
They're promising us they'll be somewhere to camp.
|
|
Yeah, there is a campsite, isn't there? I know that one of our friends is camping that.
|
|
Can't for life. We're not doing the campsite.
|
|
No, I'm going to stay in the hotel.
|
|
I love camping. Yeah, I'm not doing camping.
|
|
All the questions. Thank you for all that.
|
|
And we're back. Paula sounds really, really good to have a chat with actually.
|
|
She's very knowledgeable. I mean, she's been doing this sort of work for years now and she knows
|
|
this stuff and she's got lots of great ideas. So I mean, if there's anyone in the London area
|
|
who can go to postbox on postbox on post Friday's or just in general, go down, have a chat,
|
|
visit the website and see what they can do. What part of London do they generally meet in?
|
|
I think the nearest tube station is going to be Tower Hill. That's that's that's fairly central.
|
|
Yeah, that's very central, in fact.
|
|
Yeah, there's not a million miles away. I think it's where the caverns are. It's just a bit further along.
|
|
Feedback. You can post comments and feedback on the podcast page at fullcirclemagazine.org
|
|
forward slash podcast. Send us a comment to podcast at fullcirclemagazine.org.
|
|
You can also send us a comment by recording an audio clip of no more than 30 seconds
|
|
and sending it to the same address. Comments and audio may be edited for length.
|
|
Please remember this is a family friendly show.
|
|
That was Les Pounder speaking to Paul Graham of Frostbox, the second of our three interviews
|
|
from the folks of the OpenTech conference. And that's it from this episode.
|
|
For our third interview, see us here on the full circle podcast on Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
For me, Robin Cattling, it's thank you and goodbye.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
Those are we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday,
|
|
Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener
|
|
like yourself. If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how
|
|
easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dot pound and new
|
|
phenomenal computer cloud. HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com.
|
|
All binref projects are crowd-responsive by Lina pages. From shared hosting to custom private
|
|
clouds, go to Lina pages.com for all your hosting needs.
|
|
Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative comments,
|
|
attribution, share a like, free those own license.
|