- 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>
276 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
276 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 946
|
|
Title: HPR0946: HPR Interview David Whitman with Carl Symons and John Blanford
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0946/hpr0946.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-08 05:20:47
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
.
|
|
It is not the first year for Linux Fest that will be the 13th year.
|
|
It actually started the discussions about Linux Fest started in 1999 and the first
|
|
one was held in the year 2000 and John was actually part of the crew that started it, I wasn't.
|
|
All right, our first three Fest, like the first three Fest or so, were mostly local events.
|
|
So I think the very first Fest we had at most, maybe 50 people showed up and they were all
|
|
our relatives mostly. But every year it grew a little bit and we started getting a lot of
|
|
folks coming up from Seattle and down from the Vancouver Canada area. And I think in 2003, 2004
|
|
we decided to go regional and we named it Linux Fest Northwest and it really took off.
|
|
Tell us the dates of the Linux Fest Northwest for 2012.
|
|
It's the last weekend in April. That's the way we describe it. And this year that will be Saturday and Sunday, April 28th and 29th.
|
|
What are the admission costs for attending Linux Fest Northwest?
|
|
Okay, there is no admission cost. There's an expo with quite a number of commercial exhibits and
|
|
non-profits, educational institutions and the like. And then a whole host of presentations.
|
|
And there is no admission cost for that. It's free.
|
|
Can you tell us how people can support the Linux Fest Northwest with a sponsorship?
|
|
So there's different levels of sponsorship. The one that I think that you're referring to that
|
|
will be interesting to Hacker Public Radio listeners. We call it an individual supporter.
|
|
And the way to think about it is like a regular public radio sponsor where for $60, people can
|
|
support the Fest financially. But then as part of the $60, they get the lunches paid for both days.
|
|
It's a gourmet lunch from the Culinary Department at the college and a t-shirt, name badge.
|
|
The way we think about it is these are people who are really supporting the Fest and jumping in
|
|
and participating fully. Well, I'm just going to say on sponsors, if I like to always mention our
|
|
most important sponsor in that's Billingham Technical College, which is where we hold the Fest
|
|
is a college campus in the college, Billingham Technical College gives us access to college for
|
|
free. So there really are number one sponsor. There's what enables us to not charge admission for
|
|
everyone that comes because we get our facilities for free. And then we also have businesses that
|
|
do very sponsorship levels. We have platinum and gold and silver sponsors also that help
|
|
to free the rest of the cost for the Fest. Okay. And why don't we talk a little bit about your
|
|
sponsors and give them a little press time here, those that are supporting the Fest?
|
|
Well, our platinum sponsors are Caltura and SkyesQL and MariaDB. So those are our big guys.
|
|
And then for our gold sponsors, we have, let's see, we have OpenSusa,
|
|
Cloudstack, the parsec group and Oracle Technology Network are our gold sponsors. And I think we
|
|
have maybe six or seven silver sponsors to besides that. And then a bunch of as Carl will say in
|
|
the individual sponsors where people can contribute and also get their lunches as part of the
|
|
contribution. Okay. And so that sounds real good. So the Fest is sounds to be heavily sponsored and
|
|
like you get you have a lot of support going on there. So there's some, I'm looking here at the
|
|
Track Layout for the Fest and I see over a 101 sessions plan. And so can you maybe highlight
|
|
some of your favorites and some of the tracks that are going on? We can talk about them and I
|
|
have some favorites I want to share here just been going through the list that I'm interested in.
|
|
Oh my gosh, David, you're asking hard questions now. The first thing I should say is that we have
|
|
the response to our call for presentations or call for papers has grown every year. And
|
|
part of the attraction of Linux Fest Northwest is whatever you want to present on, whatever you're
|
|
interested in, there's probably somebody else that's interested in that as well. So sign up and
|
|
let's see how it goes. Sometime in the next week or so, there will be a meeting of the presentation
|
|
committee and we will window down those presentations based on how hot the topic is and how much press
|
|
it's gotten, how appropriate it is to open source. And there's a team of people who work on that,
|
|
who bring together several different perspectives. So it always surprises me what people do at Linux
|
|
Fest. I think my favorite last year was a presentation on Blender and it went so well that Oscar
|
|
Bateshler is back this year with another Blender presentation. And he actually takes people through
|
|
how you build a 3D model and meshes and all that kind of stuff with Blender, which is as you know,
|
|
a superstar in the open source world. So I like those. The other thing that I really like that we've
|
|
done for several years is called the tutorial where people can come in and we will, it can be an
|
|
install fast or people can ask questions. Just the whole idea of Linux Fest Northwest is that we
|
|
want to serve the community and that's where it started and then that's how we like it, you know,
|
|
that's an underpinning philosophy of the Fest. I think it's really difficult to pick out a few
|
|
because we have, as Carl said, we have so many presentations that will be going on. One that
|
|
caught my eye that I really like to go to is Jesse Keating and I think he has a co-presenter
|
|
that's going to work with it on. But they're going to do a two-hour session on
|
|
get the open source version control system and they're going to spend two hours and really get
|
|
into some of the details and because I'm one of the organizers, I hardly ever get a chance to see
|
|
a presentation but I'm going to try and get away and see this one because that one sounds very
|
|
interesting to me. John, I would just say that Jesse Keating is a name that people probably know
|
|
pretty well. Could you say a little background about Jesse? Well, I'll probably mangle because I
|
|
don't know exactly but Jesse Keating works for Red Hat and he's one of the Fedora guys and
|
|
has been one of the top Fedora organizers, I guess we'd call him for quite a while and
|
|
unfortunately I don't remember all the other details but that's who he is. Anyone in the Fedora
|
|
community would certainly recognize Jesse. Well, the reason I bring it up is because one of the
|
|
things that still amazes me about Linux Fest Northwest is the people that are attracted
|
|
to come and participate. So, you know, we have people, I know there are people that are traveling
|
|
from Germany and Holland this year to participate. A couple of years ago, Motividanius, who's the,
|
|
you know, one of the leaders of the original MySQL was here and it's amazing to be in the hall
|
|
and see people that you know are luminaires in the open source world and you can just go up and
|
|
start, you know, talking shop with these people. It's really an amazing open source community driven
|
|
event. I think the other thing that I'd like, you know, is sort of gives you a pulse of what's
|
|
going on in the tech world and the open source world. I would really be interesting to do a, like,
|
|
an analysis of our talks. We've got 13 or 12 years of talks and see how those have changed.
|
|
But you definitely see the trends. Like this year, I was just checking out the site here. We have
|
|
seven talks all about the cloud. So obviously the cloud is a big thing. So that's no
|
|
reason you can see these sort of trends coming up with the fast. Well, John, I'm so glad you
|
|
brought that up. I was going to say something about it. One of two of those presentations are about
|
|
own cloud and own cloud is an open source cloud implementation that you can put on your own server
|
|
and one of the things I like about is it came out of KDE, which I'm a KDE fanboy and so this
|
|
really shows the power of an open source community. And own cloud has just taken, it's just gone
|
|
crazy with the number of installations and the like. And it really fits in an open source kind of
|
|
mentality. Well, I'm interested in own cloud myself. And I've heard a presentation on this
|
|
on hacker public radio. Also, there was a nice, um, can't remember the exact episode, but it's
|
|
out there. And so seeing that on a schedule is really interesting to me. And I also see here,
|
|
there's, um, I'm going to think I'm pronouncing this correctly. Is Vardina open source school
|
|
management system? And if that talk is going to come, I guess to the step. I don't know.
|
|
Remember it when I'm part of the session committee. So I do remember looking at it, but I don't
|
|
remember the details. Uh, I do not know that there was, I noticed as a trend, there was three or
|
|
four talks all about open source and education this year. So that seems to be another one of these
|
|
sort of mini trends that's occurring. Yes. And I noticed that too. And I see there's, um,
|
|
several proposed sessions here then for, um, Drupal. And then I see one for Jumila. And then
|
|
of course, where goes along with that, my SQL and some other database systems. Right.
|
|
Yeah. We've got a heavy amount of web development and stuff because there's so many people in
|
|
our community, you know, do that. And so I noticed, yeah, those ones about Drupal and by Jumila,
|
|
there's also stuff on J query. I see one on that. Uh, a few other things to get one, obviously,
|
|
goes in that sort of category also. So, yeah, some development stuff in there too. So, so,
|
|
there's one other one I want to call attention to. There's, if we're lucky, um, we're going to have
|
|
the author, George Dyson, um, uh, make a presentation. He, he may be in London,
|
|
promoting his book, um, that talks about what his, his father, the, his father's name was Freeman
|
|
Dyson. And Freeman Dyson was one of the people who was around when computers were coming up and
|
|
and the Manhattan project was going. So, George Dyson was a young fellow at the Princeton, um,
|
|
advanced institute. And he has this marvelous story about the history of computing. And, um,
|
|
so if we're lucky, we'll get to have George Dyson. And the cool thing is that he lives in Bellingham
|
|
and he, um, he builds canoes, old like replicas of ancient canoes. And then he's this geek historian,
|
|
science historian, and just fascinating, and not to be missed presentation. It's very, very good.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I definitely hope we get to see that one. I think another one that I just came across,
|
|
I'm just going through the session lesson. This is a good one. We've, it's not all just techie staff
|
|
and serious things. We also have some fun things. So, Alpha Geek, which is a trivia contest
|
|
that is run by a guy named Chuck Wobler. And he's done it for, oh, a number of years. I've,
|
|
I've got how many years Chuck has been doing this, but it's always one of the favorites of
|
|
festgoers. And, um, maybe you can describe it a bit called what they do at the Alpha Geek.
|
|
You know, I've never been there, but, but I really have never been there, but I hear people talking
|
|
about it, that, you know, like, um, somebody just lost because they couldn't remember what the
|
|
formula was for, for like titanium or something. He really does a great job of pulling to get
|
|
a questions and having a lot of fun. Well, I haven't been to it either. That's why I was hoping
|
|
you could describe the formula, but yeah, people are always telling me how much fun they had at Alpha Geek.
|
|
So that's really wonderful. Well, John, we would be remiss if we didn't bring this up as well.
|
|
Maybe we can segue into another interesting thing. We have a presentation called free as in speech,
|
|
brewing as in beer. Oh, yeah. So you know, Dave, that, um, that Linux and this crowd runs on beer.
|
|
Well, we have a company from, from your neck of the woods just across the Columbia River.
|
|
Um, I don't know what their official name is, but we call them the backyard brewers.
|
|
And they, they bring their setup the way they brew beer using Linux automation to do virtually
|
|
all parts of the, of the brewing process. And then they bring, um, brews that they've, um,
|
|
that they've already made. And so there's a range of beer from just barely beer to the best,
|
|
um, porters and stout that you've ever drank. And then they also bring root beer and other
|
|
lightly fermented things. So they are, they will have a presentation and they will also be the
|
|
people who supplied drinks at the Saturday evening party at the radio museum. We won't get into
|
|
that quite yet, but quite, we have quite, um, a party planned. Yeah, their, their presentation should
|
|
be pretty good. It's done this last couple of years. And we have, uh, at the community college,
|
|
we have one room that's, uh, uh, we call it the morgue, but it's a place where, uh, where
|
|
people are taught about culinary stuff so that it's already set up pretty bit of kitchen.
|
|
And they brew the whole day. So all day, Saturday, they'll be brewing in that, uh, that room. And
|
|
you can just walk in and, uh, talk to the brewers and watch the brewing process. And, uh, I've heard
|
|
that this year they're going to be brewing a barley wine, which is, uh, sort of an advanced, advanced,
|
|
uh, difficult kind of thing to brew for a high alcohol kind of beer. So it'll be interesting to, uh,
|
|
talk to them about that. Well, I have a question about the brewing. It's, you say it's driven, um,
|
|
with Linux software. Then is that software open source? Then where people can, um, get that and
|
|
use it for themselves? Yeah, I think it is. We'd have to find out from the guys that we're doing it.
|
|
He originally started out very simple. He told me that, uh, I think it was Kurt, one of the two brewers.
|
|
And it was really just a series of shell scripts that, uh, talked to, uh, some automation equipment.
|
|
But I think he's been improving it, uh, every year. And yeah, I think they, they even,
|
|
either have open sources or will open source it. But I don't know the name of the project.
|
|
Well, you know, there, as many open source people, they're, they're exceptionally generous and
|
|
willing to share, um, I've seen them share a lot. So they're really good people to have involved.
|
|
That, that sounds like a great addition to the, um, Linux Fest Northwest. So I'm looking forward
|
|
to seeing that right now. Well, I'm going to ask you, um, about the session notes and recordings
|
|
that might be available to people who won't be able to make it to Linux Fest Northwest.
|
|
And will there be any type of, um, recordings put online or anything or, um,
|
|
session notes available on the website after the fest is over?
|
|
Well, we, we give the, um, presenters a chance to upload their, you know, their slides and all,
|
|
and attach them to their sessions. So after the fast, if you go through the, uh, schedule,
|
|
and look at the, each of the sessions, they should have the, uh, slides attached to them,
|
|
uploaded to them. As far as the video stuff, that's something that we've always been a little,
|
|
haphazard about. We don't have a really good procedure for video taping our sessions at
|
|
this point. Um, in the past, people have, informally done that and we collect links to the
|
|
various videos that people have done of sessions and provide, uh, links on the website for that.
|
|
We're hoping that this year we'll get our act together and have more of the sessions,
|
|
sort of formally, uh, videotaped, but, uh, you have to watch this space. We're not quite sure
|
|
what's going to happen with that, but hopefully we'll do a better job this year.
|
|
Well, that's real, real good. And I want to ask how many volunteers does it take to run
|
|
Linux Fest Northwest? Oh my goodness. So, um, throughout the year, there's a core group of
|
|
ranges between, I'm going to say eight and 12 people who are the kind of steering committee
|
|
organizing committee. And John and I both participated in that and, uh, John has been doing that
|
|
since it's since this fest started. And I, I don't know, I've been doing it five or six or seven.
|
|
I, I don't even know several years. So during the year, you know, we, we talk about the fest and
|
|
what we need to do and plan to go to Oscon and things like that. When Fest arrives,
|
|
we, uh, we work with students at Bellingham Technical College who are in the computer networking
|
|
department. And, um, they, the faculty, we work very closely with the faculty, uh, to use the
|
|
Fest as another training vehicle for those students. And so, um, the faculty give the students,
|
|
so Saturday and Sunday are assigned days and then they have the following Tuesday and Wednesday off.
|
|
The entire Fest network is designed and installed by a group of students. All of the administrative
|
|
tasks are, um, done and to some extent managed by students, but of course there's a little bit
|
|
of management training that goes into this. And so, um, you know, we're, we're very close, uh, we
|
|
keep a close eye on how things are going so that it goes smoothly for the attendees and the
|
|
exhibitors and the speakers. So all together, um, I don't know exactly how many we will have this
|
|
year, but last year we had over a hundred volunteers. Um, actually, I've been calling them student
|
|
assistants because they really, um, they're, in fact, they're instructors volunteered them. They
|
|
didn't volunteer. So student assistants, we have about a hundred people who were involved.
|
|
And if you go to the Fest, um, we try and give almost all our volunteers red staff shirts.
|
|
So if you ever have a question like that, there's always a gather the red shirt around some place.
|
|
They can answer questions or help you with stuff. So we're real proud that we have a good crew of
|
|
student assistants or volunteers that help everyone out.
|
|
Well, that sounds real good and, um, we started to talk a little bit about the social
|
|
side of the Living Test Northwest. I know it's only a two-day event, but there is, um, apparently a
|
|
party going on. Well, you know, we start out on Friday, um, the local, uh, technology alliance group
|
|
as it is an advocacy group for Bellingham and Northwest Washington. They have, um, joined with
|
|
Linux Fest Northwest to do, uh, what is called, uh, Tech Night. And this is an event where, um,
|
|
people who are in the tech industry from all around town, um, managers, um, workers, etc.
|
|
It's a job fair, uh, a meat and greet, uh, there are things to eat and drink. Uh, so there's kind of a
|
|
social, uh, a social event that, that's on Friday night that's kind of like a gateway event
|
|
into Linux Fest Northwest. Um, it was a hit last year, which was the first year, um, several people
|
|
got jobs right at that event. So quite a success. Then on Saturday night, um, we, when we went to a
|
|
two-day event from Saturday to Saturday and Sunday, we wanted to have something for people to do
|
|
that Saturday evening. And so, um, we have a Saturday evening event since then. It's been probably
|
|
six years that we've done that. This year, we're moving back to, um, the, what's referred to as the
|
|
Spark Museum of Electrical Invention. And the URL for that is AMRE.us. So, and I just ask anybody
|
|
who's listening, they should go to that website and check this out because, um, there will be things
|
|
like, at some time in the evening, they will fire off, uh, a Tesla coil that shoots a lightning bolt,
|
|
probably 10 feet, uh, that's as big around as your arm. There's a Thereman, um, like the beach
|
|
boys use that you can play with. There are, um, guides for the, for the museum who will explain
|
|
everything that's in the museum, um, uh, Edison, things that Edison did in Faraday,
|
|
um, just like going back through the history of electricity and radio and, um, explicit, um,
|
|
displays and explanations of how things, how these things came to be. It is the perfect
|
|
Saturday event for a bunch of geeks. But there will also be appetizers and, um, beer from
|
|
the Linux automation people. Uh, and then we're gonna, we'll put together some information about,
|
|
um, all the restaurants, uh, that are available within walking distance of the radio museum so
|
|
people can get out and enjoy, uh, downtown Bellingham, which is, uh, just a deer, uh, a deer small
|
|
place where people get along and, and treat each other with respect and, uh, so we want people to
|
|
experience downtown Bellingham as well. Yeah, I'm looking forward to going back to the, uh,
|
|
radio museum because we've had our party there a few times in the past and it's always been a blast,
|
|
and everyone really enjoys it. So it should be good.
|
|
Well, that sounds like that's something just to go to Bellingham for us to visit that.
|
|
Right. Yeah, absolutely. And as long as you, as Carl said, there's going to be free beer and
|
|
appetizers. All you have to do is when you get to the fast register and get a, uh, a badge,
|
|
and your badge will be your ticket to get you into the party. So it's all free.
|
|
Okay, that sounds like the, um, Linux Fest is going to have a really exciting two days.
|
|
And, um, I want to ask you, at this point, um, is there anything else you want to inform the HB
|
|
listeners, HPR listeners about for the Linux Fest Northwest in April 28th and 29th of 2012?
|
|
Well, I would just say that, um, we're really proud that our Fest has a, uh,
|
|
your reputation has been sort of the laid back Fest. And we try and give a, a really fun
|
|
atmosphere. We also encourage people to bring their families. And we try and have some activities
|
|
for our kids to go to, uh, to go have some, we usually have some robots around and things like that.
|
|
And, uh, activities for kids to do. So if you haven't been to the Fest, it's a, it's a great
|
|
couple of days. And I'm certainly encouraged people. Yeah, it's really unlike any other conference
|
|
that, that I know about, um, you know, just really some people who are dedicated to, to what
|
|
they're working on and interested and interesting and, um, genuine and collaborative. It's just
|
|
quite an environment. I, I think it's, I don't know of anything else that's quite like it.
|
|
And we, we do a, uh, survey after every, or during the Fest where we ask people, you know,
|
|
what can we do better? And, you know, like nothing else. And what does you enjoy most about the
|
|
Fest? And that particular question when we ask people, you know, what, what did you enjoy most
|
|
about the Fest? What was the thing you'd like the most? You know, and some people say sessions,
|
|
or, you know, some exhibit or something like that. But the, the most common thing that people say
|
|
is that they enjoyed the social nature of getting a chance to talk to other geeks and talk about
|
|
open source and Linux and all that. So that's a big part of the Fest. Okay, it sounds like it's
|
|
going to be an exciting time. And, um, I want to ask you to, um, please tell the HPR audience,
|
|
again, the dates of the Fest and where it is located at. And, um, perhaps the closest major
|
|
transportation to the area if they were going to fly in from somewhere else to be able to go to
|
|
the next set of Northwest. It is, um, April 28th and 29th, that Saturday and Sunday in
|
|
Bellingham, Washington, specifically at Bellingham Technical College. Um, if you get within
|
|
side of Bellingham Technical College, it should be no problem for you to find the Fest. We
|
|
pretty much take over the campus. Um, the nearest transportation hub is Bellingham International Airport.
|
|
You're coming from the West Coast. Um, there are direct flights in from, um, from many cities
|
|
along the West Coast. Uh, a train ride from Portland is one of the more enjoyable, uh,
|
|
ways to get here. Uh, we're about 100 miles north of Seattle and, um, maybe 50 miles south of
|
|
Vancouver. Um, so it's, um, uh, let's see. Uh, i5 is the major corridor. Um, I think that's
|
|
John anything else I missed. Well, and once you go to LinuxfestNorthwest.org, we'll have, uh,
|
|
maps and instructions. We also have some lists of, uh, local hotels that are offering discounts
|
|
and things like that. So, uh, our website is probably the best, uh, best spot for more information.
|
|
Well, real good. And I want to, um, say thank you, John. And thank you, Carl, for, um, coming on
|
|
Hacker Public Radio on talents about LinuxfestNorthwest. And I for one will be seeing you there because
|
|
I am going to be manning the HPR table. They're at LinuxfestNorthwest and we hope to get some other
|
|
interviews there and people interested in contributing to Hacker Public Radio. And Hacker Public
|
|
Radio doesn't take someone to interview you. You can just make an episode yourself and all the
|
|
details are available at Hacker Public Radio.org. And thank you very much for coming on today with
|
|
me and talking about LinuxfestNorthwest. I'm excited to attend. Thank you for having us. Thank you.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio, does our.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on different Friday.
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener by 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.Pound and the Infonomicum Computer Club.
|
|
HPR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com. All binref projects are crowd-responsive
|
|
by linear pages. From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.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.
|