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162 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
162 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2151
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Title: HPR2151: BarCamp Manchester part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2151/hpr2151.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:56:43
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,151 entitled Bar Camp Manchester Part 2 and is part of the series
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Interview.
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It is hosted by Tony H.1,212 and is about 9 minutes long.
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The summary is an interview with the organizer and one of the sponsors of the event.
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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.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Okay, this is Tony Hughes for Hacker Public Radio and I'm at Bar Camp Manchester.
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Okay, this is Tony Hughes for Hacker Public Radio and I'm at Bar Camp Manchester.
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Number 7 and with me I've got the organizer Claire Dodd or Girl Geek Up North as she's known on Twitter.
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Claire, could you tell us a little bit about what Bar Camp Manchester is about?
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Sure, so Bar Camp is an unconference where it's different from traditional conferences.
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We have no scheduled speakers at all.
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Everyone rocks up on the first day and the only scheduled item is the opening talk from me.
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And after that anyone who attends is welcome to talk about anything they feel passionate about.
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The talk slots are 30 minutes and they're not decided until the morning of the first day
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and people just turn up, write their name and the name of the talk on a piece of card
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and pop it up in the grade on an available slot.
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We have six tracks running simultaneously and I think we have about 14 sessions for the first day
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because this year we're doing an overnight conference so we're going all the way up to 10 o'clock tonight with our talks
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and then we start again.
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It's morning and it's all the same up until 6 o'clock.
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I believe even after 10 o'clock there's going to be certain activities going on during the evening
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or later into the night.
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Yes, we always have some evening entertainment.
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We have a game called Werewolf that's traditionally played at Bar Camps
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which will no doubt be being played.
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I reckon probably pushing for maybe three far in the morning.
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Sounds very interesting.
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Actually we talked away in bed by then I'm afraid.
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Could you just tell us how you got involved in actually organising Manchester Bar Camp?
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Yes, so I first attended Bar Camp.
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I think it was about five or six years ago.
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I went to Bar Camp Blackpool organised by Liz Pound and Gemma Cameron
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and it was my first experience of anything like that whatsoever.
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I didn't know what to expect and I turned up and it was absolutely amazing.
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It was the best thing I've ever been to and I was completely hooked from there.
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So I attended Bar Camp Blackpool for three years running
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and then the year after that even Forrest put a call out saying he wanted to resurrect Bar Camp Manchester
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which had been on the haters for a few years.
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And would anyone like to help?
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So being a complete lover of Bar Camps
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and totally wanting to help that happen in Manchester, I volunteered
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and did quite a lot of the work in the first year where we held it at Space Park X.
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And after that I kind of ran with it so this is now my third year
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and it takes over my life but in a really good way.
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Yeah, having been a friend of Liz Pounder who, like you say, was one of the founders of Bar Camp Blackpool.
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I know how much work goes into organising these events.
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You've obviously got quite a team.
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Is there anyone you'd like to thank in particular?
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Oh gosh.
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Yeah, so on the day we just, it can't happen on your own.
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You've got to have some part.
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I mean, my other half, Aaron, is absolutely phenomenal.
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He never really officially volunteers every year.
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He's just a person standing next to me that's like, please let me go do this.
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Please let me go do this.
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And he's like the silent helper that really is kind of, he's the one that takes over the Bar Camp on the day
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because I'm the one that's running around doing all the face to face stuff.
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He's the one running around making sure the urns are topped up, making sure he's gone.
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And then we've got an amazing car team of volunteers this year.
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So we've got Rick Threlfall who's doing our t-shirts.
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So we have an amazing team of our t-shirts.
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Very epoxy hour as well.
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Fantastic t-shirts this year.
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And he's helping out on the day.
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We've got some of the volunteers.
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We've got Anna and Angela, Simon and Laura and Jane.
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They're all helping out during the day.
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So you'll see them running around with plates of food.
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And the effort has to go our volunteers because the only, the rest of the perks have been a volunteer.
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You get your pick of the swag.
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You need the first to get fed.
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But other than that, other than that.
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It's all about just helping out and wanting to get involved in the community.
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And then obviously tomorrow we've got a national coding week workshops as well.
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So we've got a ton of devs who have volunteered to help out mentoring and coaching.
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And on those workshops, we really can't do it without people like that.
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Brilliant.
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We hear it just about 10 to 12 coming up to lunch.
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But we've already had a couple of talks.
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Is there anything that struck you as particularly enjoyable this morning so far?
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Oh my gosh, yes.
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I've just been to a talk by a young chap called Joshua who's 12 years old working on edge of pace then.
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Absolutely phenomenal.
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I can't believe he's only been coding since February this year.
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And he's already designing his own libraries and really getting some amazing stuff out there
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that are going to help young people learn how to code.
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It's absolutely phenomenal what the young generation are capable of now.
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And I think he's an absolute stand out for what he's achieved so far.
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Yes.
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I've interviewed Josh for the HDR in the past.
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And I've just videoed his talk.
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So that will be available via his website at some time in the future.
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But yeah, he's fantastic.
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I also went to a talk on women in tech run by Alan.
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Did you get a chance to see that?
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I didn't know, but I've worked a lot with Alan.
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I know he's quite passionate about that subject as I'm sure many people are.
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He's always a recurring theme at back.
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And we do tend to have quite a lot of talks along that line.
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Okay, well, thank you very much for agreeing to be interviewed.
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And hopefully we'll see you at my bar camp next year.
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Hopefully, yes.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you.
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Hello.
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This is Tony Hughes again for Michael Public Radio.
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I'm still at bar camp Manchester.
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And I've got Damien from Layershift, who's one of the bar camp Manchester sponsors this year.
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And he's going to explain a little bit about what they are.
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Okay.
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So we are a managed hosting company with best hearing Manchester.
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We've been going since about 2006.
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We're here this year to publicise our new hosting platform called EndScale.
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So it's a platform service for Java, PHP, Ruby and Python-based web applications.
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And we have a scaling challenge.
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So we're challenging the attendees here to build the highest hour of wooden blocks, a dangle style game.
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So we're going to see who can get the most moves within five minutes.
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Okay.
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Well, that's interesting.
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When you say you're a hosting company, what kind of hosting did you do in the sense of that the community might be interested?
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For the interesting question.
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So most of our hosting is for smaller medium sized businesses.
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So we host anything from like blogs or e-commerce sites.
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Our typical customer maybe has 20 or 13 employees.
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There's certainly lots of our customers are based either here in Manchester or around the northwest.
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And yeah, they are hosting on things like, for example, Magento or PrestaShop.
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And you know, different mostly PHP based applications is our sort of core market, let's say.
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But we have some much bigger customers as well.
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People like Laura Ashley and the transport marketplace called Shiply.
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We have like a very broad spectrum of customers.
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Okay.
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So what kind of costs would a typical hosting site that you provide cost?
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Okay.
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So our kind of starting price is around around about 35 pounds per month.
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Because we are targeting mainly sort of business customers, then it's not like how cheap can we provide it, but it's about the values.
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So for example, with our hosting service, we will manage the sort of security aspects of the server itself.
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So we are effectively providing, let's say we are saving you from having to hire, you know, assist admin in your company.
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So we're saving you maybe, you know, that 30 or how many thousand pounds per year for that member of staff, you know, by paying like a few hundred pounds a year to us.
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So do you provide web design services as well?
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No, we actually work with many web design companies in the area, so lots of freelancers or web design studios.
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And because of that, we don't sort of enter that market, we're not, you know, basically eating our own customers business.
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Okay.
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Would you like to tell the listeners who may be interested, may have a small business out there, how they can contact you?
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Yes, so the best way to find out more about our services is surprisingly on our website.
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So at lershift.com, yeah, we have all the information there about our managed VPSs and also our platform service.
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Okay, thank you very much.
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This is Tony Hughes from H like a public radio signing off.
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Thank you.
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Thank you.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you very much.
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