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190 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
190 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4279
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Title: HPR4279: What is on My Podcast Player 2024, Part 4
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4279/hpr4279.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:25:00
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4279 for Thursday the 26th of December 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, What is On My Podcast Player 2024 Part 4.
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It is part of the series podcast recommendations.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 19 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, this is an update on the podcasts Ahukah listens to.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
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slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello, this is Ahukah welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode.
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And this is one for the Reserve Q. Now what that means is that if you are hearing this,
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HPR is running short of shows and it's time for you to record one.
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And I'm here to demonstrate just how easy it is.
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This is about what is in my podcast player, I've done a number of shows like this for the
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Reserve Q. And the way I did it is I simply went into the G-Potter, which is what I use,
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exported an OPML file and printed it out.
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And I'm just sitting here reading through one at a time the podcasts that I have and talking
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a little bit about them.
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So that's what this is about.
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Now if that's too hard for you to do, you may have issues.
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So get out there, record some shows, it's not that hard.
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So the first one I'm going to start with here is called The Beatles Naked.
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Deep research, unconventional topics, probing interviews and hard hitting info that doesn't
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pull any punches.
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So you know, another Beatles podcast basically, I listen to a number of them.
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This one is pretty good, Richard Busken is the person who does most of this, occasionally
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he is assisted by Eric Taros.
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Now the next one is called Guitar Case and that is a podcast about everything and anything
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to do with the guitar.
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And it was created by a fellow named Don Ross.
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He's a Canadian finger style guitarist who I happen to be a huge fan of.
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I think I have just about all of his recordings.
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And if he produces another one, I'll get that one too.
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I also subscribe to his YouTube channel because he'll occasionally do concerts or YouTube
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videos of interest.
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So that's Guitar Case.
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Next is a show called Inward Empire.
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And it is described as the past is another country, they do things differently there.
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And it goes on to say Inward Empire explores the role of ideas in ideology and American
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history, how the surface of actions and events can be shaped by undercurrents of thought
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and belief.
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So it's a very interesting program.
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I haven't seen anything from them in about a year or so at this point.
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Now I have things that are podfated that I leave in G-Potter because occasionally one
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of them comes back.
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And for many of these, it's also the case that while they haven't been releasing new material,
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the stuff they have previously released is still available.
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So if you want to get an interesting slant on some topics in American history, this
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is something you could take a look at.
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Now, the next one is a podcast called Inquiring Mines.
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This is a sporadic, maybe once a month, used to be weekly.
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But you know how it is, people get busy, interest change, what have you.
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So Inquiring Mines is supposed to be about a place where science and society collide and
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making an effort to understand how the world around us works and how it affects our thinking.
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Next one, Tides of History.
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This is one of my favorites.
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This is a historian named Patrick Wyman.
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Right now I'm listening to a bunch of stuff about very early prehistory, basically.
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You know, what was the human race like before we started writing everything down, what was
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going on.
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And he did a whole long, like a year long series of shows looking at different aspects of
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that.
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I first found Patrick Wyman through a podcast he did called The Fall of Rome.
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And he did something very interesting.
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He looked at what was happening from around that 476 period and the next century or two
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after that, you know, how were people's lives affected by what was going on.
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And it is a very interesting point of view that he had with us and so I'm enjoying all
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of his stuff.
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He released a book and I bought that.
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Now the next one I have here is Cruise Radio.
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Now one of the things my wife and I like to do because we're both retired is travel.
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And we've done a few cruises, we've got, we're planning one for 2025 right now.
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And so this is a weekly Cruise News podcast, ship reviews, money saving tips, answers to
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your travel questions, et cetera.
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Then there's the Prague Axia Progressive Rock podcast.
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I like Prague Rock.
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So, you know, groups like Yes, King Crimson, Renaissance, Marillion, you know, that's something
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I happen to enjoy.
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And so here's a whole podcast devoted to that, interviews, reviews, commentary on all
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aspects of Progressive Rock.
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And another history one, the history of World War II podcast.
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So this is a very detailed, sequential, chronological look at World War II.
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Every episode, you know, takes us a little bit further in telling the story.
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And they're up to like four or five hundred episodes so far, and the war isn't over yet.
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So, you know, if you are deeply interested in World War II history, we're taking a look
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at.
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Another one I have similar is called The Civil War, a history podcast.
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Well narrative of the Civil War era in the United States.
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So it's the American Civil War we're talking about here.
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So again, it's like I say, I got a lot of history podcasts on my list.
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Next one, Terminus, a Doctor Who podcast, and described as a queer woman's perspective
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on Doctor Who, both the classic and the new series.
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So I like Nicole's take on things.
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She has some very interesting perspectives, and I'm a big Doctor Who fan.
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I enjoy hearing her perspectives.
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Now I found out about her because she was frequently brought in as a guest on discussing who,
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one that we talked about earlier with Kyle Jones and Lee Shackleford and Clarence Brown.
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And so I heard her there, and then it's like, okay, seems like an intelligent person with
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an interesting perspective, so I subscribed to her podcast.
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Next one is Relativity.
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This is a audio drama written by Lee Shackleford from the Discussing Who podcast fame.
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And it, you know, I like audio drama of various kinds, and Lee does a very interesting one.
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It's basically about a colony ship being sent out is one of a number of colony ships sent
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out from Earth, and something, there's stuff going on on Earth that make it look like,
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you know, maybe that won't be able to support life too much longer.
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And then all sorts of things go wrong.
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So there's a mystery at the heart of this.
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I don't want to say anymore because, you know, you don't want to give away the plot too much,
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but it is a great podcast.
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If you're into audio dramas at all, I recommend it highly.
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And there is the Language Tutor.
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And this is the Language Tutor Spanish.
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And that is a podcast that is tied in with a YouTube channel called the Language Tutor.
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And as you may know, I've been learning Spanish, and so these are like, you know, 15, 20 minute
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explorations of a particular topic in the Spanish language, but it's in English.
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So, you know, I can understand what they're saying.
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Then Fortunes Wheel, a podcast history of the late Middle Ages.
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Now, this is an interesting, I like this stuff because we're starting to re-evaluate a lot of things.
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People used to refer to the dark ages.
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As, you know, when the Western Roman Empire fell, everything fell into darkness.
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And, you know, people were ignorant and savage.
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And, you know, historians have looked at that and said, you know, that's not really what happened.
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There wasn't as much written down, yeah, but, you know, it was not as benighted a period as
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people sometimes portray it. And, you know, the modern Western world,
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Europe and North America, which ended up affecting so much of the world, all comes out of this
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period. So, you know, this is the history that brought all of us to life here.
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So, it's a podcast I like.
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Now, another language one. This is Coffee Break Spanish.
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And, the idea of Coffee Break is the tagline that Mark, the host, uses, is turn your downtime into
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due time. Mark is quite a polyglot, is Scotsman, who speaks, I don't know, seven or eight languages,
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and is always learning another one, and then set up this company that does what he calls Coffee
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Break. And so, the idea is it's like a 15-minute, 20-minute lesson that theoretically you could do
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on your Coffee Break. So, if you're interested in language learning, you know, that's stuff worth
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checking out. The way he does it is that Mark gets together with a native speaker in whatever
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language, and the two of them together will discuss the topic.
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Another history one, the China History Podcast.
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That's been around for a while. It started in 2010. Over 300 episodes,
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start, you know, looking at topics in the history of China. And I think we're starting to
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realize China might be pretty important in the world going forward. So, nothing wrong in
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learning a little bit about where China comes from and what that history looks like.
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Now, another ancient history one, it's called The Ancients, a podcast for all ancient history
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fans. The Ancients is dedicated to discussing our distant past featuring interviews with
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historians and archaeologists. Each episode covers a specific theme from antiquity from
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Neolithic Britain to the fall of Rome. I think it does what it says on the 10.
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Next one, The History of England. This is a particular retelling of the story of England,
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chronologically, starting from the end of Roman Britain. Where you choose is a starting point.
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Everyone has different ideas. I think what happened before the Romans got there is probably
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interesting, but that would be mostly archaeological because there wasn't a whole lot of written
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history going on. But I think it's an interesting thing, again, you know, if you're interested in
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history. Another podcast I'm subscribed to is something called Hacker Public Radio.
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It's a podcast that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday. Our shows are produced
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by the community. That's you. And can be on any topic that are of interest to hackers and hobbyists.
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That sentence could probably be improved, but, you know, what the hell?
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Then there's ninth world journal.
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It's set one billion years in the future. It is the story of a man who randomly teleports
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to strange and dangerous places with no way of controlling it. So this is another audio drama
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kind of thing. Now, the first science fiction audio drama that I started listening to was the
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relativity podcast that we discussed earlier. And then that links me to others because the host of
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that podcast would start talking about, well, these other people you really should be paying attention
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to. And that's how I found some of these others. And one of those also is something called
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Oz 9. It's spring 2142, a Tuesday. And gated galaxies has launched its 400 Oz 8,000
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ships, each carrying 50,000 resting guests to hopefully a new home on a shiny brand new planet,
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except this whole terraform and takeover idea isn't actually the plan. The real plan is far
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more nefarious and involves a great deal of cackling. But those aboard the ships don't know that.
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So off they toggle those that make it out of burst atmosphere at least.
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I hope that description is something you find interesting.
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Then another one is called Tendril, the Banshee Chronicles,
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set near 2287, which follows the epic tale of Cade, Cronist and Switch, soldiers in the paranormal
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division of a futuristic Earth's military who face otherworldly threats. As they face down a galaxy
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of ghosts, demons and monsters grotesque beyond belief, our brave heroes stare boldly into the abyss
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and hope it doesn't have teeth. Now the British history podcast,
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a chronological retelling of the history of Britain with a particular focus upon the lives of the
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people. You won't find a driver counting of dates and battles here, but instead you'll learn
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about who these people were and how their desires, fears and flaws shape the histories of England,
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Scotland and Wales. So with that, I think I've done enough for one episode, so I'm going to
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sign off and as always encourage all of you to support FreeSoftware. Bye-bye!
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. Today's show was
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contributed by a HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HPR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our sync.net. On the Sadois
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Stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International License.
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