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253 lines
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253 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1624
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Title: HPR1624: Penguicon 2015 Call for Talks
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1624/hpr1624.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:59:10
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---
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It's Thursday, Wednesday, 3rd October 2014.
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This is an HPR episode 1,624 entitled,
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Penguin 2015 Call for Torx.
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It is hosted by AYUKA and in about 16 minutes long.
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Feedback can be sent to Muilnik at Muilnik.com
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or by leaving a comment on this episode.
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The summary is, I am looking for people
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who can prevent TX-FOS Torx at Penguin 2015.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting
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with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello, this is AYUKA.
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio
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and another exciting episode.
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This is not part of any of my series,
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but I want to talk a little bit about PenguinCon 2015,
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which is coming up.
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I know we're still in 2014,
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but I happen to be the person in charge of the tech track.
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So I need to be working on things right now.
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We've talked about PenguinCon before.
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A couple of times I have posted reviews of PenguinCon,
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most recently the one that we had last early May of 2014
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and recorded a show about all of that.
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And that was a great deal of fun.
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So for those of you who are not familiar,
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PenguinCon is an unusual kind of event
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because it combines two different things.
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One is a lot of technology with a real focus,
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as you might guess from the name, on free and open source
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software.
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This is a focus that's been there from the very beginning
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because one of the people who was involved several of the people
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who were involved early on in setting this up,
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people like Eric Raymond and Rob Landley.
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And if you are familiar with open source software,
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those are probably names that you are very familiar with.
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But the other thing is that it's also a science fiction
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convention with everything that's involved there.
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So there's going to be gaming and movies and sci-fi authors.
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There's going to be costumes and anime.
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And Lord knows what else.
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I think there's probably a good 8 to 10 different tracks
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going on here.
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Science is a wonderful one.
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I always try to get some of the science talks.
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So there's a lot of stuff going on.
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And it's a really, really wonderful event
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that I think if you're in the area,
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you might want to make some time in your schedule
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to come and attend.
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The 2015 event is going to be April 24th through 26th
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at the Western Hotel in Southfield, Michigan.
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That's the same place that the 2014 event was held.
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We had a very good experience there
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and decided to go back.
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So that's going to be a good thing.
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And this is for those of you who don't know,
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Southfield is a suburb of Detroit.
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And so if you're, you'd be within a day's drive easily
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if you were anything from Chicago to Pittsburgh
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to Kentucky, Tennessee.
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I mean, any of those places could put you
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within a day's drive of the Detroit area or Ontario, Canada,
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which is actually not at all far from Detroit.
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So I don't expect people are going to be flying over
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from Europe for this event.
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But if you are in the Midwest United States,
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this is an event that's worth coming and attending.
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And a number of podcasters are going to be involved.
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So I've already got four talks, and I'll probably
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get more from the Sunday morning Linux review folks.
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Last night, I was talking to people at the Linux link
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tech show and trying to get some of those folks involved.
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So what I'm looking for right now is talks.
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So this is the opening of the call for talks phase.
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In any event like this, you have to start lining up
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your speakers and start building out your schedule.
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And this is no different.
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Last year, we had just for the tech track
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that I'm responsible for.
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We had about 66 hours of programming.
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And we really start late in the afternoon on Friday
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and run through mid afternoon on Sunday.
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Furthermore, we usually don't start anything
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before 10 o'clock in the morning.
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So if you start looking at how many talks we had just for tech,
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and how many time slots there were,
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you would have to say that on most slots,
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most one hour slots, there would be
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at least three different tech talks going on,
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not to mention all of the other tracks.
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So if you were to come to an event like this,
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you would certainly have a wide variety of things
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to choose from.
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And that's good.
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So I noticed last year, this past event,
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one of the things that I heard from people
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was the complaint that there is two talks going on
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at the same time that I want to go to.
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Well, as a programmer, that's the kind of problem
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you'd love to have.
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The more I hear that, the more I know
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I'm putting a lot of good stuff out there for people.
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The other thing that I noticed,
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and this was a problem for a number of the speakers,
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was that the rooms were really crowded.
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Again, that's a really good problem to have as a programmer
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because that means, again, it tells me
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that I'm putting stuff out there
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that people are interested in.
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So I need to do that again this year.
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And I've been given the go-ahead
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by the board of directors,
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the committees, and chairs, and all of that
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that said, at least as much as you did last year,
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if you can do even more, that'd be great.
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Because we really want to make sure
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that this tech track is the largest track going on
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at PenguinCon and that it amounts
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to roughly half of the event.
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So that means we've got to get a lot of good talks going in here.
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And that's why I'm recording this particular show
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because I want to see how many people I can get.
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And I know there's a lot of people that are listening to this
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that are within driving distance of this event.
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And so I want you to come.
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And maybe even if you have to fly,
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I was talking to Flying Rich from the Linux link tech show.
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And if he comes, he's probably gonna have to fly in
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from Florida, but he might do that
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to put on a talk for us, which I'm hoping will happen.
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Yeah, if it doesn't, it doesn't.
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But we're really open to having all sorts of people come in.
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Now we do have a theme this year.
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And the theme is biotechnology and medicine.
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And what we're looking at there
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is there have been so many interesting developments
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in technology as it applies to biology, medicine, health,
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things like that.
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You think about 3D printing of organs,
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which is starting to happen.
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You think about implanted devices,
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which is becoming ever more important.
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You could make the argument that the human race
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is slowly becoming cyborgs without even intending to.
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Now myself, I'm a diabetic.
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Fortunately, I am not insulin dependent at this point.
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And if I take care of myself, I hope to avoid that.
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But I know a lot of diabetics now have implanted insulin pumps.
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I think a lot of people may be familiar
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with implanted pacemakers and other kinds of devices.
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And what kind of software runs all of these things
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in the issue, is it something that's programmable?
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And if so, if it is programmable,
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is there any security on it?
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If you can get in with a Bluetooth or Wi-Fi
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or something and access the device,
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could a hacker get in there and do something that would kill you?
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There's a ton of really interesting issues here.
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So, I'm hoping we can get a few people
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that are gonna be talking about things like this.
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But that's not to say that every talk has to have
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that specific focus.
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I'm really interested in getting a lot of variety.
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So, I've been already talking to people
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about things involving cloud computing,
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security, hardware hacks.
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Basically, if you're listening to hacker public radio,
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if it would be of interest to you,
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having a talk on it would be of interest to me.
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So, that's really the way to think about this.
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So, while we have a general event theme,
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I'm gonna get all kinds of talks
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and I'm really looking forward to all of that.
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Now, this year we are experimenting with a new process
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to gather our talk proposals.
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And it's using a program called Tuxtracks.
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And that allows us to collect information online.
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So, you can put in a proposal
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and give me all the information and then I can log in
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and take a look at that.
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And I do monitor that several times a week
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to see what has come in over the transform, so to speak.
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One of the nice things that allows
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is a kind of a social interaction
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in which people who are just thinking about attending,
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Penguin Con, can go in there.
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And I think each person gets like five votes.
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So, they can pick five different talks
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and say, yeah, these are ones I definitely wanna go to.
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And that's a signal, then, to those of us
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who are programming, that, hey, here's something
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that is attracting some attention.
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So, even at this early stage,
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I'm seeing certain suggested talks
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that are getting four, five, six votes in favor.
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And we're just opening up at this point.
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So, that tells me right away,
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here's something a lot of people
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are really interested in doing.
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And so, I would wanna program stuff like that.
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So, I have links to all of this.
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The site for Penguin Con itself is
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2015.pengwakon.org.
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And that's the general site for Penguin Con.
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And that will let you take a look at the hotel information
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and anything else that you need to know about.
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Then there's also a site for the Tuxtracks
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and it's pengwakon.tuxtracks.org.
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So, you know, those are the two places
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you might wanna take a look at.
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And if you encounter any problems at all,
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please do not hesitate to contact me directly.
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My official pengwakon email is tech.
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www.pengwakon.org.
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So, anything you send to that address,
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I monitor that mailbox on a daily basis.
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I will know about it.
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So, this is my official 2015 call for talks episode
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of Hacker Public Radio.
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And this is Ahuka reminding everyone
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to support free software.
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Bye-bye.
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