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223 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
223 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 408
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Title: HPR0408: Interview with JonathanD from Freenode
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0408/hpr0408.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 19:56:23
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---
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Thank you.
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This is Quad 2 and I'm at South to Southeast Linux Festival and right now I've got, I don't
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know who I've gotten in front of me, someone from FreeNote.
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What's your name?
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Jonathan D.
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Jonathan Simpson.
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I'm Jonathan D on FreeNote.
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Okay, cool.
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Jonathan D.
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And so first of all, what exactly is FreeNote?
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If everyone uses FreeNote, that's listening to this probably, but what is it exactly?
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FreeNote is an IRC network and there's a lot of IRC networks out there but FreeNote is
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kind of different in its focus and that it's focused on the open source community and various
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open source projects and free software projects and other related things.
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Okay, so it's a cluster of servers?
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Yeah, basically it is.
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There's a number of servers and they're linked together so you can connect any of the servers
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and talk to anyone on any of the other servers without you don't need to be aware of what
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server they're on or anything like that.
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And why does FreeNote exist?
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I mean, like what is it as opposed to, for instance, what there are other IRC networks out
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there, I guess.
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But are they not necessarily free or?
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Most of them are, I mean, I don't know of any network that's not free to connect to.
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What they're different on is what their intent is.
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You have a lot of networks that are meant for just people to talk to each other and have
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a chat and what's for tea.
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And then you have networks that are a little more focused in their purpose and FreeNote is
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one of the larger IRC networks in existence and basically you have, say, Ubuntu and Ubuntu
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who has their channels on FreeNote, so they have people coming there for help.
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Sure.
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If you've installed a new Ubuntu, in addition, I believe it's still this way, if you fire
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up Firefox, the link's right there to IRC.
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Yeah.
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Which actually takes you to FreeNote.
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Cool.
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So you jump right in, you're in there, so people are taking right there when they need
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them and they have a question they need help and on top of that, and I mean, it's great
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for user support, but a lot of development activity happens on FreeNote as well.
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Maybe Ubuntu developers or other projects, or for example, I drove up down here today with
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some people from the Philadelphia Linux users group.
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They maintain a channel on FreeNote, they organize advances and get things like that together.
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So, it's very cool.
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Yes.
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It's also groups.
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And IRC, I mean, like FreeNote especially, is it built on all open-source software or
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is it?
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It is built off of open-source software.
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Most of the IRC platforms out there are FreeNote open-source and pretty much every network
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is based off of one of them.
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Right.
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Cool.
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And so, how do you, I mean, so anyone can have a channel in FreeNote, or is it something
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that you have to register for or sign up with, or anyone can have a channel in FreeNote?
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Okay.
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There's two kinds of channels.
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There's what we call, and most networks don't distinguish this, but for various reasons,
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but there's a primary channels, which you can differentiate between them on the network
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and they have a single hash.
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Right.
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You go to, you know, hash, Southeast Linux Fest, for example.
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Right.
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And those are channels that are of an official nature.
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They basically belong to a project or a group, Ubuntu obviously owns the Ubuntu channel.
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Right.
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So by seeing that, you can say, this project actually owns this channel, it's not operated
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by other people.
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Okay.
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But on the other hand, say there's a Windows channel.
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Right.
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Obviously, Microsoft is not running a channel, but FreeNote, you know, on a FreeNote open-source
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network.
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There are people who want to, who use Windows, and people who use Firefox and Open Office.
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Right.
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These other open-source things on Windows.
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Yeah.
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So that channel is hash, hash, Windows.
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Gotcha.
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Which we differentiate there.
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That means it's not run by the organization, it's run by people who want to assist people
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using whatever it is.
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And there's other channels like that.
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Linux is actually one of them, because the Linux channel is not operated by.
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The Linux kernel developer is heard.
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Yeah.
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Okay.
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So it's hash, hash, Linux.
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Cool.
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Okay.
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Well, that is really cool.
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So what do you do for FreeNote, first of all?
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Well, I'm a FreeNote staff, right?
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I help users with issues, and then they treat people a problem with their nicknames that
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lose their passwords.
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You know, the day-to-day help I can't get something to work stuff, there's helping people figure
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out how to use some of the stuff, because there is some complexity in it, especially people
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who are around town.
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So they're using like IRSSIs or something, or maybe people don't know how to do it?
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That could be pretty complicated.
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Yeah.
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But even for a new user.
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Even for an old user.
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Yeah.
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I use IRSSIs, and there's still stuff I don't have to do.
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Yeah, yeah.
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But they run their support channel on FreeNote as well.
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Oh, cool.
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Okay.
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And a couple of our staffers are actually IRSSIs, I don't know.
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Oh, very neat.
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Okay.
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So, and is FreeNote taking care of you, you don't need anyone else to help, or actually,
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you know?
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We're actually in the process of lining up another recruitment drive for staff.
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Okay.
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Everyone that's actually going to be.
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All right.
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Yeah.
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It was mentioned on our podcast a few weeks ago.
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You have a podcast.
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We do have a podcast regarding that about, I think, two months ago.
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Oh, cool.
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We're aiming for a bi-weekly release.
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Okay.
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We're not quite at the point where we safely say that it's taking us time to, you know,
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we have three or four people involved in it.
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Okay.
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That's a great idea.
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Yeah, I know.
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It's really tough.
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But, yeah.
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It's also possible.
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Yeah.
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And we also, we have a couple of things that we're doing that are a little different now.
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We're doing a cold-out of geek-necks, which are basically picnics for geeks.
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Oh, cool.
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In Philadelphia, we've had one in Ireland.
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There's one coming up in Cambridge in the UK.
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Is it a little bit like a bar camp?
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Have you ever been to a bi-haven?
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I haven't been to a bar camp.
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We're not a con.
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You know, we're kind of like a—
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It's a little smaller, I think, sure, than like a not a con.
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But, you know, similar principle.
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We're trying to get people together in the real world, just online.
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Right.
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Yeah.
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Give people to meet each other.
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And, you know, get people away from the computer's room.
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Right.
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Yeah.
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So we had a barbecue in a park outside Philadelphia with 30 people there.
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Cool.
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It went great.
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It was a lot of fun.
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Yeah.
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You know, we have other ones coming up.
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We're actually doing a camping trip in Northern New Jersey.
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Wow.
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Philadelphia Log.
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A couple of logs from New York City, New York State, and all of that.
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Yeah.
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Cool.
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We're going to go camping for a couple of days.
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Okay.
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Should be good.
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Where could I, like, now I'm like a free-node convert.
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I'm crazy about free-node.
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Can't get enough of them.
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Where can I find out more information about it?
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Well, you can go to free-node.net.
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That's our website.
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The pic-mix are actually on geek-naked.org.
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Oh, okay.
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And all of this is managed by an organization called the PDPC.
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Most of their information right now is on free-node.
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Okay.
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But they're going to shortly have their own more elaborate sites
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that kind of links it all together.
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Yeah.
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Okay.
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Cool.
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But basically, what we're after is getting a little bit of just a IRC network.
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And, you know, we want to support the community anyway.
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Yeah.
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And we can.
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And we have some really good people.
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We'd like to, you know, do some more stuff like the geek-nakes.
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Yeah.
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Because it's funny.
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Before today, I mean, free-node just kind of seemed very much like a cloud to me.
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I mean, I knew there were staffers, but you don't really see them at the typical fest.
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You know, I didn't see anyone at Ohio.
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I didn't see anyone at scale, then, you know, so it's kind of cool to see someone saying,
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yeah, I'm involved with free-node, and we're actually doing, you know, this and this.
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So that's pretty cool.
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We haven't really done a lot of going to assistant stuff.
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Right.
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Something that, you know, I mean, I'm very enthusiastic about the network.
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I'd love what we can do, and I'd love what takes place there.
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Yeah.
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No.
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I mean, I think a lot of people take it for granted.
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Because, like you say, it's almost like the main support system for a lot of Linux or free software-related issues.
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So it's really a cool.
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A lot goes on there.
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Yeah.
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Thanks a lot.
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No problem.
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Thank you for listening to Half Republic Radio.
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HPR is sponsored by Pharaoh.net.
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So head on over to C-A-R-O.N-C for all of us here.
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Thanks a lot.
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Thank you.
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