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107 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
107 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 981
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Title: HPR0981: Review Indiana LinuxFest 2012
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0981/hpr0981.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 16:57:05
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---
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So
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Hello, this is Ahuka, and welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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And what I want to do this time is I want to talk about my experience of Indiana Linux
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Fest 2012, which I had the wonderful opportunity of participating in last weekend for me as
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I record this. It was the weekend of the 13th, 14th, and 15th in Indianapolis, Indiana.
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And this was the second time that they've had this event. They premiered it in 2011. And
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so we started off with a joke from Lord Drakenblut, who was, you may remember that Ken Fowlin
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interviewed Lord Drakenblut about this. Oh, about a month or five weeks before the event.
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He was being able to promote and talk about the stuff that they would be doing. So he started
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off with pointing out that the theme was the reign of freedom, and reign was R-E-I-G-N officially,
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but as it was also reigning outside, which in April is not unusual. He claimed that it
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was actually a very tricky double-on-tondra that he had worked into that. So it was an
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interesting weekend. I got there Friday, got in late afternoon, and found Lord D and a
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few other folks, Jason Corpman and his wife Gail and some other folks that were down by the
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registration table. And it just didn't look like there was a whole lot going on. There was,
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at that point, there was some talk about, well, you know, maybe we'll have a speaker's meeting.
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I don't think that ever happened. What actually happened was I had to drive five hours to get there.
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So I went back to my room and lay down for a little bit because a short nap was not a bad idea at
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that point. And then after having dinner, I looked around and, you know, there was supposed to be
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opening kickoff party, but what actually happened was everyone went to the bar.
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That's not a bad thing either. We had a great time there. I was able to catch up with some people.
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One of whom was my old buddy, Vern Cedar, who used to live in Indiana, is now in Chicago, and
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works for a company called Zoro Tools that was a sponsor of Indiana Linux Fest, and is also a
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Python coder. And I met Vern originally at Ohio Linux Fest, where I'm the publicity director,
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and I got to know him there. And, you know, I still see him at these kinds of events, which is great.
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I always look forward to seeing Vern. And the other thing that was fun was spending some time with
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a fellow named Ross Brunson from the Linux Professional Institute. He's the director of member
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services. Now, Linux Professional Institute was there, of course, because they were going to be
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giving certification exams, the LPIC exam. I think level one, level two, something. I'm not a
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system administrator, so I wasn't really the target audience for something like that. But, you know,
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it was great, you know, Ross had a, you know, great fund of stories that regaled us on Friday
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evening. So that was a lot of fun. And I got to chat with him a little bit then. And then, again,
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the next day about how we can work on publicizing what they're doing and what we're doing and
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things like that. So it was, it was very useful. But that was about it for Friday. Actually, it was
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kind of low key. And then Saturday morning, everything got going with a bang. And we had
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Amber Grainer as the opening keynote speaker. And I think a lot of people know Amber in the
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community. Her husband Pete is a, a Colonel hacker with canonical. And Amber was very active
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with that at one point on the Ubuntu women and things like that. But she is now the engineering
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community resources community specialist. All right. That's a, that's a long title. But I think
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basically what she does is, is she does community. She, she does this for a group called Lanaro,
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L-I-N-A-R-O. And I find it very interesting because I was, I follow Amber on Google Plus
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and on Twitter. So I was seeing all of these posts that she was making about Lanaro. And it was,
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what's Lanaro? I don't quite get what was going on. And in my mind, she was, you know, part of the
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Ubuntu group. And Lanaro is actually something a little bit different. It was a very interesting
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presentation. Lanaro is a group that is working on bringing Linux to the ARM processors
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so that we can run a free and open software on ARM. And when you say ARM, and you have to start
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thinking things like phones, tablets, stuff like that, which is really the, the big area for most
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of us where we would encounter ARM processors. Although it's also the case that some of these,
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you know, a Beagle board, Raspberry Pi, things like that. I think most of those are also
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using ARM processors as well. And so she's, she basically, she's the community leader
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for that. So kind of like General Bacon does for Canonical, I guess Amber does for Lanaro.
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And it was great learning more about that. It looks like a very exciting project. It's got a lot
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of heavy hitters backing it. Companies like IBM, Samsung, Canonical is a, is a backer.
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Texas Instruments. So I think a lot of what she was doing was just kind of spreading the word about
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what Lanaro is doing and also saying, hey, if you want to get involved, we would love to have you.
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And that's what a good community manager does is trying to get more people involved in the
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community, right? So Amber's very good at what she does. And afterwards I, after her talk was done,
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I had a chance to chat with her at some length and just sort of catch up on various things.
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And it was interesting if you're at all in the Ubuntu community or tied in to any of this kind of
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stuff, you may know that last year her house burns down. And fortunately, no one was in the house
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when it caught fire. So no lives were lost. And as I was just kind of asking her, I said, well,
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how's that working out for you are, you know, you're obviously you have useful work to do,
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but how are you going with rebuilding your life? And what she had to say, which I thought made a
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lot of sense is, you know, the material things just don't mean as much anymore. And I guess that's
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what happens when you lose a bunch of stuff and you say, okay, do I really need to replace it
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and apparently not. So that that was very interesting.
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You know, when you go to something like a Linux Fest, a Linux conference,
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there's always two different things going on. There's the the actual
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scheduled talks and then what we call the hallway track. And I tried to do a little bit of both.
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And so I mentioned that along, a long chat with Amber, you know, because I haven't seen her since
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Oh, I think Ohio Linux Fest of 2010 where she was a speaker. And it was not so, you know,
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I haven't really had a chance to talk with her since then. And so it was it was great to catch up.
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And I'm excited to see what is going to happen. Another part of the hallway track, so to speak,
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was I got a chance to talk with a fellow named Brian Unashko, who is himself legally blind
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and also very active in the open Sousa community. And so he was there promoting open Sousa,
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which he does rather a lot of, I gather. In fact, I have to, if he's listening to this,
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I'm going to apologize. He was going to give me a box of stuff to take to Pengwakan and we just
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never connected again. So, you know, it wasn't deliberate, Brian, if you're hearing this, I'm real
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sorry. I wasn't trying to blow you off. It just, you know, somehow that at the end of the day,
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I went to get dinner and all of a sudden I didn't know where anyone was anymore.
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So, but it was it was interesting talking to him. And as I mentioned, Ross Brunson from Linux
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Professional Institute, I get to talk with him a little bit more as well. And then, you know,
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there were some talks. So, one of them was Clat 2, who not surprisingly had an interesting talk.
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Clat 2 was talking about something that is a XML document, I think it's called OpenDoc.
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And what that does is it lets you create books or documents or what have you with an XML
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specification and then you can turn it into, for instance, an EPUB or a PDF or whatever you
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wanted to do with it. And it, he gave a very interesting demonstration. It all was, all involved
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in EMAX. Next time I see him, I maybe I'll think to ask him whether it's because all of the
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software he used, it only works with EMAX or if I don't know, I know a lot of people like to use
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VI or VIM. And I would imagine there's probably similar stuff there, but Clat 2 was obviously very
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comfortable with that. It was a great talk. I was very interested for a number of reasons, one of
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which is I really love ebooks. In fact, I may record something for Hacker Public Radio on that one
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of these days. It's on my list of things to talk about at some point. And Clat 2, if you're listening
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to this and there's an excellent chance that you are and you happen to notice that I get up and
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left before your talk was done, it wasn't you. The fact of the matter was I was freezing my butt off.
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I got to remember to bring a sweatshirt whenever I go to one of these conferences, because that hotel,
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they just wanted to keep things at a freezing level. And I was just wearing a t-shirt and it got
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to be too much. I had to go back to my room and get a coat. And by the time I got back the talk
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was just about done. But I did hear a lot of it and the rest of you make a note.
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