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135 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
135 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1802
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Title: HPR1802: An Interview with Emily Hampton a LinuxFest Northwest Volunteer
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1802/hpr1802.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:26:46
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---
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com, get 15% discount on all shared
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hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15, better web hosting that's
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honest and fair at An Honest Host.com
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This is David Whitman and I'm at the Linux Vest Northwest with a volunteer and tell us
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your name.
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My name is Emily Hampton.
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Her husband Arthur is standing here but he's not going to be talking apparently.
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So I wanted to get a perspective of the Linux Vest from someone who does volunteer work
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that's maybe one of the unsung heroes of the Linux Vest that helps put it together.
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So how many years have you been working on the Vest, Emily?
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I have been a volunteer organizer for this is my third Vest that I've helped organize.
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And have you attended other years then?
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Yes I have.
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This is my fifth Vest.
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Yes, this is the fifth year I've been to the Vest.
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But three that you worked as on the organizing committee.
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Yes.
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What tasks have you done for the organizing committee?
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When we started I suggested that we get a Google Plus page and no one had no one everyone
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said they didn't have time to run it so I volunteered to run the Google Plus page.
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So the first year that I volunteered was the first year that we had that we'd had
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Settle Myer Hall and we needed the pipe and drape.
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We needed a vendor for the pipe and drape for the gold sponsor booths.
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So I was the one who called around to do that originally.
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Okay, and what jobs are you doing this year?
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Not much.
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I'm still doing I'm still doing the I'm still doing the Google Plus promotion.
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And at the fest I've just been running errands when people need me to.
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Okay, so have you had a lot of errands to run then?
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Not a lot.
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Not a lot.
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Not a lot.
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Yeah, I've just been helping out where I can if I see something that needs to be done
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and don't see a whole lot of people to do it, I'll step in and do.
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How many volunteers do you think there are?
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I don't have them.
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I'm not the one who has the numbers on that.
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I can tell you that without the BTC students, we could not run the fast.
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They're just they are absolutely wonderful.
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They are so organized.
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I came in Friday and told them to put me somewhere to do something,
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but there was nothing to do.
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They had already organized everything.
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It was wonderful.
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They're fantastic.
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Okay, the how many people do you think are attending this year?
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I was told I was told this morning that we had, let me think, a thousand people register
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yesterday and we still have people will still register today.
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So there was a thousand daytime registrations yesterday, plus the people who just know
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all together.
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A thousand badges.
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A thousand badges were given out during yesterday's fast, yes.
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Okay, and then do you live here in Bellingham?
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No, I don't.
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I used to, but I'm actually living down in the Olympia area now.
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So I do a lot of, I try to do some of the tasks that I can do remotely.
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For the org committee.
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How many people do you think are on the org committee?
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It's hard to say because I'm not physically present at the meetings now.
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We're using Google Hangouts for the meetings because we have a few other members
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who also come and dial in remotely.
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So I don't get to see how many people are there.
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So Jacob Perry is still the big cheese then.
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Is that correct?
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He is our, he's our spokesman.
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He is our webmaster and he has, he has wonderful ideas.
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Yeah, and he of course is in Portland.
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Yeah, he's working for the fast as a kind of a remote volunteer also.
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Yeah, he's, he's also mostly a remote volunteer.
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So he came up two weeks, he came up a week ago.
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And no, yeah, a week ago to start getting, to start getting things ready at BTC though.
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What first got you interested in the Linux Fest?
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My husband brought me, brought me to my first Linux Fest in 2010.
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And I liked the community aspect of it.
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I grew up in a household.
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My mother was, my mother is a diehard libertarian.
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And so I grew up with the idea of free speech.
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And that is something that I really like about Linux is the free as in speech aspect.
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The free as in beer aspect, well, it's a nice perk.
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But I'm, I'm more into the free as in free as in speech.
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Then you run Linux on your personal computers?
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I actually am now.
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Okay, what distribution do you like the most?
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Well, I'm running OpenSusa on my computer at home.
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And my darling, wonderful husband has rooted my Chromebook.
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And I'm running Debbie and Jesse on that one.
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Oh, did Debbie and Jesse just come out yesterday?
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It was, it was in beta testing though.
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Okay, yeah.
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He, he put the beta, he put the beta on for me.
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So we put Arthur on the spot here for a moment?
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Certainly.
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He would love it.
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What, what do you run on your laptops and your computers, Arthur?
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Right now, I run nopics for whenever I'm at somebody else's computer.
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Okay.
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And on my, yeah, so nopics also on my hard drive, on my laptop, I have windows,
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but I hardly ever touch it.
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I'm usually running nopics off of it.
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Off of a live USB, is that how you run it?
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Off of USB.
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And what else, I'm also running Chrome OS on my Chromebook right now,
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though I may root it later.
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And you're, how many years have you used Linux then?
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Since sometime in the 90s, I can't give you an exact date.
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Okay.
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So you're a long time user?
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Yes.
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Well, it's been nice to talk to you too and enjoy the rest of the fast.
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And you can look for your episode to be uploaded at some point,
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to Hacker Public Radio.
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In fact, I'll put it on at Google Plus to be able to see it there.
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All right.
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Well, thank you, thank you, David.
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Thank you for your volunteering.
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