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605 lines
27 KiB
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605 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3813
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Title: HPR3813: The postmarketOS Podcast
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3813/hpr3813.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 05:50:02
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3813 for Wednesday, the 15th of March 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, The Post Market OS Podcast.
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It is part of the series podcast recommendations.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 32 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Ken welcomes a new podcast to the free culture podcast family.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
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Radio.
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Today, another one in our podcast recommendation series and it is Post Market OS Podcast,
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which is the podcast for the Post Market OS project.
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And from their website postmarketOS.org, we are sick of not receiving updates shortly
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after buying new phones, sick of the world gardens deeply integrated into Android and iOS.
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And that's why we are developing a sustainable privacy and security focused free software
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and mobile operating system that is modeled after a traditional Linux distribution with
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privilege separation in mind.
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Let's keep our devices useful and safe until they're physically break.
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I'm all on board with that and the good news is they've recently joined the free culture
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podcast network and as such this is a sample episode to promote their show, sit back, relax
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and enjoy.
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Hi.
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I need to steal your microphone so otherwise you are being live streamed.
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Nice.
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Hello Internet.
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Hello Internet.
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Hello Internet.
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Live.
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Live.
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We are live.
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Oh.
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Live from Bosdom.
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We won't be live though because this is a recording.
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Yeah.
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Close enough.
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Close enough.
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Yeah, close enough.
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Sorry.
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All right.
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20th, 20th, 20th.
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Yeah.
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Is there a period of?
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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I'll say live from Bosdom because...
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Yeah I'll say live from Bosdom.
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What episode will be it?
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I'll say live from Bosdom.
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28th.
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28th.
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Okay.
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Live from Bosdom.
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It's the post market OS podcast.
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Woo!
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This is Clayton also known as Crafty Guy.
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Hello, I am Bartane.
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Hello, I'm Peter.
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And I'm Bart.
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I'm Caleb. I'm Oliver. And I'm Luca. So many people. Yes, we are live together. Sitting together.
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Yeah, where are we? We are currently outside of a cafeteria I think. All huddled together outside.
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Yeah, yeah, tiny desk, tiny desk podcast. We really need to add a picture of this to the
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podcast. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think this is this is like the first time most are all the core
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team has been together in person, right? Yeah. Yeah, not all of us, but look. I mean, I was there
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previously, so I mean, yeah, I mean, this time also not everybody's here. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
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but it's close. Yeah. Yeah. So we are having a ton of fun here. We saw a lot of talks. So today is
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Saturday. There was the deaf room, which was amazing. And yeah, just like every talk I saw was great.
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I missed like two or so. How did your talk go? Yeah, my my talk about on dev two went well,
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I think. So yeah, people seemed interested and I think for a lot of people was the first
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I'm worried about it, right? Because they know are probably a installer. But yeah, what was your favorite
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moment part? Well, I haven't been to the talk. So yeah, I probably know that in general. Well,
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just all day, I don't have a specific moment to talk to on the sense of people. Lots of interesting
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conversations. Everybody was excited. Yeah, it was good. Lots of people that were really new post
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marketers and Linus Mama general, but also people that didn't know at all. And then I had to explain
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the basics, which was art, but yeah, it worked. Yeah, pretty good.
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Hopefully, but you were in the booth or the stand all day. Yeah, I have sore legs now.
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So yeah, it's good to sit down. First time to sit down. How many hours?
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Well, since tomorrow, this morning, like nine o'clock, so yeah.
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All right, 45 actually. Yeah, quite a few hours. So we have a lot of new recruits now.
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Definitely. Yeah, why also? We'll see. Like I was really impressed. There was one kid 14
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year old and said you put it the banana phone, actually. And yeah, well, banana phone. It's the
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Nokia 8110 for G. Yes, actually. Yeah, that's good to know. Don't that you know the name.
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It comes in black and yellow and yellow one is the banana phone. Okay. And the black one is the
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one that's in the matrix. Nice. Oh, I guess the older model. I was wondering how old he was.
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14. Really? Yeah, I asked. Wow. That's really awesome. That's cool. Yeah. And it runs
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the main line. And it's so amazing. Wow. And even Fosh is running. So I mean, you can use it.
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Sort of. I mean, sort of. Sort of. It is running. You can look at the screen somewhat.
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You can never get a run. You can even launch apps. But then then that crashes. Yeah. I mean,
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it's already cool. Yeah. Amazing. I will file it as a book in Fosh and not in the, I mean,
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that's the device. Yes. There's no touch screen on that, right? No, it is. Yeah. Yeah. So I wonder
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what actually SXMO would do with like all the inputs. That'd be good. Yeah. That might work.
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Pretty well. Yeah. I mean, interesting config, at least. It's normally SXO is like what,
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free buttons. And now it is like 14. Yeah. That'd be cool. Does it actually have volume keys?
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I think it does. And it has Enter and Backspace to function keys. So you get a few bonus
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buttons. Also, the full a keypad, of course. And the dedicated button to pick up chords.
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Yes. That's useful. Yeah. That's probably one of the most popular devices on the table.
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Yeah. Because it's just so like being yellow. Yeah. You can't miss it. Yeah. It's amazing.
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At one point, Lima developer came to the table and asked about pinefones and like they don't
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receive that money box and how that comes to be. And yeah, we figured it's kind of mostly working.
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And I also there are some bucks upstream and mesa. But yeah, it seems to to be working pretty
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well overall. And I asked if what's there left to do. And if he thinks, yeah, basically he said
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performance might be possible to improve the performance, but they would need proper
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box report for that. So if somebody is interested in improving the performance of Lima, then
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you can run a profiler and see where the bottlenecks are in your apps, in your environments,
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and then file a buck report. That's basically what he said. So it was really a nice conversation.
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And Lima is the pinefone GPU driver? Yeah. Yeah. For the Mali GPU. Oh, Mali GPU.
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Oh, I'm sweating the context. Yeah. No, I wasn't sure. Cool.
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Yeah, notes. Yeah, we don't have any notes on the, we're free.
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Yeah, Ollie's prepared, but I think the exhaustive. I can't.
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So I thought it was cool how many people were interested in the stand. It seemed like every time
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I walked by, it was packed. Yeah, it wasn't a good spot as well. We were supposed to be in a
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different building, but we got switched on and away, but we got switched to probably a better place.
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Because it was right next to the entrance of the room, like after the floor. Yeah,
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come up the stairs, like it's the first thing on the left side. Yeah, so it's next to KD,
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which is nice. If you want to see like the other 16 or so stands, you had to go next to
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else. So that's, yeah, it was pretty good. And also when the talk was over, like upstairs,
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they would all go down, writes, come to us. Just amazing. Yeah, that's the point where you
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cannot hear what anyone is saying anymore. No, it wasn't that bad. Wow, wow. It wasn't too great either,
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no. Yeah. But also for the, well, I haven't been in the talks, but I heard it was also packed.
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Yeah, the room was, right? Yeah, room was pretty full for most of the ones I attended, I think. Yeah,
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like when the Fairphone talk started. Oh, yeah, that got packed. Yeah, Lucas talked, it was like,
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it was great. Everybody thought he was trying to get in that room.
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Well, it's cool. It's a cool shop, yaks. Like holy shit. Mainline, it's always good on the Fairphone.
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And Sebastian from my emo did a great, like, MC the whole thing and did a great job there. Yeah,
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like really finding positions between the talks. Yeah, it's interesting. We're pretty good. Yeah,
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it was nice. He put some data into that. So I have one more story on my notes.
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Two guys came by and one said that they, he has, he's using a Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge or something
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and runs it as tail scale tunnel, something like this. And he was like, oh, it's amazing that he can
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put the phone to use and also started a patch to be in bootstrap to give something back. So
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this was also very cool. And that's on the downstream kernel, right? I'm not sure actually what
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need to look at the device. Pretty cool. Actually, use case. Yeah, that's not just regular phone
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usage. Yeah, yeah, it's cool. Like a Raspberry Pi or something. Yeah, especially. Yeah.
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One of the favorite people that talks I had at the stand with that somebody found out that
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Firefox OS still is alive through KOS. Yes, there's also this open source one, right?
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It's being continued. Kapaloon. Kapaloon. Peter, what were your favorite moments?
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By the way, I think to add some conduct speeders from LinMob. Yeah, right.
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I was lucky. It's called LinMob.net and I've got an app list which I'm a bad maintainer of, sorry,
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the next phone apps.org. And I was on this podcast before. So, yeah, but I'm here at FOS
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them and I attended all the talks of the FOS on mobile track and they all were great. And
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my highlight was the non-Linux talk actually about G-Node. Ah, the one I missed. Oh, I wanted to see
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it. It's so different, uh, micro kernel and they've got a visual interface so that where you can
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see what an app or software that's running is connected to. So if you don't want your, I don't know,
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an app to touch the file system, you can basically graphically make it so that it doesn't have
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access to the file system. Well, cool. Yeah. And a pretty cool interface and it's really tiny also.
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So if you want to try that, it's just a download that's maybe less than this episode of the podcast.
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It's really like 20 megabytes or something. Yeah. Wow. But it's all custom. So you won't get your
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normal stuff, right? Easily. But they, they ported, uh, Morph browser from UB ports.
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Wow. You want to touch over to, um, G-Node and that ran. Okay. So you can actually run basic
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chromium on this. Yeah. Wow. That's impressive. That's impressive. And so is it their own kernel from scratch
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or? Yeah, it's some micro kernel thing framework. I don't know. They've been at this for years
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from what I've heard. And it's a small company, uh, actually in Dresden, Germany. No. Yeah.
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So it seems to be business. If I understood it correctly. And yeah, it's one of those
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cool niche projects that really do something different, have a different take. Like,
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no, we don't want those large, uh, change sets that you have from kernel.
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It's to kernel release that you can't really review on your own, right? Nobody can do that.
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24. So they're looking at new to looking at monitors, so interestingly in file systems, right?
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Or I don't know, some sub-system that's not relevant to phones. Interesting. Maybe.
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Uh, yeah. But, but it's really amazing, uh, to see this totally different thing working on
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hardware that I'm quite familiar with, with a pine phone. Uh, and that was really cool, but
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The rest of the Rocks was also quite cool, no bad talk, that's good, that's what we went for, and Lindmob Stickers, which is fantastic.
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Yes, I need to get one, I didn't get one yet.
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Oh, no, can't be done. Someone was looking for you at the booth, but you weren't there, so, hopefully he comes back somewhere, and then you're there.
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That'd be good.
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How was your talk, Clayson?
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I don't know, you tell me. I haven't been there, so you tell me. Or somebody else, maybe.
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As like a title, it was like, how do we go from here? Where do we go from here?
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From Washington, right? The vent.
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Yeah, I'd like to get home, and like, we're the beers.
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No, it was an attempt to get people within the community to think about how to become organized and not waste as much time solving the same problems
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that other people have solved in other distributions.
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Yeah, I don't know, it's just a way to try to move things a little forward.
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I guess also maybe in the direction of getting new features that nobody has working with, so I guess also voiceover, it might be a topic there,
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it's like anybody that knows anything about it, say, hey, hey, this is maybe how cool it comes out, this is maybe the things you need to do,
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and maybe links to some existing resources, some might find useful.
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And also, of course, like cameras and all the other things where, yeah, which are just not really working yet on Linux mainland.
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Yeah, yeah.
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So from what I've seen, it got a lot of interest, a lot of interest, and a lot of people asked questions afterwards,
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and you set up a matrix room where a lot of people joined already, so a lot of good ideas already, people proposing stuff,
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and yeah, I mean, it's, yeah, my goal is just to get people thinking and talking about it,
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because I don't know what the answers are really, but I have some ideas.
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Yeah, it's good to bring this up and coordinate on it.
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I think there's no answer, and I think it's not solved on the rest of either.
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Yeah, especially the thing is, while it's unsolvable, you must work on trying to solve it,
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but otherwise, things get worse and worse, so it's tedious, but necessary and good for,
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well, also mental health, I think.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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All this duplicate effort, right?
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Yeah, yeah.
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When someone's working on a thing, and then somebody else commits that matrix right before,
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then that can be.
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It can be a little bit motivating, and yeah, it's not too great, so.
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Like, maybe from past examples, I guess, what Dylan did, like, with the oldest Bluetooth audio thing,
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so like, with the car control and everything there, like, it would have been basically a topic for this, I guess.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, for sure.
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Because, I mean, it's not specific to post-markerized, so any other Linux is just, yeah, just in general.
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Yeah, yeah, there's lots of examples of duplicated effort, or things being implemented that, like, the whole MMS support,
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I mean, that was, that turned out well because, I mean, I was one of the early contributors with Chris, and.
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And it worked out pretty well for us, but a lot of distros, like, kind of make some changes to it after the fact,
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and so they were trying to play catch-up, and, yeah, it would have been easier if just, like, everyone who wanted this was at the table when it was being worked on,
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and could provide input, so the first thing that came out was, like, gonna work, I guess.
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Yeah, and I think it's also powerful to have, like, some shared website, maybe, where it's easier for people who have no clue about what this world is, basically, to get a first idea of what the project happened.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Actually, one of the really cool things that happened during my talk at the end was, there was a person there who was not technical at all.
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He actually, like, worked for a school district in this area, and which is here just out of interest, and he was really excited that, in my talk, I mentioned, like, we need to be better about communicating publicly what we're doing to non-technical people, so they have some idea, like, what's going on, and what we're all about, and why it's a good thing.
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And so, just hearing that from somebody, like, yeah, I have no idea what you're about, and it's frustrating today, because there's a lot of information, and it's mostly technical, and so, people, like, he was, like, people, like, me, get frustrated trying to piece it all together, and, you know, give up.
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Yeah, so, that was nice.
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And, like, also, kind of, given that there's a whole deaf room for it at first time, like, but there's no, like, for example, if you go to containers, I mean, there's a Wikipedia page for it that explains, like, what this, what it does, or a million other blog posts, but for the first mobile devices, like, why should you care?
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Why is it important? What exists? What can you do with it?
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Exactly.
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So, who didn't say much yet?
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I don't know, I'll chip in, I guess. I thought it was really well laid out. I was kind of hyped to see Clayton's look at the end.
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Yeah, very nice closing talk for sure.
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It really, at the end of the day, so well, and, like, the...
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Thanks.
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Yeah, it was perfect. So, you should absolutely go catch the recordings. I think, depending on this is released, they may be linked down below.
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Maybe you should be able to see them.
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Yeah, I don't know how fast FOSTEM is released in the videos.
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I think everything after 1 pm, they have sent out review emails, but everything before it was some technical issue.
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It's like next week or so.
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Just look for it, we will link it.
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Yeah, I guess moving on. I have to say it's amazing seeing all of the bases. I know we kind of open with this, but...
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Yeah, I didn't get involved in the community until off to COVID.
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So this is the first time for me meeting, like, the dozens of people I interact with online sites.
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I don't know, it's super cool.
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Yeah.
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I've been working with some folks here for, like, almost six years now, and still have a single person.
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So, first time for me too, and it's awesome.
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I have a funny story from yesterday, so we were at a restaurant, and they wanted us to tell them via email which food we want to order beforehand, so they can prepare it.
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And we did that.
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And then the food arrived, and we didn't know what we put down there.
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So we said, okay, put all the food on the table, and we looked up in our etherpad.
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Who ordered what food?
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It works out. It was fine. That's great.
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That's great food.
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But it was also kind of amazing at first, and it's like, you see, just not just software people, but people involved in the whole community, from every single area.
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It's like from the Free Software Foundation in Europe, I saw some people again that I met at some points.
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And I was actually from my previous job, like, one guy came by and said hello.
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He was there for the weekends.
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It was super cool.
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There are also a list of people who have contributed to post-microlysis in some way who came by.
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I saw some people who have done some sound-dragon 845 things, just show up, and I'm like, oh, yeah, it's you.
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Awesome.
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I could see you, like David Hiddelberg, I guess.
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Yep.
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Yeah.
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It's cool stuff.
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Definitely.
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Did anybody see any other talks that were cool?
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Outside of the bedroom?
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Outside of the bedroom.
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Doesn't seem like it now.
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Apparently you have seen any talks.
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I've seen anyone.
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Two other talks outside the bedroom?
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Yeah.
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So if you're in the embedded room at the end, it was like one about medical respirators, like Open Heart Project, which was actually quite fascinating.
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Like, I was actually for the talk before and for the talk after, but I stayed in between.
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It was really interesting.
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Like Open Heart was just cool in general, I think.
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Especially when they build this modular and stuff like this.
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It's really cool to see.
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Yeah, and it was very intentionally designed that way too, which is cool, because this...
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I think it was a non-profit company that very explicitly went for this type of design.
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So that other people could build them in the world, and I mean respirators are, you know, important when you need them.
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So making it easily reconstructed elsewhere without having to go through licensing and whatever required that you probably have to do if you wanted to get one.
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There was an Open Heart right now, it was nice.
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So yeah, that was cool talk.
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Yeah, that was amazing.
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On the topic of Open Heart, we also had the M&T pocket reform at the stand today.
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That was cool.
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Yeah, I'm not interested in M&T for coming along, I guess.
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No, it's nice.
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I'm trying to think of things to say.
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I ran on thing that Peter noted on us, I think, that two presentations were run on phones actually, right in the definitely.
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Really?
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Yeah, cool.
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So the first one, which was about Lumery and Convergence, so running on a Fairphone 4, running Ubuntu Touch,
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run from the phone, felt like I've read that down that before, because it was so chill.
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Yeah, just did it right and started in time still.
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I also had my USB keyboard with me.
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He even used it and it went super smoothly.
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And it was funny, because the device kept locking every so often.
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Yeah, it just seamlessly kept going.
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Not another problem.
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He made jokes about it, that's why I wanted to move on or something.
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It's been too long on the slide, it locks.
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Great talk.
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And the other one was from Mobian.
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Yeah, I think it was by my liberal.
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No, liberal five.
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Yeah, it was by my liberal five.
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Right on the nice stock.
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Yeah.
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It was very made for the liberal five.
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It probably wasn't, because I don't think it was made.
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It barely fits that thing.
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It didn't look like it fits.
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So it's a block for the liberal five.
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The best connectors on the side.
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Very cool.
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I was not brave enough to try that.
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Yeah, I was magic happy to finish up my target.
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So I think actually I think in like 20, I guess 2020, I think we were like for the
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pine for the original pine phone.
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We were also kind of planning to do a talk on the pine from itself, like using
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convergence or kind of convergence.
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Back in the end, plucking in an external display and doing it with it.
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But I don't think we actually did this in the end.
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But yeah, I mean, now we had at least two talks on it and super nice.
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Next year, all the talks.
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It works.
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That's the goal.
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That's the goal.
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Actually, we'll be talking about the one person who had a laptop.
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Oh, it's from our service.
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Somebody doesn't throw us the software stack.
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Yes.
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And then for USB.
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I think we could be recorded on a Linux phone maybe two.
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Outside of the bedroom, there was one talk on camera stuff in the first mobile
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bedroom, but there were two more in the bedroom.
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And that had a talk by a load camera.
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Yeah.
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One about the camera and one about all the new devices which may or may not be relevant
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to pine for too.
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I don't know.
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So I have to catch up on those.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I just have a lot of talks on my list today.
|
|
Unfortunately enough to get time to get to because there's so many people here.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
That's how advice I want to talk to.
|
|
Just track us all by track.
|
|
But yeah, I still have to really have to catch up on some.
|
|
Whatever.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
That was great.
|
|
Amazing.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Any more stories you want to tell anyone?
|
|
Wow.
|
|
That was the one.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Have to date you.
|
|
But Martijn doesn't plan to carry the podcast equipment tomorrow.
|
|
So.
|
|
Yeah, we have to release two episodes.
|
|
Yeah, right.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Not to that.
|
|
I think there's still going to be a lot of amazing track talks tomorrow.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You can also, I mean, yeah.
|
|
Now when you hear this episode, you can watch the recordings of it.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Maybe you can come next time.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Come 2024.
|
|
Probably first week in February, most likely.
|
|
The first week in the February.
|
|
Definitely in Brussels.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
We'll get a move again.
|
|
And a deaf room again.
|
|
I don't think any other university would be willing to host so many people with like so many
|
|
rooms open at the same time.
|
|
No.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Or I recruit another team that sets it up.
|
|
Because I mean, I don't know.
|
|
I think we had 30 or 40 rooms in parallel.
|
|
And they all had a beautiful maid's first-hand box like the video box with like a big bag of adapters for like.
|
|
I mean, for the first mobile devices room, we had literally we needed a VGA to HMI adapter.
|
|
And of course, it wasn't a bag.
|
|
It was so funny.
|
|
Like they were panicking of it like who has the adapter and did the first row.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
Nobody had something and then we figured, oh, there's a bag with an adapter in the front.
|
|
It was funny.
|
|
But it actually worked fine.
|
|
I mean, it was like a wonderful adapter with an actual USB connection.
|
|
Oh, wow.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
I believe about the camera.
|
|
This was also a great talk.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It was definitely a 220 or 230.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh, so one.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I've been to a lot of conferences for like previous jobs.
|
|
And this is the first conference I've been to where I traveled to another country.
|
|
And went through passport control.
|
|
And the officer there was like, are you here for the open source conference?
|
|
It was really.
|
|
I was like, yeah.
|
|
It was like, okay.
|
|
I let's click on one.
|
|
We're going to sell it if you said no.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
Probably still be there now.
|
|
I guess.
|
|
I need to do the full check three hours.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Look at the searching.
|
|
Like what else would an American do in Brussels?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It's not festival right now.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And London value had to start.
|
|
No.
|
|
This is here.
|
|
The airport.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And my connection was in the UK, which is, you know, not part of the EU anymore.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So this is my part of the country.
|
|
And yeah.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
Not the only connection.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
A long trip.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
What?
|
|
I hope it was worth it in the end.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I think so.
|
|
I'm so far.
|
|
I'm still winging up.
|
|
But yeah.
|
|
I think it's a little jet lag.
|
|
But not too bad.
|
|
And I must say it's amazing to do this podcast here outside in front of the cafeteria.
|
|
Lots of noise in the background.
|
|
That's what it actually adds to the experience.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It's authentic.
|
|
And by the way, we have four different microphones.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
And it's all connected to a fancy recording box.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
This is the first time using all this hardware.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And happy it works.
|
|
Or does it.
|
|
But I also fancy headphones on to monitor what we're talking about.
|
|
It's like a radio DJ.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I'm not really professional.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
And the stage still may end up being the quickest recording of a podcast episode ever, I think.
|
|
Maybe.
|
|
Maybe.
|
|
We don't have any delay between talking.
|
|
It's a natural conversation.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It makes discussion so much easier also because you can see each other.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You know when somebody wants to say something.
|
|
Do you remember that I shouldn't just nod along but also say, yeah.
|
|
No.
|
|
We should notice every month.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Like get laid over and then.
|
|
We'll be halfway like in the boot in the Atlantic.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Can't be fine.
|
|
Let's get a boot.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Of course we're going to ask boot.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Sure.
|
|
Crews.
|
|
There we go.
|
|
I mean, probably from half ways on the east coast of the year.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Like North Carolina or something.
|
|
Probably not where you are.
|
|
No.
|
|
People are walking past with trollies.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Not the first one.
|
|
A few cars.
|
|
That's fine.
|
|
That's good.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So shall we wrap it up?
|
|
Castel?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
We have almost exactly 30 minutes now.
|
|
Oh, amazing.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
It has a time.
|
|
So as long as you don't cut anything out, we're exactly 30 minutes.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But you also need to record the outro now, of course, the Atlantic, foster outro.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I will try to remember the text.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
You want to do it?
|
|
I don't remember it.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I'm a little rusty.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Something like.
|
|
I thought you were crafty.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No.
|
|
Rusty.
|
|
Yeah, I made something up.
|
|
It's plastic, guys.
|
|
Thank you for listening to our episode.
|
|
We hope you enjoyed it.
|
|
That's part of it.
|
|
I'm not sure if it's anything.
|
|
I think we're more infusey as them, please.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I'll try again.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Thank you for listening to our episode.
|
|
If you want to comment about it, leave a comment that Maserun posed.
|
|
If you want to buy a shirt, head over to Postmark, rest the dog slash.
|
|
Merch.
|
|
And if you want to do none of that, that's also fine.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Have a great day, I guess.
|
|
That's not fine.
|
|
And I will sing the outro music.
|
|
And then the music.
|
|
And the music.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Music for today's episode.
|
|
And every Friday, old school beat.
|
|
Yeah, in every...
|
|
Friday, old school beat.
|
|
By the passion high five.
|
|
Lettuce by...
|
|
Creative comments.
|
|
By Shara, like...
|
|
I believe.
|
|
Or something.
|
|
Also, whoever walked past while singing.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
We don't know how that's like.
|
|
We hope it's probably good.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Should be fine.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
Stay safe.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
Have fun.
|
|
We should all live out of this hill.
|
|
Perfect.
|
|
Very authentic.
|
|
On the Sadois stages, today's show is released under Creative Commons.
|
|
Attribution 4.0 International License.
|