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193 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
193 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4423
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Title: HPR4423: YouTube Subscriptions 2025 #2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4423/hpr4423.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:33:06
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,423, but Wednesday the 16th of July 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, YouTube Subscriptions 2025 Hash 2.
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It is hosted by Ahukah, and is about 16 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, part 2 of my list of subscribed channels.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q.
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We are airing it now because we had free slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode.
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This is not part of any series, this is part of the Reserve Q.
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So that means we need shows.
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There aren't enough shows being uploaded and we can't had to pull something out of the
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Reserve Q.
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So you should record something.
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And up a show, a Hacker Public Radio can only exist if the people who are members of
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the community submit shows.
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So take this as an indication you should be doing one right about now.
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So this is going to be another show about YouTube channels.
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As I've explained previously, I don't watch a whole lot of television but I watch a lot
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of YouTube videos and I subscribe to channels in order to do that.
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And so I'm just telling you about some of the channels that I subscribe to.
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What I did was I went to my YouTube thing in the browser and on the left side is subscriptions
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and open that up, it sorted everything into alphabetical order and I'm just going through
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it.
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So I'm going to start now with the letter B. And this is back to space because I'm a big
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space fan.
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I have had the opportunity to spend about a week at the Kennedy Center, spend a few days
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in Huntsville at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center.
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We're looking at trying to get a trip organized to go to Houston so that I can go to the Johnson
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Space Center there.
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And that shouldn't be surprising because you already know I'm a big science fiction fan
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and there's a huge overlap between space freaks and science fiction fans which is I know
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quite a revelation to all of you.
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So back to space is a nice channel, the host of that channel is a young, young lady.
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I say young because I'm 73 compared to me, most people are young.
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And she's like the granddaughter of one of the Apollo astronauts.
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So that's how she got sucked into all that.
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Then the next channel is Baker Street Journal.
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Baker Street you should know is the site of the fictional address of Sherlock Holmes,
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221 B. Baker Street.
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And the Baker Street Journal is a publication of the Baker Street Irregulars, a United States
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organization of Sherlock Holmes fans.
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And I have been a member of a what is called the Sion Society here in Michigan called
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the Arcadia mixture.
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So this is just kind of keeping in touch of what's going on in the community of Sherlock
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Holmes fans and I enjoy that sort of thing.
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The next one is BBC Earth Explore.
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These are short videos, typically four or five, six minutes, something like that.
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And it's from the BBC so it's pretty high quality stuff.
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And it is about exploring in some way.
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So it could be spending time in the Arctic or going into the jungles of the Amazon or
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whatever they happen to pick up on.
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Then there's a channel called Beesmart.
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Now this is interesting in that the fellow who does this, who does have a PhD.
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So he's got some credibility with me when he talks about that.
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And he'll take a particular topic and spend maybe 10 minutes or so unpacking it.
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So I enjoy it.
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I like science.
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I like facts.
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I like knowing what's going on.
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Now the next one is called Beyond the Sofa.
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This is a Doctor Who related channel.
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And the reference there is that in England, you know, the kids that would watch Doctor
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Who would get scared and would hide behind the sofa and then peek out to see what was
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going on on the screen.
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So that's the reference that goes into the title.
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What this does is this is a fellow who, I think, has a fairly aridite look at particular
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episodes.
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He does reviews, critiques, what have you.
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And I enjoy his take on things.
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So I have subscribed to his channel.
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Next one, Bill Bruford.
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Now Bill Bruford was the drummer for, yes, for some of their most popular, like fragile
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and close to the edge.
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He was the drummer on those albums.
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Then he left, yes, and got involved with King Crimson.
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Now he's not in any particular group, but is sort of on his own.
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And this channel, you know, he puts out videos of himself playing with people.
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Sometimes they're older videos, like some of the old King Crimson or yes, things that
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he did.
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And sometimes they're newer that he's working with some jazz musicians.
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I've seen a few that have a group that is Bill Bruford along with, you know, bass,
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saxophone, and keyboards.
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But it's all good.
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Next channel is called Bizarre Beasts.
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And this is about some of the unusual animals that exist in the world.
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So, you know, just a fun little thing there.
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Then Bostias.
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Bostias is a channel that is devoted to computer games, particularly civilization.
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But you know, most of the people who have YouTube channels about computer games will cover
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more than one type of game.
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So while he does a lot of sieve, he does other things as well.
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So do I watch all of his videos now, but I do watch a few of them, and they are enjoyable.
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And next is Braincraft.
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Now Braincraft is another science-oriented channel.
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And the woman who hosts it has some background in brain science and also in journalism.
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And so takes a look at topics involving the brain or related kinds of things and does
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videos about them.
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Next is Break Room of Geeks.
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Now this is a channel that is an off-shoot of another channel.
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The other channel is called Council of Geeks.
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This one is Brain Break Room of Geeks.
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And the idea was that the main channel has a certain focus.
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The break room can get a little further away from that focus.
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So it's hosted by someone named Vera Wilde.
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The reason I subscribe is for Dr. Who Reviews.
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That's mostly what I'm interested in.
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She has certainly strong opinions on a number of other topics.
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And occasionally if it interests me, I'll listen to her opinions on those as well.
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But what got me there and keeps me there mostly is the Dr. Who analysis.
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It is pretty good.
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So I stay.
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Now the next one is one that I subscribe to somewhat recently.
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We've just been through an election year in the United States and that can be fairly
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traumatic.
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But I subscribe to this fellow Brian Tyler Cohen, who does political analysis, basically.
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And puts out probably one or two videos every day on current political news.
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If you're interested in U.S. politics from a somewhat liberal perspective, then you
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might enjoy it.
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If you're outside the United States, it probably wouldn't matter much to you at all.
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The next channel I subscribe to is Butterfly Spanish.
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As I've talked about before, I started learning Spanish when the COVID pandemic hit and all
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of us were locked up.
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And that happened right after I had retired from my job at Ford Motor Company.
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And you know, there is a saying that you have to use it or you lose it.
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And I thought I need to do something to keep my brain active and trying to learn another
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language sounded like a pretty good way to do that.
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And I pick Spanish.
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Why did I pick Spanish?
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Well, you know, take a look.
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We're neighbors with Mexico.
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We've got all of Latin America in our hemisphere.
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It's the second most popular language in the United States.
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So sort of figured like, okay, I'll get more use out of that than anything.
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So I picked Spanish.
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And I'm still continuing to try and improve my Spanish a little bit.
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It's slow going, but the main thing is it's keeping me mentally active.
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So that's Butterfly Spanish.
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The next channel is called Sea Brin.
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Now that is for Cheryl Brin, who is the wife of the author, David Brin.
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Now the channel is really David Brin's channel.
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It's just in his wife's name.
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Why I don't know and really is it any of my business to begin with.
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So I don't worry about that.
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I'm there to hear what David Brin has to say.
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I find him to be a very intelligent and insightful observer, as well as being a very good author.
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The next channel is Candy Rat Records.
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Now I mentioned before that I have a strong interest in acoustic finger style guitar.
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And Candy Rat Records is a purely guitar-oriented record label and puts out recordings, CDs mostly,
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by some of the most prominent of the finger style guitar players.
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I mentioned Andy McKee's channel in another episode, and Andy McKee is on the Candy Rat label.
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So this keeps me up on what's going on.
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They will frequently do things like put out a video for a new song that one of their artists has done.
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Or sometimes they'll have someone put on a concert.
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So I can get an hour and a half of music come through as a streaming concert on this channel.
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Then there's a couple of car-related ones.
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Car care, plues, and car help corner.
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And the reason I subscribe to both of these is that the car that I'm driving right now is a Mazda 3.
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It's a 2012 model, and it has 250,000 miles on it.
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Well, it is still going great, but at some point you've got to look at, say, okay, 13 years old, 250,000 miles.
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It ain't going to last forever.
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So what I've been trying to do is kind of keep up on what's going on with cars.
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And what I'm looking at, whenever I get my next car, it was to be either electric or hybrid.
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Because I think we need to start moving away from burning up all this carbon and destroying the environment.
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But I didn't know a whole lot.
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I think I know more now than I knew when I first subscribed to these channels.
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If I had to make a decision today, I would probably go with a hybrid as being more practical.
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And that's largely because the charging infrastructure in the US is not quite where it really needs to be,
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although it is getting better, and I've done shows about all of that.
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But that's what I'm looking at now.
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But if my car holds out another three or four years, which is entirely possible,
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because so far it's doing great, the situation might be different then.
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So I'm just following these channels so that I can stay up to date on what's going on there.
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So this is a hook up for Hacker Public Radio signing off,
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and there's always encouraging you to support free software.
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Bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
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an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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