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1115 lines
100 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1762
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Title: HPR1762: HPR Audio Book Club 10
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1762/hpr1762.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:03:09
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---
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This is HPR Episode 1762 entitled HPR Audio Book Club 10 and is part of the series HPR Audio Book Club.
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It is hosted by HPR Audio Book Club and is about 170 minutes long.
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The summary is in this episode, the HPR Audio Book Club Review Revolution Radio by S. Kenlon.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Radio. Today we have for you the 10th episode of the Hacker Public Radio Audio Book Club,
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and we're reviewing the Book Revolution Radio by Seth Kenlin, a Homicide Pirate Radio. Again,
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it's not Pirate Radio. It is Revolution Radio by Seth Kenlin.
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I'm Pokey, and with me tonight is Taj. What's good, everybody? And X1-1-1.
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Howdy folks. And 5150 isn't with us tonight because he's had his recent tragedy, so I just,
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I know by the time it's air, it's probably going to be a little too late, but if you could spare
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a thought for 5150 or even a couple of bucks towards the fundraiser that's trying to do our best
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to make him whole again. It'd be nice if we could, and it'd be nice if you had that in your heart
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to do. But anyway, moving on. There's three of us tonight. Usually we have a few more, so that
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means that you want to come on with us next time we record. Revolution Radio. What did you guys think?
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I have to admit that the first chapter or so, I really didn't like this book. It took till
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probably the third, fourth, fifth chapter in before the hook really set, and I had to finish it.
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So definitely a slow start, partially because of the two different kinds of styles of audio,
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and the little snippets were really hard to hear, and I'm like, oh man, if the whole book is going
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to sound like this, I'm barely going to be able to struggle through this. But then it switched to the
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more majority type audio, and you know, I slugged through the first double chapters,
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wondering how it was going to be, and then it finally picked up.
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I unabashedly love this book. And I get that like it's not, especially at the beginning,
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it is kind of slow, and it's a very kind of exposition heavy right out of the gate. It's trying to
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explain this whole kind of brave new world, you know, that they've created from what's left of
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society. But there's so many things in this that just tickle specific, I can't talk specific
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things in my personality that I just cannot not love this book. The story is great, but I'm
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almost more in love with the world than I am with this particular story. Like I'm happy with the
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story. I think the story is cool. It's nice to follow. It's got some cool characters in it.
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But really, I just really in love with that world.
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Oh, that's really cool. Because I really liked the story, but I had a lot of problems with the
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world. I could not get into it, which took me out of the story sometimes and I had forced myself
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back into it. And I always forget to do this at the beginning of the show, but for the new listener,
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the way we do the book review is for the first part of our show here, we won't do any spoilers.
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We'll talk about the book in general terms. Won't go too far into the storyline past maybe the
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first chapter or whatever, but we won't do any spoilers. Sometime after we're done reviewing as
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much as we can without talking about any spoilers, we'll take a short break where we each review
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a beverage of our own choosing and then we'll get into spoilers at the end of that. So if you haven't
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listened to this audio book or haven't decided yet, whether you want to listen to it, the first
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part of the show, we'll try to convince you to listen or not depending on what you think of our
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opinions of it. So I always forget to do that right up front. I should, but near that side of the
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way. But yes, I really did like the story. I like what happened, but the world I had a problem with,
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I still am not able to decide whether this book is set in a utopian future or a dystopian future.
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And I think it depends on which character you ask. I also think it depends on your perspective
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of what a utopian future is versus what a dystopian future is. I think that's one of the reasons I
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like it is because it's neither, but both. You kind of have the ideas of a utopia that are developed
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now and how those play out and how those don't actually play out the way you think it would.
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I think the story very much contrasts the book we did last month down and out in the magic kingdom,
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giving a very, very alternate future if things were to go only slightly differently.
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Yeah, one of the things that makes them different is one of the things that I, I don't know,
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this one there was a revolution. I don't think it's a spoiler to say that. And
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well, I don't want to say it. So this is the result of the world being violently destroyed,
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and now it's sort of being rebuilt. Whereas down in the magic kingdom,
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materials and energy and free time seem to be limitless, and they could do whatever they want.
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The world was a play thing to them. Whereas here, there's still the, there's some sense of struggle,
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but there seems to also in this book, be an unlimited
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quantity of supplies. It's transportation that seemed to have trouble with. And that,
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you know, throughout the book, I was having trouble with where like,
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several times they're reading canned food. Well, if there's a revolution,
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and it seemed like it was some time ago and everything was destroyed, where's all this canned
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food coming from? Because I didn't hear anything about factories or that kind of thing, you know what I mean?
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I got the impression it was all leftover canned food.
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Yeah, which would imply that they should run out at some point, but they just kind of,
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you know, asked for what everybody needs. And it seems to show up.
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Yeah, I kind of felt like it just, they never say, I'm trying to do this without
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spoiling anything. They never say the age of some of the characters, but I guess in my brain,
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I'm imagining them to be a little younger than maybe they are. Because in my mind,
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even though the world has changed drastically, the revolution in my mind didn't happen that long ago,
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that like it may, there may still be things around from that time pretty easily.
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Yeah, they do, they do a very good job of painting a canvas with very general strokes and
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allowing the reader to fill that in as kind of they, they're predisposed to do.
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Can you reward that for me just a little because I'm feeling dumb and also watching this
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etherpad work is fascinating? There are kind of broad strokes and general ideas, but some details
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are left out for kind of you, the reader or listener to fill in the blanks.
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And people's even physical descriptions are kind of vague. People's ages are vague, distances,
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general geographic location, how far things are apart is given in relative terms, but never in
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any kind of empirical way that we could measure and say, no, for sure, okay, this is in this place,
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it's this far away from here. This is how far they traveled. This is how old they are. It's
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fuzzy. Yes, yes. Yeah, I agree with that. And in that, a lot of the things that at least the
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narrator seemed to not care about and universe the things that the narrator did care about,
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and she seemed to imply that the whole world thought somewhat similarly to her,
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if not exactly like her, but a lot of it seemed against human nature to me.
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It's no spoiler to say that there was a lot of sharing going on in the book and the people
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took care of one another, and at least that was her view of the world. But as she went through
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the story, there wasn't quite as much as that as I think she thought there was maybe. I don't
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know. Did you get that impression? Or am I? I don't know. Now, I think her world view is very
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trying to do this, but that's what it's hard. It's very informed by her ideals, and I think there's
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several points in the book where those ideals are just pretty openly challenged by the world around
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her. And she's kind of taken it back by it almost like she lives in this version of
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not an activity about that she thinks the revolution went in one way, and it probably did,
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but then people have moved past that point where she's still stuck in that point in some ways.
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I guess that's kind of what I meant by whether that's a utopia or a dystopia kind of
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defend depends on the starting definition of utopia. So you can't really tell someone
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it to utopia unless you know what they think utopia looks like.
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Right. There's a big like thread through this whole story of anonymity and knowing the author
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that I understand why that's important to him. But I think that that plays into it too, because
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the certain characters are very really want to keep their own feelings secret and not let them out,
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and in doing so it's almost like they're creating this world where people may not remember the
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ideals that started this world. And both of those things make perfect sense to me. It's only been
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just recently that I think anyone in our community learned that Klatu had a real name at all,
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let alone was willing to publish it. And now I guess he's he's kind of out there as Seth
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Ken Linney's claim in some of this work that he's done. He's done a lot of work too. So I can
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I can I can see what you mean about that. But also yeah it's like the the revolution is over
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and they're rebuilding the world, but the struggles not over there are there is still human nature
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to battle. And I think we see a lot of that in the book, even though even though people
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seem to profess the the the the community ideals, there's there's there's a lot of it that just
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doesn't go away. It's a lot easier to make a large societal change one big time that it is to
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maintain it. And I think that that's kind of where this story happens is after the big change
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and it's that maintenance period and everybody's kind of asleep at the wheel. Okay so first off I didn't
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know that this was plateau. So that make that also adds some depth to the story.
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I just heard your light bulb go off all the way over here. I did do I saw it happen. It was a
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flash out my window. So one of the things in the book that I'm not so sure I mean I liked it
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as part of the story, but I'm not sure I was comfortable with it is all the lying that everybody
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does. I mean nobody tells the truth about anything because they're just constantly trying to hide
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their their motives as well as their identity. Now I understand hiding your identity, but
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you just never and it's not the fact that everybody was lying. It's the fact that everybody was
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comfortable with everybody else lying and they just kind of went on about their business
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as if as if that didn't matter and I think it does matter you've got to be truthful with people
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to have any kind of real relationship with them and if you don't have a relationship with people
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you're on your own and I just don't think people were meant to live that way. So that's one thing
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about the author's perspective or that not the author excuse me the narrator's perspective
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that I just couldn't bring myself in line with the way I accepted it in the story I got to that.
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I can see that the world they were living in made them feel like that was necessary,
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but at the same time I'm gonna add my own to what you were just saying they're poking that
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I don't think you can ever have a real community of people when the whole basis of every
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relationship is based on lying and false information and withholding information it's only by
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you know openly collaborating and sharing yourself with the people you want to be in community
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with the community develops. And I think it's the world view of the people who are dealing with
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these the specific characters that we're dealing with deal with the world in a certain way and
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that's very representative of the way they deal with it. I'm gonna cross the spoiler line for like
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two seconds because it's not really important but it is totally this backwards where everybody's
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kind of metacognitively thinking about everybody else. I mean there's literally a point where a
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character says well I know that they killed that guy and they know that I know that they killed that
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guy but we're gonna play it cool like nobody knows what's going on because you know that's just
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gonna make this go easier. I mean that's just kind of the world they live in. Yeah and I can get that
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in the context of their mission but it seems like everywhere everything was more like that.
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I'm not sure how much of the outside world we've really got to see because pretty much everybody
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we need has something to do with that mission. Yeah that is true even though the narrator didn't even
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well I guess I can't talk about that but you're right and the narrator's world view was
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extraordinarily local. I mean she was very much focused on the extent of her senses so when she
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wasn't at her console it was as far as she could hear and as far as she could see was all she was
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really concerned with and she was assuming that everybody felt and acted that way and that the
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world was taking care of itself because of it. Yeah she's the epitome of in my mind of an
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unreliable narrator. There are things that I don't trust the narrator of the story and what she tells
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in the story she's telling the viewpoint she's telling it from I just don't trust it and I think
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that's what makes it interesting to me is gonna kind of try to judge what is real and what isn't real
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what's her you know reality that she's looking at versus what reality really is and I think that's
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pretty interesting to just kind of break apart. I also I'm just throwing it out there because nobody
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said it yet can I get a what's up for a strong female lead character because that's what this book
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has and it's awesome. Oh yeah for sure but also I didn't even think of it that way and I'm glad
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you pointed out maybe I have to relisten and think of it that way as her being like unreliable.
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My my whole presumption with her just based on the way that she executed her duties
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is I figured if she's telling this story she was telling it for posterity and therefore
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would be entirely truthful about it. I never occurred to me that that she could be lying
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or even be wrong about stuff it just didn't occur to me but you're right she could just
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have gotten something wrong or could even be intentionally deceptive to the listener but it
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didn't occur to me but thank you. And see I guess I didn't so much not trust her to be truthful I
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I kind of saw this as the lead's internal model log and so I assumed that she was truthful to
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herself but not always accurate so she is you know saying to herself and you know by proximity to
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the listener what she truly believes is the way the world is whether or not that has any bearing on
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reality. I kind of my my head can and I guess if you kind of call it something I kind of
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imagine this whole story because this is the second time I've gone through it. I kind of
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imagined it as without spoiling something she would leave in her console to help somebody else
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just even though they would have an idea of what happened to maybe lay it out and and the main
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characters terms I don't think it she would be untruthful intentionally like deceptive. I think
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it's just you know you hear too I mean it's the Rochelle Mon syndrome you hear two people tell
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the same story they're going to bring their worldview to it and I just think that the main
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character's worldview is so strong that it would be hard for her to tell a story without that
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just completely saturating the whole story. Yeah and that's another thing that made me think that
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you know while I was listening it made me think that she was being honest as a narrator
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was that she was pretty good about saying when she didn't know if something was the truth or not
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or didn't care whether it was the truth or not or or didn't understand or didn't know
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something I thought she was pretty good about that. She as the narrator didn't seem to make a lot
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of assumptions. No I don't think she seems like the type a engineer hacker type I don't think she
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would make a lot of assumptions just as a person I think she would try to you know root out everything
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if she could. I see her worldview is very much a lot she looks at the world's inputs and outputs
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so everything has kind of a logical flow to it and it seems like she tries to figure that flow out.
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Yeah I definitely get the kind of hacker engineer vibe from her and that does very much
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color someone's worldview a specific way. I wanted to talk briefly with you guys to see if
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it was just me or if anyone else had some significant technical difficulties actually
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accessing the book like getting the files digging into it. I know I grabbed
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Poke had re-encoded it to mp3 and then I ended up grabbing that and writing a little bash script
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that read in all the files turned it into an XML file and then I pulled it down from my own web
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server as an RSS feed so I can continue to listen to the episodes in my RSS pod catcher because
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that's the way I prefer to consume them. Yeah there seem to be a significant technical difficulties
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from the people on the HPR mailing list getting and listening to this one which I was completely
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unaware of you know at the time that you picked it. This was your pick wasn't it X1-1-1?
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No I think it was Taj's pick. Yeah it was mine I probably should have looked at the site and
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checked it before I recommended it. No no it's totally cool I'm not trying to assign blame I just
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couldn't remember who assigned it. Did had you heard it or read it before you picked it?
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I had read the ebook and I had downloaded the audiobook and my intention was to go back and
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listen to the audiobook at some point anyways whether we did it for the audiobook club or not.
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Once I opened it up I realized that like some of the files were corrupted and so I went back
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and tried to download it again and I got it and some files were corrupted and I did it like three
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times until I got all of them corrupted except for one and what I wound up doing is just taking that
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one it was only like two paragraphs of the end of the chapter and so I just opened the ebook and read
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the last paragraphs and moved on it was not worth my time to try to download it again.
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Gotcha okay yeah when I downloaded it the first let me see how did it go. I downloaded it using
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down them all which seemed to grab them without a problem but it did seem to take a little bit of time
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and then I extracted them okay so yeah I downloaded them on my old EPC I mean like it's a 701 it's
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the first gen EPC and I extracted them directly to my SD card my micro SD card that I use in my MP3
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player and all the files were there and they all had data they were all were of you know significant
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size then when I went to play them they just didn't work they just didn't play and I took those
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files and what did I do I think I read downloaded it on another computer and extracted them right on
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the computer and then tested them and they played fine it probably an M player I think is what I
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had installed on that one might have been VLC but they played fine in there so I copied them over
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to my MP3 player and again they did not work so whatever the problem with them you know M player or
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VLC whatever I had going was able to just chew through it and it was okay other that's because that's
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because that was a play anything yeah well other people couldn't even get the the tarball untard they
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they couldn't you know uncompress it so yeah I just one by one converted reencoded them from MP
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because they opened in in Audacity just fine as well and I reencoded them to MP3 and what I suspect
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is the problem that my MP3 player had with them is that the he I think he used an unconventional tag
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in the metadata to add a the art the album art to it and maybe he used something that iTunes wants
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but AUG does not because it was not it was not the the AUG the standard AUG tag for album art
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yeah I did a similar dance with mine I had I downloaded the AUG because you should if you have
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the choice between AUG and AAC definitely go with AUG yeah and so I tried to I put it on my computer
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tested it out okay blaze so I threw it on my my clips it but I have rock box on it was like
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not having it so I have a bash script to like change things from AUG to MP3 and it breaks my
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heart every time I have to fire it up but I did to reencode it and so what I ended up doing was I
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took the poke was kind enough to throw out his recon reencoded versions I grabbed that I initially
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tried to use socks to speed them up in the file and then listen to them and that was horrible don't
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anyone ever do that unless you're much better at using socks than I am it was bad and so I ended
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up just creating that XML file throwing it all up onto my web server and then using the native
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application to change the speed instead yeah that makes sense and I'm I'm still I'm curious and
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I may try it just to see I don't think that the AUG encoding was done wrong I think it was just
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that tag I mean it those are the only two things I changed were reencoding it to MP3 and changing
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that tag but I didn't know about the tag until after I had already decided to to change it to MP3
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so I just kind of went that route and I made on have had to reencode I didn't even think of a tag
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or even look at it I just reencoded it and worked so I just dropped it there I wonder if you're
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uh script that reencodes does it strip the tags out of it I would have to go back and look I'm not
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sure it's not actually on this computer that I'm on right now until my laptop yeah it'd be
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interested it was definitely an interesting adventure in just getting to the book and then
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you know I still very much enjoyed listening to it and looking forward to you know our monthly
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chat about a book I just thought of it maybe it's like this huge like alternate reality game like
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you have to hack your own audio book to be able to listen to it to to get into the world
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that's that's kind of what it felt like and uh I wasn't too worried because I I kind of figured that
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you guys would figure it out and I also figured if I didn't get it figured out I'd still be okay
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because I have a paperback version of it on my bookshelf so I was going to be okay either way
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we're persistent enough a lot I figured one of us would figure it out and overall I think it was
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worth it it was it was the story itself was worth you know that work to to hear it I completely agree
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one of the things I forgot to mention earlier and and I think it's another thing that just kind of
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if you if you know caught you it just kind of makes sense that to me reading this was very cinematic
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like I could see this being turned into like a short film like really easily um and I don't know why
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because it it almost seems like it would be not get it that because it's very internal dialogue
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that I just it was very visual to me for some reason short film this has got more content
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on a better story than most you know full-length films that are now produced that's why it would
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be a short film because nobody in Hollywood would think that anybody smart enough to actually go
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watch two hours of this oh yeah I was gonna say this is this is way too heady to be a movie nowadays
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this might have been made in the 70s but not today like see if Michael Bay made this into a movie
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there would be four or five times the explosions aliens and or robots bonus if it's robot aliens
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and some romantic interest thrown in there for good measure exactly and this to me this is more
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of like a Logan's run like hey check out these concepts think about these things while I tell you
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a story in your Michael Bay list you forgot turtles with teeth and nose holes
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I hope they've always had that and I'll get off yeah that one I don't blame on Michael Bay
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and I was like if I was like eight or nine that movie would scare the other little bit Jesus out of me
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so what do you guys think about that though like does this just remind you more of the genre of
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like the 70s style of movies like I don't know if you guys ever saw the illustrated man or Logan's run
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or there's a couple others from that era that were you know had way more silence and background
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noise than dialogue yeah I kind of like the vibe I got we just said Logan's run yeah kind of I
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get that like the 70s like kind of I don't want to call it independent but just sort of like
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that kind of vibe of sci-fi movies like I'm thinking like the first Mad Max like where a lot of
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it's the silent movie like you're just kind of watching the scenery and and letting Matt tell the
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story I did totally get that kind of vibe I agree it's not a movie that would be made today but I
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can see it being done very almost like an art house kind of deal and I'm way too young to have
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seen any of those the only 70s movies I've seen there's some Bond films and Star Wars and neither
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those really fit the description that wasn't a lie for it but I've seen yeah yeah same here
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I've gone back to watch a few of them that were you know recommended like Logan's run is is
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worth a watch but you can't watch something like that expecting the Michael Bay movie
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well I'll add it's a list yeah that and if you've never seen oh help me out here touch THX I
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always get the number wrong 1138 I think maybe yeah probably as George Lucas's first I think it
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was his first film or at least his first major film that that movie's incredible I thought
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America or graffiti was his first film I if I remember correctly THX is like I want to say it was
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a student film or something you had to do with his film school stuff and then I just kind of turn
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into a movie if I remember the story correctly oh okay either way put that one at the top of your
|
|
netflix queue because it's really good I am not a Star Wars fan but I am a fan of that movie
|
|
all right so is anybody got any other pre spoiler the things to say anything about the reading
|
|
or the sound quality or anything like that well as I mentioned earlier there's almost I don't
|
|
think it's too much spoilers to say they almost sounded like pre-recorded broadcasts or propaganda
|
|
pieces and the sound quality on those was really hard to digest it could be because of the fact
|
|
that I listened to everything at like 1.8x and that might have ruined it for me and so that
|
|
could very well be my fault but when I initially thought he munged those intentionally I'm certain of
|
|
that okay those were really hard to to hear but it did feel kind of on purpose hard to hear and
|
|
but the actual narrative of the story I thought the audio quality the production quality was very good
|
|
yeah I think the especially the the little interludes with the revolutionary catacasem
|
|
I don't think he is a ham radio operator but I know he talked to a bunch of them to write this
|
|
book that is definitely like a sound you get used to because ham radio is never clear it's always
|
|
kind of that static you think you just kind of get used to listening through it almost and so it
|
|
kind of headed um a little bit of I want I guess authenticity to it be kind of like this is
|
|
something that would would be broadcast on on their network that probably the the commies would
|
|
listen to and it's sort of like they're just passing around amongst themselves I want to come
|
|
back to this after the spoilers because my opinion of it changed yeah the the commies I thought
|
|
that was an interesting word every every time that came up I thought it was kind of neat that
|
|
you know the the communicators called themselves commies not necessarily because they were
|
|
communist but because they were communicators if I thought that was a really interesting dichotomy
|
|
there because you want to think communist every time you hear that but really the whole world is
|
|
a commune and the word communist wouldn't have the same meaning yeah yeah I assumed that it was a
|
|
very intentional word choice and I think it's one that would turn off a certain kind of person someone
|
|
who wasn't you know willing to to change their mind about preconceived notions I think that would
|
|
be a big turn off I don't think you know I think there's a certain type a certain kind of person
|
|
that wouldn't get through the first chapter of this book well and I mean how many times have
|
|
have deep proprietary software industry label people who use the gpl is commies I mean like it's
|
|
almost I kind of feel like it's almost taking it back a little bit like okay you know that's fine
|
|
we'll use that insult and kind of turn around and use it I'm not sure if that was before or after
|
|
we were called un-American cancer I don't I don't think it holds the same meaning uh in the free
|
|
software world as it does in the uh cold war world the most deep bomber we already miss you
|
|
but to your point pokey I think the same people who wouldn't be able to remap that word or
|
|
wouldn't be willing to are the same kind of people who hear the word hacker that we use in very
|
|
much one way that mainstream media uses in very much another way and cannot distinguish the difference
|
|
yes thank you and I have to say I really enjoyed her reading of this I don't think she was as
|
|
polished as a lot of the people maybe who read on on potty of books it's almost as if they
|
|
pre-read you know each each paragraph or each page and then go through it and are a bit smoother
|
|
and and she might have been reading this maybe not for the first time that she read the book but she
|
|
wasn't reading it for the second time in in 10 minutes I didn't get that impression but it's almost
|
|
like it should have been read that way it almost it felt like that's the way this should have
|
|
been narrated I completely agree that almost not quite unpolished feeling gives a little more
|
|
authenticity to the world that's been created yeah that's one of the reasons why I think reading
|
|
it the second time I kind of popped into my head that this might be something she was leaving
|
|
inside the console to to leave for somebody else is that because there were mistakes left in and
|
|
I have a hard time believing glad to let a mistake slip do if you found it if it wasn't intentional
|
|
oh I found one or two but they were more editing mistakes than
|
|
uh or actions they had any editorial mistakes than technical ones there were not many technical
|
|
mistakes and this there was a couple of double reads and there were a few of them in like the same
|
|
episode towards the end so I it felt like maybe that episode might have might have got rushed but
|
|
I think they were like three in one episode and one in one each and two other episodes for
|
|
double reads which is a really low count um for any audio book at these days it seems
|
|
I can only remember one being noticeable but I am still fairly new to the whole audio book
|
|
world I've not done that quite so much but I only noticed one where it was well noticeable
|
|
well you also doing it at like super high speed and I think they're less noticeable when you speed up
|
|
the audio like that I also thought just like the tone of her voice was very relaxing like
|
|
yeah it was almost um because she is the voice of this character it kind of told you
|
|
what her headspace was a little bit that it was just a so calm and just kind of even keel
|
|
like the veneer and her never gets excited it's just all very matter of fact and very
|
|
very stable but very pleasant at the same time like it's not something you listen to and it
|
|
runs on it was it was very it was just a nice voice to listen to I think
|
|
pleasant and stable but she'd still shoot you if she had to right she's totally we keep going
|
|
back stores on the show she's totally the Han Solo like you know I do it because I have to I'm
|
|
not gonna get excited about it I mean I'll shoot you in your face if you ever make a deal
|
|
it was weird because she reminded me a lot of clat 2 I think if clat 2 had read his own work it
|
|
would have sounded just like this but less female you know not female I haven't read his other
|
|
book yet but it definitely like the the writing has the same cadence as his speaking and you could
|
|
totally tell like if you put that in front of me it didn't tell who it was and said somebody on
|
|
in the hacker public radio community wrote this I'm about 90% sure I'd be able to nail it down
|
|
to clat 2 yeah yeah I think so see I didn't but again I'm fair I'm still new word to the community
|
|
haven't listened to a huge amount of his work but there was an odd familiar to the whole thing
|
|
and now that I now that those dots are connected it it seems a little more obvious like Bob
|
|
just keeps getting burned oh yeah I went from incandescent to see a CFL and now I'm burned
|
|
into melee easier it was I liked another thing I liked about this one was that there wasn't opening
|
|
in closing music and credits and advertisements or whatnot at you know at each episode I had no
|
|
idea what chapter I was listening to or what or what actually she announced the chapters but I
|
|
had no idea what episode I was listening to because they flowed pretty seamlessly into one another
|
|
and now only once did I ever notice a difference in sound quality that made me think it was a
|
|
different recording session it was only one time to that happen I really liked that I like being
|
|
able to breeze through the book like excuse me breeze through the book like that I kind of felt
|
|
that way just reading the written one too like it's not we were just talking about a book before
|
|
we started recording it's not like that where it's like you know leave you on the edge of your seat
|
|
kind of like have to read the next one I gotta get my next hit this is just like a slow steady
|
|
roll that like was just easy to keep going it wasn't I could put it down but I didn't want to like
|
|
I just wanted to kind of keep going to see what happened I wasn't pressing it wasn't a big pulse
|
|
pounding thing I just kind of wanted to see where it was going yeah did have a different draw but it
|
|
was the same result of I want to keep listening to this until it's over yeah and I was neither stressed
|
|
about listening or not listening the the pace was relaxed enough that I it never felt cliff
|
|
hangry if I ever had to put it down or walk away from it I wasn't like oh man I can't wait to
|
|
get back but then while I was listening I was never like I wish I was doing something else either
|
|
right I just it was very comfortable pace and and just you know no cliff hangers really to speak
|
|
of it just pleasant I don't know about you all but I'm starting to get thirsty yes yes me too
|
|
I concur so I'm gonna step away and acquire mine if you guys want to start chatting about yours
|
|
or if you want to wait for me whichever uh silences seamless in the output file so we'll wait
|
|
for you and no one will even know man's got a big house all right gentlemen thanks for waiting
|
|
I am back cool would you come back with you you uh got what's probably the most exciting beverage so
|
|
why don't you go first I have been searching for with the last six months or so for this beer
|
|
and I finally found one on Sunday completely by chance and I absolutely had to pick it up so
|
|
that I could you know drink it and share it with all the lovely people I found a dogfish had 120
|
|
minute IPA and for as much of this cost me it had better be amazing oh really they got those on
|
|
the shelf at the store that I'm at I never thought to try one because I don't really usually care
|
|
for IPAs well if you don't care for IPAs I can't imagine you'd really care for a 120 minute IPA
|
|
so how many minutes or no that must be how many minutes the hops are allowed to soak or something
|
|
yeah dogfish head does a 60 a 90 and a 120 I've had 60 and 90 already 60 is not really
|
|
happy enough for me 90 is very good and this 120 smells amazing cool so it's got some giving it a
|
|
sniff here it's got some citrusy and hoppy notes to it maybe a little bit of pine but not not
|
|
overwhelming yeah hops always kind of remind me a pine or juniper well you you might like this it's
|
|
almost got a it's got the same kind of creamy silky texture of like a stout or a porter the hops are
|
|
not at all overwhelming I've had hopier but I've not had better hopier oh I like creamy and silky
|
|
it doesn't look like it would be it looks like a mid amber color but the texture is very much
|
|
got that that silkyness going on that's very nice cool is it real sudsy or stingy on the tongue
|
|
going down or is it kind of mellow that way it's very very mellow it's almost got a little
|
|
smokiness to it as well it's it's got a lot going on and for 830 for a 12 ounce bottle it had
|
|
better yeah yeah a lot of times the IPA seem to be like almost over-carbonated to me where is where
|
|
the carbonation tries to kind of sting the tongue you know what I mean yeah last night I had a
|
|
a backstress stowaway IPA and it was very it had a very large head on it this is there's no head
|
|
at all it's not overly carbonated it's it's very nice cool touch about you would have you get
|
|
in your in your glass tonight well I'm a little disappointed but I would went to the store right
|
|
before I came home from work today and I was going to buy some lemonade to make some of my fantastic
|
|
homemade lemonade that I make and no joke I get there and there was a sign that literally said
|
|
and it's best like it looked like Sharpie no lemons today so there were no lemons to make lemonade
|
|
so I actually bought some pre-made lemonade and it's just not as good it's a little too sweet
|
|
oh that is sad is it got high fructose corn poison in the ingredients list is it like the first
|
|
thing I'm sure it tells us I don't know it's not bad it's just I I like my lemonade a little more
|
|
tart and less sweet and this is just like almost so much sweet I feel like I'm just injecting
|
|
sugar water straight into my veins oh yeah I know what you mean I don't like overly sweet drinks
|
|
people get mad at me when I make the like coolator whatever whatever drink they get mad at me when
|
|
I make it in oddly I like a little bit of coffee with my sugar I'll take my coffee with coffee thank
|
|
you I second that opinion yeah so what was the was there a particular brand you got or is it just
|
|
a jacks brand or a hackney brand lemonade what do you got it is simply lemonade and I'm looking
|
|
at the nutritional facts and you don't want to know there is 11% lemon juice in here that's all I'm
|
|
gonna say and it has lots of natural flavors but they don't say what those are I love that I love
|
|
when they just write natural flavor I'm told it we got it in nature we promise what what does
|
|
nature taste like I still haven't figured that one out I'm drinking it right here apparently a lot
|
|
of chemicals I'm I'm totally putting this nutrition label in the show notes excellent oh and I have
|
|
got it it's fairly mundane for this time of year I've got a Sam Adams summer ale and I don't
|
|
know I think it's pretty drinkable it it falls a little flat on the the flavor you know the flavor
|
|
profile it kind of fades quick it doesn't last long but I think that makes it a little more drinkable
|
|
and a little more generally acceptable for instance my wife bought this six pack and took one out
|
|
and opened it for herself and she never drinks beer but but she drank one of these so I think it's
|
|
a little more acceptable to everybody else but it's by no means bad it's fairly citrusy it's
|
|
got some lemon in there it's I don't taste any hops whatsoever which you know I don't like no hops
|
|
so it could stand to be a little hopier to be honest with you um it's a little little sweet
|
|
little citrusy and too bubbly it's a summer ale it's it's real drinkable it goes down really easy
|
|
and it's uh it's fairly refreshing really what beer couldn't stand to be a little more hoppy
|
|
there are several that I've had that I just I couldn't take it man when when the IB use
|
|
go up past I don't know maybe 65 I think it's you're good you can stop I think passed about
|
|
45 or 50 it starts making the beer less enjoyable but yeah you get up to about 65 and the IB use
|
|
and it's little too much the label says this has grains of paradise in it and I have no idea what
|
|
that is or what that means I've been it's healthier for you than natural flavors
|
|
you could be very right about that I've been it's more natural and more flavorful than natural
|
|
flavors I love when it says natural and artificial flavors and still won't tell you what any of them are
|
|
so are we ready to spoiler the crap out of this book yes let's do something that I noticed
|
|
after I listened to the book or I kind of started to think about it while I was listening to the book
|
|
but really kind of connected afterwards was all of the locations that the main character visited
|
|
sounded like radio station call signs to me rather than actual town names
|
|
yeah in the written book they actually she says them like she phonetically sounds them out to
|
|
trying to make a word out of it but in the book it's like like she says KCAG it's KCAG
|
|
so like it's it's a lot more obvious in the written word than it is in the audio book
|
|
okay see I guess the what I had pictured was you know they had started out in the old world as
|
|
radio station identifiers and had become the names of the towns where they take KCAG
|
|
and turn it into KCAG as the name of the town me getting super nerdy and just kind of knowing
|
|
about this it seems to me like they're these radio towers are not broadcast towers because she
|
|
talks about the range of them and it's not very far it seems a lot less than your typical
|
|
broadcast towers so I'm thinking it'd be something like a two four two meters or 440 centimeter range
|
|
basically your average local repeater for him radio so you're you're looking at you know maybe 10
|
|
miles something like that and I may be grossly overestimating that but you know good reception
|
|
and that's why because at some point she talks about that's why the settlement sprung up where
|
|
they did it's because that's where they had to put the towers oh and see I got I guess the the
|
|
way I had pictured was everything except KCAG had been repeaters but KCAG was an actual
|
|
signal tower it could be I know they mentioned other cities that have call signs and that may be
|
|
the case maybe there's like a higher argue of you know big repeaters and then smaller or big
|
|
you know signal generators and then smaller repeaters that spread that out
|
|
yeah and I know very little about radio but you know a little bit about computers and what's
|
|
going on and a couple of things that threw me off when it came to that was the date of births
|
|
that came at the end of all the transmissions that was like a compressed and digitized
|
|
form of everything that got transmitted and they were supposed to archive everything
|
|
everybody has their own local archive and that's good for redundant backups but where they
|
|
get all this storage you know I mean that's that's a lot they're gonna they're gonna fill
|
|
what they have fast and it doesn't seem like they've got you know a whole big storage array and
|
|
this unless this is so far in the future that you know technology has just progressed but then
|
|
again it doesn't sound like it has because they're still able to solder and repair circuit boards
|
|
you know even though those were fairly you know generic circuit board which I mean at this point
|
|
most circuits on anything useful are really not designed to be user repairable
|
|
not that people can't repair them but you know it not from experience but from people's anecdotal
|
|
evidence 20 years ago you know you could repair your own circuit boards and now you know it's
|
|
cheaper just to replace them it's way more specialized skill and as far as the data I'm thinking
|
|
if you were going to store because I'm thinking about you can send data as far as text data over
|
|
with audio tones pretty easily as you took those audio tones and converted them into text files
|
|
that would probably be a very efficient way of storing that stuff but I don't know it seems
|
|
like with the technology they have they'd be able to do that I mentioned earlier that
|
|
there was like an editorial thing here and there and I don't remember there was only two of them
|
|
that I really noticed while listening and one of them was kind of in the first third of the book
|
|
and I forgot what it was but towards the end of the book something that the narrator said
|
|
uh when she set the charges and uh exploded the charges she said in real life explosions go like
|
|
this and then you know describe it and that felt really out of place because everything in this
|
|
story was in real life there was no more that didn't appear to be any more fiction there was no
|
|
TV no you know radius there weren't any books she talked about the there being a waste of paper and
|
|
it didn't seem like anybody had you know electronics other than the the comies so that was that seemed
|
|
seemed like a very weird turn of phrase from this particular character in this particular setting
|
|
yeah I actually didn't catch that um yeah I mean that's interesting I mean it's feasible that she
|
|
would remember before the revolution and maybe as a kid having seen that stuff and maybe
|
|
that's her just saying that but I would think after living in this room for a while she'd
|
|
probably purge that over brain pretty quick yeah and and also it doesn't seem like you'd have to
|
|
explain to someone how explosions happen in real life if everyone had lived through a whole bunch
|
|
of them and it seemed like everyone had yeah and especially if the the other people that you're
|
|
talking to are where revolutionaries are a part of the same revolutionary group they probably
|
|
not have a pleasant stuff up yeah exactly and that was something if we could go back to the the
|
|
thing we were talking about the the transmissions that were I think x1 101 was saying they were kind
|
|
of hard to hear is yeah yeah they were hard to hear so at the beginning of the book I thought
|
|
that those were kind of I thought that they were transmissions they had the feel of a short
|
|
wave radio transmission they they had that same kind of like tube radio sound to them
|
|
and and I kind of thought that maybe these are something archival or something to be passed on
|
|
but later on in the book I kind of changed my mind about that and I thought this was more of her
|
|
repressed memory I mean it might have been indoctrination it might have been the kind of propaganda
|
|
that she would have studied to become the the revolutionary that she had been at one point but I
|
|
I thought of it you know the reason that it was static it was not because it was being transmitted
|
|
but because it was deep in her memory and she was trying to put it behind her trying to forget it
|
|
because she at the end of the book she was not comfortable with blowing up the station with
|
|
living people in it whereas like you know in her past you know not occurring in the book but you
|
|
know flashback passed she would have done it without hesitation yeah I never I don't think I ever kind
|
|
of took it as literally being part of the recording I always kind of assumed it was just sort of like
|
|
setting the the scene a little bit but I mean that does make sense that would be like far back
|
|
in the back of her head just kind of like a brainwashing kind of come before that's a cool way of
|
|
looking at it and I've had a very 1984 propaganda announcements type feel to it I remember at one
|
|
point reading the history of that that actual book that he quotes in this and it was interesting
|
|
and then I promptly forgot it where did you read that I remember when I read the book I'd never
|
|
heard of that and so I looked it up and I think it was just like Wikipedia as far as I got because
|
|
you know that's research and it had a history but I kind of forget what it was it it's a historical
|
|
document oh okay that's pretty neat I have to go look that up that does sound interesting
|
|
well we now that we're spoiling it I feel like I have less to say about it than before we were
|
|
spoiling it most of it that was particularly intriguing was kind of the setting and the idea behind
|
|
the little thing whereas the the plot itself was you know kind of slow and I feel like I almost
|
|
feel like we've already discussed it just in talking about the the setting and everything well I
|
|
found it really interesting I'm agreeing with you and I'm finding things that I still do want to
|
|
talk about is one of them was how appalled the main character was that the the handyman that she met
|
|
how to stash of things that she kept all to herself and I was really telling of the social attitudes
|
|
of the time right or at least her social attitude which something you guys convinced me of earlier
|
|
was that maybe the whole world does and act like the ideals that they they claim to believe in
|
|
well one of the things I found another thing I found really fascinating was the use of
|
|
free software licenses as social contracts for you know land use or you know community management it
|
|
was it was very fascinating yeah but even that was kind of it was odd in the way that it was used
|
|
because I mean she clearly took part in the revolution that created the world that she's living
|
|
so it happened within the span of a human lifetime yet no one could remember what GPL stood for
|
|
in the GPL land you know what I mean oh see that's not the story that I got it all I got that she
|
|
was part of a post almost a post-revolutionary cleanup group where she was raised in the post-revolution
|
|
period but where they were still the revolution had happened but they were still sweeping away all
|
|
the vestiges of the old world okay because she always referred to it as the old world like it had
|
|
always been before in my brain I did the happy medium I just assumed she was really young when the
|
|
revolutionary and the revolution happened so like I'm imagining her being on that cleanup crew
|
|
and probably being like 13-14 and doing like this ridiculous like mass destruction and that
|
|
just sort of formats who she is later in life so like the whole child soldier thing yeah for sure
|
|
because I think like we were talking about when we were talking about the narrator how like
|
|
calm and cool she is because she lived through all the craziness and she had to become and like
|
|
that's what she was raised in and so like all this craziness that's happening on their mission
|
|
you know the backstabbing and even when they come out and say hey guess what were this new
|
|
you know revolution based on your revolution and we want you to help us do this she's very
|
|
still even keel like she never gets excited about it she never gets mad about it she's just like oh
|
|
this is happening I almost got the idea at some points that it wasn't calmness but shell shock that
|
|
you know she went through all this destruction and caused all this destruction and you know now
|
|
she's like okay well we destroyed all this for a certain set of ideals so why wouldn't everyone
|
|
be living for those ideals I mean all this destruction happened didn't it right almost like
|
|
post-traumatic stress disorder and she I see herself as isolating herself because if she goes
|
|
out in the real world she's going to realize that nobody actually cares about that revolution and
|
|
what they stood for they just they're living in the world that they have to live in it's not about
|
|
principles it's I've got to eat I've got to find a place to live and while she spouts all these
|
|
principles in her head especially like the first chapter is all about like the principles of
|
|
you know why we make things and stuff in her head that's very important but I think to the rest of
|
|
the world is just you know how am I going to eat today yeah and then she was stunned by the guy
|
|
I think it was a guy might have been a woman but I think it was a guy who hadn't heard a radio
|
|
broadcast in several weeks because he hadn't bothered to listen to one she she thought that
|
|
the commies had the world's undivided attention I think and I think if you kind of like extrapolate
|
|
the the revolution if you kind of take like the I don't know like crypto anarchist kind of
|
|
bent and push it to its very extreme if you you know anybody that's kind of into that world that
|
|
is their world that's they they obsess about that structure and that framework and so it makes
|
|
sense that she would yeah also ham radio operators seem to have the the the notion
|
|
whether correct or incorrect that you know when it all falls apart they'll be operating they'll be
|
|
the emergency workers I don't know if I'm using the exact right words there but
|
|
and they may well be I'm not saying that they're not going to be but this this certainly is
|
|
reminds me of ham radio operators see all of that still depends on a certain level of infrastructure
|
|
being physically intact and usable which is a fairly big assumption if something is so bad that
|
|
the only people who can get in communication are the hands well there's kind of two sides of
|
|
that going I agree ham radio people in general greatly over us to make their importance to the
|
|
point where if you go to like ham organizations and they're dealing with the emergency responders
|
|
the emergency responders are like no literally just pick up your cell phone to call us because
|
|
that's more reliable and we're not actually listening to your radios so you could talk all you
|
|
want it doesn't matter but at a certain point there's a activity that most hands do once a year
|
|
called field day and what that is is basically everybody gets together and emulates a complete
|
|
infrastructure collapse and and make sure that your stuff will work in that situation so I can see
|
|
where in some ways that would work in some ways it wouldn't but yeah they people get fanatical
|
|
about it and so that that definitely sets their world view of how important they perceive themselves
|
|
to be when we're talking about worldviews and stuff I thought it was a little
|
|
both presumptuous and a little preposterous that she was speaking about well this is how commies
|
|
behave when what she really meant was this is how I perceive that commies behave and so I'm going
|
|
to behave that way I kind of got the impression that she may be one of the only people who
|
|
was a commie that actually was in the revolution or around during the revolution now that
|
|
if we're kind of going depends on where you place her in the timeline if she's after the
|
|
revolution then it doesn't count for her but in my world the or in my head cannon we'll call it that
|
|
because that's a great phrase she she was there and I don't think all the commies were there so maybe
|
|
she feels like she has this place of importance for she can just kind of say what all the other commies
|
|
do oh see I don't think she felt that she was very important I think she was intentionally trying
|
|
to take a sideline role by operating the repeater tower and she even kind of made mention of
|
|
that later but the other thing that you just said about how she assumed that this was how all
|
|
commies behaved because she behaved that way and nobody said anything about it I find that highly
|
|
relatable because I spent two years riding motorcycles with with another guy most of my miles
|
|
on a motorcycle I put on with another guy you know him on his bike me on mine and we didn't have
|
|
any kind of communication except for hand signals or occasionally at stoplights and stop signs we
|
|
would talk and I assumed that we were thinking the same thing the whole time until one day very late
|
|
in this two-year period that that I was riding with him he made a hand he made what I thought was
|
|
a hand gesture I thought he was pointing at something that I found very very amusing some oddity
|
|
of road construction and then he turned off the road real sharp and he was telling me he was
|
|
signaling a turn later and I thought he was making a joke and I was laughing out loud and I almost
|
|
crashed into the back of him when he turned and he did not it was not a conventional turn hand
|
|
signal for turning either so it was not just a mistake on my part it was it was a miscommunication
|
|
and at that point it occurred to me that you know maybe we haven't shared as many jokes as I
|
|
assumed we had over this past two years that's kind of the problem with presumed communications
|
|
I signal something you receive it and interpret it and we both assume that we're on the same page
|
|
you and I both being figurative terms here were for two people right of course assuming that
|
|
they're on the same page about something without ever being explicit about it and you know both
|
|
parties act like they're both on the same page until it becomes painfully obvious that they're not
|
|
well and I mean I if we look at our community um just sort of the HPR like Linux
|
|
open sourcey podcast community and IRC world that we all kind of are part of um we all have these
|
|
people that we've built up that we've heard we've talked to online and we get snippets of their
|
|
life and we kind of construct what we think those people are like um and it happens every once in
|
|
a while I'll hear somebody on a show or talk to an IRC and they'll say something I'll be like
|
|
but that doesn't sound like that person at all and and I have to think to myself like I don't really
|
|
know what they're like really at all um a lot of this don't even go by our real name so like we
|
|
we kind of have created this personality that we represent ourselves in this virtual space um a lot
|
|
of us never have and probably never will meet in the real world and so I could see where the
|
|
commies would kind of have that network and completely miss the mark on what each other really were
|
|
like I take issue with I agree with most of what you're saying but I take issue with it could just be
|
|
how you've said a couple of things you've said uh first of all the whole concept of a real name
|
|
the only how does the name you guys see me as x1101 how is that any less real than the name my parents
|
|
chose to give me it gave chose to give me I wrote on my birth certificate this is a name I've chosen
|
|
for myself that has meaning to me arose by any other name would still smell as sweet exactly uh
|
|
and in most circles where I've chosen how to represent myself this is how I represent myself
|
|
I'm not obscuring who I am at all I'm just I mean people who've met me in person
|
|
you know I I have a hat with my name on it this name on it and then I'll introduce myself by my
|
|
first name because I don't need to go by this name meeting someone in person it's not about anonymity
|
|
for me but this is it's not even a persona this is a name and a personality that I completely
|
|
have constructed myself and so I don't see that as any less real than the legally sanctioned official
|
|
name that I have written on my birth certificate right but it's still possible for someone to chat with
|
|
you an IRC and then meet you in real life and find that you didn't meet their expectations
|
|
oh completely and then the other and you just did it as well the other
|
|
very kind of coral I have with that is how is this life any less real I mean I consider you guys
|
|
as good of acquaintances as people I may you know work with even though you know we only talk to
|
|
each other through our computers via you know voice chat or instant messenger and we see each
|
|
each other maybe once a year just because we don't live in close proximity and we can't
|
|
hang out on a Friday night doesn't people a lot of times trivialize these relationships
|
|
I think unnecessarily I agree with you there when I if I use the terms meet in real life or online
|
|
friend that's that's a carryover from having to talk to people in real life every day who just
|
|
don't get it but yeah yeah I totally agree with you it's it's no less real just because it's
|
|
through IRC or anything yeah and when I'm talking about like real names it's not like a valued
|
|
judgment of one is better than the other it's just sort of actually I I tend to appreciate people's
|
|
chosen names more than I appreciate their given names I think it's it's more important that you
|
|
chose this name I've always had a problem with the fact that we get named before we are
|
|
conscious of ever making any kind of decision and how that could impact like our whole being so
|
|
yeah I totally it's not a value judgment the ones better than the other it is there are some people
|
|
and I don't think it is much in our community I think it's more the internet is large there's some
|
|
people who will create an identity just to act the way they can't act normally to call trolls touch
|
|
well I haven't I have an identity to act a way that I can't act but that's because I'm not always
|
|
at liberty to act on personal preference you know with this name and this community I can express
|
|
opinions and beliefs that you know I can't or I have no use for expressing you know in my professional
|
|
life no one cares that I'm a I'm a free software evangelist I'm going to use what I'm told to
|
|
use and it's going to work because it has to my preference for free software is completely not
|
|
important but it is important in my personal life right and I think me and Pokey were talking
|
|
about this one time before because he was asking me how how I wound up living in Indiana I wound up
|
|
at the name Taj and I you know I told him you know that's not actually my birthday that's a name
|
|
that it actually comes from a D&D game years ago because I'm that kind of dork but what I decided
|
|
I put out some music because I'm I was a musician I still am but I don't do this much and I put out
|
|
some music and I wanted people to judge it solely based on the music because I knew kind of in my
|
|
community people knew who I who knew who I was and knew what I was doing and I wanted to get a
|
|
totally separate read I didn't want people to read it based on oh well this guy that I've heard
|
|
do other things has made this and so I use it for everything online not because I'm trying to hide
|
|
anything it's just that's the name that happens and there are people in in in like meat space like
|
|
the real world that come up to me and have no idea that I have another name like it's just they
|
|
call me Taj because it just that's my name so it's not a name sort of tricky thing just in general
|
|
actually just to tie this back into claw to if anybody's ever heard what's that podcast that he did
|
|
with deep geek and lost in Bronx what was this information something they only ran for if you
|
|
have underground information underground yes that's the best podcast I've ever heard and I've never
|
|
been more pissed that it doesn't go on anymore but they had a whole episode about like names and
|
|
identity that was basically the conversation we're having now and it was awesome and you know
|
|
I've I've never heard any of them together but you know those three names that sounds like you know
|
|
the All Stars episode yeah I kind of wish either they would start it up or like another group of
|
|
people would do the same show because the format was great you just get three people in a room and
|
|
just say this is what we're gonna talk about and just let them go it's just a great format for a show
|
|
I can't believe I know they're all they're all super busy people so I understand what they
|
|
shut it down but if I could that's kind of my one card if I could have one podcast come back
|
|
from pod fate it would be that one you know one of them is kind of half the world away now
|
|
howdy forks fake Ken Fallon here sorry to interrupt but I wanted to remind all of you to
|
|
check the show notes for a link to Taj's album good day carry on you are so bathing me
|
|
well you have to put the link in there now because fake Ken Fallon said it would be there
|
|
if if fake or real Ken Fallon hears what I was saying about him and his accent on uh
|
|
Linux like Cassie he might be upset with me
|
|
sure just point him at the the incriminating evidence why don't you
|
|
I think they cut it out but how can we go it's like I think I'm going to cut some of these out
|
|
and put them out as hpr episodes are you okay with it and I was like yeah as long as I wasn't
|
|
insulting anybody and he's like well I think remember you saying something about not being able
|
|
to understand a word can Fallon says would you speed things up and I was like no that's cool you can
|
|
keep that in that's funny I speed everything up and I can still usually understand Ken
|
|
he is the only person that it doesn't work for I don't know what it is it's something about
|
|
it's where we can as an awesome person he does great work for the community I cannot understand
|
|
his voice better for some reason it's crazy uh the only person I ever have issue with it not
|
|
so much in our community nothing is not but not as prominent stew at language listen to bad
|
|
voltage everybody else I can follow and then him I'm like I almost want to slow it back down just so
|
|
that he sounds normal because I think he talks fast because well he gets excited about things
|
|
the same way everyone else does and then I have a really hard time following him so I just
|
|
hear this you know mad ranting Brit and I'm like oh Stuart must have said something I have trouble
|
|
at normal speed with any New Zealander or South African I just I don't know I couldn't speed those
|
|
guys up does that include clunting I should say native and he native I don't know he's
|
|
eating pidgeon right now so I think he's native wow is that even food I hope you decide
|
|
to get a tattoo in his face I would so pay to see that because those are really the natives to
|
|
New Zealand yeah it's like saying we're actually Americans right on Jazza if you're listening to
|
|
this I know you've got to give skills make this happen make clat to a Maori not a Maori for anyone
|
|
who's only ever read the word a Maori he would be the smallest one I've ever seen in my life
|
|
something I just had a thought pop into my head actually repop into my head this popped into my
|
|
head a few minutes ago as well but we're having the discussion about names and online relationships
|
|
versus to use the popular term even though I don't agree with the real life relationships
|
|
really does remind me of here we go again the the kori doktro book eastern standard tribe
|
|
which I mean just about how the people you're in physical proximity with don't necessarily
|
|
represent the same people that you are in you know ideological or you know social proximity with
|
|
and how how those relationships kind of play out yeah if I was reduced to having to find
|
|
geographically local people into things I'm into I would set it home alone a lot
|
|
yeah I kind of do that I don't know I can I mean I've got friends I've got very close friends
|
|
who shared none of my ideological beliefs as far as software and stuff goes they could care less
|
|
you know they they're not like they're it's not like they're at the opposite end of the spectrum
|
|
and we debate you know all the time it's just they just they could care less you know and I'm
|
|
fine with that I just talk about other things with them it's just that you know all the all the folks
|
|
that I that I you know talk with online and stuff it it kind it usually comes from there I mean
|
|
I'm part of different communities online but I think that's natural when you when you go online
|
|
and you you join the communities with the the communities you want to join it's like you're not
|
|
forced into them and and you're not limited by any you know what now seems like an arbitrary
|
|
limitation such as physical proximity um you mean like living in the great northern wastes
|
|
yeah I mean it or anywhere you know I mean anywhere other than like a big city where you're going to
|
|
get you know what a healthy sample of every uh everything the whole spectrum wide um you know online
|
|
I mean you're you're not going to find me on a white supremacist website because I have no
|
|
interest in in what those people have to say you know just that kind of thing so online it's just
|
|
kind of natural that you flock towards uh people of like mind what is this big city you speak of
|
|
I've traveled many many years to many many miles to get to one of those well you're you're uh shared
|
|
hosting is probably in one yeah probably I live not too far from a really big one and they're not
|
|
all that great to be yeah I don't think that by most standards the state that I live in has a big
|
|
city yeah Portland's a small city anyway back to the book we're we're pretty rad old here in the
|
|
closet book club don't we always do that yeah I don't know if we've ever gone this far off track though
|
|
I say that almost every month we're awesome like that word the book inspired discussion club
|
|
that's actually pretty accurate I think but hey we pick books that make us think and then we follow
|
|
those thoughts to wherever they take us yeah well certain books that we've reviewed do that
|
|
they're thinkers and then other books um you know or more a story based I think and then of course
|
|
others have been more character based so you know it's all there's different kinds of stories
|
|
but we hit we're talking earlier I did find it really interesting that they were using
|
|
these free software licenses to map onto social contracts and
|
|
being the little bit of a license nerd that I am I would have found it really interesting to see
|
|
how exactly they mapped those because in GPL and also the BSD Berkeley style licenses almost all
|
|
of those those rights or responsibilities are triggered on distribution and I would be really
|
|
interested to see how they're triggering that as far as you know land usage goes that would be
|
|
really fascinating I'm glad you brought up the licenses thing because while I read that the first
|
|
time my little like nerd hard exploded in happiness like I probably audibly squeed but at the same
|
|
time I'm like this is really on the nose like anybody who's picking this book up is going to be like
|
|
nerds yeah it felt a little contrived in that sense like like it was aimed at the target audience
|
|
you know laser focused um but it wasn't it wasn't unexpected or unwelcome at the same time you
|
|
know what I mean in in the setting that it was in um I thought the cranks were really interesting
|
|
uh because to me it seemed like if there was a total societal collapse most of society would be the
|
|
cranks whereas in this story the cranks were the exception but once again going back to
|
|
is that just the narrator's perception that most of the world is civilized and most of the
|
|
McCranks or is it really mostly cranks and she just lives on a hill well and again that
|
|
assumes that you use a given definition for civilized and cranks I mean the whole world could
|
|
be by some standards uncivilized but by their standards they were a functioning society that had
|
|
a few outliers who chose not to participate and there was a distinction made between cranks
|
|
and troublemakers and it seemed like the distinction really was well troublemakers do it for money
|
|
and cranks just do it because they just do it or fun well I think the cranks were I guess the
|
|
distinction I had were troublemakers were there I haven't a hard time articulating the troublemaker
|
|
side things but the cranks seemed like they were doing things out of greed they wanted to take
|
|
what you had and the troublemakers weren't so much doing that as well disrupt be just being
|
|
generally disruptive and doing overall dangerous things they were like the worldwide 18 or something
|
|
yeah the cranks were NPCs and the troublemakers were PCs bringing it back old school I like it
|
|
yep exactly yeah the cranks lived that way because that's how they lived that's how they got by
|
|
the troublemakers they seemed to have their own job they were just always down for a little bit
|
|
of adventure a little bit of fun you know for whatever reason whatever their motivation was they
|
|
still wanted to be part of what our narrator called society so but they didn't mind going on an
|
|
adventure that's why they kind of reminded me of of you know PCs player characters so in my mind
|
|
I'm kind of thinking like if we're if we're thinking hacker and like the broad like I didn't know
|
|
nothing about computers hacker terminology if that's the basis of the society so like the troublemakers
|
|
are kind of like the black hats they just go out to stir up some trouble I saw the Moritz gray hats
|
|
they're they're curious as to what trouble is gonna gonna arise and why not be part of it because
|
|
at least we'll have a story to tell hey what's this button do oh shiny somebody's gonna blow
|
|
something up it might as well be me I think that's their kind of their attitude I got nothing but
|
|
respect for that attitude especially the blowing stuff up part who doesn't love blowing stuff up
|
|
as long as no human beings are harmed in the action it's gonna say it depends what stuff there's
|
|
plenty of YouTube videos of fingers getting flown up nobody I know doesn't like that and then
|
|
towards the end of the book you know I thought it was I thought it dipped a little too utopian to
|
|
be believable when she was describing you know like she was imposing the Unix philosophy
|
|
on to human beings like find one thing and do it well and then you know specified a few things like
|
|
planting seeds where someone else would harvest them I just don't think that would work where
|
|
somebody gets to sit around for 11 months and then you know for one month plant some seeds
|
|
and then well somebody else likes picking stuff more so I'll let them do it I that I just
|
|
you know I couldn't follow that line of the story in it and it kind of hurt that it was right
|
|
at the end that it went there hell Unix doesn't even follow the Unix philosophy particularly well
|
|
why would people be able to yeah I think out of necessity humanity has had to be good at
|
|
multiple things to survive because even though we built communities a lot of the time and the not
|
|
too distant past people were pretty much a land on themselves so you may have a small group of people
|
|
who are more valuable in certain areas but really you kind of had to be good at a lot of skills to
|
|
I kind of feel like this world would be going back in that direction to where you have to be
|
|
more of a generalist to make it yeah I think I think we're more specialized today than in
|
|
than in the world that that I saw in this book um now that description at the end was a bit too
|
|
granular from my own comfort but in general the rest of the book I I thought that people were
|
|
good at everything whereas nowadays okay you find your your one thing that you're good at and
|
|
you do it well okay that becomes your task at work or you know maybe you're good at grocery shopping
|
|
so you do that at home while your you know domestic partner does the cooking or someone else does
|
|
the cleaning or maybe you're good at sharing those tasks so you do that so I don't know just to
|
|
me it felt like we were a little more specialized now than than in this story yeah I'm all for
|
|
specialization I focused on the thing I do well and then when I need something else done I find
|
|
someone who does that well and I ask them to do it because they know a lot more about it than I do
|
|
but pick one thing I can't pick one thing there are two or three things that I do well enough
|
|
that I do it well and I enjoy it and I couldn't just do one thing that sounds really boring
|
|
yeah and I don't think it was meant to be a rule either that you know hey listen if you're the
|
|
guy that plants seeds that's all you're allowed to do I don't think that's quite what it meant either
|
|
but it just it felt like it got too granular there well and I mean it that's one of the I guess more
|
|
utopian ideals is that you could have sort of an artist in society where everybody was super
|
|
talented at one skill that they did because they enjoyed it instead of you know just have to
|
|
make do I think we have to be a generalist out of survival not in this world the way that she's
|
|
looking at it your survival needs would be met and you could do what you wanted to do almost the
|
|
same conversation we were having last month about you know sort of that post scarcity what do you
|
|
do when you when your basics are covered and you can do whatever you want I think it's it's a
|
|
really cool idea I think in practicality especially with the society that they're in it's just
|
|
probably not doable it's a good thing to kind of work towards but not practical but they were almost
|
|
trying to map that post scarcity lifestyle into a hyper scarcity world even more scarce than we
|
|
live in now yes yeah that that I noticed several times and I mentioned it earlier as you know all the
|
|
the canned foods seem to be limitless it just as soon as someone found it everybody got it almost
|
|
like you could have your cake and eat it too I wanted to break up something nobody's kind of hit
|
|
on yet the quasi religion of the god stream and like that whole thread is fascinating to me
|
|
and dev know yeah those are both pretty interesting um it felt like dev know was a concept
|
|
whereas the god stream was something uh well I hesitated to use the word tangible but I can't
|
|
think of a better one at the moment it was an actual like frequency rather than the idea of a
|
|
death know right I kind of like mapped it to once again no one to my experience um you can
|
|
actually set a receiver to kind of tune in between channels and a lot of that noise is either
|
|
directly or my understanding of it and I'm not a physicist is is literally leftover signals from
|
|
the big bang like the cosmic background radiation um and so I thought that that was cool that
|
|
if that's what it is that they're talking about that somebody was trying to hijack that to
|
|
kind of store data in or or or move data across to kind of almost um kind of like
|
|
sell out your god to to get something done I mean I guess that philosophical thing the selling out
|
|
your deity of choice to get something done was very much there but it was almost like
|
|
trying to hide or store data in in in pie which is I read this really interesting thing at one
|
|
point that pie is infinite and that infinite non repeating and that means everything
|
|
that has ever happened or ever will happen is somewhere in pie and that's really kind of
|
|
mind-bending but so I mean if you kind of take that idea and map it to the god stream everything is
|
|
there if you can find it and then trying to add a carrier signal of data that be both really weird
|
|
and really difficult that and just the fact that to me it's that she's so um reverent towards it
|
|
and that she she cannot help but like be a human being and like try to pattern recognize it and
|
|
pull pieces out and try to recognize things like she says it sounds like the rain and then it
|
|
you know this and really it's probably just her you know mind-playing tricks on her but like
|
|
for her like she says she just keeps going back to it and she finds something in that and you know
|
|
what does that mean is is that you know just her self alone time and her kind of contemplating
|
|
things or is there some meaning there that she's finding well I mean that's like actually is
|
|
their meaning in in the white noise because that's really what their god stream was is just
|
|
atmospheric white noise and who's to say there is or isn't right it's like saying is does god
|
|
have any meaning you know you can ask a thousand people and you're gonna get different answers
|
|
from every single one that's really amusing because I'm reading in addition to all the stuff I'm
|
|
doing with book club and listening to I'm reading a stranger in a strange land by Robert Heinlein
|
|
and it's the the interpretation of god in that story is really really peculiar and I fascinating
|
|
I'm just fine like to me I think about once again going back if this kind of business is
|
|
extrapolation those kind of hacker culture um you know I not all of us I don't want to generalize
|
|
the great deal but it seems like a lot of us are very rational skeptical people um there are a lot
|
|
of people who are just blatantly atheist on not one of those people but there are a lot of people
|
|
who subscribe to that but even in the society that's based on that that like even then there's still
|
|
people trying to find meaning and something is interesting to me and it's almost like they're trying
|
|
to create a spirituality out of the the technical logical world because of the complete lack
|
|
thereofs in the rest of society yeah and it's like when you start thinking about like emergent
|
|
AIs and things like that it's like you know is there a point where things are so ordered that
|
|
they become disordered and what comes from that so was the god stream a specific thing was it a
|
|
real thing or was it just her imagination in the in the pattern recognition that X1101 just mentioned
|
|
I got that it was a little above it was untuning the radio tuning it to a
|
|
non-frequency something where there wasn't transmitting so you were picking up
|
|
background radiation and calling it the god stream and finding
|
|
meaning there was the humans looking for meaning where there may or may not be one and I think
|
|
it's a thing like I think other people know about it because the characters had mentioned it to
|
|
each other so I think it's an actual physical thing I think she reads more into it than others made
|
|
because obviously Riker is definitely like this is a thing I can use like he doesn't have that
|
|
reverence for it that she does like to her it's almost this adulteration of something that's pure
|
|
it's it's almost like literally like a religious hate crime to do that but for him it's just
|
|
okay I can do this and it's just an object that I can use to get done what I want to do
|
|
yeah I was confused as to how he was encrypting his signal and embedding it in there
|
|
was he mimicking the god stream was he look I didn't get that but I just kind of took it for granted
|
|
and moved on if you've ever heard like data over like radio transmissions a lot of them can sound
|
|
like you know static or chirping or something and I guess if you came up with your own encryption
|
|
you could make it sound similar enough to where it would be pretty hard to distinguish it from
|
|
the background unless you knew what you're really important yeah okay take a text file and then
|
|
cat it to like dev speaker or something the equivalent to your audio device and listen to what
|
|
it sounds like and I think that is the idea huh because that's one of my actual like interest in
|
|
radio is more data like I'm I'm very rarely get on and actually like voice talk to people
|
|
what I find interesting is getting in and you can find these data streams and you just kind of
|
|
jump in and start talking to the people in the data stream and it's kind of cool I mean it's
|
|
literally like IRC without any wires which you know it's just a fundamental law of nature just kind
|
|
of cool so IRC over ham radio similar you know you you basically get into a text chat with one
|
|
person and then you know you could get multiple people in there I guess if you wanted I've never
|
|
actually done that myself but just the idea that you can make those contacts and just sort of
|
|
you know and chill out and you know if you wanted to meet a certain group of people at a certain
|
|
frequency at a certain time there's no I don't see any reason that I know of and that could be my
|
|
lack of experience just getting into the hobby the last couple of years you could literally
|
|
just spin up and kind of a real quick chat room on on radio waves which is kind of cool well the
|
|
only thing I see there is there's not the facility unlike with IRC to give someone the permission to
|
|
manage the best word I can think of manage that you know if in IRC if I am in a specific channel
|
|
not behaving by the established rules the channel moderator can kick me out I can't imagine that
|
|
there would be a similar analogy in you know the ham radio other than people just ignoring
|
|
sorry touch is there a way to tell whose signals coming from who so that you know
|
|
collisions would be you know automatically separated out or is there anything like that too
|
|
that would have to do so like what you're talking about doing is a net and I've not done any kind
|
|
of digital nets I'm sure they exist but like in a voice net you have a net control and that person
|
|
literally says okay this call sign go this call sign go this call sign go you could
|
|
int you could do the same thing with digital because every time you send a message you you know
|
|
should probably be sending your call sign with that just so you can keep it straight if it was
|
|
just you and somebody else I think you only have to ID every 10 minutes but I know when I do it
|
|
I ID every time just in case so I mean if you had a group of people who wanted to do that you could
|
|
set up a system to do that but it has to be agreed upon by everybody else the only kind of enforcing
|
|
entity that is there's the FCC and it's just you know I have my opinions about the FCC I think it's
|
|
ridiculous that I have to apply for a license to utilize a fundamental fundamental law of nature
|
|
but I guess they do serve a purpose in some way well I mean you can copyright you can
|
|
patent software which is just math so why shouldn't you we have to register for a license to use
|
|
the radio waves because I don't agree with that either yeah it was being cynical and sarcastic
|
|
sorry if that wasn't obvious devil's advocate I hate to devil I really need a k5 tux on here to
|
|
like straighten me out on some of this hand radio stuff because he's much better at it than me
|
|
he's got a credit in this book too and I forget what exactly he's credited as but I think his
|
|
voice is in there at some point yeah it's in there so I don't I could not find I actually kind of
|
|
actively listen for it and I don't know where it was or even would venture to say where it would be
|
|
I heard Mrs. 64 though she's right at the end I was told to look out for her and I
|
|
I forgot that I was supposed to but then I picked it up right at the end and heard her
|
|
that's Peter 64's wife yeah I don't know what she sounds like so I would never know that
|
|
was her if I heard it she sounds Australian and female well that online there's a down to a
|
|
couple million people yeah but only one in this particular audio book fair enough so how about the
|
|
I guess the antagonist in this book the the pirate radio tower that seemed weird like that they
|
|
could move that many resources to that spot now I mean maybe they found some of it there but they
|
|
I didn't get the impression that they found all of it there they must have moved some of it to
|
|
where it's at and and if you look at radio towers that exist nowadays they're all at the peaks of
|
|
the mountains they're not like halfway down the mountain so this isn't something that was left over
|
|
they this is something they they put there and it just seemed odd that they moved so much equipment
|
|
and so many you know power stations and transformers over there it seemed like there was a whole
|
|
separate group that was interested in and what was going down there but yeah it does seem like
|
|
a lot to put together for especially in this world where everything is pretty separated out and
|
|
far distances like at a radio transmitter like like a broadcast radio transmitter that's not
|
|
something you're gonna move around without a car or a big truck that and they
|
|
talked about how the cranks that were protecting it must have been hired hands and and what was
|
|
the the currency how were they paid for you know it just doesn't seem like the the army and charge
|
|
at that station would have you know acquired much in in terms of you know physical goods some some
|
|
sort of barter currency to pay for their time and all that material and you know them lugging it
|
|
all there as well that was a little a little odd for something that isn't you know it's an
|
|
tangible his his goal his ultimate goal was was pretty esoteric as far as these people are concerned
|
|
you know they were kind of let it's but I think his goal was to create and that work of basically
|
|
it seemed like wanted to eventually go worldwide and once you do that you start to open the world
|
|
of globalization and trade across large distances that it seems like it's not possible at this
|
|
point so maybe saying hey look we're gonna start another revolution and you can get on on the ground
|
|
floor this one and you might come out looking pretty good at the end of this
|
|
yeah I don't know the cranks didn't seem to be the the kind of folks that appreciated the concept
|
|
of delayed gratification but maybe now I'm just nitpicking that's what we do it's a curse and a gift
|
|
almost a curse I think yeah I I don't like that it often seems like I'm nitpicking these
|
|
stories so much when I actually like them you know what I mean and and maybe it sounds like I
|
|
dislike the story but I didn't I really did like this one well just kind of sharing something that
|
|
you had sent out to the people on the the audiobook club we've had one author come on and we've
|
|
had two authors respond and it seems like everybody has been fairly happy with what we've said
|
|
I think most people take it all right well I would I would hope if you're to the point where
|
|
you're authoring something and releasing it you can you've already gotten past the editing phase
|
|
and can deal with critiques and criticism and different interpretations and other people kind of
|
|
mentally exploring the world you've created because if you're writing a story you're creating
|
|
this world for other people to explore right I mean and I think we all understand you can be
|
|
critical of something and and not be mean about it I don't think anybody is openly said like
|
|
God's books sucks they'll never read this like don't waste your time you could reach
|
|
toilet paper and it's more interesting like that's not how we roll no yeah we did though there was
|
|
a book that we we kind of did that too okay it's not how we roll since I showed up so yeah blaming
|
|
on Bogey you can blame it all I mean it's fine well it's weird though because it's like
|
|
I don't know maybe it's just me but it's easy for me to find the things that I was critical about
|
|
but then when I try to find something that I like to to talk about I usually went up talking about
|
|
you know some some I usually went up going down some rat hole instead of talking about the actual
|
|
thing the piece of the story so I think that's just me though well maybe that's because the things
|
|
you like are the things that made you think and consider and send your mind down those rat holes
|
|
into the things that you like are the things that make you think about other things
|
|
rather than the specific story that it's telling yeah that's true it does I do like a story that
|
|
that makes me wonder about you know second and third and fourth order ramifications of things
|
|
and and where's the author going with this or what what C did this sprout from I I do like those
|
|
kind of things about a book but I also do like a good story and this was a good story you know
|
|
the character interactions while they were all just lying to each other the whole time it was
|
|
kind of a neat adventure that they went on you know walking from city to city and and you know wander
|
|
in the countryside and up mountains and downlands like that it was all you know a fun story to go
|
|
through and just the different people that they met and and how all that related to the world that
|
|
they lived and I liked all that too yeah I think this is a book that for me is much more about ideas
|
|
than it is the the the plot narrative I think the plot narrative sets up the world that that it's
|
|
in but like I said at the beginning I I find myself much more interested in the implications of the
|
|
world than I am the particular characters because I think the characters go from a beginning point
|
|
and they go to an ending point like if you came to me and said hey would you like a sequel to this
|
|
book that deals with Ender I would say no if you came to me and said would you like a sequel set in
|
|
this world that had nothing to do with those characters I might be open to it but I think just the
|
|
story of those characters is done and I'm cool with that like it's a very easy not I won't say easy
|
|
to write but just like a very very finished story like it goes from point A to point B and it's
|
|
it's pretty much settled up I mean it's open that she's gonna go out and do this but I don't need to
|
|
see it like I've got to that point of kind of catharsis like okay she's dealing with her past and
|
|
that's cool and I'm sure she'll have great adventures but I don't need to see them to be okay
|
|
that's kind of what I meant by that's part of what I meant rather when I was saying that the world
|
|
is painted with broad strokes where there's all of this rich detail it's kind of hinted at just
|
|
enough that you can put it together yourself in the way that makes the most sense to you to flesh
|
|
out the world and give it you know the rest of its skin and bones to make it a little more whole
|
|
without the story actually being missing anything at the same time right I would love to see
|
|
somebody play in this world that isn't somebody attached to the revolution like to just follow
|
|
like a regular dude or you know anybody and just see what the world's like to them and just see
|
|
the alternate perspective of what this looks like I think that would be interesting like a story about
|
|
a crank maybe yeah just something like I don't even think you should do like another novel I think
|
|
you should just be like I think a short story set in this world would be really interesting to see
|
|
from a different perspective just because we kind of keep coming back to that that's kind of a theme
|
|
we've all three of us have talked about and kind of gone back and forth about is you know what
|
|
of what we are seeing in this book is reality or whatever is framed by the beliefs of the characters
|
|
yeah I think running the text chat here he's asking if anybody's got anything else to say and I
|
|
think I think we're all talked out on this one overall we seem to have liked it seemed to all have
|
|
been a little bit confused about it but everybody seemed to enjoy the confusion as well so yeah
|
|
definite thumbs up now that we're done with it and if anyone listens all the way through this
|
|
episode and didn't listen to the book I'd still recommend you do because there's there's
|
|
plenty left there yeah I mean I would definitely say that we all enjoyed it and that it was very
|
|
thought provoking and I think if you listen to our spoilers and you haven't read the book and you
|
|
go to read the book I think you'll be surprised that how it probably plays out very different from
|
|
what you are expecting based on this spoilers because I don't think we spoiled the plot that much
|
|
as in so much dug into a lot of the questions that the plot certain plot points asked
|
|
yeah and none of us is telling a story like Seth tells a story either I mean in a way we all got
|
|
to to play in the world he created that's a good way to look at it because we all seem to have
|
|
a different experience with it as well and even though we we all delved down rat holes at kind
|
|
of the same point we we came up with different what treasures or whatever and all those rat holes
|
|
and what you get out of them are very much based on what perspective you have coming in much as the
|
|
the narrators perspective informs her worldview so does the reader slash listeners perspective
|
|
inform their own view of the world's creator that's a very cool way of thinking about it
|
|
yeah it makes sense to me all right so for next audiobook club we're looking at a recording date
|
|
of September 9th 2014 7 p.m. Eastern time in the the mumble room in the hgar mumble room
|
|
those details can be found on the that public radio webpage are in the mailing list and I don't
|
|
know them we're off hand so I'm not going to attempt to repeat them here yep and the next audiobook
|
|
that we'll be reviewing is street candles by David Collins Rivera who is also a hacker public
|
|
radio community member that's lost in Bronx is his online handle and I've heard this whole thing I
|
|
listened to it all before it was suggested and I love it I can't wait to do a book club review of
|
|
this one if I get finished with the street candles is the first portion star drifter is that good
|
|
enough that it's worth listening to as well oh yeah for sure I kind of figured based on how good
|
|
street candles has been so far I actually want to go back as soon as I finish street candles because
|
|
I think I know more about e-joc from the second book that's going to make that first book a whole
|
|
lot better if I reread it I wonder if his rss feed works because I know that one of the one of
|
|
the davids on the mailing list and I had to work with lost in Bronx to get the rss feed working for
|
|
street candles before that it was not correctly set up some of the enclosure tags weren't right
|
|
the last post I saw on the mailing list was lost in Bronx saying that it was now fixed
|
|
and even before it was working 100% correctly if you had any problems getting it
|
|
g-potter downloaded it just fine if you added it as an rss feed down them all I believe worked I'm
|
|
pretty sure I grabbed I don't think I grabbed the whole thing with it but portions of it and
|
|
there was another pod catcher that was eating it just fine I forget what that was I think dog catcher
|
|
had a problem with it which is the end one of the android clients yes as I think I've said almost
|
|
every month on here I use pocket casts and pocket cast was just choking on it because only like
|
|
three or four of the entries had enclosure tags which is the official way that rss
|
|
can handle media files a lot of the other ones seem to have some smarts built into them
|
|
that if the enclosure tags are missing it simply provides the audio file located at the link tag
|
|
but david fixed and I tested out his fix for it that corrected so that all the the files
|
|
pointed at the enclosure correct excellent thanks for helping out with that well I had meant to fix it
|
|
but you know all those people in the UK who get out of work before I do got to it first
|
|
and I would like to thank everybody who helped me straighten out my show notes for the last show
|
|
and I basically just we've used them as a template for this show I knew nothing about HTML but I just
|
|
kind of you know copied and pasted and and interpreted and learned as I could and I had some help
|
|
from plenty of people x111 you helped real helped david helped who's now I can't remember which
|
|
david that was but yeah lots of people helped me out straighten out my my HTML even though it was
|
|
very basic HTML I managed to screw it up really badly at first but it seems to be working pretty
|
|
good now and looking good for the show notes so our show notes look better than they used to for
|
|
this episode in the previous one and I just want to give a shout out to Taj for providing the
|
|
is that ether is it an etherpad instance or some kind of collaborative editing we've all been
|
|
writing the show notes as we do it and that's been fantastic yeah um I threw up etherpad on my
|
|
server at home and that's what we've been using and I want to thank kwisher because um we were
|
|
talking about the other night and I couldn't get it to configure out why it wasn't facing outward
|
|
and I'm not going to say why it isn't because it's the dumbest mistake in the world and it
|
|
makes me look like amateur but he definitely taught me doing it got it fixed.
|
|
Forward forwarding.
|
|
Damn it.
|
|
Which is just a function of netting.
|
|
It etherpad is awesome we have to do an episode on this I would really like to do a collaborative
|
|
episode with you if at some point if you don't mind because this is really cool.
|
|
Both do.
|
|
Behind the scenes.
|
|
Special edition.
|
|
Maybe we can use some like that our Christmas time.
|
|
That'd be cool.
|
|
Yeah I mean we've used etherpad before someone had one I think it might have been Kevin
|
|
Wischer's I think it was his that we used at the um the last New Year's Eve show the 24
|
|
hour show and that was really fun too.
|
|
I can't get over how useful it is for something like this.
|
|
Yeah it's um I originally put it up to do that once again go into the nerd place um doing
|
|
role plane games at my house and so everybody at my house would get on the collaborative document
|
|
and kind of edit it as we went along and add stuff and it was kind of like a history of what
|
|
we were doing um but yeah this is this is fantastic and uh we can my server's always on because it's
|
|
basically how I sync things because I don't want to use Google um so it's it's it's open to us
|
|
whenever we need it and now that you know that it's good for RPGs I might have to set one up.
|
|
Dude it is fantastic yeah it's like you make up those NPCs and you can't remember the names you
|
|
could totally just go back and look it's awesome.
|
|
Yeah see that what are you applying like give them names.
|
|
You're a bad GM.
|
|
Thug 1, thug 2, thug 3.
|
|
That dude with the face in the bar in that one place.
|
|
If the NPC's name is not relevant it's thug 1.
|
|
Doesn't that kind of spoil his role just a little bit if you weren't sure yet?
|
|
Nope he's just a thug.
|
|
You just don't be like uh you walk up and talk to thug 1 and he says
|
|
Well that's awesome.
|
|
All right I want to thank everyone for listening for making it all the way through this episode.
|
|
We rat hold quite a bit but I think the story is one that lended itself to that
|
|
and uh you know good company does as well which which we've definitely had here tonight.
|
|
Please as I said before join us September 8th no 9th September 9th at 7 p.m.
|
|
Eastern time on on on mumble for the review of street candles by David Collins or
|
|
Vera or Lost in Bronx feel free to go purchase the ebook version of that one as well if you
|
|
want to help support him that's that's always something fun and cool to do.
|
|
You know with pals of ours in the community it's it's one that we've all enjoyed.
|
|
Thank you so much for listening um thank you guys for being part of this again you know
|
|
it's not something that would be any fun to do alone nor would it be any fun to listen to
|
|
so if you guys make the show and it's it's awesome for you to do that.
|
|
Now where is I enjoy doing it?
|
|
Yeah I mean this is I look forward to this the whole month.
|
|
It's literally become a thing in my family where my wife is like so when is the audio book club?
|
|
I mean for me it's an excuse to get a nice interesting new beer and
|
|
haul up in the basement and chat with some cool people.
|
|
You guys spouse approval that is awesome.
|
|
Yeah me too.
|
|
Yeah kind of it's it's okay she's just like so when are you going to hold yourself up in the office
|
|
for her layers? Patch Tuesday honey I'll be here patch Tuesday.
|
|
I'm not even allowed to use my office because it's a back to the little girls room and
|
|
my voice carries.
|
|
Yeah I've got spouse tolerance not quite spouse approval but all right thanks everyone
|
|
we got to wrap it up we got to cut it off or we're just going to keep going like this
|
|
but I guess that's what you do and people you like get together.
|
|
So thanks again everyone and have a good night.
|
|
Later folks.
|
|
Later guys.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that release the shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
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Today's show like all our shows was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy
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it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
|
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infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website
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or record a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise status.
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Today's show is released on the Creative Commons
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Attribution Shared Light 3.0 license.
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