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234 lines
18 KiB
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234 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1723
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Title: HPR1723: Success With Students
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1723/hpr1723.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:15:38
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---
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This is HPR episode 1,723 entitled Success with Students.
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It is hosted by Kevin and is about 27 minutes long.
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The summary is, from taking a podcasting course,
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students learn the benefit of creative commons and open source.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthos.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthos.com.
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Hi everybody, this is Ken here. Just before we get to Kevin's show,
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I'd like to put in a correction sent in by 5150.
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In relation to yesterday's show, the website is www.canzuslinicsfest.us.
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That's Kansaslinicsfest.us. Thank you very much for your time.
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Hello, hello, I'm Kevin and welcome to another episode
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of Hacker Public Radio.
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Over the next week while, I want to discuss about a success story I had introducing young
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minds to creative commons music and open source software.
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On top of that, we're also going to have some creative commons tracks as well as going
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over our wee bit of feedback from the previous HPR episode that I did.
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Now, before I get into doing this, I really think that maybe I should give you some
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background, otherwise the story won't really make an awful lot of sense.
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I'm a graphics teacher at the high, local high school and one of the things that we're
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required to do now and again is offer what we call elective courses.
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Now, these elective courses don't actually offer any form of certificate at the end
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with the pupils. They are just purely doing these things for enjoyment and I was told,
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but I never were to go before the elective started that I was doing an elective
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course and I thought, oh no, what am I going to do?
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And I thought about it for a few minutes and I thought, well, I've not got any budget left
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to do because I hadn't, additionally, I wasn't meant to be doing it so it couldn't be any cost
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of money. So I was thinking, oh, what can I do? And I thought, right, podcasting, I know all
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about it and I'm not saying I know everything but I know enough to get people started and it's
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also something I'm quite enthusiastic about. So I decided at that point, right then,
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I'm going to offer a podcasting course. Now, the first thing that really got me surprised
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actually about when I gave the talk was I started with right hands up who can tell me what
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a podcast was and I think out of a group of 200, two people put their hands up and that
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really shocked me. So I had to give this speech about this and out of that speech quite a number
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actually decided to take the course and that was how the podcasting, the podcasting class
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was born. Now, so like I said, that's a background. I thought it's kind of essential that I do that
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before I continue on with this podcast. Now, those here that recognised my voice would probably
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know me from podcasts such as CC Jam, Tux Jam and Crivens and one thing I do like to do is
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promote creative colours music and this podcast is going to be absolutely no different.
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So without further ado, let's have a very quick track here and we're going to go. This is by
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Fixle and it is a try.
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You look at me and I'm a bit confused. Am I the one who ran my chest? The light you're
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falling your fuse. But then you smile and you laugh. I can't read a sign from a breath. I'm a
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take that's not fighting to my love. And I try to move on. Little girls just help me out
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and I won't get the feeling once again. And one day I'll be done. I will fight it in time
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and I'll shout, I'll have courage to rest you. May I be your man.
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Now I'm sitting and waiting here for you every day and every night. But I don't know what to do.
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Suddenly you're sitting next to me. I look at you saying, girl, you are my destiny.
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But then you smile and you laugh. I can't read a sign from a breath. I'm a take that's not fighting to my love.
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And I try to move on. Little girls just help me out and I won't get the feeling once again.
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And one day I'll be done. I will fight it in time and I'll shout, I'll have courage to rest you. May I be your man.
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But then you smile and you laugh. I can't read a sign from a breath. I'm a take that's not fighting to my love.
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And I try to move on. Little girl help me out and I won't get the feeling once again.
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And one day I'll be done. I will fight it in time and I'll shout, I'll have courage to rest you.
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May I be your man. And I try to move on. Little girl just help me out and I won't get the feeling once again.
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And one day I'll be done. I will fight it in time and I'll shout, I'll have courage to rest you. May I be your man.
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But then you smile and you laugh. I'll have courage to rest you. May I be your man.
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But then you smile and you laugh. May I be your man.
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Now, Ted, in the first part of the podcast, I had to teach really these children pretty much everything from what a podcast was to some of the basic steps to create in a podcast.
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And one of the things that when I mentioned that you could play a music on a podcast, of course immediately they all started thinking,
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oh, I'm going to put on, well, whatever, my favorite tracks. So, you know, they're thinking along the lines of probably Justin Bieber on one direction.
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And I said to them, yes, you can actually do that. You can do that if you want.
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However, you know, there's a problem with it. It's illegal. You don't have permission to play those tracks.
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And you can make it up purely if it's for yourself to listen to maybe another day or can't rent your mates.
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But as I pointed out very clearly, it could end up with them being in trouble and possibly even in legal trouble.
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Because as I was saying, once something's on the internet, it's always going to be there.
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And there's going to be an awful lot of people who could potentially have thought, no, it'll never happen to me who ended up in hot water with a law.
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So I had to explain that there were things called pod safe music.
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And of course, this led on quite naturally to discussing creative comments.
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And none of them, absolutely none of them had heard anything about creative comments licensing.
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They just assumed everything was under copyright.
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So from that, I actually managed to direct their attention to Jumendo, the free music archive,
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and also Bandcamp. Unfortunately, we're Bandcamp.
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There seems to be a bit of a difficulty in searching Bandcamp for creative comments music.
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So I had to take them down the route of searching.
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Dr. GobsiteBandcamp.com with the quote of some rights reserved.
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So at first of all, got them to that and I would say, right, pick some tracks you like.
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So we managed to do that.
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So that was quite good because an awful lot of them did not realize this thing called creative comments even existed.
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A lot of them had to get out of the habit of they were wanting to look for the big name bands on Jumendo.
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And I was just saying to them, look, it's not going to happen.
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You won't have heard of many of these bands if any of them at all.
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So they had to get them out of that mindset where they actually had to go and listen to stuff
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and look for stuff rather than just picking stuff that the radio told them to listen to.
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So that was a wee bit of a challenge.
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However, quite a few of them actually embraced this whole creative comments thing.
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I wanted to, I really had to work on because they went down the route of if it's free,
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it must be rubbish or because it was creative comments, it must be just somebody recording this
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on a smartphone in the bedroom.
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And I was saying, no, no, these are actually professional bands.
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Some of them, some of them are just literally recorded on smartphones and they do sound awful,
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but for the majority of them, they're professional bands.
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So that got me saying, no, it's not just the music that was free.
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However, we're also going to make this whole thing from start to finish as cheap as possible.
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Now there's no such thing sadly as free hardware unless you get a donation.
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So I, yes, I wrote off the hardware costs and I did say you will have to buy a microphone
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unless you got one built in.
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So we went over things like that, but then we talked about putting these together because
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obviously you've got to record something.
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Then you've got to edit the sound file unless you happen to have a very good take and it's all
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done in one go.
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Then you need a piece of software to put them together.
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No, you could use in theory three different pieces of software.
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However, I was used to audacity and it was well won.
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It was open source, so it was free.
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And two, it was also cross-platform because the one thing I really wanted to push on this
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was that anybody could do it regardless because you have to bear in mind,
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I have children from a complete range, wide range of backgrounds.
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It's not like in my area there is a push school or the private school or there's the area
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that's mainly working class.
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This is one major school for the majority of the island.
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So you've got all different types of backgrounds.
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So one thing I wanted to do was make it accessible to each and every one of them.
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So again, that spoke about open source because they were talking about audacity and we're saying
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anybody can download it and of course you made a lot of them thought of torrents,
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a bit torrentsite and I'm saying no, no.
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I say this is genuine open source.
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So in other words, the codes there, you're free to use it.
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You're free to do whatever you want with it.
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And again, had to initially get past the hole.
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Oh, if it's free, it's not any good because that seems to be something that's ingrained well into them.
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So sadly, we had to go through that and that took almost a whole hour at one point
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just to try and convince them that free software can be good.
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So once we actually got started on this, a lot of them realized, hey, this is a good piece of
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software and there was another teacher in the school who has a Mac suite and he was offering me
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the use of the Mac so I could use GarageBand.
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But as I was saying, this whole point is I want this to be accessible to everybody.
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Yes, GarageBand could easily have done what I wanted it to do.
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But how many of the children that I was teaching could actually take those skills home and use
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GarageBand, I'd say probably less than 10% of them.
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So we started talking about what it meant to be open-source.
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It didn't just mean you could get it free because as I pointed out to them, if you really wanted to,
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you could probably get it free from illegal means.
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But this is a genuinely legal source.
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And of course, I was also pointing out the fact of a computer safety as well.
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If you download it from at the legal source, you don't know what's coming with it.
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Whereas with if you download a SSD or any open-source from the official means,
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then you can see what's there and if you don't know what it is, you can always give it to somebody
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else to say, check this code to make sure it's running okay.
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And a lot of them did start to get it.
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However, it's the story that got even better because I know a lot of them started speaking to me
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about different types of software, was it just music software?
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And I was saying no, it's not music software, not at all.
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It's part of it, but it's a whole array and I started talking about you can have your entire
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computer from start to finish running an open-source software.
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So of course a lot of them were asking and then start asking a wee bit about it.
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And to my happiness, to my celebratory, to the point where I got to all the celebration,
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three of them actually brought laptops into school and says, right, will you take us through how
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to install Linux on this? Because we'd started speaking about it and the three, there was one,
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I got deliberately chose three different ones just so they could see the difference side by side.
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So one got LXLE, one chose Ubuntu and one chose Mint.
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Of course, the main reason I chose I kept to the Ubuntu base was because there was a good
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community behind them. And probably as well, if they were any family members who had used Linux,
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it was probably quite a high chance they would use Ubuntu.
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So all three of them now, actually to my surprise there, from the feedback I got,
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all of the kids loved Unity, one of them liked the LXDE desktop and the other one did not,
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what the one that actually installed Mint on did not like the Cinnamon desktop at all.
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So I was to be honest, that kind of surprised me. They liked more of the new style desktop,
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weren't so keen on the traditional desktop. So in fact, the one who I installed Mint on to
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asked me to actually take it off and put Ubuntu on, which I happily did for them.
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So there you go, so that was my story of success. Now of course, that's not going to be the same
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for each and every person. However, it wasn't by drumming it into them that Windows was bad,
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that proprietary software was evil. This was just talking to them casually in conversation.
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And I think that's one of the key things. When we're doing our day to day stuff, we tend to forget
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not everybody is quite technologically minded as ourselves. So when we're actually talking about
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creative commons music, we're talking about open-source software. Then I know a lot of just showing
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people a practical use for it, just showing that this can be useful, that it isn't just, you know,
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two people and two people making up an audio track in the bedroom on a smartphone rather than
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in a studio. It's just showing people that, you know, these things don't have to be pure quality or
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low quality. And I was really amazed at how well they embraced it. Now out of the three,
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which are a bit of sad news, one of them decided he wasn't. He didn't delete the partition,
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but he didn't really keep using Linux either. But I think that was just because when I told him,
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he was a big gamer, and when I told him that gaming wasn't really in its prime for Linux,
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you know, to be honest, if he was wanting to triple-lay titles, it would be better sticking
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windows. And I think that scared him off a wee bit. So there still is that to contend with. Although
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to be fair, Steam is doing a very good job of getting some better titles on to Linux.
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Now then, so that was a wee story. We success story. It made me want to cheer,
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and that is reflected actually on my next track. The track is sun, the band is sun-versed,
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and the track is make my day, which these three people certainly did.
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I'm done now, my father alone, now I'm dying, and now I'm wise, I'm gonna hold on,
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but I like anyhow that you leave me, and that's where the one comes in.
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I love my song, when your music comes true, when you take it away from you, from your style,
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and your true. I've gotta make my own day, I have to make out my mind, I've gotta wake up so
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away, it's a way to be sure of yourself, world is free from my dreams I've had to begin.
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My life, however I want to, my joy, my joy, my joy, my joy, my joy, my joy, my joy, my joy.
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I've gotta make my own day, I have to make out my mind, I've gotta wake up so
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I've gotta make my own day, I have to make out my mind, I've gotta wake up so
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I've gotta make my own day, I have to make out my mind, I've gotta make out my mind.
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Now for the fiction, I just wanted to cover a wee bit of feedback really from the episode 1703,
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which actually was my first show for HPR Flying Solo, and I did get quite a bit of actual feedback now from outside
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from the GNU social aspect of it. I got feedback saying that generally it was quite positive but
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that I missed out both Windigo and John Culp, both said that I missed out ABCDE, which is a CLI Ripper.
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So that's something that again, I may have to go back to look at. J'sra pointed out as well that I didn't use G-Rip,
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which apparently is just scandalous, it was really terrible.
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Ken Farland, who I'm quite honored actually listen to the whole thing to be honest,
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the big man, the big head honcho for HPR, he says, sadly K3B was missing from the list, definitely want to review.
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I had a comment from Charles as well left on the show and it was nice informed of introduction to these rippers.
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I greatly enjoyed the music intermissions too, so that's good to get back now.
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If I get more than 3, if I get a few more, this suggested to me, I will do a follow-up episode on review more.
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To be honest, I wasn't really wanting to do a definitive guide to CD ripping, it was just kind of comparing the different styles.
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So in other words, how did the GUI applications compare with the command line and how did they compare with the full music suites,
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but I'll quite happily do a follow-up for that if that's what people want.
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Now, if you want to contact me, there's a few ways you can do it. One, you can go to the HPR show notes and actually add a comment to it.
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However, I don't usually get notifications for that, so forgive me if I take a wee while to respond.
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The other way, and probably more direct way, is to email, I'm kevyatunseenstudio.co.uk
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Or if you want to get in touch with me on social network, I'm on Twitter, I'm at kevy49, at kevy49.
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And I'm also on the GNU social at micro.fragdev.com, and I'm at kevy there, as well as join daisbara.co.uk, and again, I'm at kevy there.
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So if you actually liked or liked anything, just like anything, or just want to generally add a comment, then please do.
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If you want to contact me and suggest something, again, it's something that I'll be quite happy to hear back from you.
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It just gives feedback if you think, no, no, this wasn't tacky enough, if you think it...
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Well, certainly wouldn't be too tacky this episode anyway.
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But it's always good to get feedback, but please at least keep it constructive criticism.
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Let's not have too many insults.
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But anyway, I know that the community for HPR wouldn't stoop themselves to throwing anyway, I know that.
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So this isn't Facebook or Twitter.
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Right then.
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So that's pretty much me, goodbye, and I hope you'll hear me again, either in Tux-jam, Kriven's or CC-jam, the future episode of HPR.
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We've been listening to HackerPublic Radio as HackerPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday from Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribution to find out how easy it really is.
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HackerPublic Radio was founded by the Digital Dog Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club, and is part of the binary revolution and being revved.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative commons,
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attribution, share-like, 3.0 license.
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