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1238 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2980
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Title: HPR2980: FLOSS Weekly 553 - Hacker Public Radio
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2980/hpr2980.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 14:15:56
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---
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This is HPR episode 2980 for Friday the 3rd of January 2020.
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Today's show is entitled Flos Weekly 553 featuring Hacker Public Radio.
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It's part of the series' interview and it's submitted by Ken Fallon and is about 67 minutes
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it carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Randal Schwartz and Aram Nukum feature here HPR on Flos Weekly.
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Today's show is licensed under SCC by NCND License.
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This was the show that Kevin and myself were interviewed on for Flos Weekly and we're
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reproducing it here under permission critics.
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It's released in its entirety without it.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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It's at 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 AnanasThost.com.
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Hi, this is Randal Schwartz host of Flos Weekly.
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This week, Aaron Nukum joins me, we're going to be talking about Hacker Public Radio.
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They released five episodes a week of all sorts of things, you're not going to want
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to miss this, stay tuned.
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Podcasts you love.
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Front people you trust.
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This is Twit.
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This is Flos Weekly with Randal Schwartz and Aaron Nukum.
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Episode 553 recorded October 30th, 2019, Hacker Public Radio.
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This episode of Flos Weekly is brought to you by Melissa.
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Bad data happens to good companies.
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That's why 10,000 businesses count on Melissa for clean, reliable, address data.
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Get started today with 25,000 records cleaned for free at Melissa.com slash Twit.
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And by Hover, use a domain name that truly represents you and your passion.
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Visit hover.com slash Twit to get 10% off of your first purchase for any domain extension
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for the entire first year.
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It's time for Flos Weekly, the show about free, Libre, open source software.
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I am your host, Randal Schwartz, Muralinets on hinge.com, bringing you each week, the movers,
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the shakers, the big projects, little projects, projects, maybe using every day and not
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aware of it.
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Projects you may want to download right after this show or occasionally a show that's
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not about either of those kinds of things.
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Today is one of those.
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Joining me once again is my lovely, intolerant coast, Aaron Newcombe, Aaron, welcome back
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to the show.
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Hey, Randal.
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Good to be here.
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Right.
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And you look like you're speaking to us from your wife's maker space.
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Yeah.
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From my maker space, but you can only see my wife's half of the room.
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We've got one of those white lines.
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Remember in the 80s, they used to put the white line.
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I think there was a Brady bunch where they put the white line down the room.
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That's kind of what we do here.
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This is my layer.
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I've got all kinds of cool stuff.
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What can I pull up today?
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Let's see what's this.
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No, not that one.
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This one, I think this is it.
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Yeah, dead test cartridge.
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So in case anybody is into repairing Commodore 64, very handy to have these dead test cartridges,
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which you can plug in and they'll tell you, give you a little bit of information about
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what's going on in the system, whether you have bad memory, et cetera.
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So it's part of my regular repertoire as it were when I fixed an old Commodore 64.
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So there you go.
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You know, I never had a Commodore 64, but I heard a lot of other people have them.
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I had, I was in the Atari camp.
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So I had the Atari 800 and 1600 or whatever it was, the 400 Nader, that's sorry, not the
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Nader.
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Yeah.
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So that was a lot of fun.
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The 400 had the little chiclet keyboard that was like, you kind of press on the little
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membranes and the 800 actually had full stroke keys or it's kind of cool.
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So my only.
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And they have less shielding as well, which is the interesting thing about them is before
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the FCC relaxed their regulations, they had to put shielding around everything.
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So if you ever see one of those old computers, you're wondering, why is this thing made
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out of, you know, led, it looks like it's really not, but up until I forget what it was
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in 1979 or something like that, they had to put in all the shielding around every single
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component.
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And Atari went to the end to agree to make sure they weren't going to get struck down
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by the FCC and have to change their products.
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That is something I did not know.
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So you learn something every day, right?
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Yep.
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Well, I hope so anyway.
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And I am in my, what we call the Tijuana kitchen set, because I am down in, I'm down south
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of the border in Tijuana and having a good time down here.
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It's interesting because in Mexico, they celebrate Halloween like nobody else.
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I mean, it's amazing.
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So Halloween day itself is not so much except in border towns like Tijuana, but the day
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of the dead November 2nd is huge down here.
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If you've seen the movie Coco, you know that it's very, very, it's very much like that
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actually.
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They really are cool on that.
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So today we have a couple of very interesting people.
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We're going to be talking about hacker public radio hacker.
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Hacker public radio is apparently, although I haven't, I'm sorry, I haven't subscribed
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to it yet.
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I should probably not tell my guests that, but I haven't subscribed to it yet.
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But apparently five days a week, they put out a different topic and it looks pretty cool.
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It looks like the list of topics that I saw from the recent weeks, very cool.
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So we'll have to talk about the variety of topics, how they get people to contribute
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to it.
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We're going to be having Kevin O'Brien and Ken Fallon on in just a few minutes talking
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about the show.
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And it'll be, it'll be awesome, I'm sure, because you know, it's, it's funny as podcasters
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to interview other podcasters.
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And I heard some comments back in reverse, which is that, you know, it's going to be weird
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being, the people being interviewed rather than the people doing interviewing.
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So it'll be fun.
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Do you know anything about this, Aaron?
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Oh, yeah.
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Yeah, definitely.
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I mean, I did open source podcasts.
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I had a show called The Source that I started in 2006.
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And then I did a show called Open News, it was around that same time, which was kind of
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more.
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And I remember around that time seeing, I think it was around that time, seeing hacker
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public radio.
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And I used to be a big podcast listener.
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I don't have as much time now spare time or audio listening time to dedicate to podcasts
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as I used to.
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But yeah, I definitely know hacker public radio.
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They've been around for a long time, just how long we'll have to ask them and see.
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Definitely.
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And I wish I had more time to listen to podcasts.
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But you know, it's like, no, I'm not going to say that.
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I'm not going to say I no longer subscribe to this week intact, just because it's just
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too long.
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I won't say that at all.
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It's just gotten longer, longer every year.
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So anyway, but before we get into the actual show, I do have an important message because
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this episode of Floss Weekly is brought to you by the leader in address verification,
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That's Melissa.com slash TWIT or call 1-800-MOLISA to find out more.
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We thank Melissa for their support of Floss Weekly.
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Let's go ahead and bring on our guests.
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That would be, oops, I scrolled.
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I scrolled, darn me.
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Editor just cut this part out.
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Kevin O'Brien, welcome to the show.
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Thank you so much, Randall.
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It's a pleasure to be here.
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And where are you speaking to us from?
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From my home in Ipsilanti, Michigan, which is outside of Detroit.
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Yep, the middle of the United States, somewhere in there anyway.
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Yes, it did.
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We are part of the great Midwest.
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Cool, cool.
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And Ken Fallon, also, welcome to the show.
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Hi.
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Nice to finally meet you.
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And where are you speaking to us from?
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I'm calling from Bussam in the Netherlands.
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It's between Amsterdam and between Amsterdam and Utrecht.
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And are you currently below sea level?
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Here, actually, no.
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But if you go anywhere around us, yes, we are.
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But again, we're still under sea level for longer than the US.
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You have existed.
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So I think we're OK.
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So you're in the safe part of the Netherlands, yes.
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So I was last in Amsterdam about, I think, five months ago,
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hanging out with friends that were there.
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So it was kind of cool.
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It was the beginning and ending of a cruise
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that I took out of there.
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So it was kind of fun.
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Anyway, so let's start with Kevin.
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Kevin, what's your relationship, the Hector Public Radio,
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and what's it about?
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Well, I am a contributor.
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So my relationship is that I create programs
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and record them, upload them, and they go out on our feed.
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So I've done a few series.
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I'm working on a series right now on new social media.
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Cool.
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And what makes you motivated to be a podcaster?
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Well, I don't know that podcasting, per se,
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is the only motivation.
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But I used to be a teacher.
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And I've always had this need to offer whatever insight
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I may happen to have about something and teach people.
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So I've done that in writing, in classroom,
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and now with podcasts.
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And I also have that same sense.
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I mean, obviously, I've been doing this show for 13 years,
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but the notion that you need a place to express your art.
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You need a place to express a voice in the intention
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that somebody is going to be motivated,
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going to be differently because of it.
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And do you agree with that?
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Oh, absolutely.
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It's wonderful when you get feedback from people.
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And that has happened that I've been associated
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with Ohio Linux Fest for a number of years.
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In fact, I met Aaron Newcomb there many years back.
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And I'd be walking down a hallway there
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and someone would come up and say,
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hey, aren't you that guy from Hacker Public Radio
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that records those shows?
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And it's like, well, yes, I am.
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Thank you.
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That's a good feeling.
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It is to get that kind of feedback.
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I mean, I get recognized at conferences now
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as I used to get recognized as being the Pearl Book Guy,
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or the Pearl Guy in general.
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And now people are coming up to me in conferences,
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going, you're the podcast guy.
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You're the floss weekly guy.
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So I definitely appreciate that.
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That I have a new sort of pinnacle that I've managed
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to cross over to.
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Ken, what's your story?
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Is it similar?
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Yeah, I kind of got into a free Libra open source
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offer and then I just wanted to give back a little bit.
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For me, sometimes it's the people I hang around with
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don't understand that you've got something
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that you mean to compile after three days of debugging
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an issue and then you can record a show
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when you get it out of your system.
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So that's kind of one of the advantages of HPR,
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I think.
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And how do you design your show?
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Well, HPR is kind of different to most podcast networks
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because it's we're actually just a wave.
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I know a few weeks ago you had Dan on Simon on About Oddcamp.
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So HPR is the podcast equivalent of an Oddcamp or a barcap
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festival.
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We don't have any of our own shows.
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We rely on the people who are listening to us.
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So the listeners to submit shows and the shows
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can be on any topic as long as you like containing
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any content you like.
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So long as it's of interest to hackers,
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just in spam obviously.
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So if you have just come up with a cool way
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to connect Raspberry Pi to something or other
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then record a show about it.
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If you've got some interest in Harm Radio,
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record a show about it.
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And that's pretty much what it is.
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Wow, and how long have you been involved with HPR?
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Oh, I started, well,
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HPR itself has been going for,
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let me just check here, 14 years,
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one month and 14 days.
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So it's been a while, yeah.
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And that actually dates back to RSS started in 2001
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and then in 2002 to 2004, Radio Free,
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America started.
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And that's kind of where they, in the last episode there,
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they mentioned hacker public radio and then bin rev
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and then phonomicum started.
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And when those two shows were kind of winding up,
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they started the thing called,
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at the same time as Twitch started,
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they started today with a techie and ran for a few years.
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And then we morphed because the name
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wasn't actually ideal.
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So we morphed in 2007 into HPR.
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So we had 300 shows under the first name.
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And then right now we have,
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let me check 3,521 shows and posted, yeah.
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Now, I mean, this is show 553,
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which already seems long to me,
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but it has 3,000 shows.
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It sounds amazing and Kevin, how did you get involved?
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Well, one of the things that hacker public radio has done
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is a new year's marathon that runs about 26 hours.
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And yeah, it basically follows the stroke of midnight
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around the globe.
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Why that takes 26 hours, maybe Ken understands it.
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I don't, I just go along with it.
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And so I was listening to the program
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and a number of people were just talking about how,
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it's not that hard to do and you know,
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you should contribute shows.
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And I thought, well, yeah, I could do that.
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So I got started and I picked something
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that I was really interested in, which is Libra Office.
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Now, I know you've had them on your show before.
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Yeah.
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And that was something I was really pretty passionate about.
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So I did a whole series of tutorials about using Libra Office
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that covered writer, Calc.
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And was it the presentations?
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Yeah.
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And at a certain point, that kind of ran out.
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And I didn't have anything more to say.
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So then I started one on ongoing sort of intermittent
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series on security and privacy.
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There's something comes up that it's like,
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okay, we should do a show about that.
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Then I'll do a show.
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I'm working on one right now about better social media.
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You know, I was following Aaron Nukem on Google Plus.
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And as we all know, Google Plus went by by.
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And I had to start thinking, okay,
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now what do I really want to do?
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I'm not a fan of Facebook.
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And some friends of mine did a presentation at a convention
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about federated social media.
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And that got me started.
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And so I'm now doing a series looking at what we call
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the Fediverse, different social media like that
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for a mastodon, stuff like that.
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So that's the kind of some stuff that I'm interested in.
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Yeah, it's amazingly easy to do a podcast
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or at least a record audio about something
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that you're passionate about.
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I think in some ways it's much easier than say posting
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an article on medium because you get to type a lot.
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You know, it's pretty easy to grab a mic
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and just start talking like that.
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I find that it's simpler for me.
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So and by the way, the 26-hour marathon
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is because there are time zones on both sides
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of the date timeline.
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They're the date line that sort of overlaps.
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But so it really makes it about 26 times zones.
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I am a time zone geek by the way.
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I actually subscribe to the mailing list
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where they discuss the changes to the Olsen database.
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I mean, that's how time zone geeky I am.
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And it's amazing how many last minute decisions
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got made because like, I remember the one time
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Turkey decided that they were going to suspend DST
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the following day.
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But I'm thinking how many phones are gonna be wrong tomorrow
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because you can't update the database that quickly.
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And because I do shows like this
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where I'm talking to people all over the world
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and you know, Netherlands today,
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where I have to schedule stuff.
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And it's really weird that, okay, first off
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before we get too much into the conversation
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we should eliminate DST entirely.
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Please, please eliminate DST entirely
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because it doesn't do anything for anybody.
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It doesn't do anything.
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It was never for the farmers.
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It was strictly to weezy thing that people could do.
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But so if I'm scheduling a call, say with the UK,
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they change to DST two hours or two weeks differently
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than we do in the U.S.
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And if I'm calling, say Brazil,
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they go backward relative to our forward at different times.
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So it's also weird anyway.
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So enough of that.
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So what kinds of things does hacker public radio cover?
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Either of you can take that.
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Sir, basically anything that's of interest to hackers
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and the only limitation we have when you upload a show
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is yeah, we license all our stuff's creative comments.
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So we pick a creative comments license and you upload it.
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And basically we don't listen to it.
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We don't check it.
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If you're a new host, we'll, some of the janitors
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on one of them will just check it in spots
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to make sure there's nothing weird in there.
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And if it seems like you're talking about Linux or BST
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or connecting up a phone or something, then it's on the network.
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And that's it.
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There's a big upload button on the website.
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You record your audio, you press that,
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you fill in the form and that's it.
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You pick a day and your show comes up.
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I think one of the major problems we have for you listeners
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is that because we've got basically 51 gigabytes
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or 53 gigabytes of audio, just to give you an idea,
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if you started listening now, you would be 65 days,
|
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18 hours and 13 minutes.
|
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So you'd be the third of January 24, 7 listening
|
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by which time there'd be 65 more shows ready for you in your pop.
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So I know there are some long distance truckers out there
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going, yes, finally, I've hit the motor load.
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So if there are anybody insane enough to go back
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and listen to the entire feed, could you also try
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and fill out the tags on the old shows as well
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and make sure that this stuff is relevant for us.
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That would be awesome.
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It's one way you could help out.
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But a lot of people struggle with how,
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how to find out what shows there are there.
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So Dave, one of the janitors has been asking
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people to fill out the tags on the shows.
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So if you go to, on the main page, there's a tag section
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you can look for something interesting there.
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We also have series that, so if somebody contributes
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three shores or more on a particular topic,
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the newest one recently is Bitcoin, GG.
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Then that becomes a series
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and you can subscribe to that on the RSS feed.
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So we do have the full feed,
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which is the full 53 gigabytes of stuff,
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but we also have a 10 day feed that goes through.
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And in order to kind of manage that,
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some people listen to the Community News Show,
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which is put on by some of the volunteers
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and janitors of myself.
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And that's once every month.
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So anyone who listens to HPR is free to join
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and we discuss the shows that have been on in the last month,
|
|
what's happening on the news feeds
|
|
on mailing lists and stuff like that.
|
|
Any shows that we've been on, for example,
|
|
is going to feature heavily in any other business section.
|
|
And what's turned out is a lot of people
|
|
have stopped subscribing to the RSS feed
|
|
and they listen to the Community News one
|
|
and then go back and do a pick and mix on the shows.
|
|
So what's ended up happening is we have 50% of our listeners
|
|
listening via the RSS feeds
|
|
and then 50% either going in directly via
|
|
the Community News feed or picking them
|
|
because they've subscribed to a particular host.
|
|
So that's the way.
|
|
That's really cool.
|
|
In fact, I was just looking at the correspondence,
|
|
I guess you call them page.
|
|
And it's pretty interesting to go through there
|
|
and just see how many.
|
|
I mean, I can't scroll fast enough.
|
|
I don't know how many are listed here.
|
|
Looks like about 100 or 200 correspondence and 58.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
That's crazy.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know, John, if you can,
|
|
oh, perfect timing, boy, look at that.
|
|
So if you're watching the video,
|
|
you can kind of see how many people have contributed to this.
|
|
And it's kind of like, I mean,
|
|
it depends on whether you know their moniker
|
|
or user ID, right, to know who these people are.
|
|
Some of them use their name, some of them don't.
|
|
But when you go through here, it's like a,
|
|
there's just all sorts of people who've contributed
|
|
and like I see Dave Yates in here, for example, right?
|
|
Host ID 77.
|
|
And I think if I remember correctly,
|
|
Dave was the one who recorded in his car.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely.
|
|
Yeah, Dave used to do this show
|
|
where he recorded in his car in his way to work.
|
|
And it was like, dude, how do you do that?
|
|
You're driving to work in your car.
|
|
That's so sustained, all this stuff was.
|
|
Yeah, it was just off the, like, I don't know it.
|
|
Maybe he had notes.
|
|
I can't remember what he told me about how he did it.
|
|
Maybe he had notes posted on his dashboard.
|
|
Just all kinds of things.
|
|
DM Frey was on here.
|
|
He hasn't recorded since 2012,
|
|
but I remember speaking to him back in the day,
|
|
just, I mean, it's almost a huesoo
|
|
of people that have gotten involved in podcasting
|
|
or want to talk about anything from open source
|
|
to technology to what have you.
|
|
So, I mean, it really is a different kind of approach
|
|
to podcasting.
|
|
And that's really our goal.
|
|
Sorry.
|
|
Yeah, go ahead, go ahead, Kim.
|
|
Our goal here is to share knowledge.
|
|
So the whole idea is to get as many people
|
|
into podcasting as possible on it.
|
|
That kind of, we're different from most other podcast
|
|
networks and that we're not looking for listeners.
|
|
We're looking for people to contribute.
|
|
So we're looking for hosts.
|
|
So if I get a thousand listeners,
|
|
unless they turn into holes,
|
|
and it's not that really that important to me
|
|
because people with like Dave life happened
|
|
and he kind of moved away from the community,
|
|
he still contributes a show from time to time,
|
|
but we constantly need new people.
|
|
And just natural in the last year,
|
|
we've had two of our hosts pass away.
|
|
So life happens.
|
|
But if you're listening to Floss Weekly
|
|
and you've always thought, well,
|
|
what am I recording getting into this podcasting thing,
|
|
then record your show, as Randall said.
|
|
And then we take care of the rest.
|
|
All the RSS feed, you've got a welcome audience
|
|
who's very supportive.
|
|
And we, as we say, we'll accept any audio
|
|
so long as it's, we'll accept anything so long
|
|
as it's audible.
|
|
Now, Flack is best, but we'll take the rest.
|
|
So we realize that on day one,
|
|
you're not going to be reaching Floss Weekly levels
|
|
of quality, which are first podcasts,
|
|
but that doesn't matter.
|
|
The whole point is start, stop procrastinating,
|
|
record a show about something,
|
|
press the submit button, and then you're a broadcaster.
|
|
And then you can always look back at,
|
|
ooh, that was a terrible show.
|
|
And a lot of people were more than happy
|
|
to help people move on and go do their own shows.
|
|
And then obviously, they're the last time
|
|
for posting on Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
But that's not the point.
|
|
The point is to get people into podcasting,
|
|
get sharing knowledge.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, it really is a community, isn't it?
|
|
That's the point, Jay.
|
|
Yeah, in fact, I think you made me, Kevin,
|
|
you can talk about this a little bit,
|
|
but how do you know what the direction
|
|
of the Hacker Public Radio is going?
|
|
Is it a small group of people who decides
|
|
what's going to happen?
|
|
The people who are contributing, really.
|
|
I mean, we have a mailing list.
|
|
So there's discussions on the mailing list.
|
|
People, you know, we mentioned,
|
|
we do a monthly community news program
|
|
and that's done on mumble.
|
|
Anyone can come in and join.
|
|
Just if you have anything to say, you say it.
|
|
So it's, you know, it can choose us as words very carefully
|
|
when he says he's the janitor and not the admin
|
|
because that's the kind of ethic we have
|
|
that, you know, nobody owns it.
|
|
No one lays down the law unless it's the entire community.
|
|
Right, and I think that's what's kind of interesting here
|
|
is that it really does mirror in a lot of ways
|
|
the open source community, right?
|
|
For where you don't always have this, you know,
|
|
the governance is set up different ways,
|
|
but I think here, you know, you really have the fact
|
|
that this is led by the community
|
|
and what the community wants to submit,
|
|
what direction they want to see it go forward.
|
|
It really is quite a different way to run,
|
|
I guess, a podcast network, if you will.
|
|
Now, Ken, you said that you don't track necessarily
|
|
how many, you know, you're really after getting people
|
|
to submit more than you are getting people to listen
|
|
to the show, but you must do some sort of tracking
|
|
of how many people download or how many people listen
|
|
to a particular show, right?
|
|
Yes, and this is one of the points where my janitor role,
|
|
I have two hats, me as a host, and me as the janitor.
|
|
So as the janitor, I have accepted the decision
|
|
that this is something that the community requires.
|
|
As a host, I will always say that you can't measure
|
|
the impact of a show by the number of downloads.
|
|
So taking, for example, recently we've had a comment
|
|
four years after a show has been put in,
|
|
and the show itself was on somebody's experiences
|
|
as a patient within a, with schizophrenia in a hospital.
|
|
And the comment on that show was from somebody
|
|
on the other side, one of the caregivers
|
|
who was commenting about how useful the insight,
|
|
that was as an insight into their work
|
|
and how much that was going to help them.
|
|
So say I put up a fantastic show
|
|
and I get a million subscribers.
|
|
That show has had more impact on actual people's lives.
|
|
But that said, that said by command,
|
|
I am required as a janitor to basically tell you
|
|
how many shows and it's kind of weird.
|
|
We kind of get about 50% of our shows.
|
|
So when we post a show, we get about 4,000 downloads
|
|
of that show.
|
|
So you'll see all these numbers on archive.org.
|
|
We've moved our RSS feed traffic over to archive.org.
|
|
But, equally in a day, 50% of the downloads
|
|
will be historical shows.
|
|
So it's the weirdest thing out.
|
|
I just can't make head and her tale of it.
|
|
It's, we have the equivalent of a day as, say,
|
|
one of the largest fostem.
|
|
So if you've ever been to fostem,
|
|
so that's the number of listeners we have on a particular day.
|
|
But they're not all going to the main show.
|
|
Some of them are going to, you know, the side rooms
|
|
and listening to something that's four or five years old
|
|
or in some cases 14 years old.
|
|
So it's, I, yeah, that's, that's amazing.
|
|
I did want to ask, you know, I know that,
|
|
I forgot what my question was.
|
|
There was something, oh, I know what it was.
|
|
So the, when you get old, that happens.
|
|
You know, I find that happens more and more these days.
|
|
So the, you know, I've seen over time
|
|
and I want to ask you what you're seeing as well
|
|
is that suddenly podcasting has taken off.
|
|
It's kind of like it's gotten a resurgence in popularity.
|
|
You know, it seemed like it was popular back in the mid 2000s
|
|
when it first started and then it kind of waned a little bit
|
|
and then all of a sudden, you know,
|
|
everybody's doing a podcast that seems like.
|
|
So I'm kind of curious what you've seen over
|
|
since you spans such a long stretch of time,
|
|
whether you're seeing that in your listenership as well.
|
|
I see that's, well, I don't really follow the,
|
|
the download stats because I've got actually too busy
|
|
trying to keep the queue in order to be worried about that.
|
|
But I have seen people come up to me.
|
|
So anecdotally, I've seen people come up to me and say,
|
|
hey, I've heard about podcasting and stuff.
|
|
And then we go, okay, yeah, here's our, here's our network.
|
|
If you want to submit a show, this is what you can do.
|
|
But I think it's what's happened is mainstream media
|
|
has started professionalizing it.
|
|
And that I think is a danger for the free and open source
|
|
community, which is why I'm really glad of the opportunity
|
|
of coming on here because, you know, we're not on HPR.
|
|
You're not set to having to do an hour long show precisely
|
|
or 30 minutes precisely.
|
|
If what you need to say can be done in three minutes,
|
|
then you have a three minute show.
|
|
If you need an eight hour show, then you take the eight hours
|
|
to do your eight hour show or better yet,
|
|
divide it up and split it up over time.
|
|
But I am seeing so many people in work now downloading
|
|
podcast app, podcast app apps and listening to in the car.
|
|
Problem is, I've also noticed is the national news agency
|
|
here in the Netherlands don't publish their RSS feed.
|
|
So the only way you can get to it is via proprietary interfaces.
|
|
So that is definitely an issue.
|
|
So I can't let Aaron have all the fun.
|
|
So I'm gonna interrupt here for a bit and ask a few questions.
|
|
But before we do that, we have a very important message
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|
because this episode of Floss Weekly is brought to you by Hover.
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I'm personally a Hover customer ever since they were a sponsor
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a floss weekly something like eight years ago.
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And I have like about 15 domains with them.
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I move all my other domains from other sources over to Hover.
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And we thank Hover for their support of floss weekly.
|
|
I really appreciate that.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
And let's talk, again, I have a question sort of,
|
|
as Aaron was talking with you guys,
|
|
what's the most unusual show that you've had
|
|
on Hacker Public Radio?
|
|
I know I haven't listened to the 76,000 hours
|
|
of whatever you have.
|
|
So tell me, what was your most unusual show?
|
|
Well, the one that's the one that was most popular
|
|
at that I found most interesting was, well, no,
|
|
I didn't, I find all the shows interesting.
|
|
But while when above and beyond, obviously,
|
|
was where one of our chaps went fresh water swimming
|
|
in France, put on a beanie with an MP3 recorder
|
|
on his head and swam down France,
|
|
river down to the weir, passing some fishermen
|
|
on the side, saying hello, turned and swam back.
|
|
That prompted us to open a series called Soundscapes.
|
|
And we've had quite a few people who have submissive chills,
|
|
which are simply just a walk in the park along the rain,
|
|
you know, listening to the rain, listening to the traffic.
|
|
It's that one I really enjoyed.
|
|
You know, I think there would be a really interesting show
|
|
because there's so much we ignore now.
|
|
And it sort of saddens me that there are people
|
|
that are walking around with earphones on all the time.
|
|
And they're not able to hear sort of the environment
|
|
that they're in.
|
|
And there's some really interesting sounds sometimes.
|
|
Now, on the other hand, if they're listening
|
|
to hacker public radio, that's it.
|
|
Or philosophy, obviously.
|
|
Or philosophy, that could be a good thing too,
|
|
but it's like, I was sitting on the seat, was it yesterday?
|
|
No, day before yesterday, I was flying down here
|
|
from San Jose.
|
|
And I, both of the people next to me,
|
|
you know, on one flight or the other,
|
|
were like the moment that he sat down,
|
|
they're both he's, I can say it that way,
|
|
the moment he sat down, he has your budget.
|
|
And I'm going, you know, there's stuff going on around here.
|
|
And first off, you're not supposed to be doing that
|
|
while they're giving you a little talk,
|
|
the little safety dance thing, you know, the,
|
|
da, da, da, da, da, da, da, safety dance, right?
|
|
You're not supposed to be listening to anything
|
|
when that's going on,
|
|
but then they were both doing that apparently
|
|
and just ignoring the safety dance.
|
|
But I like the idea of a soundscape.
|
|
And this again is something that you don't have to be smart
|
|
to figure out.
|
|
It doesn't even have to be a story.
|
|
It's just could be, here's where I am, you know,
|
|
and here's what I'm doing.
|
|
Kevin, can you do the same question?
|
|
Well, yeah, there's a series going on right now.
|
|
Several people are involved in play testing and RPG game.
|
|
That's kind of an interesting thing.
|
|
And I'll mention one of my own.
|
|
I did a series and it's ongoing about taking care of your health.
|
|
You know, I have a few challenges.
|
|
I'm, you know, for instance, I'm diabetic.
|
|
So it's like, what, what things should you do to take care of yourself?
|
|
Because I think a lot of, a lot of us geeks may have a unhealthy lifestyle
|
|
if we're not paying attention.
|
|
Well, heck yes.
|
|
I'm sure.
|
|
I'm sure.
|
|
I mean, before I discovered low carb eating, I was definitely like a traditional hacker
|
|
right round round was my shape.
|
|
Really the only shape I had.
|
|
Well, you know, now that inspires me, it's like not that I want to be even more
|
|
hours a week in front of a microphone.
|
|
I don't mind it.
|
|
But maybe I could submit a series on what low carb eating is all about.
|
|
So that would be sort of fun.
|
|
You didn't have to listen to the show to contribute.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Well, but I might have to subscribe to the show finally and then kind of see
|
|
what the tone of the thing is, what about length?
|
|
What, what, what's your target for length and what's your short and long things?
|
|
Short to show has been three minutes.
|
|
Long show has been three more like eight, nine hours.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
We could about the 26 hour show.
|
|
Well, the tricks 20 new year shows, 26 hours, but then there's the after show
|
|
and the pre show.
|
|
So sometimes it goes up to 32 or 48 hours.
|
|
So it's, that's the freedom of podcasting.
|
|
And that's, you know, in the chaos when podcasting started, there was no
|
|
restrictions.
|
|
So you weren't restricted to 30 minutes slot.
|
|
But yeah, if, if you can say it in five minutes, say it in five minutes.
|
|
So the sweet swatch is about half an hour for most people.
|
|
15 minutes to half an hour, but you're not restricted.
|
|
We don't care.
|
|
But how does, how does diet fit into hacker is, is it, what, what's the scope of
|
|
this show?
|
|
This is if it's of interest to hackers, that is the, that is the requirement
|
|
for to get a show on, which by definition means the person recording is now
|
|
leasing off to be called themselves a hacker because they're on hacker
|
|
public radio.
|
|
So that's one down.
|
|
So to make a plural, you need to find somebody else who's interested in the
|
|
show and myself and the, the other people who contribute will always find
|
|
something interesting in the three thousand five hundred and twenty one
|
|
shows I had yet to find something that wasn't of interest or new or, or, or
|
|
led me smile or made me cry in one of those shows.
|
|
So go first.
|
|
And, and you ever get the time to aim at like 15 to 20 minutes works?
|
|
Well, I share the, the sentiment Randall that you brought up earlier about
|
|
shows that just go on and on and on.
|
|
And it seems like a lot of podcasts these days have decided, you know, our,
|
|
our fans are so desperate for content.
|
|
We have to record a three hour show and I don't like that.
|
|
And I have unsubscribe from podcast because just okay, it's just going on too
|
|
long. I got things to do with my life.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And it makes sense of that the shows that go on and on that repeat things.
|
|
I've already read in my RSS feeds are, are really useless to me.
|
|
So it's, it's, that's mostly why I've unsubscribe from a lot of shows that I had
|
|
been listening to religiously early on.
|
|
And it's also why I make sure that, uh,
|
|
floss weekly has unique content, uh, and not just unique content, but we keep it
|
|
down to an hour.
|
|
We're, we're very, very interested in making sure that we don't, uh, even if,
|
|
even if the story to fully tell would be two hours, we still just do the first
|
|
hour of it, uh, in, in a newspaper sort of way.
|
|
Just because we don't, I don't want to bore my audience.
|
|
I don't want to, I don't want to tell them things that they can find by googling,
|
|
you know, so it's, it's really important for me to keep floss weekly to be that kind
|
|
of shortness, um, uh, whisper to my ear, uh, how do you monetize?
|
|
Um, we don't, essentially, our hosting is provided the gratis free by Josh camp,
|
|
uh, nap, who is an honest host.com.
|
|
If I can put in there, he has, uh, provided us bandwidth.
|
|
We also, uh, do a lot of our, uh, files are stored on the internet archive.
|
|
Um, and so we recommend people contribute to Josh.
|
|
There's a, he has a discount code.
|
|
If you want to sign up for there, I can, I can testify to the, to the fact he's a host as well.
|
|
Obviously, um, and then the internet archive, we ask people if they have a few
|
|
shackles that they controlled there, um, what we've seen happen is that if we're going,
|
|
we tend to cover the, uh, hallway tracks of festivals and stuff.
|
|
So, um, if you're going to a festival, I've been to odd camp recently.
|
|
And, uh, met Dan and Simon.
|
|
And what we do is just record the, uh, the hallway track there and then
|
|
posted a shows on HPR.
|
|
So you'll have some of the odd camp ones coming up shortly.
|
|
And, you know, that came out of my pocket.
|
|
When I arrived there, all the stickers and stuff up to her, uh, several people on the table.
|
|
They had also all brought stickers and posters and banners.
|
|
So, you know, this stuff, even this, uh, coffee cup was contributed by, uh, by a host.
|
|
So it's, yeah, it's great.
|
|
Means I don't need to fill out forms or anything and keep shackling money.
|
|
It's awesome.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, very cool, very cool.
|
|
So we're almost out of time.
|
|
Uh, we do have a couple of questions from our chat room.
|
|
Plutonium Shore asks, um, is it audio only?
|
|
Yes, but, uh, if you want to, uh, submit a video, uh, along with it, that's,
|
|
that's, if you're posting the video on YouTube or somewhere else, then that's absolutely fine.
|
|
But, uh, focus mostly on the audio.
|
|
So one of the things I've discovered about, uh, having a video channel, which is, uh,
|
|
this show goes out in both video and audio forms, is that people will tend to then, like,
|
|
hold up things or talk about something on the screen.
|
|
And I say, look, remember that most of our audience is audio only.
|
|
You need to, you need to describe what you're holding or like that.
|
|
This is the first time I've seen this show.
|
|
Yes, listen to it.
|
|
Tons.
|
|
That's true, actually.
|
|
Yeah, definitely.
|
|
Uh, so that's something to be concerned about is if, uh, your guest doesn't know that, uh,
|
|
most of the people that are, are listening to the show, uh, uh, most of the people are listening
|
|
to the show.
|
|
I should have put the right pronunciation on that sentence.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Most of the people are listening to the show, right?
|
|
Um, so, um, we're almost out of time.
|
|
Is there anything we didn't cover that you want to make sure our audience is aware of?
|
|
But they sent me a long list of questions.
|
|
I don't think we got to most of those.
|
|
Um, no, I think we, uh, we cover these questions.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
And so people can find you at hackerpublicradio.org.
|
|
And they can subscribe.
|
|
Is that where the RSS feed is as well?
|
|
It's on somewhere on that.
|
|
I get chills and you can pick the RSS feed.
|
|
Um, but if that's blocked for any reason, you can also go to hubbypublicradio.org.
|
|
Hubby?
|
|
Hubby has in hubby.
|
|
Oh, hubby.
|
|
Oh, that's nice.
|
|
Oh, there's the question I wanted to ask.
|
|
So I get some grief occasionally because I have called myself just another pearl hacker.
|
|
Is the word hacker in your show title ever been grief for you?
|
|
Yes, uh, the word hacker and radio has caused us problems.
|
|
Um, I've, I've had where I wanted to do an interview with, with, uh, people and they refuse
|
|
to go on because of the word hacker.
|
|
Um, but then we have the exact same size with the word hacker replaced with a hobbyist.
|
|
Um, that becomes hubbypublic radio.
|
|
So if ever you're blocked and firewalls or anything in your work,
|
|
first can email us so that I know about that and I can contact the,
|
|
the team who are blocking it to say this is an educational channel.
|
|
But it's a lot less now than it was back in the day.
|
|
And, and if you ever had, uh, uh, RMS on your show,
|
|
we have twice.
|
|
Yes, once for an interview and, uh, I recorded them at one stage.
|
|
We haven't had Linus yet.
|
|
Yes, yes, and, and did, uh, did Richard require you to say,
|
|
you know, Linux?
|
|
Um, I don't think that was an issue, uh, Richard has his requirements for, uh, interviews and the
|
|
host at the time to care that, that they were all followed.
|
|
Yes, yes, I, because I thought about having none in this show, but I, I, I can't come around
|
|
to saying GNU Linux, especially because, uh, Linus is a friend of mine.
|
|
I play pool with him occasionally.
|
|
So, uh, I don't want to say GNU in front of that.
|
|
In fact, where was I?
|
|
I was on, I was on one of my cruises and he was one of the guests on the cruise.
|
|
And I went up to him and I said, do you object to GNU Linux?
|
|
And he grabbed me and put me in a chokehold.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
So, yes, I, I know front, he won't say that in public, but now it's on this recording.
|
|
So it's going to be official from now on.
|
|
Yeah, okay.
|
|
So, uh, anything else we didn't cover that you want to make sure we get covered?
|
|
Either be.
|
|
No, um, anybody who's listening to this who thinks that they would like to be a, um,
|
|
podcaster or, or then record something, press the upload button.
|
|
And if you're subscribing to HPR, don't be afraid to press the lease on the show.
|
|
If you don't like it, there are lots of shows there.
|
|
Sounds like it.
|
|
Easy yourself in.
|
|
Easy yourself in.
|
|
And if you are going back listening to all the shows, please help out with the tags
|
|
and making sure the stuff is up today at fixing links and that sort of thing.
|
|
I just want to mention in terms of, uh, equipment, you don't need, uh, a studio like
|
|
Twitter has or fancy equipment or anything.
|
|
I have done very successful shows with a Sansa Clip Plus just clipped onto my collar.
|
|
And set to record and then I just talk.
|
|
You know, I was, I was actually just going to ask, uh, can I just take my iPhone
|
|
or if you had an Android phone with a microphone?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Would that be, could I just talk into that?
|
|
Yeah, if it's a creative, uh, 15 minute show, no editing, just do a live stream for 15 minutes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
If it's audible.
|
|
Yes, right.
|
|
As long as we can understand what you're saying, that's it.
|
|
It won't end up being live in the sense that whatever you record becomes a file that then gets
|
|
sent out on the RSS feed.
|
|
Right, right.
|
|
Uh, Oh, Aaron has one more question.
|
|
Go ahead, Aaron.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
If you don't mind me, I was just kind of curious too, uh, in the same vein.
|
|
I mean, what about archive material?
|
|
Um, I know that a lot of times things, things that are relevant in, you know,
|
|
like right now are, are, are interesting to listen to, but I know I've got some recordings.
|
|
For example, I was thinking of my recording with, um, Doug McElroy, who was, uh, you know,
|
|
a manager at AT&T over Dennis Richie and Ken Thompson when they were creating Unix, for example,
|
|
I've got a recording of him at Ohio Linux Fest, uh, that in perpetuity, I think would be interesting.
|
|
So is that okay?
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
We have a general, um, we do like contents created for HPR balls.
|
|
If, uh, sorry, general guideline is if you have, if you want to promote your own podcast,
|
|
we'll take an example episode and put that on and say, hey, there's a new podcast out and about.
|
|
Here are all the RSS feeds for that.
|
|
But if you've got, uh, interviews and stuff like that that, that happen to be published anywhere,
|
|
or that you want to make them available, um, outside the feed, then, yeah, that's, that should be fine.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
And how much of a backlog do you have?
|
|
Um, I, I have eight shows currently scheduled, which makes me pleased to no end.
|
|
Makes sense.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
That's one that we normally have.
|
|
Uh, one, what, what kind of backlog do you have?
|
|
So we have about, uh, 28 chills in the queue at the minute, but that can change.
|
|
Whoa.
|
|
We, we, we suffer from the leaky book at, um, syndrome.
|
|
And you have to remember that HPR is very long term.
|
|
So the first time I got feedback at any show was six years after I recorded it.
|
|
And the feedback was, oh, Ubuntu does work like that anymore.
|
|
And I go, yeah, that's because they fixed it in the six years since you listened to the podcast.
|
|
Well, it's like, I like to say that Floss Weekly is not a news show.
|
|
It's a, it's a mega second shows where we, we, we have, uh, timeless content and people are
|
|
still downloading some of our early, uh, uh, a backlog.
|
|
And we refer to our back catalog just because it's the kinds of things that aren't, um,
|
|
you know, aren't like this month or the, uh, I love it when I get a press release from, uh,
|
|
one of the press eight companies that says, uh, we have an embargo till next Friday.
|
|
And I go, fine, I don't care.
|
|
This thing won't even find my show feed until like 12 weeks from now.
|
|
So I don't care.
|
|
So yeah, it's pretty funny.
|
|
Um, uh, so that's, that's really good.
|
|
Okay, two final questions for both of you, um, because if I don't ask them,
|
|
my audience will yell at me, what's your favorite programming language?
|
|
And what is your favorite text editor?
|
|
We'll start with, uh, Kevin.
|
|
Well, uh, I am actually not a programmer.
|
|
So the closest I can come for a programming language would probably be, uh, java script.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Or I was going to say cobalt because it's like English, uh, yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No, it's, uh, I was a IT project manager, uh, so I had programmers working for me, but,
|
|
you know, uh, I, man's got to know his limitations as Clint Eastwood famously said, uh, for my text
|
|
editor, uh, the one I use more than anything is Kate because I like KDE and it comes with it.
|
|
Ah, I don't know that one because I don't have an X desktop.
|
|
So I have no idea what these things are that you guys talk about, but that's fine. Uh, same
|
|
two questions can, uh, on any given day, it will either be bash, pearl or python.
|
|
You said pearl though.
|
|
You said pearl.
|
|
Yeah, I've been pearl in there.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
I love hanging out with the pearl people over us, uh, fuss, fuss them.
|
|
So nice people over there.
|
|
And, and your text editor, uh, case as well.
|
|
Yeah, kitty.
|
|
All right, all right, Kate.
|
|
All right.
|
|
Well, hey, guys, it's been wonderful having you on.
|
|
I may actually have to subscribe with this.
|
|
Although, again, I have limited hours in the day, and if this income's out five days a week,
|
|
I think that might be a little more than I can handle in my days.
|
|
But we'll see, I'll, I'll give it a run, um, and I may even submit some little things about, uh,
|
|
low carb eating because I'm very excited about that for the seven years that I've been doing it.
|
|
And, uh, uh, it is apropos to the hacker culture.
|
|
Because it makes hackers, uh, less round.
|
|
That's always getting more healthy, more healthy is a good thing.
|
|
It's not just about being less round, it's about being more healthy.
|
|
Uh, um, um, okay.
|
|
Well, then I guess we're ready to say, uh, thank you all for being on the show, Kevin and Ken.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Thank you very much for having us.
|
|
Thanks.
|
|
Appreciate it.
|
|
All right.
|
|
That was, uh, Kevin O'Brien and Ken Valin talking to us about hacker public radio,
|
|
which you should definitely check out hackerpublicradio.org.
|
|
What did you think there, Aaron?
|
|
Oh, it's great to talk to those guys.
|
|
Uh, I remember meeting Kevin at Ohio Linux Fest a number of years ago, um, when I,
|
|
when I used to live in Ohio and would go up there and do my show, uh, the source from up there
|
|
and interview folks and stuff, it was great.
|
|
Um, no, I think it's really important.
|
|
And, uh, uh, to have an outlet, I mean, similar to floss weekly, but, um,
|
|
an outlet for people that want to create content that maybe is a little bit out of the
|
|
mainstream or wouldn't necessarily have a place to live otherwise.
|
|
And, and, and I love what Ken said early on about.
|
|
And they both said this as, as we were talking about, encouraging people, just, you know,
|
|
pick up a microphone or even a phone, uh, and just start recording and submit that because
|
|
people, you're, you're sharing information with the broader community.
|
|
And anytime you do that, it's worthwhile.
|
|
So, um, you know, I love that they have that as their mantra.
|
|
It's not about necessarily making tons of money or, um, you know, gaining popularity
|
|
and all that kind of stuff, right?
|
|
It's about sharing knowledge and providing a platform where people can talk about these
|
|
things that we all enjoy talking about and, uh, learning something new.
|
|
So I mean, I, I think it's great.
|
|
Um, glad we were able to have them on because it's always nice to talk to, to
|
|
fellow podcasters anyway, right?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, certainly we know some of the issues they face.
|
|
So it's great to ask about those issues because it's like, uh, you know, here I am weak
|
|
by weak, producing this show.
|
|
And there are a lot of things that I have to worry about, including, as I just mentioned
|
|
at the end of the show, it's like I like to have, you know, some, some, some shows in the queue
|
|
because otherwise, I'm like, hey, what do we do?
|
|
So yeah, um, and so it's, it's, it's, it's, it's very nice to, uh, uh, and do that.
|
|
And I'm thinking, you know, I'm thinking like about every three weeks, I could have
|
|
published something to, um, the, the subreddit today I learned.
|
|
And because it's like, you come up with you, you go, oh, this combination of these,
|
|
these things, and it's generally for me, it's about hacker things.
|
|
It's about some sort of, you know, computational thing that I, uh, I didn't know before.
|
|
And I'm not thinking I could just grab a mic on my phone even because it doesn't have to be
|
|
the fancy, uh, uh, getting in other than speaking into now, but it just be a, you know, grab,
|
|
grab my phone and, and read that into the phone.
|
|
And I would have a show that I could submit to them.
|
|
And, and so I'm, I'm like, okay, well, this sounds kind of cool.
|
|
I like I said, I may have to subscribe to this now.
|
|
Yeah, for sure, yeah, I, I, I'm sorry, bad hit off.
|
|
Oh, yeah, that's okay.
|
|
I know I've come through the archives, uh, several, several times to find something, uh,
|
|
or something has come up where I've wanted to listen to it.
|
|
Or like I say, I mean, just, you know, for, for those of us that have been
|
|
in podcasting while just, especially in the open source community,
|
|
just kind of going through and seeing the contributors is kind of interesting, uh, to see who's,
|
|
who's contributed over time and, uh, kind of brings back memories at this point, you know,
|
|
it's hard to believe that they've been going for this long.
|
|
So kudos to them.
|
|
Yeah, and there's no way I'm listening to the entire back catalog.
|
|
Of course, I've got to say that I bet floss weekly's back catalog because this is show
|
|
553, I think it is, um, if you listen to all 500 hours, would be quite a ways.
|
|
Um, so, uh, I'm proud of that.
|
|
I'm proud of having been involved with almost all of it except for the first 17 shows.
|
|
Um, but, uh, it's been interesting.
|
|
It's definitely been interesting.
|
|
I keep enjoying doing this show.
|
|
I can see why these guys have the motivation to keep moving forward, uh, just because
|
|
it, it's wonderful to be able to share information with an audience, to be able to, uh,
|
|
hopefully believe at least that you're changing, transforming somehow the way that they're
|
|
doing interactions with, um, whatever they're interacting with being hackers.
|
|
So, uh, very cool.
|
|
So, uh, we're almost out of time.
|
|
So, let me go through the upcoming list, which is longer and longer every week, which is great.
|
|
Um, next week is Hot Rock, which is, uh, described itself as, uh, Hot Rock seeks to address the
|
|
challenge of transforming raw logs, alerts, and time series data, you know, real intelligence without
|
|
the traditional limitations of scale, extensibility, or high costs.
|
|
It sounds like fun.
|
|
And in fact, simply maybe even that, uh, zipper creator can use my primary client.
|
|
Uh, Kong is coming back.
|
|
It's an ex-generation API platform for multi-cloud and hybrid organizations.
|
|
And then I'm guessing it's a French word, Shesmois, CHZ, MOI.
|
|
I bet that's a pronounced French-like.
|
|
It helps you manage your personal configuration files and dot files across multiple machines.
|
|
LS Quick, which is light speed quick to UIC library.
|
|
It's an open source implementation of Quick and HTTP 3 functionality for servers and clients.
|
|
XWiki is, uh, see, first-generation wikis are used to collaborate on content,
|
|
second-generation wikis, uh, can be used to create collaborative web applications.
|
|
XWiki can be used as either first-generation wiki or second-generation one.
|
|
Um, and, uh, YugaBite, which is a huge, uh, cluster distributed database, uh,
|
|
with global scale, which was fun.
|
|
I said last week that there were a Postgres database.
|
|
That's actually coming soon.
|
|
They're actually now, uh, uh, looking at, uh, other protocols.
|
|
First, uh, RolaStream, I said it wrong again.
|
|
RolaStime is a virtual tabletop software.
|
|
It helps you manage your tabletop role-playing games with remote friends and players,
|
|
provides many features to share maps, pictures, and it also includes tools to communicate
|
|
with other friends and players.
|
|
Uh, just added to the schedule is Titan.
|
|
Titan makes it easy to run your favorite database in a darker container on your laptop,
|
|
but with the power of versioning the underlying data.
|
|
Think of it as, um, get for data.
|
|
That sounds really fun.
|
|
Uh, just kind of, uh, uh, uh, to find out all the upcoming guests as we add them,
|
|
go to Twitter, TV slash floss, which is the homepage for this show.
|
|
If you have any other suggestions, please tell the project leader or community coordinator
|
|
to email me, Merlin at stunhinge.com, uh, that email address is on that page.
|
|
So I get plenty of spam.
|
|
Don't worry about it.
|
|
I've had the same email address since the mid 90s, so I get plenty of spam.
|
|
We have a live stream at 9.30 a.m. Pacific time on Wednesdays at live.twit.tv.
|
|
Keep in mind that that, uh, delayed saving time changes with the U.S. time.
|
|
So even though Europe already moved and, uh, Mexico already moved and a bunch of
|
|
the rest of the world already moved, we don't change until this weekend, I think it is coming up.
|
|
Um, we have, uh, follow us at at floss weekly on Twitter.
|
|
We can follow me at at Merlin, M-E-R-L-Y-N on Twitter.
|
|
Uh, you can join us at the forum at twitch.community.
|
|
That's the domain name, twitch.community.
|
|
I was just at the Google developer expert, GDE, Worldwide Summit,
|
|
met 300 of my fellow GDEs and about 100 Googlers there.
|
|
Found out some really cool stuff that I can't talk about because we're under an NDA,
|
|
but it was wonderful.
|
|
And I tell you there's some amazing stuff coming up on Flutter, on Google Maps,
|
|
on, um, uh, machine learning, but you're really cool stuff coming up.
|
|
And that's all I'm allowed to say.
|
|
So that's it for that.
|
|
I have nothing else I have on my short-term radar.
|
|
Uh, Aaron, you got things to plug?
|
|
Uh, yeah, there's a couple of quick things.
|
|
So there's some big cloud conferences coming up, uh, which I will be attending for my work,
|
|
which is App Dynamics.
|
|
Thank you App Dynamics for letting me have a few hours this morning to do floss weekly.
|
|
Um, so there's a Microsoft Ignite in Orlando, which is like next week, I think, and uh,
|
|
so I'll be there all week, uh, for work.
|
|
But if you want to reach out and say hi or whatever, uh, you know, either hit me up on Twitter
|
|
or something, I'll try to, I'm going to be on, I'm going to be really busy talking to customers
|
|
in, in the booth and doing all kinds of things, but, um, happy to meet people there.
|
|
And then also, similarly with AWS reinvent in December, uh, I'll be there as well.
|
|
So if you're going to be at one of those conferences and you want to just say hi or, uh, whatever,
|
|
uh, let me know.
|
|
I'll try to try to make time to meet you somewhere, um, on the show floor.
|
|
Um, and, uh, you know, Christmas is just around the corner or whatever holiday you celebrate.
|
|
Um, so you can also, uh, pick up my book, Linux for makers, uh, wherever,
|
|
better books or sold or something like that.
|
|
Um, and last but not least, you know, there are a lot of fires around.
|
|
I just want to say, uh, in California here, uh, we're kind of going through it right now,
|
|
fire season. So, uh, I just want to say we're, we're thinking about all those
|
|
folks that are struggling right now, either being evacuated or without power.
|
|
Uh, it's tough around here, but, uh, uh, in fact, even this show was kind of in the air,
|
|
whether there'd be power to do the show.
|
|
So I just want to say, you know, you kind of been wrapping up that, uh, uh, uh, you know,
|
|
I hope, I wish everyone the best as, uh, as they're struggling with the fire season here,
|
|
which has been pretty bad this year.
|
|
Yeah, something like 200,000 people are now under forced evacuation.
|
|
And that's, that's huge. I don't know how that compares with last year's Paradise Fire Fire,
|
|
but still it's like, wow. Um, I, I can't imagine that. Uh, I love the fact that like the Airbnb
|
|
hosts are opening up their homes to, um, to people giving priority to, uh, to the people
|
|
that are displaced. So I'm, I'm really happy for that. Um, and then people want to get rid of
|
|
Airbnb that's so silly. Anyway, um, Aaron, thanks for, um, I'm gonna be coughing. Um, Aaron,
|
|
thanks for coming on today's show at sort of the last minute, I think actually, but you said,
|
|
yes, and therefore you're on. So, um, thanks for, uh, uh, being a fellow podcast,
|
|
you're able to ask questions of other fellow podcasters. Yeah, no, it's great that we've all kind
|
|
of everyone on the show today has been doing this basically since the same time frame, you know,
|
|
uh, so it's kind of, it's kind of like a reunion of sorts. So glad to be here.
|
|
In a sense. Yeah, it's definitely cool. Um, cool. And, uh, um, and, and I, I, I second,
|
|
what you were saying about the, the, the fires. So it's tough. This, this, this is, uh, I don't know
|
|
why the fires are bigger now. And, uh, as one of my co-workers said, uh, a couple days ago,
|
|
in one of the chat rooms, he said, uh, uh, well, they said, I have no idea what it was here. She, um,
|
|
said, uh, uh, we're, we're not looking forward to the first big rain because
|
|
generally what happens to fire is it burns out all of the stuff that slows the stuff coming down
|
|
the hill. And we're going to get mudslides that are going to be insane. Um, you know, especially
|
|
now this year, the, the fires are coming down, uh, the 405 almost all the way to, um, my co-workers
|
|
in, in Santa Monica. I mean, they're, they're feeling the smoke. They're, um, you know,
|
|
they're seeing it right out the front window. You know, it's, it's like, uh, I, I've got to be
|
|
there in three weeks for all hands, uh, yearly, uh, semi annually, semi annual meeting.
|
|
And I'm like, wow. So, uh, I hope that I'll get sorted out by then because, uh,
|
|
yeah, let's hope so. Be in the middle of fire and, uh, go ahead. One more thing I forgot
|
|
to plug, which is I just saw on the chat that Ohio Linux Fest, which we mentioned a couple of times,
|
|
is actually this coming weekend. Uh, I think it's still in Columbus. So if you live in Ohio,
|
|
if you're around, we should give them a plug. Uh, it's a great conference, uh, lots of great speakers.
|
|
Uh, so if you're, if you're interested in open source or, or Linux, which you must be, if you're
|
|
listening to the show, uh, go check out Ohio Linux Fest in, uh, Columbus this weekend. I'm sure
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you can sign up and get it. Uh, well, and also I, I think it's a, it's a relatively cheap conference,
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which is a nice thing. Yeah. And although I haven't paid for a conference in a year or so,
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I have no idea what anything costs anymore. Um, but, uh, I, I think I've been there twice,
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maybe three times twice, at least twice. So yeah, and it was an excellent conference. Uh, it was
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originally sort of, uh, co, uh, sponsored, not sponsored, but like, uh, co organized by
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people to do scale. So that was kind of nice to see that go across. Anyway, hey, we're out of time.
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Gotta go. Uh, we'll see you all again next week on floss weekly.
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