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442 lines
18 KiB
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442 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4109
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Title: HPR4109: The future of HPR
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4109/hpr4109.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 19:42:31
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4109 for Thursday 2 May 2024.
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Today's show is entitled The Future of HPR.
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It is hosted by Nightwise and is about 25 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Nightwise talks about the sum of the changes HPR could embrace to become
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future proof.
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Hey there, Hacker Public Radio.
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This is Nightwise from the Nightwise.com podcast checking in.
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I was doing a show quite a while ago.
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Here it is.
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I'm going to walk and I'm going to take you through a beautiful forest at 7 a.m.
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In the morning, I decided to pack up my things and go for a little stroll.
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A little morning hike in the fields and the woods behind my house, behind where I live.
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So judging by the bird song, you'll probably know that you can hear I'm closer to the wood.
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So I'm going to take you on a little stroll through the vineyard's forest, the Veingardbus,
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which is a forest located on a hill behind my house.
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And as the name says, it used to be a vineyard for the east of Belgium, which is pretty high up north from France,
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which is a vineyard country.
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That's rare, but there used to be vineyards here.
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And one of the reasons this was during the Polians' time,
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that production of wine on this hillside shut down,
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was because of a meteor strike that occurred somewhere around 1800s,
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and that triggered a fairly long set of longer winters.
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They said there was snow up until May, and this for two or three consecutive years in a row,
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which of course decimated the local vineyard, the local wine production, and they turned it into a forest.
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That was 200 years ago today, and I wanted to talk about not the past, but the future of HPR.
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I've been an IT for about 25 years.
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In the last five years, I've kind of specialized in digital communications.
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I've my own company, and we help entrepreneurs, small businesses, get their voice heard online,
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so they can via their website, newsletter, social media advertising, draw customers towards their shop.
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And every day, I sit across the table of entrepreneurs, and I ask the same questions,
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because those questions prompt answers that entices strategy.
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What do you do? What does your customer want?
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Or who's your customer? What does he want?
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What's your customer's problem? How do you solve that problem? And what is the end result?
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Those questions, those four questions, are basically the cornerstone of every marketing strategy.
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And I hear you say, marketing, well, everything's marketing.
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As Seth Godin says, everything's marketing.
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If you want to change the world, if you want to convince people of something, you need to do marketing.
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And might sound like a dirty word to some, but it is.
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You're trying to convince people of an idea.
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In order to do that, we have to market that idea.
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So let's take those questions and put them in light of the recent discussion in the beginning of the year,
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around the future of HPR.
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We're dipping into Reserve, we were dipping into the Reserve Q, as we are now.
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And the question came up, does this project need to continue?
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That's a good question.
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Ken was very honest in supposing that, because if not, then after X,
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amount of shows, we see the project come to an end.
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So there was some discussion going back and forth about, you know, what does HPR need?
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So in order to put that discussion into a different light,
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I'll shine my digital marketing torch on it and pose those questions to you, the community.
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So let's start out by question number one. What do we do?
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What's our product?
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Our product is a list of podcasts, speaking about the use of technology.
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It's a niche podcast about niche topics, but mostly it's centered around free and open source software,
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or at least talking about alternatives to the main closed corporate platforms,
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internets that are out there.
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Okay, good.
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Who's our customer? Who's our audience?
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Well, we have two.
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One of them is, one part of our audience is the geeks.
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The geeks are into these things who are, you know,
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took them around with a raspberry pie and, you know, making their own board game
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and thinking up creative stuff, creative ways to use technology.
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Those are, you know, one part of our audience.
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They're the ones that are into the scene,
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and that might also want to contribute to the show by recording one.
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But there is another audience that we need to reach,
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which is the people that don't know about all of this stuff,
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that don't know how to set up a raspberry pie or stuck on their iPad,
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and don't know that there's a whole new world out there of open source software.
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Then the question is, what does your audience want?
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What does our audience want?
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Well, the contributors or the ones that we try to let contribute.
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Well, they want to find like-minded souls to share ideas
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and find people that are just into just the same geeky things that they are
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and stuff like that.
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So they want to find a sense of connection, a sense of community.
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The other audience, well, maybe they just want to discover about
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all of this alternative technology and approaches that are out there.
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We'll discover a new world that is not as commercial as the one that they're used to.
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There's not ruled by influencers, but by people who have inside and knowledge and passion
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about what they're talking about that are not into the views and the likes,
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but that are into a genuine sense of engagements and passion about technology.
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Okay.
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What's their problem?
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For the hosts, well, we need to bring them together.
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They have a niche interest and are looking for people who are like-minded.
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And it's hard to find.
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You can go to a million different websites, about a million different topics,
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but it's hard to find inspiration about niche technology.
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So you need niche channels where you can be inspired.
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And there are other audience.
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Well, people don't know that all of this exists.
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Well, they don't know all of this exists.
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They are inundated with the corporate internet.
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They are ushered into the big silos and think that,
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well, if software X doesn't let me do things, you can do things.
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I have to buy subscription XYZ.
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I have to get into cloud XYZ.
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There is no other way.
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How do we solve that?
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Well, we solve that.
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Well, for the community of nerds, well, we create just that community
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podcast that you can listen to and contribute to.
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And you can find engagement and connection with others.
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And that's the same thing for our audience that doesn't know
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that there is a free internet out there.
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We give them a podcast to listen to and to contribute to.
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Okay.
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What's the end result?
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Because at the end,
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the end result is what people buy.
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They don't buy your product or your services,
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or they don't even buy into your ideas.
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They buy the end result.
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And the end result is, well, for our hosts and skis,
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a community is sense of family, sense of togetherness,
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of belonging, of sharing ideas, of learning things, growing.
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And for the people that are still out there in the corporate internet,
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well, they find a new community they can join.
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They find an alternate use for technology.
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They also grow their knowledge and their insight.
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So that is, that is great.
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That is fine.
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But when we take a look at the way hacker public radio works right now,
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there are some answers,
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there are some questions out there posed by the people we are trying to reach
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that we are not answering.
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And there are some responses that we have that we don't give.
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We fail to complete the marketing question.
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I've tried to diplomatically scale or diplomatically mold my responses
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into something that doesn't upset people.
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But at some point it's time that we need to face the truth.
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To be very honest,
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we are old fashioned, stuck in our ways,
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and are so focused on the goal of insisting on technology
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and philosophy that we stand behind,
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that we fail to reach the audience of listeners and hosts we need
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in order to survive.
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We are becoming nostalgic dinosaurs.
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I'm sorry if it shocks you, but it's true.
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One, what does our audience want?
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A sense of community.
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They want to interact with each other.
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They want to find connections.
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And in a world of millions of social media platforms, chat applications,
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forums and what have you,
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what does hacker public radio have as an engine for community?
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Well, you can record a show.
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Great, but for many of those,
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that is still quite a big step to take.
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Okay, fine.
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And if you want to engage with that content, what do you do?
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Well, you have to come to the website and file a comment.
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Well, wow.
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That's nice.
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Our website has a little bit of an nostalgic feel about it.
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But judging by the number of comments that we get,
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it doesn't seem to be a very effective way of interacting.
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Or if you don't agree, you record a response.
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How many responses statistically are we getting?
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Also, big step.
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We want to draw in other people to engage
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with those new alternate views of technology that we have.
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People who are not part of it, not in the fold yet.
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So where do they go?
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Well, we are on some of the social media platforms, but not actively.
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But no, they can come to our website and listen to our show.
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We have, oh, yes, we haven't.
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Well, we have a poorly maintained,
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unofficial IRC channel over at IRC.liberer.net.
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Is that it?
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Yeah.
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Or chat, I'm not sure anymore.
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IRC, really, an outdated technology that you will have to explain
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to anyone who hasn't seen the moon landing live on TV.
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It's nostalgic, it's nice, but it's no longer relevant.
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If we really want to insist on using outdated technology,
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as nostalgic and free and open as it is, well, please,
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let's bring up our own BBS.
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It would be nice to teach the young kids how to use it.
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One of the things that I always say to my customers is,
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you need to go where your customer is.
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And that means that we need to go on the platforms
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where our new audience is.
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Why don't we have a discord?
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Well, because it's corporate.
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Well, I'm sorry, kids, but the world is corporate.
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And if you want to pull in corporate technology geeks
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that are stuck in corporate silos, well, go there and pull them out.
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But we just stand at the side of the road.
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And we go like, we don't like discord, it's corporate.
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It's part of the big silos.
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We got our IRC.
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You can come to us.
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They don't know what to consist.
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We need to bring them in.
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And for our own community, we also need to think beyond
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an IRC channel that is also filled with nice content,
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but very, very sparse.
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We stick to the old ways.
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And we see that there is no engagement there,
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but we refuse to change.
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As I said, we are in danger of becoming dinosaurs.
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Then, the other thing that we need to think about
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is the way we format things.
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I love the way Ken puts shows together.
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The automated way, it's fantastic.
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I'm recording this.
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I can send it in.
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It will have the little bumper added at the beginning of the end.
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And it's out there.
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And the quality might vary.
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You know, I record as I'm walking through the fields,
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you can hear the birds.
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You can hear me panting.
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I'm going on 50 as well.
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But it's great.
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And I love the fact that the quality is different every time.
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I love the fact that we are no radio style podcast
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with ads and predictable ways.
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I absolutely love that.
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But the way it is performed,
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the way it is presented,
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might need some polishing up.
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The opening tune,
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as iconic as it might be,
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it's old.
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It's, well, may not old,
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but it's slow.
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Take a look at the attention span that you have.
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You have an attention span online.
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When you want to reach a customer,
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when you want to reach the attention of a follower
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on a social media feed,
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and you have like an Instagram reel or a midi video
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or something like that,
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you have three seconds to get their attention.
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In the first three seconds,
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you have to engage them somehow.
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What do we have?
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We have a beautiful guitar intro that's less about 30 seconds.
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Keeps going.
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And it needs a little bit of more,
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it needs more pizzazz.
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I'm more than happy to help.
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I'm not a composer,
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but I am somebody who is looking for ways to commercialize,
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but at least make it easier to consume an episode.
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And for that, we need speed.
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It needs the intro needs a faster pace.
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The outro needs a faster pace.
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We need to get into the meat of the matter sooner.
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The same goes for the website design.
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Yes, I know it's a self-hosted,
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maybe self-made, completely free and open source website.
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It's beautiful for 1996.
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I'm sorry, I'm crude,
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I'm not the one maintaining it,
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I haven't been the one building it,
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and I'm not criticizing it,
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but I am stating it the way it is
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for the modern day times
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where we need to attract new people.
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Doesn't look very snappy, does it?
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The logo, you know,
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explain to a kid that this is a microphone.
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What's this? Why was this ovoid?
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Why is this a little crown?
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This is what a microphone used to be like in the 50s.
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Our entire image is one that is stale.
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I'm sorry, it is.
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I'm probably getting hate meal by the bunch for this,
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but it is.
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It's time that somebody takes a look at it.
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These are the things that we can fix.
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We can set up a discord
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and try to see if we can be more active
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on modern day social platforms
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where the young kids are.
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We can't,
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and even if they are corporate,
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we can polish up the intro,
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maybe revamp the website.
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We can,
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but there's one thing that we need to fix
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and that may be the most
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hard thing to fix of all.
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And that is our mentality.
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We have to be very, very aware of the fact
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that our alternative view
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of the way we look at technology,
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or we criticize the big platforms,
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or criticize,
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or at least are aware that they're alternatives,
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and, you know,
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the danger of putting our entire digital life
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in or ecosystems in the hands of four big companies,
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and that's a good thing.
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That will keep us from dystopia,
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turning into a Gibbons novel.
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But we have to be aware of the fact
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that not everybody thinks like we do,
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and the fact that they disagree
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means that we have to convince them
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and not lock them out.
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We still have the mentality,
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sometimes that I compare to
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the good old news,
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the news servers,
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all dot blah blah blah,
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where you would go on as a kid,
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and you would ask a little question,
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and then they would flame you
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because you didn't know how to use the command line.
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This kind of literism,
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you know what I mean?
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This kind of high mighty nerd,
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I know, but you don't.
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Attitude is no longer relevant.
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Take a look at the Linux scene
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that used to be command line all the way.
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Now we have more graphical user interfaces
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than is possible.
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And it is that that has helped Linux grow,
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not sitting in your corner and saying like,
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no, you don't do it the way we do,
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so you're not cool.
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We have to open up,
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we have to pull people who think different,
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and we have to pull them in,
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and we have to convince them.
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But right now,
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we are sitting in our little corner,
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talking amongst ourselves
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about the things that we believe in and agree on.
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And we don't go outside,
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we don't go to the other platforms,
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we don't go to other communities,
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we don't pull them in.
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Well, what is the end result?
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Just like the dinosaurs,
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we are literally dying out.
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We've lost a couple of hosts over the years,
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and I would like to do a poll
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on the average age of an HPR host,
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but I don't think that we have a lot of them
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in their 20s and below.
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So we have to be aware of that,
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that if we want to survive,
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we have to rejuvenate,
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and it's all good to be preachers,
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and it's all good to be missionaries,
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and it's all good to try to convince the internet
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that yes, there is an alternative way
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to approach technology
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that doesn't adhere to the corporate culture.
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And that's great.
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But in order to be a ministry,
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or in order to be a missionary,
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you have to leave the convent, okay?
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Right now, we're just, you know,
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furiously pounding the table,
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and talking about ourselves that this is the way,
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and we don't go outside,
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to convince people that it is,
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because they think differently,
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and we don't talk to them.
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And I say this before you gather the wood,
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set it a light,
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and decide to burn me alive on the stake.
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I say this with love.
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I've been an HPR listener since 2005.
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Since day one, this has been the show that I have been subscribed to,
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and that I have enjoyed listening to,
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because every day it was something different.
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I enjoyed 5150 shows about God knows what.
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I enjoyed Lord Drachem Blutz,
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God rest his soul shows.
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I enjoyed Kladu shows about, you know, Urban Camping,
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which, oh, wow!
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There is no other place on the planet
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I can get content like that,
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aside from HPR,
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and I love it.
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I want to have this little tap
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that I can open up that brings me content,
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that I don't know what I'm going to get,
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but it's going to be something new and something exciting
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and something I didn't know about,
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because it's not a door to commercialism,
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and it's not a door to the big platforms.
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It's about something different.
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And we are,
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this is valuable people,
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this is really, really valuable,
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and we need to find ways to sustain it.
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The power to do so is in our hands,
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and as I say to my clients,
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using the technology to get your message out is easy.
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But reconfiguring your mindset
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to push out the right message,
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to start talking about what your customer,
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what your audience wants,
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to go to the places your audience is,
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and convincing them and pulling them in,
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is sometimes more of a mindset change.
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That's the hardest one to make.
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But if you can,
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if you can get up from behind your counter,
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and go outside and take a look at your shop,
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through the eyes of your customers,
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and tell it as if it were their story,
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from their point of view,
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you will have success.
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I am more than happy to help.
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I am more than happy to do what I can do,
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but I do hope that HPR survives.
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And for that, our mindset is the first thing that has to change.
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Godspeed to us.
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Nightwise out.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
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at Hacker Public Radio.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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click on our contribute link to find out how easy it means.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by
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an honesthost.com,
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the internet archive, and our sings.net.
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On the Saldois stages, today's show is released
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under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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