Hi Erich,

Thank you for the update. Here are some recommended topics and interviews you could consider for the podcast.

Richard Brown for openSUSE, openQA and Kubic

Ludwig Nussel for Leap 15

Dominique Leuenberger for Tumbleweed, GNOME Next and VLC

Andrew Wafaa and Andreas Faber about openSUSE on ARM / openSUSE Embedded

Andrew Wafaa for Travel Support Program

Yan Sun for openSUSE Asia

Yan Sun, Ana Maria Martinez, Stella Rouzi and Sarah Julia Kriesch for women in openSUSE and women in open source

Ancor for Jangouts and YaST

Douglas DeMaio for Getting Started with Linux magazine, project outreach and openSUSE Beer

Axel Braun about GNU Health on openSUSE

Christian Bruckmayer and Ana Maria Martinez about Open Build Service

Christian Bruckmayerand Stella Rouz on Open Source Event Manager osem.io

Sean Rickerd for SUSE band

Kai Wagner for openattic

Markus Feilner for openSUSE Documentation

Antonio Larrosa and Luca Beltrame for KDE and KDE Spain

Cornelius Schumacher for Hackweek

Robert Schweikert for openSUSE Cloud images

Michal Hrušecký for Turris Omnia with openSUSE Kernel

Sven Seeberg about raspberry pi cluster with openSUSE


I'm sure there are more that we could come up with, but that's the ones I could think about at the moment.

v/r

Doug


On 11/12/2017 05:24 AM, Erich Eickmeyer wrote:
Hi everyone!

I just wanted to give a progress update and some goals I have in mind for
getting this started.

First, it's going to be an audio-only podcast, though I may just livestream it
on Twitch or something, and perhaps have an official chatroom whether that be my
personal channel on Twitch or a special one I could make on Freenode.

Second, my goal for the first episode is the first week in December. Not exactly
a lofty goal because, in the past week, I have been prepping my machine to be
a podcast recording studio, complete with open source tools such as Jack,
Ardour, Calf, and more. This might even be the topic for the first week:
turning your openSUSE install into a podcast studio. Before that, I hope to
launch a pilot episode for you all to hear, just as an example.  Everything is
set to go (even theme music), with a few exceptions.

So, the one thing I need is a name for it. "openSUSE Podcast" seems pretty
obvious, but if anyone has any creative suggestions in mind, I'm all ears.

I also welcome input for topic and interview suggestions.

That's what I've got for now. Stay tuned, and your input is welcome.  :)

Erich

On Tuesday, November 7, 2017 4:29:38 AM PST Simon wrote:
Hi Erich,


I really like your idea. If you need some help I would step up :).


Regards, Simon

Am 03.11.2017 um 22:04 schrieb Erich Eickmeyer:
Hi Doug,

Storyboarding isn’t really what is generally needed in a podcast. However,
as with any podcast, it requires content gathering, booking guests, and
coming up with general topics. Here’s kind of what I envision:

This podcast would be a Linux podcast with an (open)SUSE-first slant.
Meaning, it would cover all topics in Linux news in general, but the
headline would always be something from openSUSE and/or SUSE. It would be
weekly or semi-weekly, depending on overall time to commit.

I envision the following segment format:
- Intro, including “what have you been up to?” for the hosts to answer.
- News from around the Linux community with discussion, with openSUSE and
SUSE news first and headlining. - Main topic or interview, hopefully
centered around (open)SUSE
- Emails & Feedback
- END

That’s what I’ve come up with so far. As far as a launch date, it all
depends on what we come up with here.

Erich

On Nov 3, 2017, at 4:35 AM, ddemaio <ddem...@suse.de> wrote:

Hi Erich,
I think this sounds like a great idea. Did you need any help story
boarding or anything of the nature. Let me know. I will help out where I
can. v/r
Doug

On 2017-11-03 06:22, Erich Eickmeyer wrote:
Hello all,
I just did a Google search looking for a potential openSUSE podcast
and came across an old thread on this list with various people
interested in starting one up. Unfortunately, nothing ever came from
that, with the exception of, at the beginning of this year, Bryan
Lunduke had started SUSE Open Audio… which never, as far as I can see,
got past two episodes. Not sure what the reasons for that, but from
what I know of Bryan is he is a very busy man.
I’ve been looking for a Linux project to get involved in lately. My
first attempt has been to revive Edubuntu, the education flavor of
Ubuntu. Unfortunately, I have received no response from my contacts at
Ubuntu/Canonical (I helped in the early days of getting Ubuntu MATE
started), and it seems as if the project is being stonewalled in an
effort to let it be discontinued. My reason for this was because my
son just entered Kindergarten and I wanted to be able to provide him
with an operating system tailored to his needs. He has shown an
interest in Linux and has a plush Geeko he regularly cuddles with
(which should have been my first indication to go with openSUSE). I
intend to set him up with the openSUSE Li-FE project when I can get a
small computer (read: Netbook or the like) for him.
That said, with my media production background, podcasts or something
of the like seem to be projects within my wheelhouse. I’m a former
producer with Jupiter Broadcasting and even appeared in an episode or
two of the Linux Action Show, long after Bryan left, and I used to
regularly contribute to Linux Unplugged. After taking a couple years
off, I’ve been a part of the Linux Unplugged “Virtual LUG” when time
has allowed. My day job is as a production director (video editor,
audio engineer, and lighting tech rolled into one) at a church in
Seattle. I could go on and even drop a few names, but that might not
be relevant at this time.
I would not be opposed to leading the efforts to revive a podcast for
openSUSE, or even being a host. I know there are tons of people within
the community who would make excellent hosts, contributors, or
cohosts. Two seems to be a magic number many podcasts use for number
of hosts, but I’ve also seen large successes with three hosts. Single
host podcasts tend to get boring as there’s no color or conversation
to bounce around.
Anyhow, if this seems like a good idea, then let me know. It sure
would be “a lot of fun.”
Erich Eickmeyer--
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