I was recently interviewed on both The Linux Outlaws and The Command Line podcasts. While the interviews are general coverage of my life so far, I did manage to sneak a bit of Smalltalk and Seaside content into both of them. I especially made it clear that I've been hacking Smalltalk since 1982, long before Perl was even around.
The Linux Outlaws interview came about because a group of us open-source podcasters were talking about "bumper trading", where we make up 30-second promos for our show, and then send it to others in exchange for playing their bumper on our show. I don't play other people's bumpers on
FLOSS Weekly, but I said that in exchange for interviewing me on someone's show, I'd be sure to mention that show on the following show of mine. I've heard that because of my mention of Outlaws on FLOSS, they had to upgrade to the next hosting plan for the rapid increase in downloads. Good work, guys!
The Command LIne show is one of the best produced shows I've heard. The host reads from a fully prepared script, and the resulting show has detailed show notes and chapters and well-produced musical stingers to identify each portion of the show. It's definitely on my "must listen" list, even if I must skip forward to different parts (easy, thanks to chapter marks) if I'm in a hurry.
Comments
In the spirit of sharing corrections, I don't actually have a full script though it is close.