A repo to stash code and config for War in Pieces, the hit new podcast at https://warinpiec.es
This repository contains both software and data (creative content), which are licensed separately:
All code and config files in this repository are licensed under the MIT License.
See: LICENSE
All non-code content in this repository is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0), including, but not limited to:
audio/(podcast audio files)descriptions/(episode descriptions)
To be absolutely clear, all voiced sentences are themselves acquired by the project under a CC-BY-SA 4.0 license.
See: CONTENT_LICENSE
The source material is already in the public domain. Namely, warpeace01tols_0.pdf
Unless otherwise noted, files are licensed according to the category above.
- How often do you publish this podcast?
We publish exactly one sentence, per day. However, the GitHub repo may lead the podcast by a few days. Don't listen ahead of you don't want spoilers. This is neccesary to ensure continuity in case of sudden interruptions that pop up for the primary reader.
- What is a sentence?
This is discussed, at some length, at text/README.md, with the goal of balancing mechanical definitions of "sentence" with narrative and creative flexibility.
- What is a day?
In most cases, sentences will be released approximately 24 hours from each other, though some exceptions may occur. A day is one calendar day, on Earth, unless or until the current steward of this podcast is a resident of another planet or other rotating body. Importantly, this means that two sentences may be released arbitrarily close together, provided they fall on adjacent calendar days. One sentence may be released at any time on a calendar day; the next may be released at any time on the following calendar day. This can result in pairs of sentences being separated by either more or less than 24 hours of wall-clock time. Note, sentence releases may occasionally be affected by leap seconds, which can cause a particular calendar day to be slightly longer or shorter than 24 hours in SI seconds, but these leap seconds do not alter the calendar-day ordering constraints.