Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
78
hpr_transcripts/hpr1108.txt
Normal file
78
hpr_transcripts/hpr1108.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
|
||||
Episode: 1108
|
||||
Title: HPR1108: What's In my Bag?
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1108/hpr1108.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:03:52
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
And,
|
||||
Hello, welcome to Hucka Public Radio. In this episode, I'm going to be talking about
|
||||
what's in my bag. It's not some sort of weird game show where I have a bag for the things
|
||||
you have to guess what I've got in my bag. It's the bag I take to work with me every day,
|
||||
all of my gadgety gear and kit that I take with me. I thought I'd just tell you about what I
|
||||
look around with me. So I have a set of show notes with pictures of everything I take,
|
||||
and they'll be in the show on this episode. So every day I take to work a quick silver backpack
|
||||
with the Hucka Public Radio badge. That Ken gave me, that's our camp. So that's what I take
|
||||
with me every day to work, especially putting the message of HPR out there, and in that backpack I have
|
||||
my little netbook. So it's an Acerous Spine netbook. I can't remember the one,
|
||||
a little bit now, ZG5 I believe. It originated, it ran a really rubbishy Linux distro, which I
|
||||
can't remember what it was called, but it was, it just wasn't very good. So I put a bunch of
|
||||
one there, and it's now quite happy running, I think, 1204. That's really nice, I use that quite a bit.
|
||||
In fact, I've recorded a couple of episodes of HPR on it.
|
||||
I've also got my Kindle. I've got a Kindle 2. It was a present from my wife, and I've got loads
|
||||
of little books on there for my Riley. So that's always quite useful to carry your reference
|
||||
live with you. And it's got a few little proof of concept ebooks that I've been putting together
|
||||
on it as well. So I've been writing ebooks on Ubuntu, and then publishing them onto my Kindle
|
||||
2. So they look like, so I've got some of those on as well.
|
||||
I have my car pod, iPod. It's a little green, four gig iPod mini. I used to have a KSCED,
|
||||
the car, that's a KSC, and it's probably my most favourite car I've ever driven.
|
||||
Because it was just amazing, and to add to the amazement, it had like a USB socket,
|
||||
so you could take a USB key, put your podcasts on it, plug your USB key into the seed, into the
|
||||
care, and you could control and listen to your podcasts, and you know, skip to the next one,
|
||||
pause, mute it, all that kind of stuff, it was great. But we change cars to a CET, and it doesn't
|
||||
have that option, or at least the model we have, doesn't have that option. So again, my wife
|
||||
brought me this from computer exchanges, and I've replaced the firmware on it with Rockbox,
|
||||
which is an open source alternative to Apple's horrible firmware. I believe it sort of sits on
|
||||
top of Apple's firmware. I don't know, huge, I don't know a lot of Bayotid, but it certainly feels
|
||||
a lot nicer to use, a piece of software that I know I've got the freedom to go into the source,
|
||||
and see how it works rather than just hoping that it works the way I think it's going to work.
|
||||
And I've also got another iPod. The other one is a, I think it's a 30 gig iPod,
|
||||
used to belong to my wife, but the screen got a little bit broken, just started to get some black
|
||||
lines on it and stuff. So she decided she was going to get a new one, because she had it for
|
||||
some time, and to get it repaired was going to be pricey. So I acquired a second hand partly broken
|
||||
iPod. Again, that's now running Rockbox, and that's quite good. So a lot of songs on there as well.
|
||||
I've also got a 2 gig USB key. It's a Buffalo key. It came with a one terabyte driver bought from
|
||||
Argos, I believe. Just one of those things, I decided I needed some storage. Argos haven't
|
||||
had some one gig drives that I'll do. So it's empty, apart from two files. It has a file called
|
||||
LD Linux.sys, which I think is left over from the previous Linux install, and a picture of a cake
|
||||
that I was going to make when I left my last job. It's basically a riff on the keep calm and
|
||||
carry on. It's keep calm and Google it. So that was that's the USB key. It's only 2 gig, as I say,
|
||||
I don't really use it for a lot, but it's always nice to have it, particularly if you've got a
|
||||
a netbook with not a lot of storage on it. I also have a conference folio. It's an A4 conference.
|
||||
I think it's a kind of plastic leathery. I'm going to go with pleather folio that I picked up
|
||||
from some conference some time ages ago. It features the sort of decal and logo of a company called
|
||||
Opal Telecom. Telecoms transformed. Now Opal Telecoms was bought by Talk Talk and
|
||||
currently the old web address Opal.co.uk seems to redirect OpalSolutions.com, which apparently
|
||||
should be redirecting to Talk Talk. I need that actually doesn't work. So at the moment that
|
||||
website and the history of it seems obscured somehow, you can find it on the way back machine.
|
||||
So you can find their wonderful website from like 2003 or whatever. It's not very good.
|
||||
Inside that to folio, I have an Oxford pad. I just like the paper because it works well with the
|
||||
pen that I use, which is an azda pen. I found these pens in azda. I think there's six in a pack,
|
||||
two black, two blue, one red, one green, something like that. And they're amazing. I went through and
|
||||
I bought like 10 quids worth of them. So you never short of a pen in my house and they're always
|
||||
these pens. I find them really easy to use. And usually in addition to all that junk I also have
|
||||
a mouse for my money book, which is one side buckets, which when I was taking these photos originally,
|
||||
I forgot because I took it out to use it with my Raspberry Pi. So obviously if I can get a photo
|
||||
of that and put that on the other side, a little Microsoft USB wireless mouse. It's a lot easier to use
|
||||
than the track pad on the little net book. So that's what I carry around in my bag. Not much in
|
||||
there really. Not a huge amount of technology. It's pretty old, but I like reusing it because
|
||||
it's still got some some life in it. Okay, well thanks for listening and I'll see you later. Bye bye.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, or take a public radio does our?
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday and Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener by yourself.
|
||||
If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economical and computer club.
|
||||
HPR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com or binref projects across the sponsor
|
||||
by LinoPages. From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LinoPages.com for all your hosting
|
||||
needs. Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released on the creative commons,
|
||||
attribution, share a lot, because our license is low.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user