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:
201
hpr_transcripts/hpr2415.txt
Normal file
201
hpr_transcripts/hpr2415.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,201 @@
|
||||
Episode: 2415
|
||||
Title: HPR2415: bullet journal to org mode
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2415/hpr2415.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 02:33:12
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is HPR Episode 2415 entitled Bullet Journal Tord Mode.
|
||||
It is hosted by Brian in Ohio and in about 15 minutes long and Karina Cleanflag.
|
||||
The summary is, my journey from a lot of digital.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
|
||||
That's HPR15.
|
||||
Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Hello Hacker Public Radio, Brian in Ohio here.
|
||||
I wanted to say hi to everybody in the Hacker Public Radio land and had a goal to do three
|
||||
or four episodes this year and seeing that I've done exactly zero, I thought it was time
|
||||
to push record as Mr. X would say and get at least one episode out.
|
||||
So the inspiration for today's show was that I heard Sean Shannon, I hope I said his
|
||||
last name correctly, on Episode 2299, doing what's in my bag episode and in it he briefly
|
||||
mentions using a bullet journal and then I think I heard Ken Fallon wondering about bullet
|
||||
journals on the community news for the month with that episode.
|
||||
So I thought it show was an order explaining how I went from using bullet journals to using
|
||||
EMAX org mode.
|
||||
But I thought also, I think before I get going too deep into this, I won't let you know
|
||||
that I'm not an expert at any of the following topics.
|
||||
Bullet journal, getting things done, org mode and especially EMAX.
|
||||
I'm just somebody who's tried these tools, climbed the learning curve and have some observations
|
||||
to make through that process.
|
||||
So first, what's a bullet journal?
|
||||
Bullet journal was created by a man named writer Carol.
|
||||
He calls it an analog system for the digital age and I found out about it listening to
|
||||
the Panatic podcast.
|
||||
I think Dave Morris mentioned that one, episode number 70 and that was my introduction
|
||||
to the bullet journal journal.
|
||||
And so what it is, bullet journal is a method of laying out a notebook and using it to organize
|
||||
and process ideas and tasks.
|
||||
I'm not going to try to explain exactly how it's set up.
|
||||
There's an excellent tutorial video at bulletjournal.com.
|
||||
You can use any notebook.
|
||||
You divide it up into index pages, a future log, monthly log, day log, and there's a visual
|
||||
indexing and tagging system to help you organize stuff.
|
||||
It's extremely customizable.
|
||||
So how I used it, initially when I started bullet journaling, I, first off, I used it
|
||||
for two and a half years and initially I just set it up completely stocked the way writer
|
||||
explains it in his video.
|
||||
But later on, I did some changes.
|
||||
I put the index at the back of the bullet journal that seemed to help me out and I would
|
||||
do some different set up initially as far as how the months were done.
|
||||
I basically would set up a whole year all in one sitting and put those pages into the
|
||||
book as opposed to waiting until the next month to do it.
|
||||
I used the bullet journal as a daily planner and I idea storing device and a device to
|
||||
help me make short-term and long-term goals.
|
||||
The strengths of the bullet journal, it's customizable but it's within a framework.
|
||||
It gives you a method to get organized that you can tailor to your needs.
|
||||
It's pretty easy actually to find info in the bullet journal itself, but only if you're
|
||||
disciplined about using it, if you come up with a really structured method of putting
|
||||
stuff into it, indexing it, you can find stuff like, one was last time my car had
|
||||
a tire change or what event a work happened the last time, whatever that might be a training
|
||||
event or something.
|
||||
But it does take discipline to do it.
|
||||
Another strength of the bullet journal is that it's battery-free, it's power is right
|
||||
up, it's always there.
|
||||
Some of the shortcomings though, you do need to be disciplined.
|
||||
Making a bullet journal, especially initially, can be tedious.
|
||||
Sometimes you're entering items in multiple places, the monthly, daily, and index sections.
|
||||
It takes time to set up to figure out exactly what you're going to do, takes time, especially
|
||||
as you customize it or thinking about it.
|
||||
As changes are made in it and you go off on your own trail of bullet journaling, it takes
|
||||
time in some thought and you need to be disciplined to get the most out of it.
|
||||
It sounds like Sean's use case that he mentioned in his podcast as a sort of project, idea
|
||||
book sounds pretty cool and it might actually be a really good use case for the bullet journal,
|
||||
sticking to a place to capture ideas and projects.
|
||||
I kind of like that.
|
||||
The shortcoming of the bullet journal is that it's hard to edit.
|
||||
This may be a strength for some people, but for me, using it as a data planner, it was
|
||||
a little daunting to use because I hate crossing stuff out and erasing is no good and changing
|
||||
stuff is just tough.
|
||||
Sometimes you come up with an idea and you have to leave space ahead of time or be willing
|
||||
to index some kind of project idea through multiple pages and that was something I never
|
||||
really liked about the system.
|
||||
The monthly blog portion of the bullet journal, which if you ever try it and you know what I'm
|
||||
talking about, it was always a mystery to me.
|
||||
What it's use was how to use it, how to get the most out of it.
|
||||
The shortcoming of the bullet journal is if you lose your bullet journal, lost it.
|
||||
And there's really no easy way to back up a paper and pencil writing.
|
||||
Although I did notice at my local library, they have a scanning station to scan books and
|
||||
so you could maybe do it that way, but still you all end up with PDFs and OCR or whatever
|
||||
they call it.
|
||||
Text out of PDFs, it would be not impossible, but it would definitely have, take some work
|
||||
to back it up in any kind of form.
|
||||
So this led me to what I use now, which is org mode.
|
||||
So you'll ask yourself, what is org mode?
|
||||
Org mode was created by a man named Karsten Dominik.
|
||||
And it is an editing and organizing mode for notes, planning and authoring in the free
|
||||
software text editor Emacs.
|
||||
So how did I find out about it?
|
||||
Well, here's a, I'll try to keep it long story short, but I do a little bit of a hobby
|
||||
programming using microcontrollers in C. I do my development at the command line in
|
||||
a Linux, Linux, Linux terminal.
|
||||
And I wanted, I've always tried to work out of way to have sort of an IDE, a command line
|
||||
IDE where I'd have all my tools, my editor, my bash shell to do the actual compiling
|
||||
and then uploading to the microcontroller and maybe a place to have some documentation open.
|
||||
And I'd sort of been playing around and using VIM and a bash shell as a sort of minimal
|
||||
IDE.
|
||||
I was using it on a laptop that didn't have X installed.
|
||||
This was certainly just for fun.
|
||||
I do not make my bread and butter using these kind of tools.
|
||||
This is completely for fun and for just the challenge of doing it.
|
||||
But as always, when you've got a hobby and you're trying things, I wanted to try something
|
||||
new.
|
||||
And I, of course, had heard about Emacs and I'd even tried it a couple of times, I'd
|
||||
opened it up.
|
||||
It's part of Slackware, if you install the complete Slackware packages.
|
||||
And I didn't like it.
|
||||
I couldn't figure it out.
|
||||
I didn't understand it.
|
||||
I didn't get the time to try to figure it out.
|
||||
But while searching through some HPR episodes that ran across Clot 2, who has a lot of
|
||||
awesome episodes about a lot of different subjects, but he's got three episodes, episode
|
||||
8.52, 8.56 and 8.61 about getting into Emacs and those episodes got me through the initial
|
||||
process of starting and using and some of the basic ideas, the fundamental ideas of Emacs,
|
||||
which without those, I would have never even gone this route.
|
||||
So after getting playing around with Emacs and trying it out, of course, the next step
|
||||
like everybody does is you start searching around and with great knowledge places, YouTube.
|
||||
And all of a sudden, while looking through Emacs stuff, I kept hearing this thing called
|
||||
org mode.
|
||||
And especially I found a website by a man I'm Rinder Konig.
|
||||
He's a, I think he lives in North Carolina.
|
||||
And he has a series of videos really well done, screencasts, I think he calls them, about
|
||||
getting yourself organized with org mode, which I started watching.
|
||||
And it's like, wow, this is exactly what I wanted it a way to organize my life.
|
||||
Like I've been using the bullet journal, but in using Emacs and a new challenge.
|
||||
So I switched in October 2016 to using org mode instead of a bullet journal.
|
||||
And so how do I, how do I use it?
|
||||
At its heart, org mode is just an outliner.
|
||||
I use org mode to set up daily to do tasks, organize projects, and jot down notes.
|
||||
And org mode has a subsystem called Agenda View.
|
||||
It can generate daily planner views from your org mode files.
|
||||
And I will admit that I initially tried to mimic the bullet journal in org mode, but
|
||||
after playing with that for a while and being frustrated, I find it was better, a better
|
||||
approach is to use the strengths of org mode, rely on those as opposed to trying to import
|
||||
the strengths of bullet journal, which are, as you can imagine, quite different.
|
||||
So what are the strengths of org mode, you might ask?
|
||||
First off, org mode is, it's really, it's very, it's easily editable, editable, it's
|
||||
searchable and customizable.
|
||||
You can take projects and you can break down, you can break down a project into as finite
|
||||
detail as you want, and that detail level can expand or contract as necessary.
|
||||
But the real power of org mode comes out when you start using it to capture ideas and
|
||||
tasks and information.
|
||||
And you can capture these events via a thing called capture templates that you can create.
|
||||
And then these, this new data that you capture is then saved in the appropriate org files.
|
||||
And then later on, can show up in your agenda view as to do items or whatever, however
|
||||
you want to set up your agenda view, it's very customizable.
|
||||
Another strength of org mode is that it's really easy to back up, but everything is text,
|
||||
it's just simple text.
|
||||
It's a future proof, it's not some proprietary data, it's not a physical object in the sense
|
||||
of like a notebook where you could just lose the one thing, you can make multiple copies
|
||||
of these small text files that are a tremendous amount of information within them.
|
||||
And another great strength of org mode is that there are a lot of really good tutorials
|
||||
online, either at YouTube or just at people's blogs, it's something people have been using.
|
||||
And it's, I'm coming late to the game, but I guess it used to not be part of EMAX, but
|
||||
now it's as of I think 25, EMAX 25, it's now just part of EMAX when you install EMAX.
|
||||
Shortcomings, as you might expect, there are some shortcomings.
|
||||
First, you do need to know a little about EMAX using the EMAX editor, and that can
|
||||
feel a little bit overwhelmed to try, but if you're even thinking about it, try those
|
||||
HPR episodes first, and just start playing with EMAX itself and then work your way into
|
||||
using org mode.
|
||||
EMAX is a new tool, and it will require you to use your brain, and that can be a short
|
||||
coming.
|
||||
And without going into too much detail, I'll just say a short coming is EMAX key bindings.
|
||||
So what's next?
|
||||
I've been using org mode now for a year as an organizer planner, as a replacement to
|
||||
my bullet journal, and my biggest frustration is portability.
|
||||
A laptop is a great device, but it's not nearly as portable as a notebook, so I've been
|
||||
trying different ways to use org mode in a portable solution.
|
||||
Now there is an app for Android and iOS called MobileOrk.
|
||||
I used it in Android, I can't test anything about iOS, and never will.
|
||||
But if the Android app just left me wanting it, I did not like it, I did not understand
|
||||
the whole push pull concept, the documentation is not that good.
|
||||
So this led me to trying a couple of different solutions with different devices that are
|
||||
portable, that aren't laptops, and it has led me to what I think is a great solution,
|
||||
and that will be a subject of another edge per episode, hopefully done before the end
|
||||
of the year, because I'd need to do two more, because that would go a three.
|
||||
So thanks for listening.
|
||||
If you have any ideas about bullet journals, or org modes, or how you use them, or what
|
||||
are your ideas on how to use them better, please record another episode for HPR, I think
|
||||
it would be very interesting to listen to.
|
||||
I'll put links in the show notes for the different things that I think are appropriate, and
|
||||
other than that, thanks for listening, this is Brian and Ohio, signing off.
|
||||
You've been listening to HECKAPOBLICGradio at HECKAPOBLICGradio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
|
||||
how easy it really is.
|
||||
HECKAPOBLICGradio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicom Computer Club,
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
|
||||
the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative commons, attribution,
|
||||
share a light 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user