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>
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Episode: 3002
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Title: HPR3002: World of Commodore 2019 Episode 8: Vote of thanks
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3002/hpr3002.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 14:45:37
|
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 32002 for Tuesday 4 February 2020.
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||||
Today's show is entitled World of Commodore 2019 Episode 8, Vote of Thanks.
|
||||
It is hosted by Paul Quirk and is about 19 minutes long
|
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and carries an explicit flag. The summer is.
|
||||
This is the final episode of the World of Commodore 2019 mini-series.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
|
||||
Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
|
||||
Hello good listeners of Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
Paul Quirk here and welcome to my eighth and final episode of my World of Commodore mini-series.
|
||||
Hopefully this series has gotten you through the worst part of winter if you live in the northern hemisphere
|
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or the worst part of summer if you live in the southern hemisphere.
|
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In this episode you'll get to hear the closing ceremonies of World of Commodore 2019
|
||||
as Golan takes the lead and talks about the people that have made World of Commodore possible.
|
||||
And so with no further ado I present to you World of Commodore Vote of Thanks.
|
||||
This is a goal in the sports for dinner tonight.
|
||||
Keep coming in, there's plenty of room, stand, sit up to someone's lap.
|
||||
Whatever you like.
|
||||
Don't.
|
||||
I need you to come up front first.
|
||||
You're working the camera for now so you can hang out there.
|
||||
But if you want to come up I'd appreciate it because you need to be up here.
|
||||
Did I better see? Switch this through wide angle.
|
||||
Oh my goodness.
|
||||
Check your bounce, bounce, bounce.
|
||||
Oh this is really structurally sound.
|
||||
Alright so I need some people if I need you.
|
||||
And I need you.
|
||||
Yeah I'm looking at you and you.
|
||||
What the hell do I do?
|
||||
That's why I need you up here.
|
||||
Oh you are, oh you know I need you.
|
||||
And you better get up here I need you.
|
||||
You volunteer just by looking at you.
|
||||
I need you for sure.
|
||||
I absolutely need you.
|
||||
You man you need to come and then oh if you're not up here I need to say a party.
|
||||
Doug what are you doing Dr.
|
||||
Get your ass up here.
|
||||
You serving up here and I can phone around man.
|
||||
I know I'm going shit.
|
||||
Come on.
|
||||
Anybody else if you're important enough to be up here you know we are.
|
||||
Come on.
|
||||
You, you of Santa get up here.
|
||||
You, yes and your wife better be with you.
|
||||
Am I missing anybody?
|
||||
So one angle lens but it's not that one.
|
||||
This is for people who are here.
|
||||
What do I miss?
|
||||
I miss anybody who's here tonight.
|
||||
Are you waving at me Marlon?
|
||||
No we're getting.
|
||||
Thanks for coming to the world of Commodore 2019.
|
||||
If you have a good time my name is Colin.
|
||||
Is not my name is Stewart.
|
||||
My email will be addressed on the website.
|
||||
Anyway this has been a great party and I wanted to let everyone know that this is
|
||||
You only have, we're missing, come on now.
|
||||
Come on now, yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So, okay, where was it?
|
||||
So this is our, this is actually T-Pux 40th
|
||||
Continuous Year of Operation.
|
||||
Woo!
|
||||
It's not a regular one, I don't do this, though.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And that is a smaller birthday is our 50th
|
||||
Continuous Year of World of Commodore.
|
||||
Woo!
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
I feel weird right now.
|
||||
That's okay.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
I'd like to clap for myself.
|
||||
Let's do this.
|
||||
Okay, so what's this all about?
|
||||
Well, so T-Pux was a, sort of 1979,
|
||||
a gentleman in Doug Lyman, and our
|
||||
yearly departed friend Jim Butterfield
|
||||
had this brilliant idea that they're
|
||||
Lyman, Lyman Doug, sorry.
|
||||
Have this brilliant idea to get some
|
||||
light-minded folks together who enjoy
|
||||
fiddling with computers.
|
||||
And somewhere between 1,500,000
|
||||
friends showed up.
|
||||
And was the largest user's group in the
|
||||
world.
|
||||
And it's the longest continuously
|
||||
operating user's group in the world.
|
||||
Anyway, the club grew to massive, massive
|
||||
size.
|
||||
It was a beyond comprehension, really.
|
||||
And there have been hundreds, maybe
|
||||
thousands of volunteers over the years.
|
||||
Some of whom are here today.
|
||||
And the reason I wanted to bring them up in
|
||||
single mode is because we would not be
|
||||
here today as a club.
|
||||
We're not for their hard work.
|
||||
And especially not here at this new,
|
||||
if you will, world of Commodore,
|
||||
which was a brain child of several
|
||||
of the people up here.
|
||||
This is one of them.
|
||||
Here's another one.
|
||||
And so I wanted to give them thanks.
|
||||
There's another gentleman.
|
||||
There's a big round of applause.
|
||||
He was also, I'll also point out that a lot
|
||||
of these volunteers have served on the board
|
||||
of directors, which means they're the
|
||||
people that do basically everything.
|
||||
So once you're driven to the organization,
|
||||
and they gave countless hours to, you know,
|
||||
the meetings possible.
|
||||
They don't want to organize events like this.
|
||||
So I'm going to just go around and tell you
|
||||
who these folks are.
|
||||
And then you can scream the applause they deserve.
|
||||
We have Santa Claus over here.
|
||||
This is David Russey.
|
||||
Yay!
|
||||
A lot of people wouldn't know what the internet was
|
||||
if they hadn't started on a BBS run by this guy.
|
||||
Nice.
|
||||
The standing next to him is our dear friend Doug.
|
||||
One of the hardest working, most diligent people I've
|
||||
ever met in my life and whose I can't,
|
||||
everybody here deserves equal amounts of a claim.
|
||||
But seriously, I'm Santa on the shoulder of giants.
|
||||
And here's one of them.
|
||||
This is, this is Ernie Charney.
|
||||
Standing next to him is one of our, we actually slim down
|
||||
from our official board of directors to a smaller
|
||||
manager group as we, you know,
|
||||
we didn't need so many organizers because the club
|
||||
was as large as we slimed down.
|
||||
So we have a very small group with us now that
|
||||
managed the club.
|
||||
Tell them the truth.
|
||||
Were you right out of their members?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
At some point, our membership started aging
|
||||
and then the curve started going this direction.
|
||||
So there's been a decline.
|
||||
But we missed them all.
|
||||
But one of our current, we call ourselves the management
|
||||
committee.
|
||||
One of our current members and tireless work went into
|
||||
making today possible.
|
||||
Is this general right here?
|
||||
Big round of applause for Stuart Russell, please.
|
||||
Applause.
|
||||
Now this hippie here with the long hair.
|
||||
He deserves no introduction.
|
||||
He has been absolutely instrumental over the last few
|
||||
years in taking the club from something that really wasn't
|
||||
going to be able to continue financially and writing
|
||||
the ship, helping us sort of reduce things.
|
||||
We had storage lockers and things that we couldn't,
|
||||
you know, we're paying more for the storage locker
|
||||
than the items were worth.
|
||||
And I can't begin to explain how hard he's worked.
|
||||
And the amount of abuse that he got for the work
|
||||
that he did.
|
||||
But he kept going.
|
||||
In fact, last year he retired as our president.
|
||||
But he still was talked into staying on the management
|
||||
committee.
|
||||
Ian Cahun, please.
|
||||
Applause.
|
||||
Now this guy doesn't want to be up here because he doesn't
|
||||
like this sort of thing.
|
||||
He'll tell you that's all it's all to you.
|
||||
You may not be able to get him on the phone or by email.
|
||||
If a rumor is of his demise and you may be wanting to order
|
||||
super snapshots or 1581 kits, he will get back to you.
|
||||
He's about 16 years behind his email.
|
||||
But he's working hard to serve you people.
|
||||
Jump along.
|
||||
Applause.
|
||||
Thank you, Ian.
|
||||
Thank you, Ian Cahun.
|
||||
It's a free work this year and you're all going to spend
|
||||
all of your disposable income on his business.
|
||||
Because this man, like I'm sort of abused on this way,
|
||||
but he drives that truck filled with all that software and
|
||||
much stuff to every commoner show.
|
||||
It's inconceivable what this guy does to support this
|
||||
community.
|
||||
So this is the man.
|
||||
This is Joe.
|
||||
You're going through exploding brake lines.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I'm going to scare you.
|
||||
Who are the brake lines?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Get him aside to tell you some of the crap that he's been
|
||||
through to keep this community alive.
|
||||
It's just.
|
||||
And then we have this guy.
|
||||
Now this guy is another one of these giants that I talked about
|
||||
when I was standing on the shoulders of giants in Ernie.
|
||||
This is another guy who's without his.
|
||||
I can't.
|
||||
I can't even conceive of the amount of work he's been doing.
|
||||
I've only been sort of running this blank show for a year.
|
||||
This guy did it for so many years.
|
||||
I've lost track.
|
||||
And again, this is another guy that we would not be here
|
||||
without this guy.
|
||||
This is Tom Lough.
|
||||
And he was the president and.
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
You've got a board member longer and probably some people
|
||||
have been alive.
|
||||
I'm going to applaud for this guy.
|
||||
Now here's a cat.
|
||||
Some of you might know.
|
||||
The ever strong spirit never gets bummed out.
|
||||
Never has a negative word to say.
|
||||
I complain about everything.
|
||||
And I'm sure half of you know that because he's taking my views.
|
||||
This guy is the counter.
|
||||
The opposite.
|
||||
Always happy.
|
||||
And the amount of effort he puts into organizing the monthly shows.
|
||||
If you think this is difficult, he's got to do like what?
|
||||
Ten of these a year basically never complains.
|
||||
Leave blingless.
|
||||
Now standing next to him is a fellow who during the lean and dark years stood up and said,
|
||||
hey, this can't go away.
|
||||
Another one of those guys that just decided I'm going to carry as much of a weight as I can
|
||||
and continues to do so, helping us out as friends.
|
||||
He's been there all the time when I personally and a bride have other things I can't.
|
||||
I have no way to describe my love for this guy.
|
||||
This is Emil.
|
||||
You know I'm the legendist here.
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
Now next to him we have the quietest, shyest, most gentleman or human being on earth.
|
||||
I'm standing in front of another guy who was a president of the club who struggled to keep things alive
|
||||
and organized world of commoners and God knows what else he's done.
|
||||
Including driving hours to come to his meetings and the CD.
|
||||
Oh my God.
|
||||
Talk about leaving with the, okay.
|
||||
So T-Pug spent years accumulating a massive archive of software, public domain software.
|
||||
Just fantastic stuff.
|
||||
People all over the world would order discs.
|
||||
We'd send them out and things.
|
||||
Discs experience bit rot.
|
||||
They go pot.
|
||||
They're gone.
|
||||
And with it would go the library and largely the legacy of this club.
|
||||
Where they're not a couple of guys.
|
||||
I mentioned to you earlier.
|
||||
This is another one who said, you know what?
|
||||
We're going to do something.
|
||||
We're going to save this library.
|
||||
These guys spend a lot of time and a lot of effort.
|
||||
They've taken a software library and they've combined the whole thing onto a CD.
|
||||
So it's 20 bucks and we still have some for sale.
|
||||
It's everything.
|
||||
There's software for Victor 20s.
|
||||
For pets.
|
||||
I mean, it's incredible.
|
||||
Even look cool.
|
||||
So our thanks go to Greg VanLair for his efforts right there.
|
||||
More giants, more shoulders.
|
||||
Okay, so this is where it gets really dark.
|
||||
We're in the very dark years.
|
||||
The club was almost ready to go under because we just things were,
|
||||
it's difficult to manage a big organization.
|
||||
Especially when it's transitioning to a smaller organization.
|
||||
We could have gone broke.
|
||||
The club would have dissolved.
|
||||
There would have been nothing.
|
||||
But a long came a person of incredible spirit, incredible intellect,
|
||||
and incredible character.
|
||||
And basically saved our collective bacon by writing the ship.
|
||||
It's happened a few times.
|
||||
This is one of the people and I give.
|
||||
From the bottom of my heart, thank you very much.
|
||||
This is Ian McIntosh, folks.
|
||||
Now we got a two-fer.
|
||||
You got a two-fer here.
|
||||
So we have a very long time member.
|
||||
I mean, from the beginning, who has done,
|
||||
he's another one of those guys that there's never anything he says no to.
|
||||
Can you do that?
|
||||
We're going to do an inventory of our, of our, of the items in our locker.
|
||||
In sub-zero temperatures.
|
||||
Our fingers are turning blue.
|
||||
Who's going to show up?
|
||||
It's snowing.
|
||||
Always the first guy through the door.
|
||||
I was the last guy out the door.
|
||||
I can't begin to tell you how much he's done for the club.
|
||||
And what's more interesting is that his wife,
|
||||
for reasons I can't even give you enough things and kudos for this.
|
||||
But has decided to help us.
|
||||
Year after year, she comes out.
|
||||
Volunteers has done more than I've done, quite frankly.
|
||||
You saw this morning when you were registering.
|
||||
You've seen her at the table telling merchandise every year,
|
||||
every world of commoners.
|
||||
She's there.
|
||||
So, a random applause for the both of them.
|
||||
We have Caroline Williams.
|
||||
Now there are lots of other people.
|
||||
There are lots of other people who have helped out over the year
|
||||
and done things for the club that either aren't here because of
|
||||
inability to make it or age or a variety of reasons.
|
||||
And even though they're not here, they're with us in spirit.
|
||||
And there's one particular thing I want to single out for a
|
||||
random applause and our love.
|
||||
Because, again, he's another gentleman who's been with us with us.
|
||||
With whom we have been since the beginning.
|
||||
There's really nothing I can say other than that.
|
||||
He's been the present club.
|
||||
He's managed the newsletter.
|
||||
He's facilitates our premises where we hold our meetings.
|
||||
He's just a wonderful human being who's just...
|
||||
And even at his age, he still comes out and does everything he can for the club.
|
||||
I wish he could have been here today, but he's not.
|
||||
I wasn't able to.
|
||||
So, again, in spirit, we thank him.
|
||||
And his name is John Easton.
|
||||
To put that in context, if you look at the March 1978 version of
|
||||
T.O. Newsletter, John was the editor at that time.
|
||||
And almost, so, I guess, a year ago?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
40 years of...
|
||||
That's how it all started.
|
||||
I met John Easton when I was 15.
|
||||
There's context.
|
||||
And now, he is literally Santa Claus.
|
||||
So, now, I've forgotten a few names, and I apologize to them all.
|
||||
And I give them all thanks.
|
||||
If you can remember me...
|
||||
You forgot, I've a guy named Gola.
|
||||
Yeah, he's a prick.
|
||||
I've got a very useful one.
|
||||
Well, occasionally, he can crack the whip.
|
||||
Anyway, so, one last round of applause for all these people,
|
||||
because God bless them all.
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
My mom just told me, by the way, that he hopes from equally large
|
||||
We're equally large trying to pause at our 80th anniversary,
|
||||
so you're going to want to put that in the L version.
|
||||
It's 40 years from today.
|
||||
There's one other guy that I just wanted to mention,
|
||||
because he showed up early yesterday.
|
||||
It took off work and came in early to help set everything up.
|
||||
Unass just does this because it's the spirit of giving
|
||||
and it's the kind of person he is.
|
||||
Brian, why don't you just come up here and say, hey,
|
||||
he doesn't like this sort of thing.
|
||||
He's another one of these guys, doesn't he?
|
||||
So yeah, this is the chair at your seat, man.
|
||||
Okay, so I've run my mouth almost too long.
|
||||
You can't have a birthday with the cakes for everybody.
|
||||
So we bought some cake.
|
||||
So what we're going to do, and I don't know how we're going to do this,
|
||||
but we're going to volunteer one person, not me,
|
||||
because I'm going to go to the Atari meeting up the hall to cut cake.
|
||||
But yeah, if I don't, some have you guys want to just come up
|
||||
and get cake and eat cake and whatever.
|
||||
And what we're going to be doing is we're going to be screening
|
||||
a great premiere of a great comment or documentary
|
||||
in about half an hour.
|
||||
So that gives you enough time to have your sugar rush and crash.
|
||||
So I'm sure it won't be half asleep with the movie starts,
|
||||
but anyway, so what we have up here are these,
|
||||
let's see what we can do is fill them all over the floor.
|
||||
We have these 40th anniversary cakes.
|
||||
Ooh.
|
||||
Ooh.
|
||||
It looks better, but yeah, if you're looking for sugar rush,
|
||||
you may bouncing off the walls.
|
||||
So yes, we've got chocolate and vanilla, so everybody just,
|
||||
once cake, just come on up and we'll work our way through this,
|
||||
and who's good with a knife?
|
||||
I've got it for you.
|
||||
Seriously?
|
||||
OK, long time member, and hey, cutting
|
||||
volunteer, Paul Quark.
|
||||
Woo.
|
||||
Woo.
|
||||
I've got to take the piano, people.
|
||||
So yeah, this is Paul Quark, a pack of public radio.
|
||||
That's OK.
|
||||
Pack your public.
|
||||
You want to give a quick plug?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Pack your public radio podcast, guys.
|
||||
If you're into open source, community podcast,
|
||||
hacker public radio, I would like to put a world of cometer
|
||||
up there, and maybe bring some more people into the book.
|
||||
Great.
|
||||
Not sure who need a knife.
|
||||
Yeah, we have a big knife and a spatula over here.
|
||||
I know, it's sort of funny.
|
||||
You have to see your tongue get comfortable.
|
||||
This is going to be like 30 cows, but just we'll try and figure it out.
|
||||
We're going to see the lines here here.
|
||||
There you go.
|
||||
There's the vanilla.
|
||||
So hit your choice.
|
||||
OK.
|
||||
One line.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Oh, the line over here.
|
||||
Whatever.
|
||||
That was the mine.
|
||||
I said I was going to start a line over here, and people would follow me.
|
||||
Perfect.
|
||||
That's great.
|
||||
We're going to line up on the 10th of the group at the end.
|
||||
And ask you to start this, man.
|
||||
Good.
|
||||
We'll call you.
|
||||
It's a pretty good paper, man.
|
||||
Just wait a little.
|
||||
You have to research.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
That's all you know about that.
|
||||
Come on up.
|
||||
Don't be shy.
|
||||
Let's get this part in here.
|
||||
That's what I'm going to line up on.
|
||||
This was my favorite episode, because at the end of the day, it really is all about
|
||||
the people.
|
||||
I hope you enjoyed this mini-series of the world of Commodore as much as I enjoyed making
|
||||
this podcast.
|
||||
And hopefully, this will motivate some of you to come out to the next world of Commodore
|
||||
if it happens.
|
||||
I have some good news.
|
||||
I've decided to contribute to Hacker Public Radio with a series of my own podcasts on topics
|
||||
that interest me and hopefully you as well.
|
||||
I'll start off my new series by talking about a hobby I've enjoyed for as long as I've
|
||||
owned a computer.
|
||||
And that is photography.
|
||||
Until then, please drive safe and make sure to have fun.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.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 HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
|
||||
how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.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 status, today's show is released on the Creative Commons, Attribution,
|
||||
and share a light 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user