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:
159
hpr_transcripts/hpr3093.txt
Normal file
159
hpr_transcripts/hpr3093.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,159 @@
|
||||
Episode: 3093
|
||||
Title: HPR3093: Response to Linux Inlaws S01E06 (hpr 3079) on NeXT
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3093/hpr3093.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-24 16:36:58
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is HACCO Public Radio Episode 3,093 for Wednesday, 10 June 2020.
|
||||
Today's show is entitled Response to Linux in-laws season 1, Episode 6,
|
||||
HPR 3,079. On next,
|
||||
it is the 10th anniversary show of Claudio Miranda,
|
||||
and is about seven minutes long
|
||||
and carries a clean flag. The summary is
|
||||
Response to Linux in-laws season 1, Episode 6,
|
||||
HPR 3,079. Regarding next, next step,
|
||||
and what would become Mac OS X.
|
||||
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.
|
||||
.
|
||||
.
|
||||
.
|
||||
.
|
||||
.
|
||||
Hey everyone, this is Claudio M.
|
||||
I'm just recording a little episode here
|
||||
as a response to the Linux in-laws episode that was uploaded
|
||||
for season 1, Episode 6, which is HPR 3,079.
|
||||
I heard in that episode that they were discussing
|
||||
the origins of Mac OS, Mac OS X,
|
||||
and they had brought up the company called Next,
|
||||
and Next Step. I wanted to clarify it.
|
||||
I was going to clarify it as a comment,
|
||||
but apparently it was too long,
|
||||
and I think Ken and company have some sort of algorithm going where
|
||||
if your comment is past a certain number of characters,
|
||||
it gives you an error in the hopes that you record an episode.
|
||||
So here I am recording an episode, a response episode, to 3079.
|
||||
So that was a good episode. I liked it and enjoyed it,
|
||||
but I just wanted to clarify a couple of things regarding Next.
|
||||
So I'm going to take basically read off what was going to be my comments,
|
||||
my comments to that episode.
|
||||
So a little bit of clarification on Next and how it became Mac OS X.
|
||||
Next was the computer company that Steve Jobs created
|
||||
after being ousted from Apple in the late 80s.
|
||||
The operating system was used by the next brand of computers.
|
||||
It was called Next Step.
|
||||
Now Open Step was an API derived from Next Step
|
||||
that allowed the implementation of the interface and libraries to other systems
|
||||
hardware-wise and even operating system-wise,
|
||||
so that they can run that kind of interface along with being able to develop apps
|
||||
for that environment.
|
||||
And it was also used by Next itself in what was also called Open Step,
|
||||
except that Open Step was in all caps.
|
||||
The way they spelled the operating system,
|
||||
if you're not familiar with Next the company,
|
||||
it was a capital N, lowercase E, and then capital X, capital T.
|
||||
And then, of course, the operating system was next in the same fashion,
|
||||
but the word Step was all caps.
|
||||
And of course, the operating system they created using the Open Step,
|
||||
basically camelcased for the implementation of the APIs and all that,
|
||||
was Open Step, capital S, but the OS they created,
|
||||
basically the continuation of Next Step under a new name was all capital
|
||||
and all one word Open Step.
|
||||
So, I'm going to provide the links to the Wikipedia entries for each one of these in the show notes.
|
||||
So, yeah, basically, that's...
|
||||
Next was the name of the company, and Next Step was the operating system
|
||||
that they created for their Next hardware, which was the Next Station,
|
||||
the Next Cube, and a few others.
|
||||
I can't recall off the top of my head.
|
||||
Great little machines.
|
||||
Some of them, the Cube basically was a big machine.
|
||||
That was the one that I think certain burners Lee used to create the World Wide Web.
|
||||
So, I'll put that one in the show notes too.
|
||||
That wasn't part of it, I just threw that in there.
|
||||
But anyways, so, continuing on,
|
||||
when Apple purchased Next in the late 90s,
|
||||
it took what was basically Next Step or Open Step,
|
||||
and turned it into Mac OS X.
|
||||
The core of Mac OS X, and even to this day,
|
||||
with it being called, quote unquote, Mac OS,
|
||||
is what's called Darwin.
|
||||
And it's BSD, I want to say BSD-based,
|
||||
but it's actually a bunch of stuff.
|
||||
So, there's a lot of other things as a whole Darwin uses.
|
||||
So, it has, I think, an XNU kernel.
|
||||
I don't know if that's specifically Mac or not.
|
||||
Didn't research that part, but I know that that's part of it,
|
||||
and there's certain BSD-isms about it.
|
||||
And originally, they used to ship with the GNU tools,
|
||||
but I think they're moving away from that.
|
||||
I think they have already moved away from that,
|
||||
but I can't say for sure.
|
||||
But I know that's what they're looking to do,
|
||||
is kind of eliminate all of the GNU tools and applications from it.
|
||||
So, before Mac OS X was actually released, officially,
|
||||
there were some developer versions that still maintained
|
||||
some of the aspects of next step or open step.
|
||||
Mainly, the SCU Morphic icons from the originating OS,
|
||||
kind of like what you'd see in Window Maker or anything like that.
|
||||
The project was called Rhapsody,
|
||||
and there were a couple of developer releases for that.
|
||||
I think there were two, but there's an entry there for,
|
||||
I think in the next step one, or one of those.
|
||||
And one of the links that I'll be providing, it's there.
|
||||
So yeah, so they had a few developer releases,
|
||||
and then after that, they had one called Mac OS X Server 1.0.
|
||||
And that one was really kind of used to test a couple of things.
|
||||
They had a server, some server software,
|
||||
you can run as like a web server and stuff,
|
||||
but it was very, very early days.
|
||||
So it was just mainly for testing purposes that I can remember.
|
||||
And all those previous versions of Mac OS X before the public beta
|
||||
was released to the public.
|
||||
They all had the classic Mac OS interface,
|
||||
like the one that you'd see in Mac OS X 9,
|
||||
stuff like that.
|
||||
Now the Aqua interface was introduced with the public beta,
|
||||
and it's been there since,
|
||||
with a few variations like the Brush Metal and some of the later versions,
|
||||
and kind of the more minimal looking interface that they have now.
|
||||
And if you look, all of this is better explained in the open step,
|
||||
Wikipedia entry that I'll provide in the show notes.
|
||||
So funny enough, before even next was around,
|
||||
Apple actually had a Unix operating system.
|
||||
It was called AUX, and it's usually written A forward slash UX,
|
||||
all capital.
|
||||
And I've used it before, and from personal experience,
|
||||
just running it, if you just use it and you run it,
|
||||
it kind of felt like a herbinger of what was to come in the Apple world.
|
||||
So it's kind of eerie now seeing Mac OS X,
|
||||
or Mac OS if you want to call it what it is now.
|
||||
And how that all came to be.
|
||||
And this was basically 10 years prior to all of that.
|
||||
So kind of interesting.
|
||||
So I'll also put a link in the show notes for AUX.
|
||||
And I hope this was informative.
|
||||
I hope I didn't ramble too much,
|
||||
so I have a tendency to do that, as you can tell.
|
||||
But anyway, I hope you enjoyed this,
|
||||
and talk to you soon.
|
||||
Bye-bye.
|
||||
MUSIC
|
||||
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 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.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound
|
||||
and the infonomicon computer club,
|
||||
and it's 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 stated, today's show is released under
|
||||
Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLive, 3.0 license.
|
||||
MUSIC
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user