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: 3265
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Title: HPR3265: My Chromebook Experience
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3265/hpr3265.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:54:10
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio Episode 3265 for Friday the 5th of February 2021,
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today's show is entitled, Microbook Experience,
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It is hosted by Yuka and is about 9 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summer is adding my own perspective to the Chromebook discussion.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello, this is Huka welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode.
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This is kind of a response episode because I was listening to Episode 3242 which
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went out in the feed on January 5th of this year and it was kind of an interesting episode.
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Zen Floder 2 decided to take something that Kla2 had done.
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Kla2 had recorded an episode on Gnu World Order and Zen Floder basically replayed what Kla2 had
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done, interspersed with his own comments and his take and it was kind of interesting.
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It was a lengthy look at Chromebooks by a couple of Linux folks and I say on the whole they
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were pretty happy with the experience. Now if this may surprise some people I was not surprised
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since I've been using a Chromebook for I guess a year and a half at this point and have found it
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useful. Chromebooks have at the heart a Linux base and you can do a lot with them and the
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discussion went into things like installing EMAX or doing audio or video production and stuff
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like that. Well that's not my use case at all and I have a home network with several desktops.
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One of which belongs to my wife who uses it for her work although we have Wi-Fi for things like
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phones, tablets and laptops the desktops are all connected via Ethernet to the router
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and we have a DROBO NAS box to handle backups on-site. We also have carbonite accounts for off-site backup
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and the NAS box also handles NAS storage of things like MP3 music files, videos, photos,
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stuff like that. When I do audio production such as recording my shows for hacker public radio
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I do that using Audacity on my Kaplan 2 1804 desktop machine and I will happily continue to do that.
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It works just fine. So while I was enjoying the discussion of how you can do that on a Chromebook
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frankly I will probably never do anything that interesting. I try to fit my tools to my purposes
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and I have no problem using multiple tools. Now my first thought when I was listening to the
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episode was oh I'll post a comment. Then I channeled my inner Ken Fallon and decided no really
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what I should do is record my own show in reply. Hacker public radio always needs more shows anyway.
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So no harm done there. Now this is not going to be the longest one. I'm just going to give a kind
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of a different point of view on why having a Chromebook might be something you would want to use.
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So the start of my story in 2014 I have purchased a Nexus 9 tablet with the idea of having
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something I could easily carry around and do things like read, check my email, look things up,
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basically things I could do on a phone but just with a larger screen.
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But the thing with email is that you have to type and using the on-screen keyboard never got
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comfortable for me. I could do it but it was work. I really wanted a keyboard. So I got a keyboard,
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case combination and that connected via Bluetooth. Sometimes it was really very erratic and
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it tended to drive me nuts. Still it served my primary purpose. I took it with me on my trip to
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Ireland in 2015 and used it to keep my diary of the trip and to look up tourist information and
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you know any place that there was Wi-Fi available I could use it. I took it with me for breakfast
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on Sunday mornings at a local restaurant here. So it was not excellent but it was okay and once
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I had bought it I kept using it. Then it started to misbehave. While I was at breakfast at that local
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restaurant it started to admit loud sounds kind of like a siren which is embarrassing when you're
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out in public. And this happened again after rebooting. At some point I just had to face the fact
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that it was dying. I could have bought another tablet but since I had not entirely enjoyed the
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experience and I was curious about Chromebooks. I decided now let's try this Chromebook thing out.
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So in June of 2019 I spent 309 US dollars to buy an Acer Chromebook. I've got a link in the show
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notes if you want to see what I got. It has an Intel Selleron dual-core processor and four
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gigabytes of RAM. So it isn't particularly powerful but it's very light and easy to carry around.
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I can check my email on it and when my wife and I visited Europe in fall of 2019 I used it to
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keep our travel diary as a Google Doc. I can install and run Android apps on it and I use it
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every day to run a couple of Spanish learning apps because typing on a keyboard is much better
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than trying to do it on a phone screen. Now if I fold the screen and the keyboard back it behaves
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like a tablet and I use it at least a couple of times a week for zoom calls. It's great for that
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and easier than plugging in a camera and microphone on my desktop since it has all of that equipment
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built in and as a slim and light machine it is great for taking on airplane flights or for
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other kinds of travel. So it does a lot of good things for me. Now that said it will never be my
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main computer but that's fine since I have more powerful computers for other uses but for
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something I can just grab and go I am quite happy with it. You know what happens if this reaches
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the end of life. Now mine is scheduled to receive updates through June of 2024. Right now I expect I
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will buy another when that happens. You know maybe new information will come to light between now
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and then but right now I'm happy with it. Now if you have a Chromebook basically mine I get updates
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for five years so I bought it in June of 2019 it will get updates through June of 2024.
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Now I think there were some models that they extended the length of the updates but you know who
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knows what the technology will be in 2024. I'll deal with that when it comes around. Now I have
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a laptop it's when I got from Dell. It's getting kind of old. It's also heavy.
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All right the days of the light laptop had not arrived when I got this one. In fact when I bought
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it it was because Dell for the first time was offering laptops that had Linux pre-installed.
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And if you remember just when that was that will tell you how old it is but it is old. I've
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still got it. It's still you know if I have to go do a complicated Libra Office presentation
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and a local Linux users group and I occasionally get asked to do things like that I would probably
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take that laptop because it's really much more suitable for that particular purpose.
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But when I just want to be able to check my email, surf the web you know wherever I go
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Chromebook is pretty sweet for that. So this is a hook up for hacker public radio signing off
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and is always encouraging you to support free software. Bye bye.
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You've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show like all our shows
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was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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and click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker public radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise status. Today's show is
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released on the creative comments, attribution, share a live 3.0 license.
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