Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
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Episode: 3533
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Title: HPR3533: Porridge
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3533/hpr3533.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 01:04:29
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio episode 3533 for Wednesday the 16th of February 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Porridge, It is hosted by D&D and is about 29 minutes long and
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carries a clean flag. The server is a show about Porridge.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Haka Public Radio. This is D&D.
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So this one is actually something I recorded almost one year ago. It was going to be my first episode
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of Haka Public Radio, but I ended up never posting it. And I actually mentioned it in my first
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episode. It's my episode about Porridge that I had already recorded. So I was just making some
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binhead oat Porridge, which means it took about 25 minutes to cook. And while I was making it,
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I was just talking a little bit about Porridge. And I also talked about some of the episodes of
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Haka Public Radio that had come out in the weeks before this. This was in March 2021. I decided
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to pick it up again and have a listen, cut a few bits here and there and then post it.
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All right, good afternoon. Haka Public Radio.
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So I'm a new host here. I don't have a name yet. I'll try to come up with one before I post this.
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This is kind of like an intro show, I guess. And it's also a show about Porridge.
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So about every lately, maybe like every other day, I'll make myself oat Porridge for lunch.
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So this is steel cut oats, the brand is Bob's Red Mill. And you can buy it in the US,
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which is where I live. Probably somewhere else too, I guess. So yeah, Porridge. So according to
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Wikipedia, Porridge is when you take a plant and you boil it, a starchy plant, and you boil it in water.
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And you can let it absorb most of the water or not. And depending on the types of Porridge you're
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making. So lots of different things are Porridge. For example, in the south of the US, they eat
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grits, which is Porridge made from ground up corn. There's also polenta in Italy,
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largely the same thing, maybe a different kind of corn or ground finer, I'm not sure. But so
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I've got about half a cup of steel cut oats, and I'm kind of roasting them first. I don't know how
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often people actually do this, but generally I like to roast things and cook them a little bit
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dry before I put water in them, whether it's rice or whatever else. So yeah, by the way, rice is also
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kind of like Porridge, but with rice you let it dry almost completely. There are other
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kinds of dishes where you have rice, but you maybe don't let it dry all the way, like risotto.
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Anyway, so I'm going to add the water now.
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So I saw a while back. I read something about the Porridge World Championship or something like that.
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I'll try to find the article and now share it in the show notes when I send this in.
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So at this thing, you people go and make Porridge with just rice, salt, and your oats.
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Just coming in from 2022 to say that, of course, rice, salt, and oats will not make
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Porridge. You need water. So I was supposed to say oats, salt, and water.
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And then they try and see which one is best. So according to the thing I read,
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the brand Bob's Red Mill was almost always the one selected by my people. People would bring their own
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oats to this thing, to this championship. So also according to the thing, the typically the
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winner or the best ones were the ones where the contestant was actually stirring the oats the
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entire time. So here I'm making oats with just water and salt for now. I'm going to put a little more
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salt. So yeah, yesterday I tried to do this and I was trying to make it so informal and easy,
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just, you know, record it while I'm making my oats, my porridge that I'm going to make anyway.
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But I guess I made it so informal that I forgot to check that the microphone was actually being
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picked up by the application. So I ended up just recording about 20 minutes of silence. So that
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didn't work. I guess I didn't post that one. Maybe it would have been two of two, even for this
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podcast. But I did check this on the website show about porridge and the tool on the website
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said that it is of interest to hackers. So here it is. So now I'm just stirring this with a wooden spoon
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and apparently in I think Scotland or maybe in Ireland they use a special tool that's called
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a spurtle. That's kind of like a stick from what I've been able to gather. In fact the trophy of
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the the world championship is the golden spurtle. And so yeah, it's just a stick because apparently
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you're supposed to stir your porridge so softly that it doesn't release too much more starch than
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it would otherwise. But it will still promote that even cooking. Also I think there are spoons that
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are kind of like a wooden spoon where both faces of the spoon are like the back of the spoon
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to also. So there's not like that shoveling action or whatever when you're stirring it.
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So I'm just stirring it with a regular wooden spoon. I'm just being very easy about it.
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And then you know you just stand here and stir your porridge and just think about how many
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millions of people have made porridge for thousands of years, apparently ever since the Neolithic
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like 10,000 years ago. And here I am making it too. In this simple way it's kind of like
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it's kind of like solving your problem using just like you I think like a writing
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writing a script that uses only Unix tools for example. No dependencies at all. That's kind of
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what this is like. And it tastes pretty good too. But yeah I'm read a while back there and there's
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this island in the north of I think Scotland maybe to the west some way from the mainland.
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And they were this island was evacuated in the early 20th century. People moved to the mainland
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and I think ever since no one has lived on this island. And I read that one of the things that
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people did was when they left their houses for the last time they left a little mound of oats
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on the in the middle of the room. Because I guess that's how significant oats are to them.
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Also they say that while in England oats were seen as the food for your horses and stuff
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for your cattle or something like that. For your animals anyway not for your people.
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It was it would sustain people in Scotland. And I think it still is a very significant staple food
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in Scotland. And so it's got that kind of anti imperialist thing about it too. It also represents that
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I think. And yeah everywhere in the world people have taken stuff. Starship plants I guess.
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And blow them in water to see what happened. And they make there's also the wheat berries.
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They will the wheat berries you can make pourers out of them but you have to boil them a little
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the night before and then let it soak overnight and then cook it the next day.
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I think there's some tradition somewhere where you they eat it with maybe coconut.
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It's a sweet porridge and it's maybe new years maybe a new year's tradition. I'm not sure about that.
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We have some wheat berries here for that reason. We made that. It was very good.
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I want to make it again soon.
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Yeah and then like I said before you have polenta you have grits, a lot of grits, delicious stuff.
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You just cook it or whatever you want it or don't put anything in it just have it vanilla and
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that's good too. Just have it plain you know nothing wrong with plain.
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And it's cool.
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So yeah things are moving along here. Hopefully Sony will be able to hear the bubbling as some of
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the water evaporates or is absorbed by the oats. I'm just going to talk about some of the other
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shows I've listened to on this. So yeah I started listening about when it was posted on Hacker
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News. It was mentioned in the in the news the coming of the new news episode at the time.
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So a bunch of new people came in including the guy with the the trumpet guy trumpet John or
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something like that who had a show about his morning routine for his his weekend car maintenance
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routine. And a few other new ones came in apparently at the same time. So yeah I really enjoyed
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several of the episodes you know you have this lately we've had episodes from some guy on the
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internet. Unfortunately it took that name before any of us could. And then there was this guy
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before him who was talking about diversity and Linux you know in you know in technology in general
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I guess an open source technology and yeah I enjoyed the show of this guy was talking about his
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work relating to a COVID-19 in 2020 and then all of a sudden there's a coyote somewhere and
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that was very cool. It makes me makes me think about you know just recording a show while you're
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doing something else that's pretty interesting you know all of a sudden there was a coyote there
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was somebody else there was you know there's this kind of a climax action moment in the show very
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cool and meanwhile you know he was sharing very interesting information with us too. And then the
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guy that was talking to his wife about alcohol that was pretty interesting too. You know about that
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I would say you know you probably want to try it because there's just too much of a risk whenever we
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say we're like we don't want to do something should always ask yourself not even ask yourself you
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should almost assume there's a risk that you're just doing it out of fear and maybe there will be
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something to discover in it so of course you don't want to you don't want to do that all the time
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but in that case I definitely got that vibe from that show. I heard there was also a show about
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tattoos in a similar kind of way and so interesting stuff really interesting the you know that we
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get to share in that. So another thing that I have a public radio has made me think about is how
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you here in the US we have the we have PBS right and there's PBS news hour every night at six
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and on Fridays they've had this thing called in memoriam so they take they take five people
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who have passed away because of COVID-19 from COVID-19 and they just highlight them and they
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show pictures that their family sent and they talk about them and stuff that's a really powerful
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segment you know every every time it's just really interesting these really fascinating people that
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are out there in the world and you know we could just never know about all the fascinating people
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in the world and it kind of makes me think about just how much better everything would be maybe if
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there were no celebrities if the celebrities were not a thing you know similarly here on Hacker
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Public Radio you download the episode when it comes out and maybe you look at the subject if
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it's interesting you might start playing it and you know maybe you have no idea who who is sharing
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it with you and who recorded it and and you're really often it's just really interesting people
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people I want to hear from you know much more than I want to hear from the people that you generally
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see when you turn on your TV or when you know like when you open your your music app on your phone
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all of a sudden you're seeing all these damn people that you you have no interest in you know famous
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people and you have to kind of steer away from them otherwise you would just be given them if you don't
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do anything about it so yeah very cool I'm very grateful for this um definitely hear the call to
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provide a show so the the day when there is no show to air will never come and so we'll continue to have
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this at least for as long as I'm here hopefully so getting pretty um advanced here let me see maybe you
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can hear the bubbling isn't that wonderful so yeah you can kind of see the starch floating around and
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just keep going and it'll absorb a little more I don't like my orange super watery maybe people
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who make it with milk prefer to leave it more liquidy because it's like creamy or something
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since I'm just making it with water and salt I I let it go pretty far and then what I do which
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um happens to be what I've read is the kind of most basic most traditional way to eat
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porridge is you just just pour it in a bowl or in your plate and just sprinkle a little bit of brown
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sugar on top and that's it then you eat it I um I don't stir it in because I kind of like to
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just kind of skim the top with my spoon and then get a few spoons with this really sweet
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porridge and then the rest of it is more savory I find that kind of fun
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so all right I think I'm gonna wrap this up I can't think of anything else
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anyway I just want to thank everyone for um for what they do with this stuff
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acropublic radio is really incredible I've had great times listening to these and
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and hopefully hopefully I can be a contributor to who knows
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and dropping this one in kind of a weird one I know about porridge
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but I did test it on the tool on the website and it did say it was of interest to hackers
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so all right have a good one then I'll see you next time
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all right so that was that and then later a few months after I recorded this one
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I I just recorded the sound of making porridge with no voice and this was it was these
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uh quick cooking um steel cut oats from Bob's Red Mill which is kind of like they're a little bit
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rolled so that the bits are a little smaller so it cooks much faster and I thought it was worth
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it because the it's still pretty good um compared to like actual rolled oats the stuff that
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cooks in just like a minute or something like that and just it's just mush um the the quick
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cooking steel cut oats I thought was a good tradeoff so it was revealed a little while ago
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well months ago now in the emailing list that there are some listeners of hacker public radio that
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use the show uh as a way to go to sleep so I thought as a shout out to those listeners I will play
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um an eight minute clip of the sound of making porridge all right um so to everyone else if you
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want to skip to the next episode feel free this was another episode of hacker public radio thank
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you very much for tuning in and come back tomorrow for another episode
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um
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you've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org
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Today's show was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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