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: 3703
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Title: HPR3703: McCurdy House Tour
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3703/hpr3703.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 04:19:51
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3703 for Wednesday the 12th of October 2022.
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Today's show is entitled McCurdy House Tour.
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It is the 90th show of operator and is about 13 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is operator brings us on a house tour.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio with your host operator.
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Going to do something a little weird.
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Today I'm going to do a kind of house tour.
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Most of the will be technology based.
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I'm not going to do show notes.
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There are some things that are specific to certain things that I'll have to provide to you.
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But in general I'm not doing show notes and I know everyone hates that.
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But you can pretty much google everything except for what I'm going to put in the show notes.
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So I'm also off in the garage here.
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I have a ESB32 Arduino board powering a bunch of lights.
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Like 1,400 Christmas tree lights year round.
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And there's a thing called J-channel that you can put in.
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If you all want more episodes to expand just let me know.
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But this is J-channel that you can drill holes in every three inches.
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And you got your fancy year round Christmas tree lights.
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So far so good.
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I've had to repair it once.
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It should last longer than that but whatever.
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Automatic garage door with code.
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That's what everybody has nowadays.
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Let's see.
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I go into those beach things.
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It's a folding beach wheel cart.
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I opted on the one without the giant plastic wheels because it's kind of a pain
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about to put in and out of cars.
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The slimmer wheels are better because you can fit more stuff in.
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Folding chairs.
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Everybody has those.
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Pressure washer.
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The pressure washer I have is used.
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I do not recommend building or rebuilding pressure washers because it's basically two engines.
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You've got one engine.
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This is the engine and the other engine is the pump system.
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And you know, you get leaks and whatever.
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But when you're doing pumps,
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anything with water or metal and water.
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You can use a radiator anti-rest with water pump loop by Prestone.
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It's a yellow bottle.
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And it's this blue liquid that's essentially, I don't even know what's in it.
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But it helps keep protect winter eyes, metal, and stuff like that.
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So I let it run through, pull the crank a couple of times and blue and that blue.
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But the white stuff comes out and that's how you let it sit.
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You drain the water out as best you can.
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And then you let it sit with that that radiator goo in.
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Anyway, it's moving on.
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I got a big one of those big plastic coil pans.
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Screws, boxes, used cat litter boxes.
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Nothing's nothing interesting or useful there.
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I got a nice chainsaw.
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It's still a real nice, still chainsaw.
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And try to learn not to how to chop my head off.
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But if you do have a chainsaw, I'll get invest in a good one and take care of it and sharpen it
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and know how to use it and know how not to use it.
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If you spit on it and the spit and the spit steams up or whatever and sizzles,
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you're something is wrong.
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Your chainsaw is too hot.
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Stop figuring out what's going on.
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You need more oil.
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You need to sharpen it, whatever.
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Make your own mixes.
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Don't buy the 50-50 stuff from the store.
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It's stupid expensive.
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Various yard ornaments for Halloween.
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Mr. Foggers or the fog machines, you want to clean them out with, they say vinegar.
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I just clean them out with water and let them run through steam comes out.
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And then I pull out the water out and then I let it run until it's dry for a very short time.
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If you don't want to run anything that's supposed to take a load that's without a load on it.
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So dry pumps, dry firing, dry anything.
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You don't want to do that.
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Water irrigation system I have in the front that's a
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a little pop-up thing you can build your own, but somebody did half of ours.
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And that's a whole completely different story.
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But a timer-based little drip irrigation system that I set up.
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The threads on the irrigation stuff is different than the threads on your traditional hose.
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So in America we have like two different kinds and they feel like they're the same,
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but they are not.
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So you will destroy threads on stuff.
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If you try to use the traditional hose or some of these other attachments, they're
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different, slightly different, what do they call it?
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Links or whatever for the for the threads on things.
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I've ruined a timer just because I thought the hose attachment was supposed to sit on there, right?
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And then you have to get a converter.
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Let's see, boxes and stuff various organizing of things.
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Took an old flood light and made a spotlight out of it.
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So I just took apart the LED worked fine, but the switching part of the motion light didn't work.
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So I just bypassed all that and now I have this stupid 900-lumen workbench light that I can put really anywhere.
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By a nice bike pump and a nice bike so you can do good stuff.
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Oh, chainsaw rope on a chain.
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Chain saw blade essentially or a chainsaw chain on a rope.
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And you throw it up there and you try not to get the chain stuck.
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But I've pulled down three branches so far.
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It is an effort to get all that figured out, but you can cut down branches that are touching
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your house or whatever.
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You don't want branches touching your house because gooders can easily get in and out
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of the top level.
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They can just crawl up the tree and go straight into your house, had ants doing that with us.
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We save, just a starter foam, what not.
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We're only five minutes in, so I'm kind of moving that decent speed.
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Kind of make sure I don't take forever on this one.
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Various boots and bobs.
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Oh, we use bins 100 max formula for insecticide.
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It's like 97% deep and it doesn't smell like nasty like the deep woods off.
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So if you have to use deep woods off, I would switch to the bins.
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It's very oily and you have to kind of rub it in your skin and I use a piece of,
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actually a piece of plastic tubing to like apply it.
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So I'll spray a little bit on and I apply it with a plastic tube and smear it around.
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It's, it gets to be a mess.
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You can't really spray it on.
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You have to spray it on and kind of wipe it in with something.
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And then you get that oily stuff all over yourself and you know, you kind of stink,
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but it's not nearly as bad as whatever.
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Giant box of 32 DB in our ear protection.
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You need ear protection a lot more than you think.
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So put them in your car.
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We're going to a concert.
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Put them in your purse.
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Put them in your book bag.
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Put them in your backup.
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You know, it's just like Nino's porn.
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I have Nino's porn everywhere.
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I have ear plugs everywhere.
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And don't wear them too much because you'll end up with ear problems because
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ear plugs and ear buds shouldn't be worn all the time.
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Bug stuff.
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I do, I did an episode on the bug stuff.
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So dealt the dust for getting behind walls and whatnot.
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So I did an episode on bugs.
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If you want to listen to that one, pretty much it.
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Oh, I mean, got to the inside, but there is all the blaster stuff is great.
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The blaster has a penetrating catalyst.
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It doesn't work really.
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What you want to do is a hot cold, hot cold method.
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So if it's metal and you're having problems with whatever that is,
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hit it with a torch, if you can't.
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And then cool it down with like some ice or an upside down can of air.
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And you trust your position back and forth between that ending on cold.
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And banging it with a hammer or something like that.
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And sometimes you won't have to get out the angle grinder and cut something off.
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Just that cold, hot transition is enough to break everything free.
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Along with the blaster, then you might get lucky and get what you want.
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Um, uh, those ladder things that go on the top of a ladder to like,
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to be more secure, I've only used it a handful of times.
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But you see people on ladders walk around like they own the place and scared to
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wrap out of me, um, a cutoff valve for your water meter.
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If you do not have one, get one, show your spouse how to use it.
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Make sure everyone knows how to use it.
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Make sure that your water, uh, meter is clear.
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I'm here in the US at least, um, and you can get to it and you can easily pull it off.
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Maintenance that thing at least once every two years.
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Make sure that it's not gross down there.
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Then you can get to the shutoff valve and it's nice and clean.
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I had to spend probably an hour to just clean up originally.
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That shutoff valve around our house because if something happens and you call,
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you have to call the county or city, whatever to cut something off or the plumber to cut
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something off. You don't want to be doing that because it's in the policy like 300 dollars just
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to have somebody shut off of their valve for you.
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Um, air, air, air, uh, air compressor.
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A lot of people don't know what you're supposed to bleed it out when you're done using it.
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Um, same thing maintenance maintenance maintenance.
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If you have a motor or something with a motor in it or it's a tool that's mechanical in nature,
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just do the due diligence of like whatever the product is.
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Maintenance and figure out, okay, what do I have to do for my angle grinder maintenance?
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Oh, cool. I'm not supposed to use the blades all the way down to the stub because it might
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shatter in my face. I don't know if they do like those anymore, but uh, you know, see this awful
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angle grinder videos of people like over not misusing the angle grinder blades and chunks of
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hot slag in their face or something. Um, anyways, that's most of the garage.
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Tools, tools, tools, strategy, tag tools everywhere. I can't have too many screwdrivers.
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I've got a decent grill. Costco had a ceramic grill because I'm so tired of buying crappy aluminum
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or whatever. Crabby girls. See them down the street. There's one in the street right now down
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the street. See them all the time, vacuum cleaners. People don't know how to fix stuff. People
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don't want to pay to fix stuff. Everything is garbage. So I bought a ceramic kaboakimoto,
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basically like a green egg knockoff. Um, and they have deals on them at Costco. Everyone's
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someone else. Look deals will have a nice deal on it. You get the cover, which is like, you know,
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$100 for, you know, however, for free, basically. And then, you know, that's the whole thing.
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So I'm still trying to figure that out. I'm not going to do an episode on that because people
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people would beat that dead horse. Um, so yeah, um, I think the garage is pretty much done.
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There's nothing super cool in there. Uh, my bike, um, maintenance, figure that out. I still haven't
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figured out my bike, but uh, kitchen's pretty basic. Um, I would say, um, we got some
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knife block for Christopher, for our anniversary or whatever wedding gift. And I've been slowly
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swapping out. The knives was like super fancy, um, one of these, um, shun, fancy shun nice.
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So our knife block is like getting completed. One of these days will have a complete set of
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shun knives, but apparently the, the whole thing with, um, knives is that you've got like soft
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steel. And then you've got like your German steel that's harder steel. And these,
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these shun knives are kind of overkill. Like they're for like making sushi and stuff because
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you use them and you gotta sharpen them in home like every time you use them. But it's, it's, it's, it's a thing.
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Um, um, pretty much down here. Kathy loves this bizzle thing, the little bizzle floor cleaner.
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It's blue, I don't know the model number of it. Bizzle Crosswebe, whatever their nearest
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crossway of this is so far so good. Um, they're all garbage, but she likes it.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was
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contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive and our sings.net. On the Sadois
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status, today's show is released on their creative commons, attribution, 4.0 International
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