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:
61
hpr_transcripts/hpr3914.txt
Normal file
61
hpr_transcripts/hpr3914.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
|
||||
Episode: 3914
|
||||
Title: HPR3914: how to deal with blisters
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3914/hpr3914.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:52:03
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,914 for Thursday the 3rd of August 2023.
|
||||
Today's show is entitled How to Deal with Blisters.
|
||||
It is hosted by DNT and is about four minutes long.
|
||||
It carries a clean flag.
|
||||
The summary is a technique my father taught me for dealing with blisters.
|
||||
You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q.
|
||||
We are airing it now because we had free slots that were not filled.
|
||||
This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
|
||||
Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
Hello and welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
This is your host, DNT.
|
||||
This one I am making it an emergency show for the emergency queue.
|
||||
I want to talk about something that my father taught me when I was pretty young about
|
||||
dealing with blisters.
|
||||
I remember him doing this to my brother on how exactly he got a bunch of blisters on
|
||||
his hand.
|
||||
He showed this to us and then I have done it many times since and I haven't had any
|
||||
problems.
|
||||
Most recently I went on a trip to Chicago with my brother and my brother walks quite
|
||||
a lot and he was visiting from Brazil, going to Chicago and then I went to Chicago and
|
||||
met him there and we walked a whole lot and since now I live in the United States I am
|
||||
not used to walking much at all anymore so my feet were suffering quite a lot and he
|
||||
was absolutely fine.
|
||||
Every night we got to the hotel and I would kind of do maintenance on my feet as you would
|
||||
do to a horse or something like that.
|
||||
What I did was I think after the second day I had blisters on one.
|
||||
I think I had just two blisters on one foot and so what you can do is I went to Walgreens
|
||||
which is like a drugstore here in the US and I bought a sewing kit then you can take
|
||||
your needle and your thread, you thread the needle and then you poke into your blister
|
||||
being careful not to poke your flesh and then cross it to the other edge of your blister
|
||||
and then poke it through to come out with your needle then pass the needle through leaving
|
||||
some thread inside your blister.
|
||||
Then you can squeeze in some liquid will come out and none of this will hurt obviously.
|
||||
So some liquid will come out so it's good to squeeze it with a napkin or something like
|
||||
that at first and then you can just leave it like that.
|
||||
It'll hurt a lot less right away and then you just leave the thread in and when you get
|
||||
home in the evening you can remove it and then you can just move on and after a while the
|
||||
skin will come off completely but you won't have any more pain pretty much immediately after
|
||||
you'll do this so it's a pretty cool trick I've never seen anyone do this before.
|
||||
My father taught this taught me this a long long time ago and I've never seen anyone do it
|
||||
since I don't know if he came up with this or what and he's not with us anymore so I can
|
||||
ask him but so I'm passing it on here as an emergency show. Now this was being posted in 2022
|
||||
and just recently we had a show that had been posted in 2012 come through to the main feed so
|
||||
perhaps this will go out in about 2013-2033. Perhaps if things go well I suppose.
|
||||
So here's a shout out from 2022 to you in the future. All right thank you for listening.
|
||||
Now remember if you're listening to this it means Hacker Public Radio is short on shows so
|
||||
just sit down with your phone and record something like this just share a little something that
|
||||
you know or whatever and send it into Hacker Public Radio. Thanks for tuning in and I'll see you
|
||||
next time. You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
||||
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
|
||||
broadcast you can click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our
|
||||
synch.net. On this otherwise stated today's show is released on our Creative Commons
|
||||
Attribution 4.0 International License.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user