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: 4275
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Title: HPR4275: What is on My Podcast Player 2024, Part 3
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4275/hpr4275.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:22:52
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,275 for Friday the 20th of December 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, What is On My Podcast Player 2024 Part 3.
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It is part of the series podcast recommendations.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 17 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, this is an update on the podcasts Ahukah listens to.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
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slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode.
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And this is going into the Reserve Q.
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So if you're hearing this, that means that HPR is short of shows and you should do a show.
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It's very easy to do.
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For this, I've done several of these about what's in my podcast player and all I did was I went
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into G Potter and exported the OPML file and printed it out and I'm just sitting here
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reading through and discussing each of these podcasts.
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Now I listen to a lot of podcasts so this is going to end up being a number of shows
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to get through all of this.
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Now I've done this before but the thing you have to understand is that things change.
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I'm older.
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My interests are a little bit different than what they were five or ten years ago.
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And so what's in my podcast player has changed.
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So with that introduction, I'm going to get going here.
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And the first one I'm going to mention is a podcast called Discussing Who, which is
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about Dr. Who, one of my passions.
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Now this is one of my favorite Dr. Who podcasts.
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It features three gentlemen from the southern part of the United States.
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Kyle Jones and Clarence Brown are both from Mississippi as I understand it.
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And Lee Shackleford is from North Carolina.
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And they've got a discussing network that does a number.
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They do a discussing who, they do a discussing trek that goes into Star Trek.
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And I've probably several other things.
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The Dr. Who one is the one that I'm interested in.
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Now Kyle Jones and Lee Shackleford initially got involved with a podcast that sadly does
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not exist anymore called Dr. Who Pod Shock.
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And this was really, I think, one of the very first Dr. Who podcasts started up right
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around the time that Dr. Who came back in 2005.
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And they ran for a number of years and then as happens sometimes, circumstances changed
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and the podcast has disappeared.
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But Kyle and Lee were on that podcast together at one point.
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And then when Pod Shock disappeared, they set up discussing who and it has become one
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of my favorites.
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Lee Shackleford is a playwright.
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And he will probably get to discussing one of his solo podcasts, which is really a audio
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drama.
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But he brings some insight from being a playwright into the discussion.
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Now, I'm going to put in the show notes links to each of the podcasts that I talk about.
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So if one of them happens to catch your attention, you can just go to the show notes and sign
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up and start listening.
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Now the next one is called Talk More Talk, a solo Beatles cast.
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Now this one is available as a video cast on YouTube or you can get it as audio.
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I listen to audio podcasts most of the time when those are present because that's something
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I can do when I'm doing the laundry, driving my car, things like that, work around the
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house.
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So audio content is useful for that.
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So I get it as audio.
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And what this is focusing on is the solo catalog of the four people who made up the Beatles.
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So they're not directly discussing Beatles material, but they're discussing John Lennon
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material, Paul McCartney material, George Harrison material, Ringo Star material.
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And I happen to like most of that stuff.
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So this is a good one.
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And it has four people involved, Tom Hanyadi, who is involved in a solo McCartney podcast
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we'll probably get to at some point, Kit O'Toole, Mean Mr. Mayo and Ken Michaels.
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Then there's the Beatles multitrack meltdown and this is deconstructed mixes of the music
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of the Beatles and related artists.
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So this starts picking apart how some of the music is put together and I think it's
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an interesting kind of thing if you're onto that sort of thing.
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And there's one here called On the Terrace.
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Now I mentioned in another one of these episodes, I started with a podcast called Splendid
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Chaps and said that the people involved in that had created an audio drama thing called
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Night Terrace.
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And On the Terrace is a podcast companion that talks about, you know, little discussion
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of the show after it's aired, interviews with the people involved, etc.
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Now Night Terrace is a BBC Radio 4.
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They sold that to the BBC.
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So if you're in the UK, you can probably find it wherever you find BBC programs.
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I signed up to support the show and I get it that way.
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So trying to remember, if you know, I don't remember offhand, which way I signed up to
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support it, but one of those online support things.
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The next one I want to mention is called the Geeks Guide to the Galaxy.
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So obviously a play on the old Douglas Adams Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
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It's a science fiction related podcast hosted by David Barr Curtley.
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And you know, he'll talk about things involving science fiction.
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So he's had guests such as Neil Gaiman, George R.R. Martin, Richard Dawkins, Simon Pegg,
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and so on.
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So it's on the recommended podcast list from NPR, the Guardian, BBC America.
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So it's a discussion about science fiction.
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So you know, with Doom movies coming out, they've had some discussions about Doom and
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looking at the novels that the movies come from and have two or three guests come on
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and participate in the discussion.
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Now the next one I want to talk about is called Two Legs, a Paul McCartney podcast.
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So this is a play, there's a McCartney song called Three Legs.
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My dog has three legs and your dog's got none.
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But in this case, it's Two Legs because there's two hosts.
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One is Andy Nichols and the other is Tom Hanyadi.
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I mentioned Tom as he's also on the Talk More Talk, Solo Beatles podcast.
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So this is one that is devoted strictly to Paul McCartney's Solo work and if that's
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something you're interested in, check it out.
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Now the next one I'm going to mention is called Ten American Presidents.
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Now there's, I don't think it's restricted to Ten, I don't know how they started this.
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But they tend to have, they have guest hosts that come in and will pick a particular
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president or some aspect of that president and talk about it, generally they're people
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who have written books or their historians or something like that.
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And as someone who loves history, that's the kind of thing I tend to go for.
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And speaking of history, another one, the ancient world and this is talking about the
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oldest human civilizations, it basically anything up to about 500 BC.
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At that point it starts becoming the classical world I suppose is the way you would break
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it down.
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So you wanted to talk about Sumeria, Babylon, stuff like that or the civilizations in
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the Western hemisphere or in China or what have you.
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This would be a podcast that might be of interest.
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And another one, history, I got a lot of history podcasts, it's called Our Fake History.
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And what this is about is things that people think are true because the stories have been
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going around and you know you hear about it and the host will then dig into it and show
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in various ways.
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Well this isn't exactly the way things were.
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So you know did Cleopatra commit suicide by clutching an ass to her bosom and no that's
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not really what happened.
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So again you'd have to like history and enjoy getting to the bottom of some of these stories
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but I do so that's one of the ones I like.
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The next one is space rocket history.
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Now this is a series that has been going on for a while.
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They've got a few hundred, usually a few hundred shows by now they started with a few things
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going back to Oberth and Seal Klofsky and some of the early pioneers and then working
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into actual space exploration that just finished Skylab like last week as I'm recording this.
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They look at both America and the Soviet Union and at the point we're at because it's
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done chronologically.
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We haven't gotten to the post Soviet Union yet but they have done shows you know looking
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at the Soviet efforts in space and they're very interesting.
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I have a strong interest in space and science fiction, all of those things sort of tied
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together for me.
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So this is something that I really enjoy.
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Another history one, Renaissance English history a show about the tutors.
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So a lot went on then, Henry VIII broke with the Catholic Church and established a Protestant
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religion.
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There were wars with Scotland and France and Spain.
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The birth of the modern world, the tutors started the exploration.
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It didn't really get going in earnest until the stewards but it started with the tutors.
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So there's a lot of good stuff going on here.
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And there is the history of Byzantium which tells the story of the Eastern Roman Empire.
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Now the Roman Empire started obviously in Rome but in the 4th century Constantine moved
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his capital from Rome to a city that he ended up calling Constantinople in his own name.
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And then in the 5th century the Roman Empire in the West fell.
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You can argue about when.
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Now there was a wonderful podcast by Mike Duncan.
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We talked about him when we looked at his podcast called Revolutions.
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He started though with one called the history of Rome and he took Rome from the founding
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of the city all the way up to the fall of the Roman Empire in the West.
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And the date that a lot of people used for that is 476 AD when the last emperor was deposed.
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So this other fellow decided that he loved what Mike Duncan had done but he wanted to
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continue the story.
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And there was still a Roman Empire in existence.
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It just had a capital in what is now Istanbul in the East.
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And he's got a point because the people there thought of themselves as Romans.
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They called the land they lived in Romania.
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We call it Byzantium long after the fact that was not a name that any of those people
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ever used.
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And that Eastern Roman Empire lasted for another thousand years after the fall of the Western
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Roman Empire.
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So it's pretty significant.
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And Robin does a good job of exploring that history basically from the 476 AD when it fell
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in the West to 1453, which is when Constantinople finally falls to the Ottoman Turks.
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So with that, this is a hookup for Hacker Public Radio signing off and as always encouraging
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you to support free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an onstoast.com, the internet archive and
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our syncs.net.
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On this advice status, today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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