- 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>
157 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
157 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4277
|
|
Title: HPR4277: Introduction episode by Paul
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4277/hpr4277.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:23:46
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4277 for Tuesday, 24 December 2024.
|
|
Today's show is entitled Introduction Episode by Paul.
|
|
It is the first show by Newhost Paul Jay and is about 8 minutes long.
|
|
It carries a clean flag.
|
|
The summary is Paul Jay is a new podcast host for HPR.
|
|
This is his introductory podcast.
|
|
Good evening.
|
|
My name is Paul and this is my introductory podcast for Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
I came across Hacker Public Radio and Ken at Ogkamp 2024.
|
|
In discussions with Ken, he was very persuasive, suggesting I should make a podcast for Hacker
|
|
Public Radio.
|
|
The first show he explains should be a simple, short introduction show and then the following
|
|
shows could be more about specific topics.
|
|
So here I am.
|
|
So it's first of all I'd like to give you some background about me, starting with my
|
|
work.
|
|
I studied material science at Brunel University in West London in the UK.
|
|
Following my degree, I joined British Steel as it was then, in the stainless division
|
|
in Sheffield as a graduate trainee.
|
|
Six months later I transferred to South Wales to stay in this long product as a steel
|
|
maker.
|
|
This job involved calculating all the elements, additions and gas blows to convert about
|
|
44 tons of melted steel scrap into 48 tons of prime stainless steel.
|
|
This was a small division and in the following 18 months I was promoted a couple of times.
|
|
First of all to shift management and subsequently to technical section manager.
|
|
After three years I took a job in Bosch at their new UK-based factory.
|
|
I worked there for 10 years actually in two five year blocks with two years in an automotive
|
|
pressure up in between.
|
|
All I can say is don't believe what the headhunters tell you.
|
|
In 2002 I moved to North Wales to start with work of a Toyota in their engine manufacturing
|
|
plant.
|
|
I stayed with Toyota for 17 years, the last three and a half years based in Brussels and
|
|
working all around Europe.
|
|
In the middle of 2019 I left Toyota and after a couple of months I set up a part-time consulting
|
|
business with an employee count of one, i.e. me.
|
|
This has kept me busy since 2019 but I plan to finish this work at the end of 2025.
|
|
I had been very lucky enough to work in companies with a real interest in looking after employees
|
|
and working together with them to deliver both performance with a company and long-term
|
|
stable employers and development for their employees.
|
|
I'd like to talk a little bit about my computing interest.
|
|
So my first interaction with the computer was in 1980 in school.
|
|
We had an opportunity to do some programming in basic.
|
|
The computer was actually based at the county council and we had to send the program listings
|
|
off to them and they would load and run them and then send the printout back a week or
|
|
so later.
|
|
Debugging would take some time.
|
|
Subsequently the school bought two Commodore PET computers which we could use, again programming
|
|
in basic.
|
|
My first computer I owned personally was a Spectrum 16K on which I mostly played games.
|
|
When it went to university we had an account on the Baltic's mainframe.
|
|
This was used for some coursework but also for emailing and so on.
|
|
In my last year my project was modelling interfacial bond behaviour on injection moulded carbon
|
|
fiber reinforced nylon.
|
|
To do this I decided I didn't want to learn 4tron or lists but instead learn C.
|
|
Ironically I've come to love lists in recent years.
|
|
I was given an account on the Pyramid Unix system to do programming for this project.
|
|
In hindsight what I did was not really that complex but it did get me a good degree
|
|
result.
|
|
I also bought an Amstrad PCW8256 in my final year at university and I used this to write
|
|
up my project and also to learn Pascal.
|
|
In my job in British Steel I had an IBM PC clone on my desk and after university I bought
|
|
an Omega 500 for home use.
|
|
I could see the possibility to make a computer program to do the calculations for steelmaking
|
|
and I started writing a program in C to do this while still in British Steel.
|
|
I set it up so I could compile it on both the work PC and also on my Omega.
|
|
It was a terminal user based interface program as was commonly known as days but it had
|
|
a consistent interface whether used on the Omega or on the PC.
|
|
To make life a bit easier I bought a sidecar hard drive unit for the Omega and I also bought
|
|
a C compiler to form a cost about £400 with a 20 megabyte hard drive.
|
|
The C compiler itself was also not cheap if I remember correctly.
|
|
Once the hard drive was plugged in the driver took a good portion of the 512K system memory
|
|
so the next purchase I had to make was an additional 512K costing another £70.
|
|
Stuff wasn't cheap in those days.
|
|
I left British Steel before finishing the program but delivered it to the company 18 months
|
|
later.
|
|
It was then used up until the plant closed about 10 years later.
|
|
I eventually moved on from the Omega and built an X86 system based on the AMD K6 processor
|
|
I remember correctly.
|
|
I've made use of several Linux distributions.
|
|
The first was flatbar in 1995 but I also had a few box version of Suzie.
|
|
When using Suzie I learned the meaning of dependency hell when trying out newer versions
|
|
of software which has stored newer libraries which overrode libraries needed by the system.
|
|
I gave a run for a spin when it came out but in 2005 settled on Gen 2 and I've been
|
|
using it continuously on my desktop and laptop since.
|
|
Over the years I became curious about Geeks and Knicks.
|
|
I struggled to get my head around Geeks initially but had more success with Dix having learned
|
|
the concepts while learning Geeks.
|
|
The community friction in Knicks is something I find disturbing so I put Gen 2 back on my
|
|
laptop and I start experimenting with Geeks again on one liter PC.
|
|
I'm making much more progress this time and I can see a time when I put Geeks on my
|
|
laptop and possibly on my other computers at a later date.
|
|
I have a server which I've built for work in 2023 primarily to run Next Cloud as a service
|
|
to avoid needing Google Drive.
|
|
My work is still done in Windows in order to interface with clients my work files are
|
|
on OneDrive.
|
|
This is something I will change in 2025.
|
|
Anyone who thinks Microsoft, Embrace, Open Source should consider why things like Autosave
|
|
and Office applications only works when the files are stored on OneDrive.
|
|
The sooner I'm out of the Microsoft ecosystem, the better.
|
|
Not to mention their intention to use all customer files to train their AI.
|
|
In addition to my computing expertise I also engage in several other activities.
|
|
I play the clarinet in the local town band.
|
|
I picked the clarinet up about 20 years ago and initially taught myself to play but
|
|
then had lessons to improve further and also to unlearn some bad habits.
|
|
The band is a community windman with about 40 players and we meet and rehearse each
|
|
week and do a couple of concerts each year.
|
|
I build and fly model aircraft in quadcopters and I have done this since I was a teenager
|
|
really on and off.
|
|
I have been involved in the development of Libre pilots, which are quadcopters software
|
|
but the team have drifted away and is now no longer in active development.
|
|
I'm learning Rust at the moment and want to build a flight controller and Rust to reinforce
|
|
my understanding.
|
|
For me, learning by doing is better than learning by reading.
|
|
Outdoor activities and trying to keep some level of fitness, particularly as I start
|
|
to get older.
|
|
I do cycle and I also took up kayaking this year.
|
|
I'm also a registered ham operator having taken my foundation license to found during
|
|
lockdown in the UK.
|
|
I set up a home shack but I'm plagued by interference at home so I need to spend some
|
|
time working out where the problem is coming from and resolving it.
|
|
I have a mobile setup which I use for some SOTA and POTA but I need to be more active.
|
|
I do some electronics mainly supporting ham radio and model flying activities.
|
|
Again, I plan to expand this more once I fully retire in October.
|
|
I think in summary, I can bring something to the HPR community and look forward to choosing
|
|
a topic for my first proper episode.
|
|
If you have any ideas you think I should elaborate on, feel free to comment.
|
|
Also, if I can make an episode for HPR then so can you.
|
|
Trust me, it isn't so difficult.
|
|
I will be in FOSTEM in 2025 so if you want to meet up, drop me a message.
|
|
It will be my first time and I suspect I will find it a challenge for the number of
|
|
people there.
|
|
I'm looking forward to it.
|
|
It would also be great to be in Brussels again.
|
|
That's my introduction show for you.
|
|
While preparing to record this podcast, I had a look at the account on the HPR website.
|
|
There are so many open slots so I really need to emphasise that you should make a podcast
|
|
and I will also start looking at what my second podcast topic should be and hopefully
|
|
to be something of interest to you.
|
|
So that's me.
|
|
I'm Paul and you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio and I'd like to wish you all
|
|
the best for the upcoming holidays.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
|
Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, you click on our contribute link to find
|
|
out how easy it really is.
|
|
Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
|
|
and our syncs.net.
|
|
On this advice status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
|
|
License.
|