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Conspiracy Theorem

Nick Dolle and Kareem Maize/Packaged Media

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Kareem Maize and Nick Dolle dive deep into conspiracies while trying to stay unbiased so you can make your own decision. Leave us a message here (http://packaged.media/conspiracy-theorem) It may be played on the show!
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Hello— And welcome to The Robloxians Theorem, the Podcast about all things RobloxStudio. Have you ever wanted to create a Roblox game but didn’t know where to start? Well then this is the perfect Podcast for you! Here we talk about the best models, tools, guns, and scripts to make your game truly amazing!
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The Breakthrough

TheoremOne (now Monks Technology Services)

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The Breakthrough was a podcast produced by TheoremOne (now Monks Technology Services) to help innovators navigate a world in flux. The podcast was hosted by Alison Dean, our Global SVP, People Operations at TheoremOne.‍ Hear interviews with thought leaders across the technology industry as they give practical advice based on their experience and share fresh perspectives on what’s next. Enjoy this content, brought to you by Monks. Learn more about Monks Technology Services at https://www.monk ...
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Director Terry Gilliam talks about The Zero Theorem. Set in a dystopian future world, the film follows an eccentric computer programmer who’s tasked with finding the reason for human existence. But, when he starts to get close to an answer, his sinister corporate managers try to distract him from the truth.
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Bite-Size Math Pi

Jeffrey Ong

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The Bite-size Math Pi podcast is about math topics in secondary or high school. In each episode, Jeffrey discusses topics like indices, differentiation, binomial theorem, math functions, and others in a quick and easy way to help you understand them. Join him for a bite-sized math pi(e).
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The Long Watch

Harlly Lewis, Jeaun Lewis and Lawson Kiehne

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Each week Harlly Lewis, Jeaun Lewis and Lawson Kiehne work their way through “The List”, an overly long and unnecessarily complex catalogue of films of all genres. It may seem like madness, but there are rules - even if only Lawson understands them.
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IMT Show

Mike Sims

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IMT stands for Infinite Monkey Theorem.The infinite monkey theorem states that a monkey hitting keys at random on a typewriter keyboard for an infinite amount of time will almost surely type any given text, such as the complete works of William Shakespeare. - WikipediaGiven that an infinite amount of time something is written, said, or even tried it could create something interesting, we give that name to our show.IMT is broadcasting about various subjects as well as interviews, information, ...
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Welcome to our podcast series, the place to learn and discover more about our school and where we speak to staff, pupils, alumnae and parents. If you have any questions please do contact the school through the main website.
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Still remember “Pythagoras Theorem” or “Trigonometry Formulas” from school, but don't know about tax planning, portfolio building or personal finances? If not, don’t worry, we’ve got you covered. Angel One presents "Beyond The Classroom" - A special podcast series that teaches you the money lessons they never taught you in school. Learn about markets, budgeting & investing so that you can make informed financial decisions. Subscribe now & get ready to graduate from financial stress to financ ...
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Retire Once Show

Johnathan Rankin

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The Retire Once Show is a retirement podcast designed to help simplify retirement so that you can retire with confidence. Running out of money in retirement is one of the biggest fears that retirees have. That is why our goal is to help you not just get to retirement, but most importantly, stay retired. Join your hosts, Johnathan R. Rankin CRPC® CEPA®, founder and CEO of Theorem Wealth Management, and Melissa Rankin, Wealth Management Advisor with Theorem Wealth Management Each week, they wi ...
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"Why Didn't You Tell Me?" is a fun, open and honest look at how three young men who thought the stuff they were taught in school would prepare them to be successful, confident and stable young adults. Little did they know that Pythagoras theorem wouldn't help them buy houses and Henry VIII wouldn’t get them work experience. The transition into adulthood is abrupt and real world knowledge is the true key - so let’s shift the balance. This platform pokes fun, educates and inspires the next and ...
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Intellectually Curious is a podcast by Mike Breault featuring over 1,400 AI-powered explorations across science, mathematics, philosophy, and personal growth. Each short-form episode is generated, refined, and published with the help of large language models—turning curiosity into an ongoing audio encyclopedia. Designed for anyone who loves learning, it offers quick dives into everything from combinatorics and cryptography to systems thinking and psychology. Inspiration for this podcast: "Mu ...
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Strachey Lectures

Oxford University

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This series covers the Strachey Lectures, a series of termly computer science lectures named after Christopher Strachey, the first Professor of Computation at the University of Oxford. Hosted by the Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford, the Strachey Lectures began in 1995 and have included many distinguished speakers over the years. The Strachey Lectures are generously supported by OxFORD Asset Management.
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Zero Knowledge

Zero Knowledge Podcast

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Zero Knowledge is a podcast which goes deep into the tech that will power the emerging decentralised web and the community building this. Covering the latest in zero knowledge research and applications, the open web as well as future technologies and paradigms that promise to change the way we interact — and transact — with one another online. Zero Knowledge is hosted by Anna Rose Follow the show at @ZeroKnowledgefm (https://twitter.com/zeroknowledgefm) or @AnnaRRose (https://twitter.com/Ann ...
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🎓 Welcome to Simplified RSA – Your Guide to Maths & Physics! Here, we break down complex concepts in Mathematics and Physics into easy-to-understand lessons. Whether you're in high school, rewriting matric, or tackling university-level problems, our goal is to make science and numbers make sense. Expect clear explanations, past paper walkthroughs, and tips to help you master the subjects. 📚 New episodes weekly – let’s simplify learning together!
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The Math Club

Pete and Noah

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Join hosts Peter Littig and Noah King as they discuss and explain mathematical topics with their own unique style. Full of information that will interest and entertain math lovers as well as those who maybe don't love it quite that much… yet. Mathematical concepts, history, paradoxes, and puzzles await you, along with a generous helping of witty banter and fun. Calling all members…. The Math Club is open! Email - [email protected] Twitter - @mathclubpodcast
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The Ratchet Aunties

The Ratchet Aunties

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We, the Ratchet Aunties are here to drop a wealth of game on our beautiful fam. We may get a little ratchet sometimes, but we always gon keep it classy, cute and above all…we gon keep it real.
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Scott and Matt put on their thinking caps and discuss the vast array of obscure, wondrous, and intellectual topics which the world has to offer. Did you know that some human languages are entirely whistled? Can an AI successfully masquerade as a human? Is morality objective or subjective? Join us as we dive deep into these questions and many more in The Phantasmagorical Think Tank.
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A 13 year-old explains some interesting math. Or at least tries to. Notices: -3/14/23 I missed pi day! Sorry. I lost my script the day before at school. Will make a pi day episode next year. -3/15/23 Got a better recording system! Will be updating my episodes accordingly.
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Faith and Science

3ABN Australia Radio

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Presented by Dr. John Ashton, a professor of chemistry and biomedical science and author of 14 books. Listen to Dr. John Ashton explain how science is challenging evolution and supporting the Biblical account of creation
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What if the truth of a theorem reveals the exact axioms needed to prove it? In this episode we explore reverse mathematics, a program that starts from a theorem and asks: what is the minimal axiom system required in second-order arithmetic? We'll meet RCA0 as the computable baseline, see how many theorems align with WKL0, ACA0, ATR0, or Pi11-CA0, a…
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Harlly, Jeaun, and Lawson are not dying. Although, in a way, from the moment of birth, we all begin to die. ALSO DISCUSSED * Bugonia (2025) * Gen V: Season 2 (2025) * Ghosts Australia: Season 1 (2025) * I Believe in Santa (2022) PITH TAKES * Hardwired… to Self-Destruct (album, 2016) * Skulduggery Pleasant: Bad Magic (graphic novel, 2023) Read Harll…
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Join us as we dissect the art gallery problem for simple polygons: triangulate the shape, color the vertices with three colors, and pick guards from the smallest color class to cover every spot. We trace the logic from the floor(n/3) bound to efficient algorithms like Jarvis's march and Chan's O(n log H), and explore trapezoidal maps and randomized…
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In this end-of-year episode, Anna recaps the major ZK themes of 2025 and gives a preview of what’s coming in 2026 — new episodes, a mini-series, zkSummit14, and the rollout of ZK Mesh Plus, a unified space for newsletters, educational content, and events. She highlights this year’s core research threads, from lattices and Ligero to quantum security…
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Join us as we explore the yoga mala—108 Surya Namaskar sequences designed to purify, build tapas, and reset the mind. We break down the symbolism of 108, the breath-movement synchronization, and how to maintain precision with safe modifications. From the mental wall around rep 70 to the restorative savasana that closes the practice, learn practical…
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We dive into the biology of Mamenchisaurus youngii, whose neck accounted for about 41% of its body length. Learn how pneumatic bones filled with air pockets lightened the mass to roughly 0.5 g/cm^3, how overlapping ossified tendons acted as tension cables to stiffen a long neck, and how an avian-style respiratory system kept the animal breathing ef…
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On this episode, we dive into HD 20794 d, a ~5.8 Earth-mass super-Earth just about 20 light-years away. Its highly eccentric 647-day orbit swings from scorching close approaches to cooler distant phases, yet climate simulations suggest it can remain temperate long enough to retain its oceans. The trade-off is faster long-term water loss, but that v…
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Diamonds survive a fiery ascent through kimberlite volcanism, powered by a volatile mix of water and carbon dioxide that keeps magma fluid and fuels explosive eruptions. The payoff is a surprising twist: the same system that launches diamonds can carbonize and store CO2 as stable carbonates, producing a negative CO2 footprint per carat in verified …
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We unpack how enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) could unlock hot, dry rock deep underground using directed energy drilling, driving efficient, low-cost power. Then we explore naturally occurring geologic hydrogen—hydrogen produced by serpentinization—as a vast primary energy resource and discuss its implications for a clean-energy future. Note: Thi…
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A deep dive into North Carolina’s iconic hot dog order. We decode the regional operating system behind the 'works'—mustard, a beanless chili, onions, and the neon red Bright Leaf frank—plus the plain/no fixings setting. Learn the cheese-dog quirk (cold, unmelted cheese atop the dog), and how the red vs white slaw debate divides the state. We also c…
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We combine Gaia astrometry, ground-based spectroscopy, and TESS asteroseismology to study Gaia BH2, a red-giant star orbited by a dormant black hole of about 8.9 solar masses in a 1,277-day orbit—the widest known black-hole binary. The star’s oscillations provide an independent mass, confirming the black hole, while its alpha-enhanced chemistry hin…
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We dive into Vampyroteuthis infernalis, the vampire squid, and its record-size genome—up to 14 Gb with a landscape rich in repetitive DNA. This genome preserves an ancient 10-armed chromosomal architecture even as its lineage diversified, making it a Rosetta Stone for cephalopod evolution and the origin of octopus intelligence. We'll explore how it…
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Geochronology isn't just about lining up events—it's about giving them dates. We'll tour how scientists move from relative orders to absolute ages using decay clocks like carbon-14, bracketing with potassium-argon and uranium-series methods, and techniques such as ESR and optically stimulated luminescence. A cross-checked dating of Homo naledi show…
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In the 1920s, luthier John Dopyera flipped the guitar’s engine from a wooden top to spun aluminum cones, turning string vibration into loud, metallic sound. We explain how the cone acts like a loudspeaker, why damping matters, and the three National designs: tricones, biscuit, and Dobro. We explore why metal-bodied resonators dominated blues while …
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We dive into the Lassen Volcanic National Park discovery of Cindiamoeba cascadensis, a eukaryotic, obligate thermophile that not only survives but thrives at about 63°C. Explore its genome-wide toolkit for heat resilience—rapid signaling via calcium, MAPK, and ROS pathways; proteins with inherently higher melting temperatures; and a chorus of HSP20…
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I'm delighted to talk to Rustan Leino, one of the world's premier program provers, probably best known for the Dafny programing and verification language. We have a casual chat about program logics, some of the history of Dafny, and some deeper thoughts about inductive predicates and how to do program specification right. A couple things mentioned:…
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Join us as we decode James Webb's first weather forecast for SIMP J013656.5+093347, a rogue brown dwarf about 20 light-years away. Through time-series spectroscopy, Webb maps a three-layer atmosphere with silicate, iron, and rock clouds, and reveals that brightness changes come from deep, turbulent weather rather than patchy clouds. Most astonishin…
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Two vast, dust-based 'ghost moons' lurking near Earth's L4 and L5—the Kordylewski clouds—are real, dynamic structures rather than solid bodies. We trace their controversial history from 1961 sightings to the 2018 polarization confirmation, explain why they’re so hard to see, and explore how their gravitationally stable locations could become low-en…
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A deep dive into Göbekli Tepe (c. 9500–8000 BCE) in southeastern Anatolia, predating Stonehenge by millennia and rewriting the timeline of civilization. We explore the site's circular enclosures, T-shaped limestone pillars carved with anthropomorphic and animal motifs, and the evidence that hunter-gatherers built it, organized long-term water manag…
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Long before T. rex, croc-line archosaurs—the pseudosuchians—dominated the Triassic. We trace their game-changing crurotarsal ankle that allowed both sprawling locomotion and an erect, powerful stance, explore iconic predators like Postosuchus and Desmatosuchus, and spotlight the Brazil-born Papasaurid Tenraclusucus bellator as a case study in early…
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A clear, engaging dive into Google's Tensor Processing Unit family—from the 8-bit inference boost of TPU V1 to Ironwood (TPU V7). Learn why Google built a dedicated chip, how quantization and the MXU’s systolic array accelerate workloads, and how scalable, energy-efficient hardware is reshaping AI at data-center scale. Note: This podcast was AI-gen…
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Meet the Maya long count, a non-repeating calendar built on a modified base-20 system that stretches time far beyond the 52-year calendar round. We decode how kin, winal, tun, katun, and baktun fit together, why the 18 in the second place matters for a 360-day year, and how the GMT correlation anchors August 11, 3114 BCE to a single tick in the Jul…
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On a clear night the Moon looks ordinary, but science calls it a cosmic anomaly. In this deep dive we unpack why Earth's moon is astronomically improbable—its outsized size relative to Earth, density quirks, and perfect tidal lock. We explore how this massive, seemingly unlikely satellite stabilizes Earth's tilt and climate, the gaps in the leading…
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Once thought frozen and geologically dead, Mimas may host a global liquid ocean just beneath its icy shell. By analyzing Cassini data—tiny librations, apsidal precession, and recent surges in orbital eccentricity—scientists infer a 20–30 km ocean decoupling the crust from the core. The ocean's youth, formed within the last 5–25 million years, provi…
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In a deck shuffle or a data network, randomness seems pure chaos—yet a surprising order hides in the cycles of a permutation. We unpack why the expected number of cycles in a random permutation of n items equals the harmonic number H_n, and how for large n this grows only like ln n (more precisely, ln n + gamma). We’ll connect this elegant math to …
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An American kestrel—the size of a large coffee mug—helps northern Michigan cherry growers cut losses and boost food safety. By installing cavity nest boxes, growers create a landscape of fear that dramatically reduces damage (more than 10x in one study) and trims bird droppings. The economics are striking: nest boxes cost about $115 upfront with ro…
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Challenging the old mind-body split, this deep dive explores how senses, movement, and our physical form actively shape reasoning and learning. We’ll unpack sensory and motor simulation, somatic markers, and cognitive offload—with practical examples like gesturing and hands-on modeling that make difficult problems easier to solve. Tune in for a fre…
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Meet the hand-sized instrument that can mimic the pressures at Earth's core—and even Jupiter's. We trace the Diamond Anvil Cell from Bridgman's early anvils to the late-1950s breakthrough that paired two gem-quality diamonds with a metal gasket to trap samples. Learn how hydrostatic pressure is kept with a pressure-transmitting medium, how ruby flu…
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New infrared fingerprints from the Spitzer Space Telescope point to tryptophan in the Perseus star‑forming region, suggesting life's essential ingredients may be widespread in the cosmos rather than a miraculous accident. Meanwhile, the OSIRIS‑REx mission shows Bennu's samples carry a near‑complete starter kit for life — 14 amino acids and all five…
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We explore Google Research's D-Star, a data-science agent that reads heterogeneous data (CSV, JSON, Markdown, and more), extracts structure and context, and turns questions into executable Python code through a plan–implement–verify loop. Learn how a dedicated verifier critiques outputs beyond syntax, how a router can revise or replan to prevent er…
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An in-depth look at how the iconic armored dinosaur did more than shield itself. From the tail club as a weapon and plates as social signals, to thermoregulation via vascular osteoderms and even biochemical tricks seen in crocodilians, armor was a multi-tool that solved defense, display, and physiology all at once. Note: This podcast was AI-generat…
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Harlly, Jeaun, and Lawson found multiple dead bodies in the vineyard. ALSO DISCUSSED * The Equalizer 2 (2018) * Good Boy (2025) PITH TAKES * Demon Road: Desolation (novel, 2016) * Wuthering Heights (novel, 1847) Read Harlly and Jeaun's Blog at https://onthebrightsidemedia.home.blog/ Read Lawson's Blog at https://exitthroughthecandycounter.wordpress…
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A concise dive into using Fibonacci numbers as a mental math shortcut for converting miles to kilometers. By taking the next Fibonacci number after a given mile value, you get quick, accurate estimates (3 mi → 5 km, 13 mi → 21 km, 55 mi → 89 km); for non-Fibonacci values you can decompose or approximate. The trick rests on Fibonacci ratios convergi…
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A data-driven look at how NBA players are moving faster on the court, rising from 4.20 mph in 2013-14 to a projected 4.43 mph in 2025-26. We explain what average on-court speed captures, why the jump matters, and how pace‑and‑space is reshaping training, defense, and strategy—plus how teams use live-tracking data and AI tools like EmberSilk to stay…
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Meet muntjacs, the bark-voiced deer of Asia. We explore their tiny size, elongated upper canines, small antlers, and scent-marking glands; their omnivorous diet and rapid reproduction; and the genomic bombshell: the southern red muntjac's rapid chromosome fusion yields just six chromosomes in females (seven in males), a record of extreme genomic pl…
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We explore how researchers used barycentric free orbital elements to strip Neptune’s gravitational noise from 1,650 Kuiper Belt objects and fed the stable, free elements into DBSCAN. The result? A second, colder cluster—an inner kernel around 43 AU just inward from the known kernel near 44 AU—offering a pristine fossil record of the solar system’s …
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We unpack how the Mahalanobis distance generalizes simple Z-scores to high‑dimensional, correlated data by using the inverse covariance to whiten the data. Instead of a naive Euclidean ball, data lie in an ellipsoid shaped by correlations; distance is directional and scale‑aware, turning chaos into a single, unitless score. Learn how this helps det…
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In this Episode: Our Heroes throw back to the Mike Myers classic: So I Married an Axe Murderer! We've got special guest Nuggety Bob back on the show and this one is firmly rocking the 90s. Tune in..! Follow Us: Our Website Twitter Instagram Facebook Items discussed (links to more info): Note - if the below links don't work in your podcast player pl…
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Join us as we unpack the armored giant Dunkleosteus terrelli, a late Devonian predator whose four-bar jaw mechanism could snap open in about 20 milliseconds and deliver extraordinary bite force. We’ll reassess famous size estimates—from a legendary 33 feet to a more plausible 11–13.5 feet based on complete skulls and pelvic girdle placement—and exp…
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In this episode we explore 238 BCE’s Decree of Canopus, a tri-lingual inscription honoring Ptolemy III that functions as three things at once: a linguistic bridge among hieroglyphs, demotic, and Greek; a window into a sophisticated centralized governance with famine relief and temple patronage; and a scientific blueprint for timekeeping—the propose…
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An astonishing discovery: a regurgitated fossil of Bakuribu (also known as Ritza), a long-jawed, filter-feeding pterosaur from the early Cretaceous Rimaldo Formation in northeast Brazil. This 'comb-mouth' creature sits between earlier stenocasma and later Pterodastro and, with about 440–568 teeth, reveals how filter feeders evolved. The find also p…
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Brazil’s Unicamp researchers turn cocoa bean shells—usually waste—into a cocoa-flavored bioactive ingredient, using native stingless bee honey as an edible solvent and ultrasound-assisted extraction. This pioneering approach boosts sustainability, extends shelf life, and could scale to other agricultural residues, creating a platform for healthier,…
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A deep dive into how ancient civilizations engineered analog calculators, mapped the heavens with durable celestial charts, and codified astronomical knowledge in tablets and calendars—from the Antikythera Mechanism's eclipse predictions to the Tendere Zodiac, the Skiri Pawnee star chart, and Babylonian MUAPN. Note: This podcast was AI-generated, a…
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AI is remaking how we choose what to build with, not just how we code. Drawing on GitHub Next’s Octoverse data, we trace a shift from traditional runtime and ecosystem tradeoffs to AI-driven decision making: TypeScript surges 66% YoY for safer, faster AI‑generated code; Bash explodes 206% as AI handles scripting drudgery; and WebAssembly threatens …
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We unpack Unison 1.0, launching this November after years of work toward content-addressed code. Learn how code is identified by its content (DNA), enabling instant non-breaking renames, perfect incremental compilation, and conflict-free merges. We also explore deployment with Unison Cloud and BYOC, collaboration with Unison Share, and a roadmap fo…
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Explore how a nanometer-scale pore turns a molecule’s passage into an electrical signature, letting us read DNA, peptides, and more. We compare natural protein pores with tunable solid-state pores and show why pattern recognition is at the heart of sequencing and diagnostics—enabling fast, portable biosensing from health to the environment. We’ll a…
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A deep dive into magnetoreception, tracing the breakthrough that ties magnetic sensing to the pigeon's vestibular system. We explore the 19th‑century Vigier idea, how rapid head movements could induce detectable nanovolt signals in the semicircular canals, and how specialized hair cells translate those signals into neural pathways guiding long-dist…
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Perseverance’s SuperCam microphone captured 55 electrical discharge events over two Martian years, including tiny sonic booms. We explain triboelectricity in Mars’ thin CO2 atmosphere, why “mini lightning” matters, and how this electrical activity shapes future missions, habitats, and the search for ancient life on the red planet. Note: This podcas…
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