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Videos 1 to 30
WTP 203: Oyster Card Hacks, Sahara Solar Farms, e-Cars Now!, and Bletchley Park
from PRI's The World: Technology Podcast from BBC/PRI/WGBH July 25, 2008
A very full program this week. First, we look at the International Olympic Committee's test for EPO, a performance-enhancing drug. The test for EPO may not be very effective. Also, a card used for travel on the London Underground appears vulnerable to hacking and cloning. Then, we hear about plans to build giant solar farms in the Sahara desert, and also how Finns are using a wiki to convert gas-powered cars to electric vehicles. And we end with a look at efforts to save Bletchley Park, sight of some of the most important code-breaking work during World War II.
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WTP 200: Bill Gates Bye-Bye, Icann's DNS Expansion, Chernobyl Tourism, and Nol
from PRI's The World: Technology Podcast from BBC/PRI/WGBH June 27, 2008
Bill Gates steps down from the day to day management of Microsoft. We find out what people aroudn the world make of his legacy. Then, Icann decides to expand the Domain Name System. Good idea? Pandora's Box? Both? Also, how much would you pay to take a tour of Chernobyl, site of the world's worst nuclear disaster? And we end with Nol -- think of it as a text-message version of Esperanto. And yes, a tribute, of sorts, to the advent of podcast 200. Yeah, rah.
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WTP 199: Olympic Tech Talk, Honda Goes Fuel-Cell, and Paul Otlet's Proto-Internet
from PRI's The World: Technology Podcast from BBC/PRI/WGBH June 20, 2008
A very full show this week, and a day early. We start with some new athletic technologies that might be on display at the Summer Games in Beijing. Then, we hear about how Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan might have sold digital blueprints for a nuclear weapon to interested parties. Then, a sequence that highlights Honda's fuel-cell vehicle, the Tata Nano from India, and a Zeppelin for a new millennium. We end with Paul Otlet's proto-Internet, and what's believed to be the first ever computer generated music. Great fun.
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WTP 197: The Lazy Gene, Digital Tampering, Animal Research, and Plankton Tech!
from PRI's The World: Technology Podcast from BBC/PRI/WGBH June 06, 2008
OK, here we go. We've got some new insight, maybe, into laziness. I wish I had the energy to care. Then, we take a look at how, and why, Vladimir Putin's enemies seem to be disappearing from small screens across Russia. Then, an in-depth look at whether or not animals are still an essential part of scientific testing. And we end with a report on some humble, yet lovable, plankton. Music this week by The Flying Burrito Brothers, and Plankton Man.
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WTP 192: Mobile Gorilla Game, World Malaria Day, Alex Goes Amazon, and yes, Phorm
from PRI's The World: Technology from BBC/PRI/WGBH April 25, 2008
I'm back from my wanderings with a very full show for you. First, we hear about the re-release of a mobile phone-based video game called Silverback. Then, to Zimbabwe to hear about FrontlineSMS. We'll have a studio talk with The World's Alex Gallafent about his multimedia-laced trip to the Amazon, and a chat with Cyrus Farivar about his trip to the Baltics. And somewhere in there, we'll talk about a new social networking site designed to bring donors and malaria researchers in Africa together. And yes, finally, a piece on Phorm.
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WTP 191: Higgs-Boson meet thy maker, German Robot Restaurant, Holy Batdisease!
from PRI's The World: Technology from BBC/PRI/WGBH April 18, 2008
Just a short WTP this week, since Clark's out and about reporting. So in his absence we're heading first to Cern, in search of the Higgs-Boson. That story features Professor Peter Higgs himself.. That's got to screw with your head, right, having a particle named after you? Then it's to Germany where in a quest to eliminate inefficient service one restaurant has automated the delivery of food to table. And finally, a story about bats in New England. Something's killing the bats, and that's not a good thing.
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WTP 189: The Capital of Google Earth, Saudi Bloggers, Global Net Filtering, and Fakes
from PRI's The World: Technology from BBC/PRI/WGBH March 21, 2008
A very good Good Friday podcast. We've got news from Nanaimo, British Columbia, the self-proclaimed "Capital of Google Earth." Also, we'll hear what happens when the French get fed up with speed cameras. Not pretty. Then, a report from inside Saudi Arabia about how blogging is leading to a new form of activism. We'll follow that with a look at a new book that explores the extent to which nations across the globe censor the internet. And we'll finish with a great interview about fakes. All that, plus The National.
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WTP 188: Al-Qaeda Targets Saudi Cell Phones, AfriGadget, and Yikes, a Global Beer Shortage.
from PRI's The World: Technology from BBC/PRI/WGBH March 14, 2008
Full line-up this week. We start with news that Al-Qaeda may be using cell phone memory cards to carry calls for cash into, and across, Saudi Arabia. Then, one bloggers quest to figure out what the world thinks about America. We'll also chat about solar cell phone chargers and Kenyan carvings of Simpsons characters with the folks at AfriGadget. And we'll finish off with desperate news: there may be a world wide shortage on two of the key ingredients for making beer. All that, plus a new way to support the Tech Podcast.
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WTP 184: Ocean Pollution, Couchsurfing, Veg Exchange, and Speedcabling
from PRI's The World: Technology from BBC/PRI/WGBH February 15, 2008
We kick off this week's podcast from a new report on the state of the world's oceans from the AAAS conference in Boston. Then, on to the Balkans for a report on couchsurfing.com. From there, we hop to London for a look at a website that allows people to exchange the fresh fruits and vegetables that they grow. And we'll end in Los Angeles, which recently played host to the world's first speedcabling championship. Fear not, all will be explained.
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WTP 183: ihavenotribe.com, AfriGadget, FARC and Facebook, and Paper Planes...in...Space
from PRI's The World: Technology from BBC/PRI/WGBH February 08, 2008
On this week's tech podcast, we hear about a web-based initiative to stop tribal violence in Kenya. Also, a podcast exclusive -- we launch a new monthly segment on low tech solutions to African problems, courtesy of AfriGadget. Then, to Colombia, where we'll hear about a march organized on Facebook. And we'll end in Japan, where one scientist wants to fly paper airplanes from the International Space Station all the way down to earth. Brilliant!
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The World: Global Hit - Selling Wham! to Red China
from PRI's The World: Global Hit January 12, 2006
This was the plan. Take a hot new boy-band. Pitch it to Communist officials in Beijing. And be the first to bring WESTern pop music to China. The manager of Wham! tells how he staged a promotional coup in China in 1985. And launched his band's international career. Copyright 2006 PRI's The World
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The World: Global Hit - A Night in Jost Van Dyke
from PRI's The World: Global Hit January 13, 2006
One of the bars that's always jumpin' is Foxy's. Foxy Callwood has been not only the keeper of the tavern. He's been the keeper of a tradition of "scratch band" music. It's called "scratch" because the instruments are gourds, washboards, and other items that are scratched with a stick. Foxy and friends were recorded in 1968. Michael Melford did the recording at Foxy's bar. Copyright 2006 PRI's The World
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The World: Global Hit - Remembering Hemingway
from PRI's The World: Global Hit January 16, 2006
ErnEST Hemingway felt completely at home at Finca Vigia...his residence just outside Havana. He felt just as comfortable in a seaside village a few miles to the east. Hemingway used to dock his fishing boat in at Cojimar. It's right on Havana Bay. You can still find folks here who remember him. Osvaldo Carnero Pena does. Copyright 2006 PRI's The World
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The World: Global Hit - Back-masking
from PRI's The World: Global Hit January 17, 2006
A long time ago, people used to use turntables in funny ways like to play records backwards. Well, this practice, known as "back-masking," isn't dead and gone in the digital age, as we hear from The World's Marco Werman. Copyright 2006 PRI's The World
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The World: Global Hit - Daby Toure
from PRI's The World: Global Hit January 18, 2006
A lot of our Global Hits on the program seem to take us to countries in WEST Africa. On the one hand, today's report fits the pattern. On the other, Mauritania is a rare dESTination for us. The World's Marco Werman tells us why. Copyright 2006 PRI's The World
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The World: Global Hit - Global FEST
from PRI's The World: Global Hit January 19, 2006
If you're interESTed in music from around the globe, the place to be this weekend is New York City. That's where the third edition of Global FEST is taking place. Auktyon is an gonna be there. Auktyon is an "art-rock" band from St. Petersburg Russia. It's just one of the acts scheduled to perform at Global FEST. The World's Marco Werman is going to be there too. Copyright 2006 PRI's The World
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