A weekly podcast about the electronics industry. Occasional guests. Lots of laughs.
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Covering the outer reaches of space to the tiniest microbes in our bodies, Science Friday is the source for entertaining and educational stories about science, technology, and other cool stuff.
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Hosted on the www.embeddedcomputing.com website, the Embedded Insiders Podcast is a fun electronics talk show for hardware design engineers, software developers, and academics. Organized by Tiera Oliver, Associate Editor, and Rich Nass, EVP, of Embedded Computing Design, each episode highlights embedded industry veterans who tackle trends, news, and new products for the embedded, IoT, automotive, security, artificial intelligence, edge computing, and other technology marketplaces in a light ...
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The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate, from the physics of cricket to prime ministerial biorhythms.
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Professor Jim Al-Khalili talks to leading scientists about their life and work, finding out what inspires and motivates them and asking what their discoveries might do for us in the future
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Weekly podcasts from Science Magazine, the world's leading journal of original scientific research, global news, and commentary.
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The Data Skeptic Podcast features interviews and discussion of topics related to data science, statistics, machine learning, artificial intelligence and the like, all from the perspective of applying critical thinking and the scientific method to evaluate the veracity of claims and efficacy of approaches.
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Host Russ Altman, a professor of bioengineering, genetics, and medicine at Stanford, is your guide to the latest science and engineering breakthroughs. Join Russ and his guests as they explore cutting-edge advances that are shaping the future of everything from AI to health and renewable energy. Along the way, “The Future of Everything” delves into ethical implications to give listeners a well-rounded understanding of how new technologies and discoveries will impact society. Whether you’re a ...
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The most interesting people in the world of science and technology
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The latest machine learning, A.I., and data career topics from across both academia and industry are brought to you by host Dr. Jon Krohn on the Super Data Science Podcast. As the quantity of data on our planet doubles every couple of years and with this trend set to continue for decades to come, there's an unprecedented opportunity for you to make a meaningful impact in your lifetime. In conversation with the biggest names in the data science industry, Jon cuts through hype to fuel that pro ...
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Steve Hsu is Professor of Theoretical Physics and Computational Mathematics, Science, and Engineering at Michigan State University. Join him for wide-ranging conversations with leading writers, scientists, technologists, academics, entrepreneurs, investors, and more.
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NASA’s technical workforce put boots on the Moon, tire tracks on Mars, and the first reusable spacecraft in orbit around the Earth. Learn what’s next as they build missions that redefine the future with amazing discoveries and remarkable innovations.
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Current content form the Popular Science Magazine
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Bite-sized interviews with top social scientists
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Five times winner of the Publisher Podcast Awards, including Best Technology Podcast, Engineering Matters celebrates the work of engineers who use ingenuity, practicality, science, theory and determination to build a better world. In the UK alone 5.7million people work in engineering related enterprises from manufacturing and agriculture to construction and transportation. Their work ensures that the country has sustainable power supplies, better connectivity between cities, increasing effic ...
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Host Rachel Feltman, alongside leading science and tech journalists, dives into the rich world of scientific discovery in this bite-size science variety show.
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Podcast by Isaac Arthur
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The Being An Engineer podcast is a central repository in which we collect and share industry knowledge & best practices associated with the discipline of engineering. We hope that engineers throughout the world will benefit from this content as they connect with the companies, technologies, people, resources, and opportunities that are relevant to their engineering or engineering-adjacent roles. Contact us at [email protected]. Intro and Outro music by John Martell
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Catastrophes are part of life, but many of the worst are the direct result of human error. Whether it’s poor planning, design flaws, or simply greed or hubris, we are often our own worst enemy. Join volcanologist Jess Phoenix as she explores the stories of natural disaster, failure, and calamity, and what we learn from our fascination with digging through the rubble.
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Modulus, hosted by Brian and Stephanie, is a podcast for engineers, scientists, researchers, and STEM enthusiasts who want an inside look at the work that moves humankind forward.
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MECO is opinion and analysis of spaceflight, exploration, policy, and strategy, by Anthony Colangelo.
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Probing the weird, wacky and spectacular, the Naked Scientists Special Editions are special one-off scientific reports, investigations and interviews on cutting-edge topics by the Naked Scientists team.
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From the evolution of intelligent life, to the mysteries of consciousness; from the threat of the climate crisis to the search for dark matter, The world, the universe and us is your essential weekly dose of science and wonder in an uncertain world. Hosted by journalists Dr Rowan Hooper and Dr Penny Sarchet and joined each week by expert scientists in the field, the show draws on New Scientist’s unparalleled depth of reporting to put the stories that matter into context. Feed your curiosity ...
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Podcasts from the British Ecological Society
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In this podcast, Taylor and Andrew investigate the past, present, and future of materials science and engineering. Topic areas ranging from cutting edge materials technology, the history of different materials, the commercialization of new materials, and exciting advances in processing and characterization are all covered in detail. Our episodes include things like the unlikely discovery of superglue or teflon, the fascinating backstories about modern biomaterials like dialysis filters, and ...
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Physics World Weekly offers a unique insight into the latest news, breakthroughs and innovations from the global scientific community. Our award-winning journalists reveal what has captured their imaginations about the stories in the news this week, which might span anything from quantum physics and astronomy through to materials science, environmental research and policy, and biomedical science and technology. Find out more about the stories in this podcast by visiting the Physics World web ...
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Get your weekly dose of all that's new in space and astronomy with Escape Velocity Space News. The sky is not the limit, as we bring you the latest scientific discoveries and rocket launches. EVSN is brought to you by the team behind CosmoQuest at the Planetary Science Institute and features hosts Dr. Pamela L. Gay and Erik Madaus, with audio engineering by Ally Pelphrey. EVSN is supported through Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/CosmoQuestX.
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The Naked Scientists flagship science show brings you a lighthearted look at the latest scientific breakthroughs, interviews with the world's top scientists, answers to your science questions and science experiments to try at home.
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Cheap Astronomy offers you 10 minute weekly podcasts on a wide range of astronomy, astrophysics, cosmology, space science and space exploration topics. At Cheap Astronomy you're only as cheap as the telescope you're looking through.
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Software Engineering Institute (SEI) Podcast Series
Members of Technical Staff at the Software Engineering Institute
The SEI Podcast Series presents conversations in software engineering, cybersecurity, and future technologies.
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Our Moore's Lobby Podcast serves an elite global audience of engineers, technologists, and executives with a goal to educate, empower, and entertain. We discuss the technologies and engineering behind the hottest industry trends as host Daniel Bogdanoff guides you through the human stories behind the world's most inspiring organizations and leaders. Tune in every other Tuesday for new episodes.
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A myriad of AI, science, and technology experts explore the real challenges and enormous opportunities facing entrepreneurs who are building the future of health. Raising Health, a podcast by a16z Bio + Health and hosted by Kris Tatiossian and Olivia Webb, dives deep into the heart of biotechnology and healthcare innovation. Join veteran company builders, operators, and investors Vijay Pande, Julie Yoo, Vineeta Agarwala, and Jorge Conde, along with distinguished guests like Mark Cuban, Greg ...
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Mongabay's award-winning podcast features inspiring scientists, authors, journalists and activists discussing global environmental issues from climate change to biodiversity, rainforests, wildlife conservation, animal behavior, marine biology and more.
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The Royal Aeronautical Society is the world’s only professional body dedicated to the entire aerospace community. Established in 1866 to further the art, science and engineering of aeronautics, the Society has been at the forefront of developments in aerospace ever since.
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Talking Biotech is a weekly podcast that uncovers the stories, ideas and research of people at the frontier of biology and engineering. Each episode explores how science and technology will transform agriculture, protect the environment, and feed 10 billion people by 2050. Interviews are led by Dr. Kevin Folta, a professor of molecular biology and genomics.
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The Social-Engineer Podcast is about humans. Understanding how we interact, communicate and relay information can help us protect, mitigate and understand social engineering attacks
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The Building Science Podcast is a show hosted by MEP engineering firm Positive Energy principal Kristof Irwin. The show covers everything from the basics of building science to adjacent scientific disciplines to more fully understand how the built environment shapes our lives as human beings on planet earth.
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Welcome to DataFramed, a weekly podcast exploring how artificial intelligence and data are changing the world around us. On this show, we invite data & AI leaders at the forefront of the data revolution to share their insights and experiences into how they lead the charge in this era of AI. Whether you're a beginner looking to gain insights into a career in data & AI, a practitioner needing to stay up-to-date on the latest tools and trends, or a leader looking to transform how your organizat ...
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'Will my bacon sandwich kill me?', 'Is vaping better than smoking?', 'How do you become an astronaut?' - just some of the Big Questions we ask some of the brightest minds behind Oxford science. Join us in each podcast as we explore a different area of science.
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Welcome to Science Sessions, the PNAS podcast program. Listen to brief conversations with cutting-edge researchers, Academy members, and policymakers as they discuss topics relevant to today's scientific community. Learn the behind-the-scenes story of work published in PNAS, plus a broad range of scientific news about discoveries that affect the world around us.
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In a world first, scientists at the University of Utah have engineered fruit flies susceptible to cocaine addiction .
In a world first, scientists at the University of Utah have engineered fruit flies susceptible to cocaine addiction .
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Diagnosing Male Infertility with a Mechanical Engineering Twist
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10:39Male infertility is undercovered and underdiscussed. If a couple is struggling to conceive, there’s a 50–50 chance that sperm health is a contributing factor. Diagnosing male infertility is getting easier with at-home tests—and a new study suggests a method for testing at home that would be more accurate. Study co-author Sushanta Mitra, a professor…
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Researchers have uncovered handwritten letters, court documents, and a coroners report related to the nearly 700-year-old cold case murder of a medieval priest.
Researchers have uncovered handwritten letters, court documents, and a coroners report related to the nearly 700-year-old cold case murder of a medieval priest.
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About a year and a half ago, violinist Zac Clejanalso known as Clejan or @thetrapviolonist on social mediastood on the banks of a pond in one of his favorite parks in Los Angeles.
About a year and a half ago, violinist Zac Clejanalso known as Clejan or @thetrapviolonist on social mediastood on the banks of a pond in one of his favorite parks in Los Angeles.
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Scientists from City St Georges, University of London created a terrifyingly realistic android head to determine whether chimpanzees can catch yawns from robots.
Scientists from City St Georges, University of London created a terrifyingly realistic android head to determine whether chimpanzees can catch yawns from robots.
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Farming maize in ice age Michigan, predicting the future climate of cities, and our host takes a quiz on the sounds of science
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43:05First up on the podcast, we hear from Staff Writer Paul Voosen about the tricky problem of regional climate prediction. Although global climate change models have held up for the most part, predicting what will happen at smaller scales, such as the level of a city, is proving a stubborn challenge. Just increasing the resolution of global models req…
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Is there a weekend warrior in your dad?
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Phone charging slowly?
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While fictional depictions of fossil discoveries often feature someone finding an entire dinosaur bone in their backyard, the reality of paleontology usually involves puzzling over disparate fragments ...
While fictional depictions of fossil discoveries often feature someone finding an entire dinosaur bone in their backyard, the reality of paleontology usually involves puzzling over disparate fragments of a skeleton .
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Imagine the ceaseless cacophony of New York City suddenly stopped.
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Probiotics are everywhere, claiming to help us poop , restore gut health, and more.
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Its only a matter of time before a catastrophically sized asteroid barrels towards Earth again.
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In the age of quantum computing, AI everything, and literal rockets landing themselves, its kind of wild that sharing a file with a client still feels like an awkward game of Did you get the link?
In the age of quantum computing, AI everything, and literal rockets landing themselves, its kind of wild that sharing a file with a client still feels like an awkward game of Did you get the link?
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Biologists estimate that four out of five animals on Earth are nematodes (AKA roundworms) .The tiny, wriggling, transparent invertebrates are the most abundant creatures on the planet and are found ...
Biologists estimate that four out of five animals on Earth are nematodes (AKA roundworms) .The tiny, wriggling, transparent invertebrates are the most abundant creatures on the planet and are found nearly everywherefrom permafrost to the deep ocean.
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Richard Bond and George Efstathiou: meet the astrophysicists who are shaping our understanding of the early universe
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55:03This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features George Efstathiou and Richard Bond, who share the 2025 Shaw Prize in Astronomy, “for their pioneering research in cosmology, in particular for their studies of fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Their predictions have been verified by an armada of ground-, balloon- and sp…
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Orbital Shipyards - Building Fleets in Space (Narration Only)
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51:50A new industrial revolution is coming—not on Earth, but above it. This episode delves into how orbital shipyards will produce everything from shuttles to megastructures, changing how we explore and inhabit space. Watch my exclusive video Fishbowl Starships - Water As Shielding - https://nebula.tv/videos/isaacarthur-fishbowl-starships-water-as-shiel…
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Orbital Shipyards - Building Fleets in Space
52:21
52:21
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52:21A new industrial revolution is coming—not on Earth, but above it. This episode delves into how orbital shipyards will produce everything from shuttles to megastructures, changing how we explore and inhabit space. Watch my exclusive video Fishbowl Starships - Water As Shielding - https://nebula.tv/videos/isaacarthur-fishbowl-starships-water-as-shiel…
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#332 The Future of Airports Around the World
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33:58Airports are at the forefront of a global transformation, rethinking their role not just as transport hubs but as sustainable, connected cities of the future. In this episode we explore how airports around the world are responding to environmental pressures, technological advancements, and increasing passenger demands. From Hong Kong’s ambitious ru…
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How Science Communication Can Step Up Amid Federal Cuts
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18:21It’s a precarious time for science in the United States. Federal funding is being slashed, career scientists are being laid off, and researchers are considering leaving to work abroad. On top of that, public trust in science and experts has declined. Besides acknowledging the federal attacks on science, a lot of scientists are also asking themselve…
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GODZILLA DOWN! India-Pakistan Clash and Chinese Military Technology with TP Huang — #87
1:02:24
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1:02:24Steve and TP discuss the implications of the recent air battle between India and Pakistan, which involved over 100 fighter jets and took place entirely beyond visual range (BVR). What is sensor fusion, and have the Pakistanis achieved it with Chinese technology? Does the PL-15 outrange and outperform Western air-to-air missiles? What are the implic…
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Insect extinctions, and AI shot in the arm for drug design
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37:11In episode 10 of the Cambridge Prisms Podcast, the shocking finding that as many as 2 invertebrate species are going extinct each week in Australia: what can be done? Also, the shot in the arm that AI is administering to the drug discovery industry, how do you measure the microplastic problem, and why climate tipping points are a serious problem fo…
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At any given time across the universe , massive cosmic bodies are releasing incomprehensible amounts of energy.
At any given time across the universe , massive cosmic bodies are releasing incomprehensible amounts of energy.
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A specially designed artificial intelligence program named after a Judaic prophet suggests one of biblical archeology s greatest finds require reexamination.
A specially designed artificial intelligence program named after a Judaic prophet suggests one of biblical archeology s greatest finds require reexamination.
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Whats the weirdest thing you learned this week?
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All sorts of interesting one- and two-wheeled vehicles crisscross the streets of my city, including an increasing number of affordable, portable forms of transportation.
All sorts of interesting one- and two-wheeled vehicles crisscross the streets of my city, including an increasing number of affordable, portable forms of transportation.
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Jealous of your family and friends with Costco memberships ?
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Animals constantly adapt to their environments, but keeping up with humanitys dramatic influence on the natural world poses unique challenges.
Animals constantly adapt to their environments, but keeping up with humanitys dramatic influence on the natural world poses unique challenges.
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If you are in the market for a powerful, lightweight Apple laptop  that is also affordable, look no further.
If you are in the market for a powerful, lightweight Apple laptop  that is also affordable, look no further.
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Last time I posted about a Carhartt T-shirt deal , PopSci readers bought thousands of them.
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To combat the deadly diseases spread by mosquitoes , entomologists often turn to the blood-sucking insects reproductive life.
To combat the deadly diseases spread by mosquitoes , entomologists often turn to the blood-sucking insects reproductive life.
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The tiny world of microorganisms is full of microbes competing in a major life or death battle .
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Making Process Respectable Again: Advancing DevSecOps in the DoD Mission Space
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44:26Warfighters in the Department of Defense (DoD) operate in high-stakes environments where security, efficiency, and speed are critical. In such environments DevSecOps has become crucial in the drive toward modernization and overall mission success. A recent study led by researchers at the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute (SE…
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How Cannibalistic Tadpoles Could Curb Invasive Cane Toads
18:49
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18:49South American cane toads were brought to Australia in 1935 to help eradicate native beetles that were destroying sugar cane crops. The toads didn’t care much for the beetles, but they did spread across the coast of Queensland and beyond, with no natural predators to stop them. Their own deadly toxin devastated local reptiles along the way, and the…
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#695 – Making The Invisible, Visible with Sam Aldhaher
1:15:13
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1:15:13Welcome Sam Aldhaher, power engineer and 3D graphic artist! Sam has always been interested in art…and power engineering He primarily works in Blender and has been for 5-6 years Inputs and outputs Starting from Altium / KiCad for eCAD Blender doesn’t accept step files, it works with meshes like STL KiCad -> Blender is a good flow, as there are add-o…
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Kim Stanley Robinson's 'Ministry for the Future' has lessons for the present
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55:58Five years since Kim Stanley Robinson's groundbreaking climate fiction novel, The Ministry for the Future, hit The New York Times bestseller list, the Hugo and Nebula Award-winning writer shares reflections on themes explored in the book and how they apply directly to the world today. The utopian novel set in a not-so-distant future depicts how hum…
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Sauropods were some of the largest dinosaurs to ever stomp across the planet, and they did their stomping pretty much everywhere.
Sauropods were some of the largest dinosaurs to ever stomp across the planet, and they did their stomping pretty much everywhere.
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There are few bike styles that are as all-around capable as fat tire e-bikes.
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So youve chosen your perfect electric bikewell, thats just the beginning because now it's time for accessories.
So youve chosen your perfect electric bikewell, thats just the beginning because now it's time for accessories.
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The phrase the worlds smallest violin is dripping with sarcasm and reserved for disdain, but for some researchers its a mark of pride.
The phrase the worlds smallest violin is dripping with sarcasm and reserved for disdain, but for some researchers its a mark of pride.
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Theres no such thing as a normal dad.
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My favorite pair of shorts right now comes from The North Face.
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In December 2010, Michael Faherty died in his home in Galway, Ireland.
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The Great Lakes have claimed thousands of lives and ships .
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Everything is fun and games when its daytime, and you can actually see your favorite birds, plants, and sights clearly.
Everything is fun and games when its daytime, and you can actually see your favorite birds, plants, and sights clearly.
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