This is TAG Data Talk where we discuss news, trends, and ideas in the world of Data Science and Analytics. TAG Data Talk is hosted by the Technology Association of Georgia's Data Science and Analytics society.
…
continue reading
HardwareX provides interviews and deep-dives with scientists and leading experts in open-source hardware. Produced for the journal HardwareX from Elsevier Publishing Company.
…
continue reading
Join our hosts as they break down complex data into understandable insights, providing you with the knowledge to navigate our rapidly changing world. Tune in for a thoughtful, evidence-based discussion that bridges expert analysis with real-world implications, an SCZoomers Podcast Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas. Curated, independent, moderated, tim ...
…
continue reading
This story starts with space ships scouring the universe in an interplanetary game of tag. The humans know there are “Aliens” out there. But so do the Aliens. As each tries desperately to make the phenomenal discovery, they secretly hope that the other will not turn out to be the enemy. Humans call them “Plumies” because of the feathery plumes they inscribe on silicon-bronze tablets and cairns they have left behind on their intergalactic travels over the last thousand years. The search goes ...
…
continue reading

1
Mom, The Algorithm Will See You Now: Predicting Postpartum Depression
17:50
17:50
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
17:50Send us a text Read the article on Substack Instead of requiring new tests or lengthy questionnaires at discharge (when everyone's already exhausted and overwhelmed), the model uses information that's already been collected during routine care. Age, medical history, pregnancy complications, how long you stayed in the hospital, whether you needed me…
…
continue reading

1
🍎 Apple WWDC 2025: How Apple Just Rewrote the Rules of Personal Computing
31:02
31:02
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
31:02Send us a text Please see our episode substack for a more detailed breakdown and a comic. Something profound happened at Apple's WWDC 2025, and most people missed it entirely. While the tech press got distracted by shiny new features and incremental updates, Apple quietly orchestrated what might be the most significant shift in personal computing s…
…
continue reading

1
USA's Global Games: Canada, Ally or Enemy?
16:44
16:44
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
16:44Send us a text Read the article on Substack Let's start by demolishing the central premise of Trump's geographical fantasy. The idea that the US-Canada border is somehow artificial or arbitrary reveals a stunning ignorance of centuries of distinct historical development. This isn't just about geography—it's about fundamentally different cultural, p…
…
continue reading

1
😷 The Hidden Epidemic: What Toronto's Measles Crisis Reveals About Our Broken Health System
18:55
18:55
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
18:55Send us a text See the related Substack Episode, and there is a comic ". ) When a "defeated" disease comes roaring back, it exposes every crack in our public health foundation There's something almost quaint about measles making headlines in 2025. Like hearing that someone still uses a rotary phone, or that a city's traffic lights run on punch card…
…
continue reading

1
“We can't go on like this”: Nature Needs A Price Tag
11:08
11:08
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
11:08Send us a text Read the article on Substack We're living through what historians will probably call the Great Greenwashing Era. Every corporation has a sustainability report now. Every CEO talks about "purpose-driven business." Every shareholder meeting features carefully crafted slides about carbon neutrality by 2050. Most of it is performative bu…
…
continue reading

1
The Liquid Economy: How AI Could Finally Pay Us Back
19:37
19:37
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
19:37Send us a text See the related episode for haiku, details and comic Beyond copyright battles lies a revolutionary economic model that could transform how we value human creativity in the age of AI Copyright and Artificial Intelligence Part 3: Generative AI Training pre-publication version A REPORT of the Register of copyrights May 2025 US Copywrite…
…
continue reading
Send us a text Read the article If we're this wrong about hawks—creatures we can observe directly—what does that say about our understanding of other species? What sophisticated behaviors and cognitive abilities are we missing because they don't fit our narrow definitions of intelligence? More importantly, what does this mean for how we design our …
…
continue reading

1
⚕️The Hearts We Didn't Know We Were Breaking: What We're Learning About COVID's Long Shadow on Our Children
16:21
16:21
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
16:21Send us a text See our episode substack with haiku, details and comic We told ourselves a story about children and COVID-19. It was a comforting story. Like most comforting stories we tell ourselves during crises, this one was both partially true and dangerously incomplete. A massive new study from the RECOVER Consortium has just shattered our comf…
…
continue reading

1
The Radical Science of Peace: What Dame Kathleen Lonsdale Knew
13:16
13:16
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
13:16Send us a text When World War II came, Lonsdale faced the ultimate test of her convictions. As a conscientious objector, she was imprisoned rather than participate in the war effort. Think about that choice: a woman at the height of her scientific career, choosing prison over compromise. But here's what's remarkable—that experience didn't break her…
…
continue reading

1
🧠 The Uncomfortable Truth About What You Really Believe
25:19
25:19
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
25:19Send us a text Hummm, go deeper. Comic, haiku, mind maps, essay and more Why your deepest convictions have more in common with falling in love than solving math problems We tell ourselves a comforting lie about how our minds work. We like to imagine that our beliefs are the product of careful reasoning—that we weigh evidence, consider alternatives,…
…
continue reading

1
The Virus That Hijacks Your Immune System's First Responders
16:13
16:13
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
16:13Send us a text Think of your immune system as a sophisticated military operation. Neutrophils are the rapid response team—they arrive first at any sign of trouble, ready to fight. But what if an invader could somehow reprogram these first responders to work against their own army? That's exactly what researchers led by Shia and colleagues discovere…
…
continue reading

1
🧪The Hidden Medicine Cabinet: Why One Old Drug Might Hold Keys to Our Chronic Illness Crisis
28:35
28:35
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
28:35Send us a text Corresponding Substack Episode When a 50-year-old addiction medication starts reversing autoimmune diseases, clearing brain fog, and helping cancer patients—maybe it's time we stopped thinking about medicine the way pharmaceutical companies want us to. We live in an age of medical gaslighting disguised as evidence-based care. Million…
…
continue reading

1
Lost Mobility: The Prison You Don't See Coming
18:14
18:14
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
18:14Send us a text Think about two people: Mark, who bikes the same route to work every day and hits the same gym with military precision, and Eleanor, who works from home but takes spontaneous walks to cafes, swims at different pools, and explores new neighborhoods on weekend bike rides. In a clinical test, they might perform identically - same walkin…
…
continue reading

1
🦠 The Paradox of Viral Evolution: Why More Mutations Don't Always Mean More Danger
17:15
17:15
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
17:15Send us a text Continue with the episode substack. Understanding the delicate balance between immune escape and infectivity in SARS-CoV-2's latest variants We're living through one of the most fascinating evolutionary experiments in real-time, and most of us don't even realize it. Every day, SARS-CoV-2 is running millions of tiny experiments in hum…
…
continue reading

1
The Baby's Grave in a Medieval Brothel: A Radical Act Of Love
11:20
11:20
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
11:20Send us a text There's a moment in every archaeological dig when time collapses. When the careful scraping of trowels reveals something so intimate, so human, that centuries disappear and you're suddenly face-to-face with a life that mattered to someone, somewhere, sometime. In 1998, that moment came in a medieval square in Aalst, Belgium, where ar…
…
continue reading

1
🐉 The Beautiful Trap: How Apple Built an Empire on Borrowed Time
43:59
43:59
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
43:59Send us a text For the episode comic, haiku, essay and much more... You're holding a miracle in your hands right now. That iPhone didn't just appear in some sterile California lab. It's the product of one of the most audacious manufacturing experiments in human history—a decades-long dance between American innovation and Chinese industrial might th…
…
continue reading

1
It's Not Just In Your Head—It's In Your Body's Power: The Placebo Effect
18:37
18:37
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
18:37Send us a text The conventional narrative goes something like this: a doctor gives a patient a sugar pill but tells them it's medicine. The patient believes it will help, and somehow, mysteriously, they feel better. It's been framed as "the lie that heals"—effective but fundamentally dishonest. This framing created an ethical dilemma: beneficence v…
…
continue reading

1
⚙️ P-1 AI Develops Engineering AGI for Physical Systems
17:58
17:58
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
17:58Send us a text Explore further with this episode's substack comic and other resources included We're standing at the edge of something unprecedented in human history. Not another technological breakthrough that makes our phones faster or our videos sharper, but a fundamental shift in how we solve the complex problems that shape our physical world. …
…
continue reading

1
Why Your High Sensitivity Might Save Us All
19:22
19:22
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
19:22Send us a text Let's get something straight right away: this isn't about being "too emotional" or easily offended. High sensitivity is a neurobiological reality, as evidenced by brain imaging studies that show distinct patterns of neural activity in highly sensitive people. When a highly sensitive person (HSP) walks into a crowded café, their brain…
…
continue reading

1
🧠 Your Brain’s Secret Saboteurs: How Hidden Biases Hijack Your Decisions
54:38
54:38
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
54:38Send us a text Checkout this Episodes Substack to go deeper You think you’re in control. You weigh pros and cons, mull over options, and make choices you’re sure are rational. But what if your brain is quietly betraying you? What if the very machinery of your mind—those lightning-fast instincts and gut feelings—is steering you wrong, and you don’t …
…
continue reading

1
Reading for Happiness: How Bibliotherapy Is Changing Mental Healthcare
21:16
21:16
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
21:16Send us a text Bibliotherapy involves strategically chosen reading material aimed at specific therapeutic goals. The process typically includes: Identification - connecting with characters or concepts in the text Catharsis - experiencing emotional release through the reading Insight - developing new understanding and perspectives about one's own si…
…
continue reading

1
🔗 Xanadu Aurora Scalable Photonic Quantum Computer
18:24
18:24
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
18:24Send us a text More on this episode substack In the race to build practical quantum computers, a fascinating dark horse is emerging: photonic quantum computing. While most media attention focuses on the superconducting approaches championed by tech giants, a different path using light itself might ultimately prove more practical and scalable. Scali…
…
continue reading

1
The Pigments That Built Empires: What Ancient Dyes Reveal About Power, Scarcity, and Human Nature
25:04
25:04
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
25:04Send us a text What's fascinating isn't just the scarcity but how swiftly that scarcity was weaponized as a tool of social control. In Rome, the wearing of purple evolved from a status symbol into a legally enforced class marker. Julius Caesar began wearing the all-purple toga praetexta as a show of power. By the 5th century CE, purple had become a…
…
continue reading

1
🧠 The Fragile Stories We Tell Ourselves: Unraveling Memory’s Perfect Imperfections
52:41
52:41
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
52:41Send us a text Remember to open the episode substack to provide better memory retention You think you know your past. That argument with your partner last week, the taste of your grandmother’s pie from childhood, the exact moment you heard about 9/11. These memories feel like Polaroids, crisp and unchanging, tucked safely in the album of your mind.…
…
continue reading

1
The Medical Research Gap That's Literally Killing Women
16:59
16:59
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
16:59Send us a text Medical research has a woman problem. And women are dying because of it. When we talk about healthcare inequalities, we often focus on disparities in access or treatment. But there's a more fundamental problem lurking beneath the surface: much of modern medicine was built on research that excluded women entirely. It's not ancient his…
…
continue reading

1
🔥The Ancient Element That's Revolutionizing Modern Technology
10:28
10:28
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
10:28Send us a text Please see episode substack for more insight. The oldest technology we know is reshaping our future at the nanoscale, hidden in plain sight You're surrounded by invisible nanotechnology right now. It's in the tires of your car. The bright white paint on your walls. The optical fibers bringing you this article. Even the mRNA vaccines …
…
continue reading
Send us a text Ancient weapon engineers—working without advanced mathematics, computers, or even basic calculus—created devices so effective they changed the course of history and embodied physical principles we still use today. They didn't need venture capital or TED talks. They needed results. Listen to this fascinating Heliox podcast episode on …
…
continue reading

1
🧩 The Silent Revolution: When AI Learns to Teach Itself
18:51
18:51
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
18:51Send us a text Continue with the substack for this episode. In the quiet corners of technological innovation, something profound is happening. It's not the loud, bombastic declarations of tech billionaires or the dystopian warnings of AI doomsayers. It's a subtle, almost imperceptible shift that could rewrite everything we understand about intellig…
…
continue reading

1
Fractals Connect Everything from Your Heartbeat to the Cosmos
22:38
22:38
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
22:38Send us a text The world is trying to tell us something. It's speaking a mathematical language that appears everywhere—in our bodies, in our art, in the way financial markets rise and fall, in the branching of trees and rivers. This language even shows up in our heartbeats and brain patterns. The language is fractals, and understanding it might be …
…
continue reading

1
🔔 The Freedom Trap: How Our Obsession with Being "Left Alone" Is Making Us Less Free
15:06
15:06
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
15:06Send us a text Please see episode substack to go deeper We've got freedom all wrong. For decades, Americans have embraced a dangerously narrow definition of liberty – one that Timothy Snyder, in his penetrating book "On Freedom," calls "negative freedom." It's the freedom from interference, from rules, from being told what to do. It's about being l…
…
continue reading

1
Neuroaesthetics: The Science of Why Art Moves Us
21:50
21:50
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
21:50Send us a text Have you ever stood before a painting and felt your breath catch? Or had goosebumps ripple across your skin during a musical crescendo? There's something almost magical about these moments—when art transcends being merely something we observe and becomes something we experience with our entire being. For centuries, we've attributed t…
…
continue reading

1
📔 The Hidden Secession: How 5,400 Economic Zones Are Reshaping the World Under Our Noses
25:48
25:48
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
25:48Send us a text Be sure to explore the episode substack The most significant shifts in history never trumpet their arrival. They happen quietly, gradually reshaping our reality while we're distracted by louder narratives. We're living through such a transformation right now, and most people haven't even noticed. Over 5,400 special economic zones now…
…
continue reading

1
The Science That's Bringing Back the Dead: Facial Reconstruction
23:27
23:27
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
23:27Send us a text It's not perfect. It never will be. But it's getting remarkably close. When Egyptian mummy portraits have been compared with facial reconstructions of the same individuals, the similarities are often striking. The science works, and it's improving every year as our reference databases grow and our technologies advance. But why does t…
…
continue reading

1
🧬 Your Gut Microbiome Census Is Lying To You: Why Regulation Matters More Than Population
19:10
19:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
19:10Send us a text See the corresponding substack essay and resources It's 2025, and we're still obsessed with gut microbiome tests that peddle false promises. They arrive in sleek packages with fancy charts showing the bacterial composition of your gut. They promise personalized insights and dietary recommendations. They claim to unlock the secrets of…
…
continue reading

1
Optics in the Renaissance Period: Leonardo's Integration of Science and Art
12:06
12:06
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
12:06Send us a text When we talk about Renaissance men, we're really talking about one man. Leonardo da Vinci didn't just paint the Mona Lisa. He wasn't just responsible for The Last Supper. He was investigating human anatomy with unprecedented precision. He was designing flying machines centuries before the Wright brothers. He was inventing optical dev…
…
continue reading

1
🐕 What Dogs Can Teach Us About Living a Meaningful Life: Wisdom from "The Word of Dog"
18:25
18:25
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
18:25Send us a text More in the corrisponding Substack post In a world obsessed with achievement and constant self-improvement, the secret to a meaningful life might be found in the most unexpected place—our canine companions. We're drowning in self-help books and productivity hacks. We've turned happiness into an achievement, something to be unlocked a…
…
continue reading

1
The Scent of Power: How Fragrance Has Shaped Human Society
24:37
24:37
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
24:37Send us a text I've been thinking about perfume lately. Not the kind they hawk at department store counters or in those glossy magazine inserts that give you an instant headache. I'm talking about the entire concept of fragrance — this invisible force that has shaped civilizations, economies, and human behavior for thousands of years. It's not friv…
…
continue reading

1
Combatting Chronic Wounds: Elevating patient care in Nepal through open-source technology
16:43
16:43
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
16:43How can we elevate life quality for patients in some of the world's most underserved regions? Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) is a proven and efficient method for treating chronic wounds. This is particularly useful in low- and middle-income countries, where diseases like leprosy, limited healthcare, low infrastructure and poverty combine to…
…
continue reading

1
🏘️ Our Crumbling Foundation: Housing Crisis Solutions
23:38
23:38
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
23:38Send us a text Please see our related substack episode to go deeper For too long, we've pretended Canada's housing disaster is some force of nature—an unfortunate economic hiccup that happened to us rather than because of us. But let's cut through the noise: this crisis isn't an accident. It's the foreseeable outcome of policy choices, financial in…
…
continue reading

1
USA’s Global Games: The Rise of Latin America (Part 4)
10:58
10:58
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
10:58Send us a text Sometimes the most interesting stories hide in plain sight, buried beneath the daily outrage cycles and the breathless panic of breaking news. Here's one you probably missed: America's tariff wars, meant to "protect" domestic industries, are quietly reshaping Latin America's entire economic future—and possibly creating a more powerfu…
…
continue reading

1
World Happiness Report 2025: Happiness, Benevolence, and Social Connection
34:11
34:11
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
34:11Send us a text See the related substack page to go deeper into happiness Hear related original song We've been getting happiness all wrong. That's the disturbing conclusion I've reached after diving into the latest global research on well-being. While self-help gurus push manifestation techniques and corporate America hawks "wellness" products, the…
…
continue reading

1
A History of Timekeeping: Our Obsession With Time Is Both Ancient and Modern
31:36
31:36
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
31:36Send us a text Your phone buzzes. Another meeting reminder. A calendar notification. A timer for that thing you were cooking. If you're like most people, you experience dozens of these little time-related interruptions daily. We're practically swimming in them, these constant reminders that our modern lives are utterly, completely governed by preci…
…
continue reading

1
👕 Gardening Au Naturel WNGD: Social Good, NIR FIR Infrared Light, and Fashion
14:58
14:58
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
14:58Send us a text See more on our related substack page Hear related original song: Skin and Soil: An Infrared Symphony "A haunting meditation on what it means to truly inhabit one's body and place on earth... achingly beautiful in its simplicity." In a world obsessed with perfection, what if I told you that getting naked with strangers might be the a…
…
continue reading
Send us a text It's 2025, and we're still pretending COVID is just another flu. You've probably noticed it by now. Friends who can't shake that lingering cough. Coworkers who are out sick more often than they're in the office. The endless cycle of "brutal colds" that seem to hit everyone harder and last longer than they used to. What if I told you …
…
continue reading

1
Democracy's Silent Erosion: The Global Autocratic March
14:36
14:36
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
14:36Send us a text please see the substack for this episode Freedom doesn't disappear overnight. It erodes gradually, like a slow-moving mudslide that's barely perceptible until your foundation is already compromised. The findings from the V-Dem Institute's Democracy Report 2025 confirm what many of us have sensed intuitively: democracy worldwide isn't…
…
continue reading

1
Lion's Teeth Marks in British Graves: The Roman Empire's Brutal Entertainment Industry
26:01
26:01
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
26:01Send us a text Evidence hidden in bones tells a bloody story of Roman Britain that changes everything we thought we knew. When we think of Roman gladiator combat, our minds normally drift to the Colosseum in Rome, or perhaps to the sun-baked arenas of North Africa and the Mediterranean. Few of us picture lions stalking the misty shores of Britain. …
…
continue reading

1
Climate Change's Silent Threat: The Fungal Awakening
28:50
28:50
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
28:50Send us a text see the episode substack for more detail We're witnessing the quiet emergence of a global threat that could redefine public health in the coming decades. While the world fixates on flashy disaster headlines and political theater, a more insidious danger is evolving in the shadows of our warming planet—pathogenic fungi that are adapti…
…
continue reading

1
Re-Enchantment: Solitude and the Cost of Constant Hurry
9:01
9:01
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
9:01Send us a text O'Connell describes how his initial boredom in the wilderness—that uncomfortable confrontation with unfilled time—eventually dissolved into what he calls a "meditative stupor." It's precisely this transition that our constant digital engagement prevents. We've developed a pathological aversion to boredom. The moment we feel that twin…
…
continue reading

1
⚖️ Pinpointing Climate Damages to Corporate Emissions
14:54
14:54
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
14:54Send us a text see the substack for this episode to go deeper We've spent decades listening to fossil fuel companies talk about "shared responsibility" for climate change. They've perfected the art of diffusing blame – pointing fingers at consumer choices, technological limitations, and "market forces" while raking in record profits. But what if we…
…
continue reading

1
The Invisible Pandemic: What Science Is Finally Admitting About (Long) COVID
37:52
37:52
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
37:52Send us a text They told us it would be over in two weeks. They told us that once you recover, you're fine. They were wrong about all of it. Three years into this pandemic, we're finally getting clarity on what COVID actually does to our bodies long-term. The evidence is overwhelming, disturbing, and deliberately downplayed by those who want us to …
…
continue reading