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Lab In Every Lesson Podcasts

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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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Roots L.E.A.D. to Results

Lab In Every Lesson

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Welcome to Roots L.E.A.D. to Results—a weekly podcast that brings soul-deep encouragement to educators who are tired of surviving and ready to serve from a place of alignment, clarity, and conviction. I’m Lisa Karosas—science teacher, curriculum designer, and believer that classrooms change when teachers are rooted. This podcast is my own accountability check-in: a chance to slow down, reflect on the bigger picture, and disciple through my daily work right alongside you. Each week follows a ...
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The Science Marketer

Joachim Eeckhout

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The Science Marketer brings you inside the world of science marketing and communication. Every two weeks, I sit down with industry-leading marketers, communicators, and founders to unpack the strategies behind their biggest wins—and lessons from their hardest challenges. Expect actionable advice and exclusive insights to sharpen your own approach in every episode. Hit subscribe, so you don’t miss an episode!
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Build Boldly with Pat Rodgers

RISE Commercial District

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'Build Boldly' dives deep into the experiences of entrepreneurs and operators alike with Pat Rodgers, Chief Revenue Officer of RISE Commercial District. Whether you’re just starting out or looking to scale up, this podcast is your go-to resource for real stories and tangible advice to help you move your business forward. Tune in every two weeks to learn from those who’ve been there. If you’re ready to build, build boldly. Subscribe now and let’s get to work.
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Are you at your wit’s end in education? Tired of unruly children & boring lessons? This show helps educators who are burned out from lesson planning and grading for hours & hours at work & at home all to comeback & teach the same boring lessons over and over again. Listen to discover how to create lessons that will engage your students, encourage creativity & most of all, give you your time back with efficient & effective grading strategies. After teaching for hundreds of hours, training doz ...
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Leader Lab with Andy Bruce

Leader Lab with Andy Bruce

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You know you've been called by God to love and influence others. And you're willing to do whatever it takes. But the problem is figuring out what that is and how to do it. Welcome, friend, you're in the right place. Join Andy every Wednesday to discover how to deepen your influence on others, how to love and lead others, and to receive practical tips for purposeful living. If you know God has something more for you that you haven’t yet experienced, if you want to know Him more, and if you ha ...
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Join TMac, a Multi-Emmy Award-winning former TV camera operator, photographer, and teacher as he hosts intimate conversations with world-class photographers, cinematographers, TV directors, and producers. Each episode is packed with real-world tips for breaking into the business, techniques, and stories from the world of media production. Whether you're shooting with a smartphone or cinema camera, this learning lab helps you level up your visual storytelling skills. From weddings to wildlife ...
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Crime and the Courtroom

John M. Collins

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Crime and the Courtroom is a unique and stimulating examination of the American criminal justice system for the authorities and supporting professionals who make criminal justice possible. We turn an observant eye toward the system's evolving capacity to strike the delicate balance between preserving the quality of life of our citizens and protecting the rights of the accused. Hosted by one of the most respected and influential forensic experts in the United States, John M. Collins and his g ...
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Exploring the science, people, and practices shaping better buildings. The Building HVAC Science Podcast dives deep into the technical and human sides of heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and building performance. Hosted by industry veteran Bill Spohn, CEO, and co-host Eric Kaiser, Industry Engagement Manager at TruTech Tools the show brings together decades of hands-on expertise with a passion for advancing the craft of HVAC. With nearly 240 episodes and counting, the podcast features ...
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Want to create a hugely successful online course, one that has a major impact on the lives of your students? If you want to learn how to create online courses from the best, you turn to Mirasee; and if you want to host that course, you can’t go wrong using the powerful platform, Ruzuku. Ruzuku co-founder Abe Crystal and Mirasee founder and CEO Danny Iny know what it takes to stand out and be successful in the online courses industry. And now they’re teaming up to share this intel with you in ...
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Beginner's Mind

Christian Soschner

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Blueprints for Builders and Investors Hosted by Christian Soschner From pre-seed to post-IPO, every company—especially in deep tech, biotech, AI, and climate tech—lives or dies by the frameworks it follows. On Beginner’s Mind, Christian Soschner uncovers the leadership principles behind the world’s most impactful companies—through deep-dive interviews, strategic book reviews, and patterns drawn from history’s greatest business, military, and political minds. With over 200 interviews, panels, ...
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The Monkey the Cat Podcast & YouTube Channel 🐾 Join Monkey the Talking Cat and his hilarious, lovable friends—Brooklyn the playful Lab, Teddy the wise German Shepherd, and Olivff the shy feline—as they embark on exciting adventures that teach valuable life lessons for kids and families alike! From discovering the magic of kind words to solving tricky problems with teamwork, Monkey shares lessons about friendship, communication, resilience, and having fun along the way. 🐱💬✨ 🎧 Tune in for: Fun ...
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Salaam and Welcome to "Muslimahs in Motion: Professional Pursuits"— A podcast about Muslim women building careers, balance, and barakah—one story at a time. Let me introduce you to your new favorite podcast: where we're spilling the tea on what it really means to chase your dreams while staying true to your deen. Picture this: Your girl Hawa S. sitting down for real, unfiltered convos with incredible Muslimah powerhouses who are out here literally changing the game! We're talking brilliant s ...
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Discover how the first confirmed exoplanets didn’t orbit a sunlike star but a pulsar, the ultra-dense remnant of a supernova. We unpack pulsar timing—the cosmic clockwork that reveals planets by tiny shifts in pulse arrival times—and explain how these worlds can form from the star's shredded debris, sometimes as carbon-rich, 'diamond' planets. We'l…
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We unpack the OpenAI–Red Queen Bio study that had an AI design RAPF HiFi—RECA-assisted assembly paired with GP32, a novel temperature cycle, and a surprising downstream boost from pelleting cells at 4°C—that together delivered a 79x jump in cloning efficiency, validated by a robotic automation system. We break down the mechanism, the validation, an…
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A dramatic soft X-ray flare from the active galactic nucleus in NGC 3783 triggers an ultra-fast outflow racing at 0.19c, launched from about 50 gravitational radii. Radiation pressure falls short; magnetic reconnection—the same physics that powers solar flares—appears to drive the wind. This suggests a universal mechanism for extreme outflows and a…
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What does it really take to launch, survive, and scale a business in today’s world? In this season-finale episode of Build Boldly, host Pat Rodgers is joined by Allison Barber to reflect on the first year of the podcast. They unpack the most surprising entrepreneurial journeys, hard-earned lessons, and behind-the-scenes realities they uncovered whi…
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Meet Advhena magnifica, the deep-sea 'E.T.' sponge discovered by NOAA's Okeanos Explorer. This glass sponge's syncytial tissue forms a single, many-nucleus network that conducts electrical signals across its body, enabling rapid internal communication and a nervous-system-like coordination in a delicate, glass architecture. As an ecosystem engineer…
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A deep dive into ruptures that outrun their own seismic waves. We unpack the forbidden speed range between Rayleigh and S-waves for common mode-2 ruptures, reveal the Burridge–Andrews mechanism that launches a fast daughter crack ahead of the main rupture, and show how laboratory tests and modern sensors confirm this radical behavior. We’ll explore…
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A deep dive into how olive oil moved from a luxury indulgence to a pillar of imperial power. We trace the long arc from grove investment to Archimedes’ screw-driven presses, and from the Dressel 20 amphora to standardized stamping and tituli picti that served as ancient supply-chain checkpoints. Follow oil from Baetica to Rome, the staggering throu…
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Most founders obsess over ideas. Breakthrough companies obsess over inflections, conviction, and structure. This episode unpacks Pattern Breakers by Mike Maples Jr.—a book that quietly explains why most startups never break out… and why a small minority reshape entire categories. But this isn’t a book summary. It’s a thinking upgrade for founders, …
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An in-depth look at promotion and relegation—the open league system that makes every match matter and fuels both drama and financial risk. We unpack how parachute payments shield relegated clubs, why they’ve reshaped parity in leagues like the Premier League, and how alternative systems like Promedios in Argentina and Uruguay balance short-term res…
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We dive into the quantum world behind everyday vibrations: phonons, the quasi-particles that carry vibrational energy through crystals. Learn about acoustic and optical phonons, how they shape thermal and electrical conductivity, and why some vibrations couple to light as infrared-active modes. We explore cutting-edge ideas like phonon tunneling ac…
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From a cat’s trill and chatter to a ferret’s duke, alpaca clicks, and otter choruses with hiccups, this episode explores the formal, onomatopoeic vocabulary humans have built for animal noises. We scan how scientists name and interpret these sounds, what they reveal about intent and meaning, and how advances in bioacoustics and AI may unlock even d…
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We travel to the Isua Greenstone Belt in southwest Greenland to read Earth's oldest rocks (3.7–3.8 billion years). This episode digs into what these rocks reveal about early oceans and crust, weighs the plate tectonics versus heat-pipe debate, and surveys the first signatures of life—from light carbon isotopes to possible stromatolites—and what the…
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We break down MIT's Speech-to-Reality system, a leap toward physical AI that turns spoken requests into real objects. The pipeline runs from natural-language understanding to a 3D generative mesh, then voxelization that enforces buildable geometry and modular, magnet-connected parts. Robotic arms assemble the design, while vision-language models wi…
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We dive into Quilter, a physics-driven reinforcement-learning system that designs a complete two-board Linux computer on the NXP iMX8M Mini. It generates layout options and verifies real-world physics—impedance, heat, and manufacturability—during the design, achieving first-power-up reliability with no re-spins. We explore how this hardware-rich ap…
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A deep dive into how James Gibbs turned a radical circular library into England’s first, using precise geometric rules drawn from his own Rules for Drawing. We explore the 1:10 column proportion, the one-fifth entablature, and the pedestal adjustments Gibbs justified by decorum, showing how he balanced exacting math with artistic judgment. From the…
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We trace the evidence for Pangaea—from coastline fits and matching mountain belts to Mesosaurus fossils—how Wegener and Holmes built the case for plate tectonics, what Triassic climates were like, and how the giant landmass finally tore apart into the continents we know today. Plus a look at rifts like the Red Sea and the future of planetary drama …
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Time on Mars isn’t just longer days. In this deep dive we explore how relativity and Mars’ orbital quirks affect local time, why a Martian day (the sol) runs 24h39m35s, and how the equation of time can swing by as much as 93 minutes over the Martian year. We then compare calendar schemes—the Darian model and the pragmatic Smoital system with occasi…
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Exploring innovation where education meets entrepreneurship. About Durga Suresh-Menon Durga Suresh-Menon, Ph.D., is Head of School at New England Innovation Academy. An energizing, dynamic and growth-minded educator with a record of inclusive leadership and passionate storytelling, Dr. Suresh-Menon joins NEIA with over two decades of collaborative …
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In this deep dive we explore why the pumpkin toadlet, about the size of a Skittle, is one of the clumsiest jumpers in the animal kingdom. CT scans from the Overt initiative reveal an impossibly small vestibular system—the smallest semicircular canals recorded in an adult vertebrate—so the fluid can’t sense midair rotations, leading to belly flops r…
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We dive into the hunt for a hypothetical fourth neutrino flavor—sterile neutrinos—and how they could solve the neutrino mass puzzle via the seesaw mechanism, with a potential link to dark matter. From KATRIN and MicroBooNE to future big detectors like DUNE, we review the latest results, why they matter, and how scientists are pushing beyond the Sta…
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"Inspect your marketing the way you'd inspect a home—run diagnostics, don't guess." – Aaron Husak "Attitude is way more important than aptitude. One bad apple really can infect the whole company." – Aaron Husak In this episode of the Building HVAC Science podcast, Eric and Bill sit down with long-time friend and contractor-turned-marketing pro, Aar…
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A deep dive into Google's AlphaEvolve, an AI-powered system that evolves optimization algorithms through seed code, mutation, and fitness-based selection. See how the Gemini-powered coding agent uses fast exploration and deep analysis to yield breakthroughs—recovering 0.7% of global compute by better scheduling, speeding a vital kernel by 23%, and …
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In this deep dive, we unpack Menger's theorem—the elegant link between the minimum number of elements needed to disconnect two points and the maximum number of disjoint paths connecting them. We'll distinguish edge connectivity and vertex connectivity, explore how max-flow min-cut and linear programming underpin the same duality, and show how the t…
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Join us as we unpack StarCloud-1, the first satellite to host an NVIDIA H100 in orbit and run a powerful LLM in space. We'll explain how orbital compute could slash energy use and cooling, scale to a proposed 5 GW data center powered by solar, and explore real-world applications—from wildfire detection to lifeboat spotting—in the race to redefine A…
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In this deep-dive episode, we recount the final full year of the LHC's Run 3 (2025), where ATLAS and CMS hit a new milestone with 125 fb^-1 each and the four experiments together surpass 5×10^16 collisions in total. We explain the 150-pileup environment, 90%+ data-taking efficiency across ATLAS, CMS, LHCb, and ALICE (ALICE at 95% during a 21-day le…
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We dissect Andrej Karpathy's project that uses a modern LLM to retrospectively judge the foresight in 930 December 2015 Hacker News discussions. From the six-section prompt to bias mitigation, learn how the system assigns A-to-F grades, spot standout predictions, and discuss what this approach implies for future knowledge synthesis and AI-driven fo…
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A nine-ton hadrosaur from late Cretaceous Laramidia, found in New Mexico, spent over a century mislabelled in a museum. In 2025, a meticulous reanalysis by Dollman and colleagues reclassified it as Ahshislesaurus wimani. We unpack how a partial skull, a robust front mandible, and an extra set of teeth revealed a new genus—and how old bones in museu…
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A friendly dive into knot theory and the unknotting number—the minimum number of crossing switches needed to untie a knot. We ride from simple knots like the trefoil and the figure-eight to complex families like twist and torus knots, explain why the unknotting number gives a deep glimpse into a knot's structure, and celebrate the 2025 result showi…
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From the limits of early pseudorandom generators to the MT powerhouse, we unravel how Matsumoto and Nishimura engineered a long-lasting, high-quality RNG. Explore its astronomical period, 623-dimensional equidistribution, and the tempering polish that eliminates hidden patterns, plus why it’s become the backbone of Python, MATLAB, R, and Excel. We …
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We unpack the iterated prisoner's dilemma, why 'tit for tat'—start cooperative and copy your opponent's last move—proved stunningly effective in Axelrod’s tournaments, and how generosity (GTFT) prevents spirals from miscommunication. From World War I trenches to AI diplomacy and business, we explore how a little forgiveness can stabilize complex sy…
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We unpack how Bombus terrestris nests mount a four-phase defense—from a rapid worker-led onset with alarm buzzing and leg-raising to a prolonged 'abdominal pumping' warm-up, followed by a delayed response with pulse buzzing and grooming. The colony's defense adapts to threat type, and a hidden layer—social immunity via transgenerational immune prim…
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We explore how memory-two bilateral reciprocity (MTBR) emerged from multi-agent Q-learning, revealing a dominant social strategy that combines forgiveness with a cycle-breaker. Learn about the dual objective—maximize your relative advantage to deter exploitation while also maximizing your own total payoff to encourage cooperation—and how these rule…
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Join us as we connect climate and chemistry models to Mars' faint young Sun paradox, where crustal hydrogen release and episodic volcanism could have produced bursts of warmth long enough for rivers to carve vast networks. A new map identifies 16 mega basins—each over 100,000 square kilometers—that cover only about 5% of the ancient terrain but con…
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A humbling deep dive into MAB (formerly S2003-U1), the faint Uranian moon that evades easy measurement and even Voyager 2’s flyby. We trace its Hubble discovery in 2003, the mystery of its size, and how a chaotic, Goldilocks-sized moon acts as a self-sustaining dust factory that feeds Uranus’ ring system. This episode explores how a small world can…
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In this deep dive, we explore the first detailed single-nucleus atlas of Paracentrotus lividus at two weeks old. SnRNA-seq maps every active gene in every cell and reveals a surprisingly complex nervous system: 48 cell clusters, 29 neuronal families, and a full suite of signaling—dopaminergic, serotonergic, cholinergic, GABAergic—distributed across…
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We reveal a near-complete 70-million-year-old crocodile relative from Argentina—Kostensuchus atrox —and what its broad snout, giant jaw muscles, and serrated teeth tell us about Cretaceous land predation. The episode compares its ecology with coeval predators like Chaetotrox and Baryosuchids, explores locomotor clues from its limbs, and explains wh…
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A deep-dive into Cassiopeia A, the brightest extra-solar radio source, and a centuries-old explosion that went unnoticed in the 1600s. We explore how radio, X-ray, and light-echo observations stitched together the event, revealing an asymmetric Type I explosion and the creation of life’s building blocks—like phosphorus. It’s a cosmic detective stor…
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Join us as we dive into blue holes—giant, oxygen-starved caverns carved from carbonate bedrock. We explore their Ice Age origins, the halocline that preserves climate records and fossils, and the unique chemosynthetic life that thrives there. We’ll also look at how scientists map these underwater time capsules and why they’re powerful analogs for l…
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A deep dive into how astronomers map cosmic history with the ages and metals of stars. We trace Walter Baade’s Population I, II, and III framework, explain why metallicity acts as a cosmic clock, and show how Pop I (like the Sun) are metal-rich, Pop II are older and alpha-enhanced, and Pop III are the universe’s first stars. Explore how metal conte…
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We unpack the Hadamard (Schur) product: simple A ∘ B, equal-shaped matrices multiplied entrywise. It’s commutative and, crucially, why PSD matrices stay PSD thanks to the Schur product theorem—giving a stability guarantee for big systems. See how this tiny operation shows up in image masking, JPEG-like processing, and the gate-driven memory of LSTM…
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Dive into the discovery of Iridogorgia chewbacca, a shimmering deep-sea bamboo coral whose thousands of active polyps cloak its stalk in a fuzzy, iridescent halo. We unpack what a monopodial spiral axis means, how this species survives at 400–1,000 meters in the western Pacific, and why archival ROV footage led scientists to formally describe it as…
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A deep dive into Mount Zao’s awe-inspiring juhyo—giant, feathery ice formations sculpted by the perfect storm of geography, biology, and brutal weather. We break down ice-snow accretion, the role of the hardy Maris fir, and how supercooled droplets and wind angle create the feathered, low-density “soft rime” that gives these giants their surreal sh…
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Dive into the Frobenius (Rational) Canonical Form and discover how it gives each square matrix a unique fingerprint that survives changes of basis. We’ll see why this form avoids eigenvalue factoring, using invariant factors and companion blocks to build a canonical block-diagonal picture. Compare it with diagonalization and Jordan form, and learn …
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A tour of the darkest materials, from nanotube forests like Vantablack to nanofibril fabrics and melanin-based layers inspired by deep-sea organisms. We explore how nanoscale structures trap nearly all light, why durability and scalability matter, and how nature’s blueprints could power robust ultra-black coatings for science, industry, and everyda…
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A practical deep-dive into turning AI prompts into repeatable, high-impact results. We unpack four input types (simple questions, tasks, entity/classification prompts, and completions), the value of few-shot examples, and the power of positive guardrails. Learn how to shape context, use explicit structure with delimiters, and tune creativity with t…
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We unpack the classic predictor dilemma—two boxes, a near-perfect forecaster, and a choice that seems to predefine your fate. We compare the one-box and two-box strategies, dive into the idea of character formation, and discuss what ultra-accurate predictions mean for decision-making in an AI-enabled world. Note: This podcast was AI-generated, and …
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"Get mad at the problem, not the person. When people feel safe, they'll actually bring you the real issues." - Bill Spohn "We're woven into the fabric of this industry. The industry made me—so in a way, it owns me." - Bill Spohn "What we have to learn to do, we learn by doing." - Aristotle In this episode, Eric turns the mic around and interviews h…
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A voyage from Roman wax tablets to the codex, exploring its binding, text block, endpapers, paste-downs, fly leaves, and the art of bookmaking—from accordion folds to ebru paper marbling—celebrating the craftsmanship behind the everyday book. Note: This podcast was AI-generated, and sometimes AI can make mistakes. Please double-check any critical i…
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Scientists using the VLA detected strongly polarized, repeating radio bursts synchronized with the 2-day orbit of rocky YZ Ceti b, revealing a planetary magnetic field via star-planet interactions. This first direct hint of a magnetosphere around a terrestrial exoplanet 12 light-years away offers a powerful tool to assess atmospheric retention and …
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A nature-inspired deep dive into the Secretary Bird Optimization Algorithm (SBOA): how a raptor’s two-stage hunt—general search with Brownian motion and precision strikes via Levy flights—translates into robust, dynamic scheduling for edge-enabled drone networks. We explore enhancements like MSESBOA+RL, golden sinusoidal guidance, and cooperative c…
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