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Metal Fish Podcasts

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The Metal Detecting Show

The Metal Detecting Show

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Hey If you are interested in metal detecting please check out my podcast where each week I talk about my own adventures in metal detecting, I brake down technical aspects of the hobby, all coupled with guest interviews discussing their successful hunting methods and product reviews. You can interact with the show by leaving a voicemail via https://linktr.ee/themetaldetectingshow Chat Soon.
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Cut & Retie

Cut & Retie

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No matter how you fish or what you fish for, Cut & Retie with Joe Cermele. Never techy, always metal-injected, let your guard down and stop taking fishing so seriously, because it's just fishing, man.
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Full Metal Podcast

Full Metal Podcast

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CNAS defense policy experts discuss current events from a hard defense viewpoint. Hosted by Jerry Hendrix, Susanna Blume, Lauren Fish and Adam Routh at the Center for a New American Security. Each episode will incorporate a DSA team discussion followed by a conversation with a special guest.
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Pop-Punk & Pizza

Noelle Matonis

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Pop-Punk & Pizza is a weekly podcast featuring guests ranging from bands in your local scene to internationally known artists such as Less Than Jake, Reel Big Fish, Wheatus, and more! A lot of times, the interviews will take place while eating pizza. Hosted by Noelle Matonis.
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Gone Fishkin

idobi Network

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Originally from Long Island, Fish has been in love with music since he was 10 and started playing guitar. Around 14 years old he tuned into idobi for the first time and months later started producing The Gunz Show out of his room for years. After starting a college radio show just to pass a class he started Gone Fishkin in 2013 on idobi. Since moving out to LA he’s started Djing at some of your favorite places too!
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Diaries of a Lodge Owner

Outdoor Journal Radio Podcast Network

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In 2009, sheet metal mechanic, Steve Niedzwiecki, turned his passions into reality using steadfast belief in himself and his vision by investing everything in a once-obscure run-down Canadian fishing lodge. After ten years, the now-former lodge owner and co-host of The Fish'n Canada Show is here to share stories of inspiration, relationships and the many struggles that turned his monumental gamble into one of the most legendary lodges in the country. From anglers to entrepreneurs, athletes t ...
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Think all Realtors are the same? Think again. This is the podcast that takes you beyond the sold sign and into the real, raw, and refreshingly human side of real estate professionals. Every Friday, host Melissa Doucet sits down with agents from across the country (and beyond) to talk about everything except real estate—mental health, music, sobriety, creativity, resilience, parenting, passion, purpose, and the messy, magical moments in between. Whether you’re in the industry or just curious ...
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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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Researchers Under the Scope

University of Saskatchewan, OVDR, College of Medicine

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Medicine is so much more than lab coats and stethoscopes. The research community at the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine is a diverse group of humans, all working with their own unique motivations — and not all of them work in a hospital setting. Get to know what gets these researchers amped about their jobs, what they're doing, where they're doing it, and why. Presented by the Office of Vice-Dean of Research, College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan.
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Wall St For Main St

Jason Burack, Mo Dawoud and John Manfreda

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Wall St for Main St provides alternative financial information, research, education and consulting to Main Street investors using uncommon wisdom. Our goal is teaching people how to fish for themselves instead of trusting their financial adviser. We interview top investors, traders, money managers, financial commentators, economic experts, authors, CEOs and newsletter writers from around the world to discuss the latest events in the global economy and financial markets.
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JW Community Podcast

Louise Goode and Lara Kaput

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JW Community Podcast is the new podcast home for Louise Goode and Lara Kaput. Our podcast has the objective of providing support and information to people when they leave the cult, and presenting factual and entertaining content through discussion and interviews with a range of ex Jehovah's Witnesses, professionals and experts. You have the opportunity to feed back to us and send us any questions you would like the team to answer by contacting [email protected].
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The Merch Drop

Rich Graham

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The Merch Drop is your source for inspiration for your own marketing and promotional campaigns. This show highlights brands that use custom merch, branded apparel, and printed goods as integral aspects of their marketing strategies. We’re here to fuel your creativity — so business owners and marketers like you see the full potential of branded promotional products. We’ll show you how various industries use custom branded merch as strategic tools to promote their products and services, engage ...
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Inquiring Minds

Indre Viskontas

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Each week we bring you a new, in-depth exploration of the space where science and society collide. We’re committed to the idea that making an effort to understand the world around you though science and critical thinking can benefit everyone—and lead to better decisions. We want to find out what’s true, what’s left to discover, and why it all matters.
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We explore Verlinde's entropic gravity, the bold claim that gravity is not a fundamental force but an emergent force arising from information and thermodynamics. We'll tour the core ingredients— the holographic principle, equipartition of energy, and the Unruh effect— and show how they can reproduce Newton's law. We discuss the dramatic implication…
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From the fossil record's 66-million-year gap to the 1938 South African discovery, we trace the coelacanth's improbable return and why it's called the ultimate Lazarus taxon. We'll dive into Latimeria, the lobed-finned lineage that links us to lungfish and tetrapods, and explore their bizarre anatomy—the notochord and intracranial joint—that keep th…
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Meet TOI 561, a 10-billion-year-old orange dwarf in the Milky Way's thick disk—the galaxy's ancient backbone. This metal-poor star hosts at least four planets, including TOI 561b, a scorching super-Earth with an 11-hour orbit whose composition is debated: rocky with little iron or a water-rich body shrouded in a dense steam atmosphere. The discover…
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We explore the Vishapakar—massive basalt monuments of the Armenian highlands carved with fish, serpents, and other symbols, named for the water dragon Vishap. New research shows their placements align with ancient irrigation and water networks dating to the Chalcolithic (roughly 4,200–4,000 BCE), revealing a sophisticated water-centered ritual land…
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On Christmas Eve, a simple misprint sparked a legendary tradition: NORAD's Santa Tracker. We unpack the origin—from a CONAD hotline prank to a real-time, 3D Cesium-powered digital twin of Earth—complete with star catalogs, LiDAR terrain, and a 26,762-triangle sleigh. Meet the volunteers, the engineering feats, and the enduring blend of old myth and…
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A math-filled dive into wrapping a conical spiral around a tree. We model it with height H, base radius R, and N turns, showing how the radius shrinks as you rise and you complete N loops. The arc length requires calculus—and an inverse hyperbolic sine—to estimate how many lights you’ll need. We also explore the broader beauty of spirals in nature …
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In this deep dive, we unpack sparse representation theory. Learn how a complex signal can be expressed with only a handful of dictionary atoms, why exact sparsity is NP-hard, and how convex relaxation (basis pursuit) and greedy methods (orthogonal matching pursuit) yield fast, provable solutions. We explore structured and collaborative sparsity, re…
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We explore density functional theory, the idea that a chemical system's behavior can be determined entirely from electron density. Learn how Kohn and Sham replaced a hopelessly tangled many-electron problem with a fictitious non-interacting system that reproduces the same density, and why the elusive exchange-correlation energy remains the single r…
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We explore the Gumbel distribution—named after Emil Julius Gumbel—and how it models the maximum of a dataset. From 500-year floods to the Gumbel Max Trick in AI, this episode shows why engineers and data scientists rely on max-stable theory to plan for the extreme and build resilient systems, while tracing a surprising historical thread from Laplac…
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Forget the neat arc of a nine-to-five. We sat down with Kyle Satchery, a small-town barber who spends spring and summer trapping live bait and guiding bear hunts when the weather turns, to unpack a life that moves with ice, bugs, and bookings. From black ice and first-snow days to crappie dinners snuck in before a niece’s skating show, Kyle’s world…
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A deep-dive into 2025 discoveries that rewrite the roots of modern fishes. With high-tech imaging and modeling, these tiny fossils are expanding our view of the grand history of vertebrate evolution. Note: This podcast was AI-generated, and sometimes AI can make mistakes. Please double-check any critical information. Sponsored by Embersilk LLC…
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We dive into CSS Grid Lanes—the native masonry solution that moves items into the shortest available column, eliminating the need for heavy JavaScript. Learn how it differs from standard Grid, the three-line setup (display: grid lanes; grid template columns; gap), and how tolerance affects placement for accessibility. Explore real-world use cases, …
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We dive into Alfred Rényi's 1958 random sequential parking puzzle on a line, uncovering the jamming limit and the famous parking constant ≈ 0.7475979. We explore how this one-dimensional geometric bound mirrors how tokens fill context in transformers, via causal attention masking and the idea of metastable anchor points (Rényi centers) that boost e…
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A practical dive into performance engineering—how estimation, the latency hierarchy, and smart data structures turn frustrating delays into instant responses. Guided by Jeff Dean and Sanjay Ghemawat's performance hints, we unpack moving from O(n log n) to O(n), hoisting temporaries, and fast paths for the common case. We also glimpse real-world win…
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In this deep-dive, we explore how Fisher Information measures how much your data can tell you about an unknown parameter. Visualize it through the curvature of the log-likelihood—sharp curves mean high information and precise estimates, flat curves mean ambiguity. We’ll cover additivity across independent observations, the Cramér–Rao bound as the u…
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A tour of the young star Fomalhaut and its spectacular, collision-prone debris disk. We unravel why its bright ring behaves like a nonstop demolition derby, the misidentified exoplanet Dagon, and the rare feature of two stellar companions each hosting a disk. It's a dynamic, real-world lab showing how chaos fuels planet formation in a multi-star sy…
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In this episode, medical student and researcher Vaidehee Lanke shares what large provincial datasets reveal about opioid use disorder, maternal mental health, and pregnancy. Armed with data, she hopes better support —before, during, and after birth—can change outcomes for mothers and babies. Lanke spent her summer working with epidemiologist Dr. Na…
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In this episode we explore how the Nabataeans turned Petra, a rose-red rock city, into the heart of a powerful trading kingdom. Learn how ingenious water engineering, control of the incense route from Yemen to Gaza, and fierce defense allowed them to dominate ancient trade, withstand big rivals, and endure as a commercial force even after Rome clai…
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A deep dive into Torricelli's trumpet, the shape formed by revolving y = 1/x about the x-axis from x = 1 to infinity. We explore why its volume is finite (π) even as its surface area diverges to infinity, unravel the painter's paradox, and see how calculus resolves the mystery. We'll also discuss why the paradox disappears in the real world due to …
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A data-driven dive into the Eephus pitch—the infamous 'dead fish'—exploring its history, the physics behind a slow, high-spin arc, and what the data really says about contact quality, exit velocity, and on-base percentage. We separate myth from method, examine why this oddball pitch persists, and discuss how teams might use it as a legitimate tool …
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We unpack a provocative claim: a tiny, non-existent seahorse emoji as a tripwire revealing a new phase in AI training—the use of thinking-trace data that exposes the model's internal problem-solving process. We trace how labs feed rough drafts into models to produce more stable, better-aligned AI, and what this means for reliability across closed a…
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From a creek’s tiny whirl to the robust math of fluids, we explore how vorticity and vortex stretching power turbulent flows. We trace Berger’s vortex as a stable exact solution, then reveal high‑resolution simulations showing that, in the inviscid 3D Euler equations, the anticipated blow‑up is tamed by dynamic depletion: vortex tubes flattening in…
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We distill CNPC's Shendi Take One Well in the Taklamakan Desert—a 10,910-meter onshore drilling milestone that makes Asia’s deepest vertical well and ranks second globally behind the Kola borehole. Drilled from May 2023 to February 2025, it set a world record for the fastest onshore depth to that level and yielded the first ultra-deep onshore oil-a…
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A deep dive into the foundational shifts Karpathy highlights for 2025: reinforcement learning from verifiable rewards (RLVR) driving massive cheap optimization, the rise of ‘thinking time’ traces and jagged, task-optimized intelligence, and the birth of vibe coding—guiding powerful AI with plain language. We explore the new LLM app layer that turns…
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NASA’s Earth Observatory spotlights a surreal 22-kilometer chain of five pale-blue thermokarst lakes near Billings on Russia’s Chukchi Peninsula. The pattern isn’t surface snow but underground ice wedges melting in summer, causing the ground to slump into a line that winds and waves slowly align end-to-end. From orbit you can see this dramatic natu…
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We explore how monitoring AI reasoning can reveal safety signals in critical decisions. Learn what monitorability means, why a perfect transcript isn’t required, and how robust metrics and three evaluation modes—intervention, process, and outcome—help catch red flags. The episode covers why bigger models aren’t necessarily less transparent, the sur…
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An intimate journey through the life of Emil Grosswald, a towering figure in number theory who thrived under upheaval. From dual degrees in mathematics and electrical engineering in Bucharest, through wartime flight across Europe to Cuba, and finally to a transformative U.S. career under Hans Rademacher, Grosswald bridged pure theory and practical …
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From button taps on your iPhone to complex event flows, this episode breaks down the Chain of Responsibility design pattern. Learn how a chain of handlers can decide who processes a request at runtime, keeping senders agnostic of receivers and enabling dynamic, extensible systems. We’ll look at Cocoa’s responder chain as a concrete example, discuss…
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We dive into Spherical Voronoi (SV), a new framework that partitions viewing directions on the sphere with adaptive Voronoi cells to capture sharp reflections and high-frequency lighting in real-time rendering. See how SV uses a single softmax temperature to smoothly span diffuse to mirror-like highlights, outperforming traditional approaches like …
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We dive into DisCIPL (Decentralized Collaborative Intelligent Planning Language model), a two-part framework that splits reasoning into a planner LM that writes a task-specific program and a swarm of cheap follower LMs that execute in parallel. The planner acts as a blueprint-writer and gatekeeper, guiding thousands of quick, inexpensive attempts a…
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We dive into aerogels and the extreme aerographite—a nanoscale, three‑dimensional carbon network so light it weighs less than 0.2 mg per cubic centimeter, yet conducts electricity even at cryogenic temperatures. Learn how a sacrificial zinc oxide template and chemical vapor deposition create this porous, conductive marvel, why its vast internal sur…
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Dive into the ancient art of letterlocking—the craft of folding a letter into its own secure envelope. We trace spiral locks, self-destruct mechanisms, and the long arc from Mesopotamian seals to modern physical information security. Then see how X-ray microtomography lets researchers virtually unfold 300-year-old letters from the Brienne Collectio…
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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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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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A hot-tub sunrise under northern stars. A beached fuel barge after the dam closes. Guests stepping off rocks because the docks aren’t ready yet—but they can see the heart and the plan. We sit down with Willie “the Oil Man” to unpack the real work behind Two Rivers Lodge’s first season and why oil patch grit translates surprisingly well to backcount…
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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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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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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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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 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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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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