Science Podcasts
Podcasts from around the web on science and technology.
50 listings
Submitted Aug 17, 2008 to Science Podcasts In this weekly podcast series Alok Jha and the Guardian science team bring you the latest science news and interviews with science and technology leaders from around the world.
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Submitted Aug 18, 2007 (Edited Aug 28, 2007) to Science Podcasts The weekly podcast, Science Elements, describes research reported in ACS
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Submitted Aug 05, 2007 to Science Podcasts We're not talking dentistry here; FLOSS all about Free Libre Open Source Software. Join hosts Chris DiBona and Leo Laporte every Friday as they talk with the most interesting and important people in the Open Source and Free Software community.
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Submitted Feb 04, 2007 (Edited Dec 07, 2016) to Science Podcasts You can view all of our Webcasts on demand. Using a program such as iTunes, you can subscribe to our Podcast feeds so that new Royal Society Podcasts are automatically delivered to your computer.
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Submitted Oct 18, 2006 to Science Podcasts The audio summaries feature our editorial staff discussing the highlights from the week's issue, and usually include at least one interview with the study author of a key paper. Also produced is a monthly audio summary for The Lancet Infectious Diseases and The Lancet Neurology.
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Submitted Sep 16, 2006 to Science Podcasts People will believe anything. Why is that? Our podcast is here to bring you relevant, under reported current events, as well as in-depth discussions from a scientific, critical, skeptical, and humorous point of view. In our travels we will tackle the beasts of pseudoscience; the paranormal, supernatural, ufo / alien encounters, mis-understood history, astronomy, space, and overwrought legends - urban or otherwise. Welcome to Skepticality, truth in podcasting.
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Submitted Jun 20, 2006 to Science Podcasts Science facts, news, creature feature, and entertaining and educational songs about nature and science.By the Singing Science Teacher. 10-15 min. For all ages. Weekly during school year (bi-weekly during summer months). Also, visit scienceonthewildside.com for more fun songs.
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Submitted Apr 07, 2006 to Science Podcasts Point of Inquiry is the Center for Inquirys radio show and podcast, drawing on CFIs relationship with the leading minds of the day including Nobel Prize-winning scientists, public intellectuals, social critics and thinkers, and renowned entertainers. Each episode combines incisive interviews, features and commentary focusing on CFIs issues: religion, human values and the borderlands of science. Point of Inquiry is produced at the Center for Inquiry in Amherst, NY. CFI, a think-tank devoted to promoting science, reason, and freedom of inquiry in every field of human interest, co-sponsors the new Science and the Public program at the State University of New York at Buffalo. CFI also maintains additional branches in Manhattan, Tampa and Hollywood, and in eleven cities around the world.
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Submitted Feb 18, 2006 to Science Podcasts Join host Steve Mirsky each week as he explores the latest developments in science and technology through interviews with leading scientists and journalists.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts "Science and Society" is broadly focused on nanotechnology, life sciences, energy and the environment, space exploration, and K-12 science education. Over the last several years we have interviewed more than 350 trendsetting and groundbreaking reseachers, industry-leading executives, and senior government officials. "Science and Society" presents direct access to primary sources of change in science and technology.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts Science Friday is a weekly science talk show, broadcast live over public radio stations nationwide from 2-4pm Eastern time as part of NPR's 'Talk of the Nation' programming. Each week, we focus on science topics that are in the news and try to bring an educated, balanced discussion to bear on the scientific issues at hand. Panels of expert guests join Science Friday's host, Ira Flatow, a veteran science journalist, to discuss science - and to take questions from listeners during the call-in portion of the program.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts EPA's homeland security research is helping to protect human health and the environment from intentional acts of terror. Subscribe to feeds to get news delivered directly to your desktop or portable device.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts StarDate is the longest-running national radio science feature in the country. It debuted in 1978, and will broadcast its 10,000th episode in 2006. It airs on more than 360 radio stations in the United States. StarDate tells listeners what to look for in the night sky, and explains the science, history, and skylore behind these objects. It also keeps listeners up to date on the latest research findings and space missions. And it offers tidbits on astronomy in the arts and popular culture, providing ways for people with many diverse interests to keep up with the universe. StarDate is a production of The University of Texas McDonald Observatory, which also produces the Spanish-language Universo radio program and Universo Online web site and the bi-monthly StarDate magazine.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts Your antidote to soundbite science. What I want to accomplish with this web site & podcast is to fill in the missing context for scientific and technical issues reported on elsewhere, and to cover items that get lost in the mass media's rush to deadline.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts A show covering topics in current events, politics, science, technology, history, satire, and whatever we damn well please.
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Submitted Feb 12, 2006 to Science Podcasts How would 10 top physiciststwo Nobel Prize winners among themdescribe Einstein's equation to curious non-physicists?
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Submitted Feb 11, 2006 to Science Podcasts Welcome. Sure, you already know all about computer science, physics, mathematics, yadda yadda yadda. But can you explain it to your boss in terms that won't explode his managerial head? More importantly, can you use your big, bulging brains to land dates? No, seriously? Okay, then. Intellectual Icebergs is for you. Join us, semi-weekly-to-monthly, as we explore topics ranging from cryptography and subatomic physics to geek dating tips and partyology.
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Submitted Feb 11, 2006 to Science Podcasts Weekly podcasts covering science news by New Scientist magazine.
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