403 episodes

Indicast is India's longest running and most popular Indian podcast network. This is the mother feed of all the shows produced by Indicast including a current affairs new show, a business news show, a tech show from an Indian perspective, a bollywood movie review show and a conversational interview show. Expect a good discussion with few laughs in our special India focused content. Individual show feeds are available at http://www.theindicast.com

Indicast - All Podcasts Various Indicast Podcast Hosts

    • News
    • 5.0 • 12 Ratings

Indicast is India's longest running and most popular Indian podcast network. This is the mother feed of all the shows produced by Indicast including a current affairs new show, a business news show, a tech show from an Indian perspective, a bollywood movie review show and a conversational interview show. Expect a good discussion with few laughs in our special India focused content. Individual show feeds are available at http://www.theindicast.com

    Gregory Zuckerman on his book "The Man Who solved the market: How Jim Simons Launched The Quant Revolution"

    Gregory Zuckerman on his book "The Man Who solved the market: How Jim Simons Launched The Quant Revolution"

    Gregory Zukerman writes for the Wall Street Journal. Over the last few decades he has written several books. In 2019 he wrote "The Man Who solved the market: How Jim Simons Launched The Quant Revolution" which became a runaway hit. It tells the story of a genius mathematician who used modern quantitative techniques to make money for himself and his investors. Since 1988 one of the fund’s operated by Mr Simons generated average annual returns of 66%. Legendary investors like Warren Buffet, George Soros and Peter Lynch, too, cannot claim to have made these outsized profits with such consistency. How did Mr Simons go about his business? How did he manage a stellar team while keeping them movitated? How did he use machine learning, artificial intelligence, data and analytics in an era when these terms were unheard of in the industry? Gregory Zukerman explains it all in this podcast.

    • 32 min
    Ananyo Bhattacharya on his book The Man from the Future: The Visionary Life of John Von Neumann

    Ananyo Bhattacharya on his book The Man from the Future: The Visionary Life of John Von Neumann

    Ananyo Bhattacharya's "The Man from the Future: The Visionary Life of John Von Neumann" is a fascinating book about the Hungarian-American mathematician. It's a shame that most of us know little about the man. Dr Bhattacharya digs deep into the mathematician's early days and how he went on to have a lasting impact in different fields including nanotechnology, game theory, artificial intelligence and quantum physics.

    • 53 min
    Indicast #252: The solar eclipse saga

    Indicast #252: The solar eclipse saga

    How does it feel to witness a solar eclipse? Aditya tells us his experience in this podcast where we dig into trivia and history of this beautiful astronomical phenomenon. Bangalore faces a water crisis. How can a country as big as India deal with water shortages? Generative artificial intelligence is and will remain in the spotlight in a year when countries with a collective population of 4bn go to polls.

    • 42 min
    Indicast #251: India's Chess grandmasters rise

    Indicast #251: India's Chess grandmasters rise

    The Candidates Tournament is among the world’s most recognised Chess contests. This time round India has as many as five grandmasters competing for the top prize. That’s a big deal given that for around 30 years, it was Vishy Anand, the sole Indian grandmaster who represented India. In politics, “washing machine” trended for a while on Twitter in the context of corruption probes which, the opposition argued, could be washed away if one joined the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. And in business, Tesla scouts sites in India for a big plant. What does that mean for the giant and for the country?

    • 33 min
    Indicast #250: What social media does to our brains

    Indicast #250: What social media does to our brains

    Florida just passed a bill proposing to ban access to social media for kids under the age of 14. What does social media addiction do to our brains? We talk about the subject which is close to our hearts given that both of us have kids aged ten and five. The great Indian general elections are round the corner. What is the BJP up to? And in the world of cryptosphere, which we barely understand, Sam Bankman-Fried, the former boss of FTX, a defunct cryptocurrency exchange, gets 25 years in jail.

    • 42 min
    Dennis Yi Tenen on his book Literary Theory of Robots: How Computers Learned to Write

    Dennis Yi Tenen on his book Literary Theory of Robots: How Computers Learned to Write

    In this podcast Prof Dennis Yi Tenen, a software engineer turned literary scholar, leans on history of computer programming to tell modern tales of Artificial Intelligence. How did robots learn to write so quickly? Is it a good thing? Do technologies like ChatGPT make us lazy? Not quite, says Prof Tenen. He argues that such advances do not diminish our capacity to think. It may just make us better writers, on an average. Previously machines learned from human outputs but now they learn from machine outputs. What does this mean for us? He believes AI is neither Jesus nor a Terminator-like force as long as both the makers and users use it responsibly.

    • 51 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
12 Ratings

12 Ratings

sparsh bansal ,

its amazing!!

just came across podcasts (I was living under a rock).. this is one of the first podcasts i heard.. its really amazing.. informative yet humours.. and i like their take on subjects.. :)

Profound thinker ,

Our Own homegrown swadesi

Many years back, almost 15 yrs, I picked my first copy of The Lonely Planet Guide to India which opened the vision for my own country the way I had never seen it. And to acknowledge that, in the first few scores of pages somewhere describing the Hows an Whats and Whichs, the authors pointed out that more Indians were now using LP to explore their own country.
It kinda stung me as to why can't I use a foreign guide to learn more about my own country. The truth was that not too many Indians were doing much on the subject.

Moving on to read more profound subjects on the country I chose I read Mark Tully with his non stop full stops in slow motion, and also a bit of Edward Luce ( though missed William Dalrymple) to understand deeper dynamics of India and Indian Culture. Here though, I had wider choice but I chose western authors.

But ever since I hooked to the electronic media on Podcasts, I have been on the edge of euphoria with my own people doing the so called white thing. Aditya and Abhishek have always managed to touch upon things that touch everyday India.

Would love to see you more often, atleast once a week if not more. Don't tell me you don't have masala. I guess you guys are busy with other stuff. Nonetheless, you are very good and have wishes from Punjab to stay good.

ParthParikh ,

Awesome!!

Great Job! Its good to see the kind of intellectual topics that you put up! I'm a fan of yours! Keep up the good work!!

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