12分

0004 Ever the Optimist – Cloaking Device, Deflector Shields, Fantastic Fails - What Gets My Goat What Gets My Goat

    • ニュース

Originally published 07-07-2013

Hello and welcome back to the ‘Ever the Optimist’ podcast. We’re back and working on some audio hang-ups, but let’s get going anyway! Remember, you can Like “Ever the Optimist” on Facebook and as always you can find links and discussions of show topics in our show notes at www.wyethdigital.com/optimist







Question of the Week


Nature.com reports that:

“electrical engineers have used lasers to create a cloak that can hide communications in a ‘time hole’, so that it seems as if they were never sent. The method, published today in Nature1, is the first that can cloak data streams sent at the rapid rates typically seen in telecommunications systems. It opens the door to ultra-secure transmission schemes, and may also provide a way to better shield information from noise corruption.”

So the obvious Question of the Week: Given that the NSA and other intelligence agencies have been data-mining and  tapping our communications, would you like to be able to hide your communications?

Future Tech


UPI.com takes us where no one has gone before with news that:

“the command ‘shields up’ to protect humans traveling in spacecraft from radiation may soon graduate from the realm of science fiction, British researchers say.

“Scientists at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory say they’ve been testing a lightweight system to protect astronauts from harmful radiation on long voyages, such as a round trip to Mars, who would be exposed to cosmic rays and high-energy particles from the sun contained in solar storms.” 

Make it so!

Future Fail


Web Urbanist fills my Amazon wish list with 10 fantastic inventions that failed. Flying tanks,  poison-gas spewing riot cars and telephone answering robots are but a few of the colossal failures that made the list!



Glass Half-Empty

Discovery News  cautions that warming oceans are putting puffins in peril. According to their article, which relies heavily on reporting from the AP:

“The AP’s Clarke Canfield reports that instead of feeding their chicks herring, the puffin parents were attempting to feed them butterfish, which were too big for the chicks to swallow. Butterfish is a more southerly species of fish that has become more abundant in the Gulf of Maine as waters have warmed, or perhaps more accessible to seabirds because it has moved higher up in the water column; according to Steve Kress of the National Audubon Society’s seabird restoration program, exceptionally warm water temperatures in the Gulf of Maine last year may have prompted an earlier-than-usual phytoplankton bloom,

Originally published 07-07-2013

Hello and welcome back to the ‘Ever the Optimist’ podcast. We’re back and working on some audio hang-ups, but let’s get going anyway! Remember, you can Like “Ever the Optimist” on Facebook and as always you can find links and discussions of show topics in our show notes at www.wyethdigital.com/optimist







Question of the Week


Nature.com reports that:

“electrical engineers have used lasers to create a cloak that can hide communications in a ‘time hole’, so that it seems as if they were never sent. The method, published today in Nature1, is the first that can cloak data streams sent at the rapid rates typically seen in telecommunications systems. It opens the door to ultra-secure transmission schemes, and may also provide a way to better shield information from noise corruption.”

So the obvious Question of the Week: Given that the NSA and other intelligence agencies have been data-mining and  tapping our communications, would you like to be able to hide your communications?

Future Tech


UPI.com takes us where no one has gone before with news that:

“the command ‘shields up’ to protect humans traveling in spacecraft from radiation may soon graduate from the realm of science fiction, British researchers say.

“Scientists at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory say they’ve been testing a lightweight system to protect astronauts from harmful radiation on long voyages, such as a round trip to Mars, who would be exposed to cosmic rays and high-energy particles from the sun contained in solar storms.” 

Make it so!

Future Fail


Web Urbanist fills my Amazon wish list with 10 fantastic inventions that failed. Flying tanks,  poison-gas spewing riot cars and telephone answering robots are but a few of the colossal failures that made the list!



Glass Half-Empty

Discovery News  cautions that warming oceans are putting puffins in peril. According to their article, which relies heavily on reporting from the AP:

“The AP’s Clarke Canfield reports that instead of feeding their chicks herring, the puffin parents were attempting to feed them butterfish, which were too big for the chicks to swallow. Butterfish is a more southerly species of fish that has become more abundant in the Gulf of Maine as waters have warmed, or perhaps more accessible to seabirds because it has moved higher up in the water column; according to Steve Kress of the National Audubon Society’s seabird restoration program, exceptionally warm water temperatures in the Gulf of Maine last year may have prompted an earlier-than-usual phytoplankton bloom,

12分

ニュースのトップPodcast

NHKラジオニュース
NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation)
ながら日経
ラジオNIKKEI
辛坊治郎 ズーム そこまで言うか!
ニッポン放送
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
飯田浩司のOK! Cozy up! Podcast
ニッポン放送
English News - NHK WORLD RADIO JAPAN
NHK WORLD-JAPAN