12 episodes

If life stays on one planet, then one day that planet will be uninhabitable and that will be the end of all life in the universe.We should get out more.Wunderdog is a collection of talks with people who have ideas about how to do this.

Wunderdog Øystein Runde & Nitro

    • Science
    • 5.0 • 7 Ratings

If life stays on one planet, then one day that planet will be uninhabitable and that will be the end of all life in the universe.We should get out more.Wunderdog is a collection of talks with people who have ideas about how to do this.

    Vinay Gupta: Mattereum, giving our things a trackable identity layer. Bonus: Climate refugees! Vinay has a plan!

    Vinay Gupta: Mattereum, giving our things a trackable identity layer. Bonus: Climate refugees! Vinay has a plan!

    Vinay used to work at Ethereum. Now he's trying to develop Mattereum, a digital identity layer (based on blockchain technology) that can tell us with more precision where a product is in its lifecycle, and how safe it is to buy. The intention: To make us reuse stuff more, with higher trust, thus rewarding quality products over cheap, one-time use stuff.

    https://mattereum.com/ shows how it's used, but I needed to know WHY. And that's how we got here.

    After hour one, he's explained Mattereum pretty well (doesn't buying used stuff on Ebay and Amazon accomplish the same? Why do we need a blockchain solution for this? How will the quality of used goods be "supervised", and by whom? What does the future hold for Mattereum?)

    According to Vinay, a big use case for Mattereum is just around the corner. As usual, you're 5 years ahead of things if you listen to Wunderdog!

    In hour two, we go into Vinay's big ambition: How to help the coming wave of climate refugees as best as possible. The only way is to give them a framework that allows them to do labor. How does he plan to accomplish this?

    Vinay's cheap housing design http://hexayurt.com/ has already become the go-to housing at Burning Man, but there's also large-scale infrastructure to think about.



    Listen, discuss and leave reviews of the pod in your preferred player!

    Jingle by @trop1ce from Twitter. May or may not contain black holes.

    As usual, the podcast exists because of my amazing sponsors from www.patreon.com/runde 

    Today let me highlight the following Patrons:

    Roy Cato Kleveland
    Ole-Morten Duesund
    Kirsti
    Bjarte Aune Olsen
    Michael Schmichael


    and in particular:

    Lars Ivar Igesund
    Kyle Arumugam
    Kyrre Matias Goksøyr
    Are Edvardsen
    Kristoffer Karlsen
    Øyvind Grimstad Gryt
    Andreas Døving
    Berit Reppen Lorentzen
    Kristoffer Karlsen

    Patrons are incredibly cool people! You remember the Medicis, right? And none of the other noble families from Italy around the renaissance. Just the Medicis, because they supported the arts. Maybe you remember the Borgias, because they were so horrible. But ... don't be a Borgia. Be a Medici.

    Www.patreon.com/runde

    • 1 hr 41 min
    Robin Hanson: Grabby aliens - the scariest solution to the Fermi Paradox

    Robin Hanson: Grabby aliens - the scariest solution to the Fermi Paradox

    "One of the most original thinkers in the world" (list of people who have said this at the bottom) is BACK for a second visit! Lex Fridman recently had Robin on, and we cover some of the same ground, but there can never be too many Robin Hanson conversations.

    This episode has a new jingle, by @trop1ce - who I found on Twitter. It contains a sample from a certain black hole sound published by NASA. Thank you! 

    As usual, the podcast exists because of my amazing sponsors from www.patreon.com/runde 

    Today let me highlight the following Patrons: 

    Sunniva Gylver (welcome!)
    Thomas Nøkleby (welcome!)
    Katja
    Beate Eiklid
    Bjørnar Kristiansen
    Joakim Kjenes

    and in particular: 

    Lars Ivar Igesund
    Kyle Arumugam
    Kyrre Matias Goksøyr
    Are Edvardsen
    Kristoffer Karlsen
    Øyvind Grimstad Gryt
    Andreas Døving
    Berit Reppen Lorentzen

    You patrons, you keep this going. Thank you. Remember to quit supporting whenever it should become a burden for you or if I just start making bad stuff. 

    Here are the blurbs for Robin's book "Age of Em", which was the topic of our previous Robin Hanson-episode, but which i just found right now. This is wild. Look at what these people are saying. (Also, I wonder what Robin thinks about the gender balance in this list. Oh well.)

    I'm reading a fascinating academic book, The Age of Em. .. It’s about brain emulation.Ian McEwan, Winner of the Man Booker prize Robin Hanson brings intelligence, imagination, and courage to some of the most profound questions humanity will be dealing with in the middle-term future. The Age of Em is a stimulating and unique book that will be valuable to anyone who wants to look past the next ten years to the next hundred and the next thousand.Sean Carroll The Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself What happens when a first-rate economist applies his rigor, breadth, and curiosity to the sci-fi topic of whole brain emulations? This book is what happens. There's nothing else like it, and it will blow your (current) mind.Andrew McAfee  The Second Machine Age A highly provocative vision of a technologically advanced future that may or may not come true — but if it does, we'll be glad Robin wrote this book now.Marc Andreessen  Netscape, Andreessen Horowitz In this brilliant analysis, Robin Hanson shows that our hyper-smart `downloaded’ – or emulated – heirs will still have ambitions, triumphs and thwarted desires. They'll make alliances, compete, cooperate… and very-likely love… all driven by immutable laws of nature and economics. Super intelligence may be a lot more like us than you imagined.David Brin  Hugo: Existence, The Transparent Society Robin Hanson provides a richly detailed portrait of a future society where brain emulation is widespread. Drawing on physics, economics, sociology, history, and a host of other disciplines, he describes a world that is wonderfully strange and yet strikingly familiar. Far out? Yes. Fascinating? That too.Hal Varian  Google A fascinating thought experiment about the future, written with clarity and verve by somebody who thinks very deeply and freely.Matt Ridley  The Times, The Evolution of Everything Robin Hanson is one of the most important and original thinkers. His new tour de force will dazzle and delight you. Anyone who loves books should read The Age of Em.Tyler Cowen  New York Times, The Great Stagnation Robin Hanson has a remarkable mind and has written a remarkable book. He provides an encyclopedically-detailed analysis of a fascinating future dominated by brain emulations. Whether you agree or disagree with each of his specific predictions, each page will entice you to think more deeply.Erik Brynjolfsson  The Second Machine Age There are different paths to the Technological Singularity. In The Age of Em Robin Hanson explores one such possibility using methods and insight that all analysts of future technology can admire. W

    • 1 hr 54 min
    Anders Sandberg from the Future of Life Institute: Volcano engineering! Freeman Dyson's computer at the end of everything, moving planets, how transparent will society get after quantum computers? The best geoengineering! AND MORE

    Anders Sandberg from the Future of Life Institute: Volcano engineering! Freeman Dyson's computer at the end of everything, moving planets, how transparent will society get after quantum computers? The best geoengineering! AND MORE

    Anders is a futurist and transhumanist, but also deeply concerned with the ethics and risks of all the wild technology he believes will happen. He works at Nick Bostrom's Future of Life Institute, and calls himself an "academic jack of all trades". This was more or less like trying to ride an elephant, luckily Anders managed to remember where we had digressed every time I completely lost track of how our many digressions started. I wanted to trim this episode down, because it goes EVERYWHERE. But in the end - what was I going to cut?

    This is perhaps my least focused episode, but so what? It's Anders Sandberg! 

    If you don't learn ANYTHING new in these almost 2 hours, PLEASE GET IN TOUCH WITH ME. I WANT TO TALK TO YOU, YOU INSANE MONSTER. 

    Give this podcast reviews in whatever podcast app you're listening to it in, find my patreon on patreon.com/runde and subscribe to this + comics for a dollar, remember to pet dogs and cats and don't pet walruses, and stay kind.

    Made in collaboration with NITRO STUDIOS, Oslo. 

    • 1 hr 51 min
    Casey Handmer: On leaving Hyperloop One and NASA to bet on cheap, giga-scaleable carbon capture

    Casey Handmer: On leaving Hyperloop One and NASA to bet on cheap, giga-scaleable carbon capture

    First he took a PhD in gravity waves, then he got a position at Hyperloop One because of some truly shocking problem-solving skills (as far as I can tell, just listen to the episode and see if you agree), and THEN he worked at NASA JPL, where the literal rocket science happens. Every single one of these topics could have been their own 2 hour 40 minute podcast - but we hardly go there.

    This episode focuses on Casey's current endeavour after he left NASA: Terraform Industries, a carbon capture project that's designed to be ultra-scaleable - which is what the world VERY much needs. Is Casey's carbon capture project feasible? If solar power becomes cheap enough, Casey thinks so. The episode was recorded before the current war in Ukraine, and with the war, gas prices have gone up so much that Casey's technology would be profitable today.

    The war has also shown (as if that was necessary) the value of producing one's own natural gas, which Terraform's machines are promising to do. It sounds almost too optimistic to be true, but Casey's credentials speak for themselves. This may be the most optimism-inducing podcast I've recorded so far, and on twitter, you can tag me @oysteinrunde and casey @cjhandmer if you have any questions or grievances. 

    His twitter bio reads "Physicist, Immigrant, Pilot, Dad.Former Caltech, Hyperloop, NASA JPL.Founder @terraformindie", and he came to my attention when a lot of smart space people shared his essay "Starship is still not understood".
    https://caseyhandmer.wordpress.com/2021/10/28/starship-is-still-not-understood/

    If you want me to make a similar episode where we ONLY talk about SpaceX' and Elon Musk's masterpiece Starship, the spaceship that promises to really change the space industry for humankind, please find me on Instagram @rundeshow and send a PM, and do leave reviews and comments on this podcast wherever you listen to your podcasts. Spreading the word helps!

    This podcast exists because of the generous contribution of Nitro Studios, Oslo, and my great supporters at www.patreon.com/runde. They also get some neat digital comics! 

    • 2 hrs 40 min
    Jesse Moynihan 2 of 2: The dilemma of NFTs, and JESUS 2

    Jesse Moynihan 2 of 2: The dilemma of NFTs, and JESUS 2

    The second part of the Jesse Moynihan interview!

    Jesse Moynihan went from incredibly weird underground cartoonist to "household name" when his friend and colleague Tom Herpich suggested Pendleton Ward hired Jesse to join as a storyboarder/writer/artist/art director at the end of the first season of the soon-to-be legendary animated show Adventure Time.

    On the side of the enormous body of work that is Adventure Time (currently on HBO max), Jesse has also made his own, weird, spiritual, slice-of-life comic about bickering cosmic gods, Forming. With his brother Justin he's released the short Manly on youtube, via Cartoon Hangover. And he's been art director on the beautiful show Midnight Gospel (Netflix).


    Recently Jesse presented an NFT project on his instagram account @jmoyns. The ensuing debate showed that some of his regular fans saw NFTs as a betrayal of the integrity Jesse had shown through his entire career - and with great disappointment comes great interviews! I jumped on the opportunity to hear Jesse explain his thoughts on NFTs and their place in the current art scene, as I can easily say that Jesse has never been an artist known for taking "the easy route". So, what's his thoughts on the climate impact of NFTs, why he stayed away from OpenSea even though it could have meant a bigger profit, what he sees as the future for art, on building a new fanbase from the ground up, and what he wants to do next.

    I'm very proud to give you this 3,5 hour talk with one of the most awesome creators I know of! For practical reasons this talk has been cut in two.

    Jesse's patreon: https://www.patreon.com/forming

    Jesse's art can be found on Netflix (Midnight Gospel), HBO max (Adventure Time), YouTube (Manly)
    Instagram: @jmoyns


    His future project, on twitter: @jesus2rises
    On Discord: discord.gg/jesus2rises
    This podcast is, as always, produced thanks to Nitro studios, Oslo, and with the help of my supporters at https://www.patreon.com/runde 
    Patreon supporters get secret comics, sketches, full pdfs of unaccessible comics (like Olav Sleggja and Margarin and Teleboy - in english) AND extra nice drawings and maybe gifts if they meet me at festivals. This year I'm a guest at Fantasticon Copenhagen (june 25th) and Art Bubble Aarhus (sept 16th).

    If you want to support Ukraine AND get a comic from me and genius Ida Neverdahl, order our first travelogue MOSCOW from this link - http://centrala.org.uk/shop/moscow/

    • 1 hr 57 min
    Jesse Moynihan 1 of 2: From underground comics to Forming, Adventure Time and Midnight Gospel

    Jesse Moynihan 1 of 2: From underground comics to Forming, Adventure Time and Midnight Gospel

    For the first non-space related episode of Wunderdog, I have a MASSIVE nugget of artistic GOLD.

    Jesse Moynihan went from incredibly weird underground cartoonist to "household name" when his friend and colleague Tom Herpich suggested Pendleton Ward hired Jesse to join as a storyboarder/writer/artist/art director at the end of the first season of the soon-to-be legendary animated show Adventure Time.

    On the side of the enormous body of work that is Adventure Time (currently on HBO max), Jesse has also made his own, weird, spiritual, slice-of-life comic about bickering cosmic gods, Forming. With his brother Justin he's released the short Manly on youtube, via Cartoon Hangover. And he's been art director on the beautiful show Midnight Gospel (Netflix).


    Recently Jesse presented an NFT project on his instagram account @jmoyns. The ensuing debate showed that some of his regular fans saw NFTs as a betrayal of the integrity Jesse had shown through his entire career - and with great disappointment comes great interviews! I jumped on the opportunity to hear Jesse explain his thoughts on NFTs and their place in the current art scene, as I can easily say that Jesse has never been an artist known for taking "the easy route". So, what's his thoughts on the climate impact of NFTs, why he stayed away from OpenSea even though it could have meant a bigger profit, what he sees as the future for art, on building a new fanbase from the ground up, and what he wants to do next.

    I'm very proud to give you this 3,5 hour talk with one of the most awesome creators I know of! For practical reasons this talk has been cut in two.

    Jesse's patreon: https://www.patreon.com/forming

    Jesse's art can be found on Netflix (Midnight Gospel), HBO max (Adventure Time), YouTube (Manly)
    Instagram: @jmoyns


    His future project, on twitter: @jesus2rises
    On Discord: discord.gg/jesus2rises
    This podcast is, as always, produced thanks to Nitro studios, Oslo, and with the help of my supporters at https://www.patreon.com/runde 
    Patreon supporters get secret comics, sketches, full pdfs of unaccessible comics (like Olav Sleggja and Margarin and Teleboy - in english) AND extra nice drawings and maybe gifts if they meet me at festivals. This year I'm a guest at Fantasticon Copenhagen (june 25th) and Art Bubble Aarhus (sept 16th).

    If you want to support Ukraine AND get a comic from me and genius Ida Neverdahl, order our first travelogue MOSCOW from this link - http://centrala.org.uk/shop/moscow/

    • 1 hr 42 min

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