The Dead Zone, aka Stephen King’s Dead Zone (in USA) was an American-Canadian science fiction/suspense series starring Anthony Michael Hall as Johnny Smith, who discovers he has developed psychic abilities after a coma. The show, credited as “based on characters” from Stephen King’s 1979 novel of the same name, first aired in 2002, and was produced by Lionsgate Television and CBS Paramount Network Television (Paramount Network Television 2002-05) for the USA Network.
Tech History Today – Dec. 12
In 1896 – Guglielmo Marconi amazed a group at Toynbee Hall in East London with a demonstration of wireless communication across a room. Every time Marconi hit a key a bell would ring from a box across the room being carried by William Henry Preece.
In 1973 – Founder of LinkExchange, CEO of Zappos, and promoter of customer-centric business, Tony Hsieh was born.
In 1980 – Apple’s stock was initially offered for sale. Regulators in Massachusetts prohibited individual investors in the state from buying the stock, as it was deemed too risky.
In 1991 – Paul Kunz sets up the first website in North America. It searched particle physics literature at Stanford.
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S&L Podcast – #116 – Secret of success
Tech News Today 646: Slice of Page’s Brain
Hosts: Tom Merritt, Iyaz Akhtar and Jason Howell
Microsoft fights Apple, Yahoo fights Gmail, Facebook fights democracy, and more.
Guest: Loyd Case
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Running time:: 0:47:33
Tech History Today – Dec. 11
In 1910 – Georges Claude, the first person to apply an electrical discharge to a sealed tube of neon gas, displayed the first neon lamp to the public at the Paris Motor Show.
In 1967 – The Concorde, a joint British-French venture and the world’s first supersonic airliner, was unveiled in Toulouse, France. Bigger news than the speed of the jet was the announcement that it was finally agreed that the British and French planes would both be spelled with an “e” at the end.
In 1972 – Apollo 17 became the sixth and last Apollo mission to land on the Moon.
In 1998 – The Mars Climate Orbiter was successfully launched on a Delta II rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Station in Florida. However, the probe disappeared on September 23rd before reaching Mars, apparently destroyed because scientists had failed to convert English measures to metric values.
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Frame Rate 105: Sounds of Cuddling
Hosts: Brian Brushwood and Tom Merritt
Netflix-Disney deal, Apple TV Fantasy, Tim Cook on Apple TV, Yahoo and NBC Sports, and more.
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Running time:: 1:03:05
Tech News Today 645: The Patents Must Flow
Hosts: Tom Merritt, Iyaz Akhtar and Jason Howell
Yahoo gets sporty with NBC, Steam making hardware, Is Apple TV getting apps?, and more.
Guest: Jonathan Strickland
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Running time:: 0:47:22
Tech History Today – Dec. 10
In 1815 – Ada Byron was born in London England to the poet Lord Byron and Anne Isabelle Milbanke. She would later marry William King and take on his title as Lady Lovelace. But she is best remembered as Charles Babbage’s friend, and writer of the first program for his Difference Engine. She is considered by many to be the first computer programmer.
In 1942 – Germany conducted the first powered test flight of a V-1 Rocket, launched from beneath an Fw-200.
In 1944 – Paul Otlet died. His theories presciently described a global interlinked “web” of documents, presaging the World Wide Web almost 50 years before its invention.
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East Meets West 302 – What to eat?
Moving, getting rid of things, gout, medicine, and eating right.
Tech History Today – Dec. 9
In 1906 – Grace Hopper was born. She would rise to the rank of Rear Admiral but be best remembered for popularizing the term “debugging” for hunting down computer errors. She conceptualized the idea of machine-independent programming languages, which led to the development of COBOL.
In 1968 – Computer scientist Douglas Engelbart gave a legendary product demonstration of MLS that would become known as “the mother of all demos.” Among other things it introduced the computer mouse, video conferencing, teleconferencing, hypertext, word processing, hypermedia, object addressing and dynamic file linking, bootstrapping, and a collaborative real-time editor.
In 1987 – Microsoft released Windows 2.0 which among other improvements could run the first Windows versions of Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel.
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