Tech News Today 484: Lon Done 20. 12 O’ Limb Pics!

Hosts: Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Iyaz Akhtar and Jason Howell

Apple admits 4G is meaningless, why I call them Oh! Limb pics, 500-mile electric vehicles, and more.

Guest: Denise Howell

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Running time: 55:03

Tech History Today – April 21

In 1962 – President John F. Kennedy opens the Seattle World’s fair by telephone from Palm Beach, Florida. He pressed a gold telegraph key which focused an antenna at Andover, Maine and a Navy radio telescope station in Maryland on a star to pick up a 10,000 year-old radio signal. That in turn set in motion various exhibits at the fair.

In 1964 – Satellite Transit-5BN-3 failed to reach orbit after launch. It dispersed 2.1 pounds (0.95 kg) of radioactive plutonium in its SNAP RTG power source.

In 1988 – Tandy Corp. held a press conference in New York to announce its plans to build IBM PS/2 clones.

Tech News Today 483: Xolo, More Like Zoloft

Hosts: Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Iyaz Akhtar and Jason Howell

One data plan for many devices coming, government demands to spy on your car, Intel arrives on the cell phone, and more.

Guest: Patrick Beja

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Running time: 54:05

Tech News Today 482: Don’t Tip The Bellman In The Face

Hosts: Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Iyaz Akhtar and Jason Howell

Who has the fastest 4G, is there really a spectrum crisis? Hope for the Internet’s future, and more.

Guest: Danny Sullivan

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Running time: 49:32

Tech History Today – April 20

In 1926 – Sam Warner approves the sound-on-disc system created by Western Electric and creates the Vitaphone company to develop the process to add sound to film.

In 1940 – Vladimir Zworykin and his team from RCA demonstrate the first electron microscope. It measured 10 feet high and weighed half a ton achieving a magnification of 100,000x.

In 1964 – The first AT&T picturephone transcontinental call was made between test displays at Disneyland and the New York World’s Fair.

The SF Signal Podcast (Episode 118): An Interview With Sword and Laser Hosts Veronica Belmont and Tom Merritt

We were very honored to be invited to sit and chat with Patrick Hester from the SFSignal podcast about the Sword and Laser show. I was worried we’d have to stand but Patrick was very nice in letting us sit. He also was very nice in listening to us go on and on about our dragon and how we love scifi/fantasy books. But then SFSignal is all about SciFi and fantasy so I guess he might have been interested. Plus they got nominated for a Hugo! So we made it up to him by congratulating them.

Anyway if listening to Veronica Belmont’s voice si at all interesting to you, or you like to hear people talk about awesome things, you might want to check it out.

Get the podcast episode here!

East Meets West 283 – Lingua Changa

We talk about beards, dragon names, grammar nazis, and the evolution of language.

http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/archive.org/download/EastMeetsWest283-LinguaChanga/eastmeetswest283.mp3

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Tech History Today – April 19

In 1947 – A report appeared in Billboard magazine of the first public demonstration of the Jerry Fairbanks Zoomar lens. The National Broadcasting Company in New York City conducted the demo and the zoom lens soon became standard TV equipment.

In 1957 – The first non-test FORTRAN program ran at Westinghouse. It produced a missing comma diagnostic. A successful attempt followed.

In 1965 – “Cramming more components onto integrated circuits” by Gordon Moore was published in Electronics. Moore projected that over the next ten years the number of components per chip would double every 12 months. By 1975 he turned out to be right, and the doubling became immortalized as Moore’s law.