CRISPR Mosquitoes
The powerful gene editing tool CRISPR is already being tested on animal and plant cells. It has even been used on humans. How might this revolutionary tool change our lives? On the one hand, it could cure inherited disea...
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Big Picture Science
Big Picture Science
Token Metrics Daily Pulse
Token Metrics
The Monocle Daily
Monocle
Pipeline Innovations TechTalk
Gulf Podcast Network
Captain Overfit (KO)
조용한 문 스튜디오
The Good Tech Companies
HackerNoon
Microjuris Argentina
Microjuris Argentina
The Qualified Answer
Simon Elisha
TFTC: A Bitcoin Podcast
Marty Bent
Telecom Reseller / Technology Reseller News
Telecom Reseller
Making Awesome - 3D Printing, Inventing, Making, Small Business
3D Musketeers
This Week in Startups
Jason Calacanis
Sportsmen's Empire - Whitetail Hunting
Sportsmen's Empire Outdoor Network
Artificial Intelligence Growth Architect | Connor with Honor | Real Estate Consultant
Connor T. MacIvor | Connor with Honor
Ground Floor Government
PhoneLive.io
WordPress Plugins from A to Z
John Overall | WordPress Plugins
CanadianSME Small Business Podcast
SK Uddin
Games At Work dot Biz
Michael Rowe, Michael Martine, Andy Piper
Theo - t3․gg
Theo - t3․gg
Bankless
Bankless
UpNext AI
UpNext Labs
AppStories
Federico Viticci, John Voorhees
Transform Gov - the digital government podcast
Maeve Kneafsey
Pedro Doria - Vida Digital CBN
CBN
PodBiz | Where's The Money In Podcasting?
Norma Jean Belenky & John Kiernan
Reflections
Livewire Labs
Kim Komando Daily Tech Update
Kim Komando
Modern CTO
ProSeries Media
Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats
Wes Bos & Scott Tolinski - Full Stack JavaScript Web Developers
The Backup Wrap-Up
W. Curtis Preston (Mr. Backup)
Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson
Info-Tech Research Group
Connected Design Podcast
Connected Design
Rede Agro de Podcasts
Agro Resenha
The Neural Daily
Neural Network Media
Retronauts
Retronauts
TED-Ed
TED-Ed
Tecnología
Big Picture Science
The powerful gene editing tool CRISPR is already being tested on animal and plant cells. It has even been used on humans. How might this revolutionary tool change our lives? On the one hand, it could cure inherited disea...
Many of us know the feeling: we intend to go to bed but pull out our phones for one last scroll. Setting them aside hours later, we’re wide awake, unable to fall asleep. For years, scientists have singled out blue light ...
Long before Yuri Gagarin became the first human to go into space, Laika, a stray dog, crossed the final frontier. Find out what other surprising species were drafted into the astronaut corps. They may be our best friends...
The latest Hollywood romp through the world of aliens has landed in theaters. Steven Spielberg’s movie Disclosure Day suggests that our government has been hiding a cache of evidence about alien visitation that spans dec...
Self-driving cars, once a thing of science fiction, have become a reality in a handful of cities across the country. As our vehicles gain autonomy, they may provoke a profound shift not unlike the introduction of the fir...
Since humans first chiseled marks into stone, we have externalized our thoughts and ideas. Our tools may have evolved—now we clack away at computer keyboards—but written communication remains a bedrock of modern society....
Bigfoot could get official status if proposed legislation passes making it the state cryptid of California. If nothing else, the effort shows that fascination with cryptids has an outsized footprint on our culture. We lo...
Runny nose. Itchy, watery eyes. Sneezing. If you don’t have allergies, you probably know someone who does. The number of people with allergies, including food allergies and eczema, is increasing. What is going on? A medi...
We may not want to think about another pandemic, but, as epidemiologists say, it is once again a “when,” not “if,” scenario. For his latest book, journalist Jon Cohen, who has written extensively about infectious disease...
Forty years later, the exclusion zone surrounding the infamous Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant remains uninhabited by humans. But among the radioactive remnants, wildlife is flourishing, including endangered species. In th...
On April 26th, 1986, an explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the Soviet Union blasted a plume of radioactive debris a half mile into the sky, blanketing Europe. Witnesses described a laser of blue light eeri...
It’s not just facts that inform our decisions. They’re also guided by how those facts feel. From deciding whether to buckle our seat belts to addressing climate change, how we regard risk is subjective. In this extended ...
Great news! We've been nominated for a Webby Award! Our three-part Katrina series is a finalist for Best News & Politics limited series podcast. Now, we need your help. Voting ends Thursday, April 16! Cast your vote at...
What’s it like to live on a block of ice, especially when it thaws? An environment writer shares his forty-year experience in the Arctic, including the time a paddling polar bear tracked him on a river. He describes the ...
Before everything could come up roses, there had to be a primordial flower – the mother, and father, of all flowers. Now scientists are on the hunt for it. The eFlower project aims to explain the sudden appearance of flo...
Thinking small can sometimes achieve big things. A new generation of diminutive robots can enter our bodies and deal with medical problems such as intestinal blockages. But do we really want them swimming inside us, even...
As protagonist Ryland Grace fights to save Earth - and possibly the universe - in Project Hail Mary, author Andy Weir discusses the science behind his sci-fi story and what it’s like to see it adapted for the big screen....
As NASA’s Artemis program promises to take us back to the moon for the first time in fifty years, we consider what it means that as many as 10% of Americans don’t believe we went there in the first place. Why, despite al...
Everyone knows that a big rock wiped out the dinosaurs. But the danger from an asteroid hitting Earth is not limited to ancient history. To deal with this threat, scientists recently ran an experiment to deflect a potent...
With only a microscope and a collection of birds, taxidermist Roxie Laybourne became the world’s first forensic ornithologist. The “feather detective” was on the case, examining pieces of plumage to solve mysteries. From...
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