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Education

Knowledge by Ear? 36

jgercken asks: "I recently survived a 16-hour drive solo thanks to having downloaded 10+ hours of old Off the Hook shows, a 2600 sponsored radio program. It is so refreshing to hear news from a technically cognizant perspective. Is anyone aware of any similar programs or maybe sources of recorded lectures?"
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Knowledge by Ear?

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  • Coast to Coast (Score:2, Interesting)

    by sirmikester ( 634831 )
    Of course there are other radio shows with a technical perspective! Just take a look at Coast to Coast [coasttocoastam.com] with Art Bell (sometimes). The technical parts come in to play when UFO's are mentioned ....
    • I guess you haven't listened to Coast to Coast in a while. Art Bell left the show 7 months ago and the primary hosting duties have gone to the sadly ignorant George Noory.
      • I listened to it last time I was in california (a while ago). I'm sad to hear that art left, what happened?
        • I'm sad to hear that art left, what happened?

          mostly health issues - specifically a back problem that left him not being able to do 5 hour shows 6 days a week with preps before and after.

          I recal one show where he had stepped out the back door for a breath of fresh air, and forgot the construction pit that was out their in the dark. he was a sore puppy after that for a while.

          The original back problem was from a fall when he slid off a telephone pole, and decided not to get a collection of very big splint

  • the /. show (Score:4, Funny)

    by InsaneCreator ( 209742 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @02:19AM (#6347034)
    Geeks in Space [thesync.com] - not exactly "Knowledge by Ear", but what could beat "slashdot by ear"? :)
  • Space and Quirks (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jayrtfm ( 148260 ) <jslash AT sophont DOT com> on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @03:05AM (#6347204) Homepage Journal
    The Space Show [thespaceshow.com] focuses on timely and important issues influencing the development of outer-space commerce and space tourism, as well as other related subjects of interest to us all. {recent show with Brian Walker, the Rocket Guy}

    Quirks & Quarks on CBC Radio One [www.cbc.ca] Join host Bob McDonald each week to find out the latest in science, technology, medicine and the environment. We cover the quirks of the expanding universe to the quarks within a single atom...and everything in between.

    also, check out the websites of conference recording companies. That $300 seminar you missed at PC Expo is now probably a $10 tape or CD.

  • by rasteri ( 634956 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @03:37AM (#6347313) Journal
    A good chunk of Discovery Channel programs don't need pictures to be able to understand. There are quite a few other places you can record from too.
  • audible? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Polo ( 30659 ) * on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @03:49AM (#6347349) Homepage
    Although Audible [audible.com] is a pay service, it has an enormous amount of diverse material.

    I think my favorite so far has been "Surely you're joking, Mr. Feynman".

    I signed up for two books per month and I'm WAAAY behind on listening to it all in the car (some books are as long as 24 hours).
    • Another vote for Audible.

      And for those worried about losing the info, in twenty years or whatever, you can burn your books to redbook CD audio, from the Audible manager itself. Boom, done.

  • BBC Radio 4 (Score:4, Informative)

    by Noodlenose ( 537591 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @04:32AM (#6347455) Homepage Journal
    ...has an impressive collection of scientific content online for your listening pleasure.

    Always very well presented and researched, this is probably the best speechbased radio station in the world.

    http://bbc.co.uk/radio4

  • Star Stuff (Score:3, Informative)

    by ZenJabba1 ( 472792 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @05:35AM (#6347612) Homepage Journal
    http://www.abc.net.au/newsradio

    1 Hour of space stuff, each week.
  • by elucidus ( 245536 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @08:57AM (#6348467) Homepage Journal
    The Ottawa Linux Symposium [linuxsymposium.org] Back Years Are Available Online. There are some very detailed and technical presentations. I liked the treatment of Rsync from 2000 "The Rsync Algorithm", highly recommended.

    Also see:
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Dammital ( 220641 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @11:26AM (#6349976)
    ... includes audio recordings in Ogg/Speex format. See here [linux.org.au].
  • Dr. Dobb's (Score:2, Informative)

    by d3a350 ( 203361 )
    Dr. Dobb's has quite a few technical presentations in MP3 format at their TechNetCast site:

    http://technetcast.ddj.com/ [ddj.com]

    They've got a pretty good set of presenters and topics. I've only listened to a couple, but I like what I've heard so far.

  • Radio Freek America (Score:3, Informative)

    by mageben ( 557038 ) <code@mage.prodigy@net> on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @11:59AM (#6350311)
    Radio Freak America [oldskoolphreak.com] is a 2600 inspired web broadcast from somewhere in Arizona. It's an interresting way to kill an hour or so. Check it out. They have more on the technical side than OTH's more political nature.

    -Code

  • A few picks of mine. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Deagol ( 323173 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @02:43PM (#6351846) Homepage
    After a few months of 1-day-per-week 3-hour commute to work (one-way), I grabbed a cheap MP3 player at Wally Mart. I began to look for more than my music collection as entertainment.

    My first pick was Off the Hook, then Off the Wall.

    I searched for good free sources of MP3 talk radio content. If NPR wasn't solely Real format, I'd grab All Things Considered and Morning Edition. Ditto This American Life (damn, how I'd love to have this show in MP3 format!).

    A decent, locally-produce show that I like is Radio West [publicbroadcasting.net], a show dealing with issues local to Utah and the West in general. There's a few good recent shows about the Mountain Meadows Massacre, a horrific event in LDS history that Mormon officials rarely acknowledge (and have never formally apologized for). Quite a hot potato in local circles. ;-)

    A somewhat less professional, but often entertaining show, is Ghostly Talk [ghostlytalk.com]. Regardless of your opinion on ghost chasers and the supernatural, it's kinda interesting stuff. My only real gripe with the show is that there's a lot of chatter of the crew amongst themselves before the real meat of the program's main topic is presented.

    More MP3 archives of good public radio shows would be most welcome. (I don't suppose there's a good Real Adio --> mp3 converter for Linux?)


    • More MP3 archives of good public radio shows would be most welcome. (I don't suppose there's a good Real Adio --> mp3 converter for Linux?)

      Of course there is, this is linux. Setup a named pipe, call it /dev/dsp, and realplayer should happly write to it.

      Ok, so maybe you may run into some small blocks, but generally speaking, it can be done. Especially in Linux. Thats why the dvd/etc industry don't like Linux. Its too easy to simply write an audio/video driver that writes whats being played/displa

  • The Feynman Lectures (Score:4, Interesting)

    by breon.halling ( 235909 ) on Wednesday July 02, 2003 @04:01PM (#6352544)

    ...Are available on tape at Amazon [amazon.com], and probably MP3 somewhere. ;)

  • BiTD (Back in the day) we had RadioX in Houston, Texas. It was a radioshow put on by a lot of the big BBSers around 1996 and had a concurrent IRC chat going as well. It was a good mix of ascii/ansi and other various BBS related things. There may have even been a few juar0z people around too, if you can imagine that.

    Sadly, a quick google of it only shows a bit from around 1996 and a dead website. I wonder if theres any of it still around...

    The one thing I remember from it, oddly enough, was Mr. Man's c
    • RadioX was so gay. Me and my friends would call in with stupid questions. The show quickly got to the point that it was at the level of a bad newsgroup, mostly drivel with little interesting content.
  • Check out The Teaching Company [teachco.com]. They have a nice catalog of high-quality college lecture courses available on cassette, CD, VHS, or DVD. Their selection leans toward the humanities, but they offer a little of everything. I know people who are addicted to these courses.
  • A lot of church pastors and other Christian speakers put their sermons online -

    Dr. Daniel Harrell [parkstreet.org]

    Ravi Zacharias [christiansunite.com]

    Alister Begg [gospelcom.net]

    RC Sproul [gospelcom.net]
  • entertaining, if not educational is Pacifica's DemocracyNow! [pacifica.org] radio show. Archives of the show daily show (now 2 hours I believe) are available for download in mp3 or a RealAudio stream within a few days of the broadcast. I used to listen to this a lot but haven't much lately since I scored a bunch of audio books on tape. I'd probably be better off listening to DemocracyNow, but the audio stuff is entertaining. And I ripped about 15 hours of programming from BBC Radio4, which was mentioned previously.

    F
  • Visit your library's A/V section.

    Look for books on tape, or preferably, compact disc.

    Rip them to mp3.

    Listen at leisure.

    Courtesy of my local library, I've recently picked up copies of an Allen Ginsburg album, Bill Cosby's "Himself", a Bill Maher audiobook, Cornel West's album, a Garrison Keillor sampler, James Mason reading "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" & Roy Dotrice reading "The Hunting of the Snark", and the audiobook version of "Minority Report", which also includes other Phillip K Dick stories. J

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