Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Podcast: Popular Mechanics Breakthrough Award Winners

Glenn and I attended the Popular Mechanics Breakthrough Conference in New York this month and were lucky enough to catch up with some of the winners for interviews. We talked with Amory B. Lovins, a visionary of radical energy efficiency who talked with us about what advice he would give the current crop of presidential candidates about energy efficiency. We also talked with Shawn Frayne, an inventor whose work has focused on water disinfection, "green" packaging, cleaner cooking fuels and wind energy. Frayne received a 2007 Breakthrough award for inventing the Windbelt, which takes advantage of aerostatic flutter to produce low-cost electricity.

Finally, we talked with Shawn Carlson, a physicist, science writer, educator and recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship for his innovative approaches to science education. He talks about why 40% of the PHDs in the sciences and engineering are now foreign born and how we can help our kids get excited about math and science in the schools. He is the founder of Labrats.org, a terrific website for kids who are interested in science. I like their motto: "Data over Dogma."

You can listen directly -- no downloading needed -- by going here and clicking on the gray Flash player. You can download the entire file and listen at your leisure by clicking right here, and you can get a lo-fi version suitable for dialup by going here and selecting lo-fi. Plus, you can always get a free subscription via iTunes -- and why wouldn't you, really?

Visit our show archives for past episodes and updates at GlennandHelenShow.com. Music is by Mobius Dick.

This podcast is brought to you by Volvo Automobiles. Buy a Volvo today and tell them it's all because of the Glenn and Helen Show!

Labels: ,

6 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Aerostatic flutter... the places I could go with that one....

5:00 PM, October 17, 2007  
Blogger Syed K.Haque, M.D. said...

ha ha advice to presidential candidates!
@interesting health articles

5:35 PM, October 17, 2007  
Blogger Unknown said...

Meet Thomas Hager, author of "Demon Under the Microscope" a fascinating journey through history about the birth of the pharmaceutical industry and the development of the antibiotic known as sulfa and how it saved lives at Pearl Harbor. His website echoes the themes in your post and those of Labrats.org

Thomas Hager writes on his webpage "I live in a college town. Like many college towns, mine is both enviably liveable and decidedly liberal. But even here, among a highly educated populace, I find that most people I talk with (outside of the university's scientists) have a hole in their understanding of modern culture: They know next to nothing about science. They do not know where or when it started. They do not know how it is done. They do not know who sets its priorities, or how it is paid for, or the full impact it has on our society."

I highly reccomend this book. If we are to conquer the new wave of antibiotic resistant MRSA staphylococci and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we need more interest in drug discovery. This is a book that brings to life the hard work and lost lives that pushed scientists to develop drugs that killed microbes but not humans.

Raising the issue of science education is critical. Thanks for the podcast.

Paula Sundstrom,
Professor
Dartmouth Medical School

11:03 PM, October 18, 2007  
Blogger Jungle Jim said...

It's probably about 70% of Economics PHDs are foreigners.

1:14 PM, October 19, 2007  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

視訊做愛視訊美女無碼A片情色影劇kyo成人動漫tt1069同志交友網ut同志交友網微風成人論壇6k聊天室日本 avdvd 介紹免費觀賞UT視訊美女交友..........................

11:38 PM, May 19, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

xvediox免費A片 - 微風成人日本美女寫真集咆哮小老鼠影片分享區免費成人電影小魔女自拍天堂av1688影音娛樂網成人交友0204movie免費影片咆哮小老鼠論壇85cc免費影城85ccfoxy免費音樂下載成人視訊交友免費視訊免費影片成人影城免費a網 免費視訊辣妹彩虹頻道免費短片

3:19 AM, June 08, 2009  

Post a Comment

<< Home