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FORESEEABLE FUTURES - THE FUTUROLOGY PODCAST

12 Episodes

26 minutes | Apr 9, 2021
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 12 - Brain tech, superconductors, toxic waste, and solar savior.
In this episode Erwin discusses recent scientific advancements of brain implants allowing paralyzed patients to control artificial limbs. Kyle discusses the discovery of room temperature superconductors and the cost of solar and wind becoming cheaper than coal…and Mike rains on the optimism highlighting increasing levels of toxic waste building in the Earth’s oceans.
19 minutes | Dec 19, 2020
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 11 - Nobel Prize CRISPR and Cold fusion
31 minutes | Nov 13, 2020
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 10 - Artificial Intelligence from Fighter Jets to Physicians
Kyle, Mike and Dr. Erwin discuss recent developments in Artificial Intelligence. First, in a government DARPA project, an AI-controlled fighter jet recently defeated a human pilot in a flight simulator dogfight. How close are we to seeing fully autonomous fighter jets in the battlespace? Are we looking towards a future where war is fought entirely by the robots?
56 minutes | Sep 11, 2020
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 09 - Universal Basic Income
The future of UBI is not IF but WHEN... Its coming people!
61 minutes | Jun 19, 2020
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 08 - Privacy
In this episode the guys talk about the recent developments in technology privacy.
58 minutes | Jun 8, 2020
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 07 - COVID-19
In this episode we speak with Dr. Erwin Loh about the Professor Erwin Loh about the Covid-19 pandemic outbreak and what future developments in science and technology may help us in our fight against future pandemics.
83 minutes | Feb 5, 2020
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 06 - Interview: Lyle Tavernier from JPL
How does one end up working at NASA? Lyle digs into how he came to be a staff member at one of the most sought after job opportunities for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, a NASA branch that carries out robotic space and Earth science missions such as the Mars rover Curiosity. Lyle reviews his work at JPL, including visiting schools and inspiring the next generation of engineers and scientists. Join Midnight and Lyle as they discuss the history of JPL and their part in the original space race as well as future plans including Mars 2020. 
63 minutes | Nov 1, 2019
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 05 - Human Longevity
We discuss the stunning possibility that within the lifespan of most people alive today, science may be able to curing the aging process itself.
55 minutes | Oct 1, 2019
Foreseeable Futures Episode 04 – Blockchain, Bitcoin, Facebook’s Libra currency & the future of 5G
Bitcoin has recently again seen massive rises in the markets and with technologies like Bitcoin’s lightning network coming online to support thousands of transactions per second, Bitcoin and cryptocurrency in general might finally have shown its a viable and long-term technology that’s here to stay.
58 minutes | Sep 1, 2019
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 03 – CRISPR & Moon 2024
Mvea introduces CRISPR & gives an overview of where it is at this point. We then go on to discuss some of its future implications. In particular we look to its longer term future where we can begin to fundamentally alter ourselves. New Lunar Plans... Political Feasibility – will Congress agree to funding,  is this a Trump vanity project? Engineering feasibility – is this possible within the new time frame?
51 minutes | Aug 1, 2019
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 02 – NeuraLink & Robotics revolution?
How plausible is Neuralink’s ambitious goal to connect a human mind to the cloud? It is building part of your brain in the cloud.  Part of “you” would be non-biological.  A few mind-bending thought experiments to chat about.
45 minutes | Jul 1, 2019
Foreseeable Futures Podcast Episode 01 - AI & Lab Grown Meat
Lugh discusses the advent of post-scarcity resources in education and medicine. The question he asks, based on the comments in this thread, is why do people overwhelmingly focus on wealth inequality when considering this issue? Stryker discusses cultured/lab-grown meat as a necessity for several reasons. Less land needed for raising livestock. Less greenhouse gas emissions, theoretically more efficient as you only need to raise the meat, not the bones, brain, etc of an entire animal. Hope is to scale-up so that it can be mass produced. This will increase yields (helping address rising population and demand for meat in developing countries).
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