Mon, 28 November 2005 #038 -- Science -- NASA is not wowing anyone this fall with either the long term plan for interplanetary exploration or their current work on the International Space Station. New cracks in the foam, and underwhelming plans for the space station, and insufficient funds to ever reach Mars. Meanwhile China is gradually building momentum towards a moon mission, and private enterprise is getting closer to having viable space vehicles. Music by Fatboy Slim, Timo Mass, Snog, DJ Micro. NOTE: the phone number for voice messages is inaccurate! Not enough people called, so I lost my number!Comments[4] |
Tue, 22 November 2005 #037 -- World -- One of the chemical weapons used by Saddam Hussein against his own people was white phosphorous. In the United States military, this substance is known as Whiskey Pete, or Willie Pete, and has been used in "Shake and Bake" missions in Fallujah. What is White Phosphorous? What does it do? Why would we use it? What is its status under international law? Did we really use it? Background music by Laurie Anderson (Credit Racket), Fugazi (Exit Only), Garmarna (Hunger), PGR (The Chemical Bride: Signalling through the Flames), Dead Can Dance (Bird), and Shostakovich.
Comments[2] |
Fri, 18 November 2005 #036 -- Tech -- Studies in imperfection including the never ending failure of personal digital assistants to actually live up to inherent promise of the device, and the abject failure of email to be as simple and effective as it should be. Music by DJ Cheb-i-Sabbah, Hallucinogen, Jethro Tull, and Mozart.
Comments[3] |
Mon, 14 November 2005 #035 -- SciFi -- The Science Fiction channel, which runs SciFi.com, has decided to shut down their short-story magazine arm, SciFiction. This is a sad day for science fiction writers, and for fans of the short form. It's also just another data point in the decline of the once venerable science fiction short story. However, the decline in readership is balanced by a thriving interest on the part of writers, and some of the very best stuff in the history of the form is being written now. Strange, huh?
Background music by The Crystal Method, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Gillian Welch, and The Reverend Horton Heat.
Comments[3] |
Thu, 10 November 2005
#034 -- Intelligent Design -- Mainstream scientists deplore intelligent design as unworthy of debate. They dismiss what purports to be a rival to the theory of Natural Selection simply because it looks like creationism in disguise. But serious scientists with serious academic credentials have put their names behind it. Are mainstream scientists being close minded about a valid idea, or do the proponents of the idea really have ulterior motives? And what might such motives be? Bluejack juxtaposes this with a slightly different angle on scientific spirituality, using music from Peter Gabriel, Jeff Buckley (and Leonard Cohen), Gillian Welch, Westbam, Cowboy Junkies, and Mark Mothersbaugh.Comments[6] |
Tue, 1 November 2005 #033 -- Life -- Taking stock of everything: recent shows? How about those clones: You can buy them today. Human-computer integration? Computerized ears, eyes, already in production. How about November? NaNoWriMo, and the next super secret project. But don't forget to Breathe, Bluejack! Let's all breathe together: An interesting connection between Eastern and Western spirituality.
Comments[5] |
Wed, 26 October 2005 #032 -- Science -- Why is there any debate about cloning? Clone me, Dr. Memory! The usual rambling discussion of the science, politics, religion, and science fiction of cloning. Background music by PJ Harvey (The Wind) Amon Tobin (Deo) Tom Waits (Dirt in the Ground) Ani DiFranco (Icarus) Infected Mushroom (Unbalanced -- Baby Killer Remix).Comments[5] |
Fri, 21 October 2005 #031 -- Life -- The death march plods on; podcasting is missed; the scientific method applied to spirituality.Comments[8] |
Tue, 11 October 2005 #030 -- Tech -- Before wandering off into a lala land of incoherent software engineering minutiae that will be of very little interest to anyone who doesn't already know the difference between C and C++, Bluejack discusses Microsoft's payoff to Real Networks in a bid to put together an Anti-Apple coalition to take down iTunes. Background music by DJ Shadow (Organ Donor), Timbuk3 (Disn***land), Fatboy Slim (Ya Mama), Sunday All Over the World (Kneeling at the Shrine), Michael Nyman (Drowning by Numbers).Comments[4] |
Mon, 3 October 2005 #029 -- SciFi -- Thinking about the future of man-machine interface. The qwerty keyboard, in case you don't know, is designed to slow you down. But the answer is not a dvorak keyboard... the answer is neural interface. Includes a peculiar sidetrack into the spritual implications of -- and mandate for -- the integration flesh with technology. Background music includes: the ZZ-Top v. Pink mashup, Ani Difranco (Modulation), The Sugarcubes (Blue-Eyed Pop), Beck (Mixed Bizness), Moby (Natural Blues).Comments[4] |
Thu, 29 September 2005 028 -- Life -- Bluejack does some consulting for corporate America. Background tracks include PJ Harvey Working for the Man, The Kills with No Wow, Cop Shoots Cop with $10 Bill, Violent Femmes: Make More Money Tonight, Yello's Oh Yeah. This is the first view on what is certain to be yet another death march.
Comments[5] |
Mon, 26 September 2005 #027 -- Science -- An interview with James Hamlin, a graduate student in physics who is experimenting with superconductivity and high pressure. We talk about his work as well as superfluids, space elevators, science fiction, inductive reasoning, philosophy and more. View photos of Hamlin's work at http://artsci.wustl.edu/~jjhamlin/DAC/, or check out his demonstration of superconductivity and levitation at http://artsci.wustl.edu/~jjhamlin/. The book that so influenced Hamlin is Beyond Einstein by Michio Kaku.Comments[4] |
Fri, 23 September 2005 #026 -- Tech -- Much is being made over problems at Microsoft. Disaffected employees, a brain drain to Google, a large, slow-moving bureaucracy. This all may be true, but is this really a bad thing? Microsoft is a somewhat different company than tech observers seem to think it is. It plays by different rules, and it plays for different stakes. Rumors of its demise may be exaggerated.Comments[3] |
Tue, 20 September 2005 #025 -- Science -- NASA has put forward its proposal for the next 10-15 years. The Space Shuttle is out, the Crew Exploration Vehicle is in. But not everyone is jumping for joy, and I don't just mean the usual luddites who believe space travel is a foolish luxury. Scientists, NASA watchers, and many other advocates of space exploration are greeting this plan with at best only moderate approval. What has changed since we went to the Moon the first time? Well, for one thing, we went to the Moon a second time. And a third. And a fourth. And a fifth. And a sixth. And then, in 1972, we decided not to bother anymore. In this podcast I go back to the source, Kennedy's proposal before congress (text at http://www.jfklibrary.org/j052561.htm) and consider the historical role of space exploration in our national psyche to better understand the present, and the future. Comments[3] |
Fri, 16 September 2005 #024 The Singularity has been one of the most challenging new ideas in science fiction: challenging for writers to approach in interesting ways, as well as a challenge to everyone's beliefs about the significance of humanity. This show discusses some of the specifics of Vinge's idea, and presents some objections. It also takes a quick look at what the concept has meant for science fiction. Background music by Hallucinogen (Trancespotter), The Chemical Brothers (In Dust we Trust), and The Crystal Method (Ready for Action). Also read Vernor Vinge's Paper on the Singularity (http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~phoenix/vinge/vinge-sing.html), and check out more art by Francis A. Lohmueller (http://www.f-lohmueller.de/index.htm). Comments[3] |
Mon, 12 September 2005 #023 -- Science -- The difference between a binary tree and a splay tree, the problems of marrying outside of geekdom, and the new Nano. No, not the nano you're thinking of. I don't give a fig what kind of IPod you listen to. Oh yeah, check out Unicorn LA.Comments[2] |
Fri, 9 September 2005 #022 - Tech - Getting the podshow back on track: more positive in spirit than the Katrina stuff, and looking forward to new work. I'm working with the libsyn guys on performance and scalability now, so a few quick notes on that.Comments[3] |
Wed, 7 September 2005 #021 - World - Calamity upon catastrophy, characterized by a failure of imagination. What do we do? Do we continue with half-hearted measures, follow the path of least resistence? Use our technological capacity for destruction only? Or do we do something Really Big? Something Really Good?Comments[2] |
Mon, 29 August 2005 #020 - Life - A couple more stories from life in the tech trenches; listener's emails; plus, overclocked has a phone number: send in your audio comments, your stories, your experiences!Comments[3] |
Thu, 25 August 2005 #019 - Tech - With the launch of Google Talk, we see both an incredible show of chutzpah with the search engine giant taking on perhaps the most oversaturated software market on the net, and another component of GoogleOS delivered under the radar of the major OS players.Comments[2] |
Mon, 22 August 2005 #018 - Science - With the next shuttle launched delayed until (at least) March of 2006, some people are asking about the future of manned space flight in the United States. Who are these people, and what are the questions. More importantly, what are the answers?
Comments[2] |
Fri, 19 August 2005 Show #017: Science Fiction has long explored ideas about the next step in human evolution: steps that we will consciously choose; science isn't quite catching up on all fronts, but scientists *are* undermining the very notion of consciousness.
With background music from Tom "T-Bone" Stankus, Laurie Anderson, Underworld, Khan, and Gurdieff, plus a clip from a new (old) podcast!
Action packed episode!Comments[3] |
Tue, 16 August 2005 #016 - New Audio Equipment - This is an experiment in audio production only. There's virtually no content at all, other than Bluejack's trials and travails trying to figure out how audio cables work. Hopefully this will be the last experimental meta show in the series. It can only get better from here!Comments[2] |
Fri, 12 August 2005 #015: Still waiting for some new equipment, and heads down on a project, but this is a quick podcast on the topic of privacy v. transparency.Comments[2] |
Tue, 9 August 2005 #014 - Tech - This program is a pile of scrap metal, some junk, maybe some gems! NASA shuttle landing; Debian v. Ubuntu v. Fedora v. ?; Bicycle brake pads & cone wrenches; The evils of PHP; Podcasts reviewed; Kind words from listeners; New equipment on order!
Comments[2] |
Sat, 6 August 2005 Show #013: Robots! Creepy Japanese Doll Androids! Baizhixing, the Weird Robot Doll (more here)! Furby is Back! Roach Robots!
Comments[2] |
Tue, 2 August 2005 #012 -- Life -- Stories from my years at Amazon as may (or may not) pertain to "living beyond the manufacturer's specifications."Comments[4] |
Tue, 26 July 2005 Show #011 - In which Bluejack fails miserably at covering the NASA space launch, and gives you meandering dreck of rambles and rants on the Space program and related phenomena.Comments[2] |
Mon, 25 July 2005 #010: Here's something new... a film review, and of an unlikely gem of a movie, Space Truckers, from 1996 and starring Dennis Hopper. Directed by Stuart Gordon. You would expect a movie with this title to be a bad bit of sci-fi B-movie fluff, and it's all of that except, in my opinion, actually bad.Comments[2] |
Thu, 21 July 2005 #009 -- ::overclocked::World -- President Bush is expected to announce a revision to the United States policy on space-based weapons. We don't know for sure what he will establish, but we know what the Air Force wants. It wants total, exclusive, and perpetual military superiority in space. We examine the benefits, the costs, and the political and scientific ramifications of space-based weapons.Comments[1] |
Mon, 18 July 2005 #008: IBM announces that it will terminate sales and support of OS/2 over the next year and a half. What? OS/2 was still alive? What can we learn from the life and death of OS/2: Was Microsoft opportunistic or Macchiavellian? Do computer companies understand the difference between hardware and software?
Comments[2] |
Wed, 13 July 2005 #007 -- In which we listen to the Space Shuttle Launch being scrubbed, have a look at Kennewick Man, and discover that any nutcase can walk in to the Defense Department's computers and scarf super-secret files about suppressed technologies.Comments[2] |
Mon, 11 July 2005 #006 : On well-produced podcasts, too much nattering, the limitations of time, and most of all -- genre purists in science fiction and fantasy. Music clips from Art of Noise and Fatboy Slim.Comments[2] |
Sat, 9 July 2005 #005: Podcasting and self-publishing have a lot in common, both good and bad. But one problem affecting both forms is the difficulty in finding good stuff.
Could there be a common solution?Comments[2] |
Wed, 6 July 2005 #004: A meditation on the soul of America.Comments[2] |
Sun, 3 July 2005 ::overclocked receives its first critique, and discusses copyright and fair use.Comments[2] |
Sat, 2 July 2005 #001 : Coffee, Clarion West, and Science Fiction, with music clips from ClockDVA and Timo Mass / Deep Dish.Comments[2] |
Fri, 1 July 2005 A very quick, 1:30 introduction to the ::overclocked podcast.Comments[2] |


#038 -- Science -- NASA is not wowing anyone this fall with either the long term plan for interplanetary exploration or their current work on the International Space Station. New cracks in the foam, and underwhelming plans for the space station, and insufficient funds to ever reach Mars. Meanwhile China is gradually building momentum towards a moon mission, and private enterprise is getting closer to having viable space vehicles. Music by Fatboy Slim, Timo Mass, Snog, DJ Micro. NOTE: the phone number for voice messages is inaccurate! Not enough people called, so I lost my number!
#037 -- World -- One of the chemical weapons used by Saddam Hussein against his own people was white phosphorous. In the United States military, this substance is known as Whiskey Pete, or Willie Pete, and has been used in "Shake and Bake" missions in Fallujah. What is White Phosphorous? What does it do? Why would we use it? What is its status under international law? Did we really use it? Background music by Laurie Anderson (Credit Racket), Fugazi (Exit Only), Garmarna (Hunger), PGR (The Chemical Bride: Signalling through the Flames), Dead Can Dance (Bird), and Shostakovich.
#036 -- Tech -- Studies in imperfection including the never ending failure of personal digital assistants to actually live up to inherent promise of the device, and the abject failure of email to be as simple and effective as it should be. Music by DJ Cheb-i-Sabbah, Hallucinogen, Jethro Tull, and Mozart.
#035 -- SciFi -- The Science Fiction channel, which runs SciFi.com, has decided to shut down their short-story magazine arm, SciFiction. This is a sad day for science fiction writers, and for fans of the short form. It's also just another data point in the decline of the once venerable science fiction short story. However, the decline in readership is balanced by a thriving interest on the part of writers, and some of the very best stuff in the history of the form is being written now. Strange, huh?
Background music by The Crystal Method, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Gillian Welch, and The Reverend Horton Heat.
#034 -- Intelligent Design -- Mainstream scientists deplore intelligent design as unworthy of debate. They dismiss what purports to be a rival to the theory of Natural Selection simply because it looks like creationism in disguise. But serious scientists with serious academic credentials have put their names behind it. Are mainstream scientists being close minded about a valid idea, or do the proponents of the idea really have ulterior motives? And what might such motives be? Bluejack juxtaposes this with a slightly different angle on scientific spirituality, using music from Peter Gabriel, Jeff Buckley (and Leonard Cohen), Gillian Welch, Westbam, Cowboy Junkies, and Mark Mothersbaugh.
#033 -- Life -- Taking stock of everything: recent shows? How about those clones: You can buy them today. Human-computer integration? Computerized ears, eyes, already in production. How about November? NaNoWriMo, and the next super secret project. But don't forget to Breathe, Bluejack! Let's all breathe together: An interesting connection between Eastern and Western spirituality.
#032 -- Science -- Why is there any debate about cloning? Clone me, Dr. Memory! The usual rambling discussion of the science, politics, religion, and science fiction of cloning. Background music by PJ Harvey (The Wind) Amon Tobin (Deo) Tom Waits (Dirt in the Ground) Ani DiFranco (Icarus) Infected Mushroom (Unbalanced -- Baby Killer Remix).
#031 -- Life -- The death march plods on; podcasting is missed; the scientific method applied to spirituality.
#030 -- Tech -- Before wandering off into a lala land of incoherent software engineering minutiae that will be of very little interest to anyone who doesn't already know the difference between C and C++, Bluejack discusses Microsoft's payoff to Real Networks in a bid to put together an Anti-Apple coalition to take down iTunes. Background music by DJ Shadow (Organ Donor), Timbuk3 (Disn***land), Fatboy Slim (Ya Mama), Sunday All Over the World (Kneeling at the Shrine), Michael Nyman (Drowning by Numbers).
#029 -- SciFi -- Thinking about the future of man-machine interface. The qwerty keyboard, in case you don't know, is designed to slow you down. But the answer is not a dvorak keyboard... the answer is neural interface. Includes a peculiar sidetrack into the spritual implications of -- and mandate for -- the integration flesh with technology. Background music includes: the ZZ-Top v. Pink mashup, Ani Difranco (Modulation), The Sugarcubes (Blue-Eyed Pop), Beck (Mixed Bizness), Moby (Natural Blues).
028 -- Life -- Bluejack does some consulting for corporate America. Background tracks include PJ Harvey Working for the Man, The Kills with No Wow, Cop Shoots Cop with $10 Bill, Violent Femmes: Make More Money Tonight, Yello's Oh Yeah. This is the first view on what is certain to be yet another death march.
#027 -- Science -- An interview with James Hamlin, a graduate student in physics who is experimenting with superconductivity and high pressure. We talk about his work as well as superfluids, space elevators, science fiction, inductive reasoning, philosophy and more. View photos of Hamlin's work at
#026 -- Tech -- Much is being made over problems at Microsoft. Disaffected employees, a brain drain to Google, a large, slow-moving bureaucracy. This all may be true, but is this really a bad thing? Microsoft is a somewhat different company than tech observers seem to think it is. It plays by different rules, and it plays for different stakes. Rumors of its demise may be exaggerated.
#025 -- Science -- NASA has put forward its proposal for the next 10-15 years. The Space Shuttle is out, the Crew Exploration Vehicle is in. But not everyone is jumping for joy, and I don't just mean the usual luddites who believe space travel is a foolish luxury. Scientists, NASA watchers, and many other advocates of space exploration are greeting this plan with at best only moderate approval. What has changed since we went to the Moon the first time? Well, for one thing, we went to the Moon a second time. And a third. And a fourth. And a fifth. And a sixth. And then, in 1972, we decided not to bother anymore. In this podcast I go back to the source, Kennedy's proposal before congress (text at
#024 The Singularity has been one of the most challenging new ideas in science fiction: challenging for writers to approach in interesting ways, as well as a challenge to everyone's beliefs about the significance of humanity. This show discusses some of the specifics of Vinge's idea, and presents some objections. It also takes a quick look at what the concept has meant for science fiction. Background music by Hallucinogen (Trancespotter), The Chemical Brothers (In Dust we Trust), and The Crystal Method (Ready for Action). Also read
#023 -- Science -- The difference between a binary tree and a splay tree, the problems of marrying outside of geekdom, and the new Nano. No, not the nano you're thinking of. I don't give a fig what kind of IPod you listen to. Oh yeah, check out
#022 - Tech - Getting the podshow back on track: more positive in spirit than the Katrina stuff, and looking forward to new work. I'm working with the libsyn guys on performance and scalability now, so a few quick notes on that.
#021 - World - Calamity upon catastrophy, characterized by a failure of imagination. What do we do? Do we continue with half-hearted measures, follow the path of least resistence? Use our technological capacity for destruction only? Or do we do something Really Big? Something Really Good?
#020 - Life - A couple more stories from life in the tech trenches; listener's emails; plus, overclocked has a phone number: send in your audio comments, your stories, your experiences!
#019 - Tech - With the launch of Google Talk, we see both an incredible show of chutzpah with the search engine giant taking on perhaps the most oversaturated software market on the net, and another component of GoogleOS delivered under the radar of the major OS players.
#018 - Science - With the next shuttle launched delayed until (at least) March of 2006, some people are asking about the future of manned space flight in the United States. Who are these people, and what are the questions. More importantly, what are the answers?
Show #017: Science Fiction has long explored ideas about the next step in human evolution: steps that we will consciously choose; science isn't quite catching up on all fronts, but scientists *are* undermining the very notion of consciousness.
With background music from Tom "T-Bone" Stankus, Laurie Anderson, Underworld, Khan, and Gurdieff, plus a clip from a new (old) podcast!
Action packed episode!
#016 - New Audio Equipment - This is an experiment in audio production only. There's virtually no content at all, other than Bluejack's trials and travails trying to figure out how audio cables work. Hopefully this will be the last experimental meta show in the series. It can only get better from here!
#014 - Tech - This program is a pile of scrap metal, some junk, maybe some gems! NASA shuttle landing; Debian v. Ubuntu v. Fedora v. ?; Bicycle brake pads & cone wrenches; The evils of PHP; Podcasts reviewed; Kind words from listeners; New equipment on order!
Show #013: Robots!
Show #011 - In which Bluejack fails miserably at covering the NASA space launch, and gives you meandering dreck of rambles and rants on the Space program and related phenomena.
#010: Here's something new... a film review, and of an unlikely gem of a movie, Space Truckers, from 1996 and starring Dennis Hopper. Directed by Stuart Gordon. You would expect a movie with this title to be a bad bit of sci-fi B-movie fluff, and it's all of that except, in my opinion, actually bad.
#009 -- ::overclocked::World -- President Bush is expected to announce a revision to the United States policy on space-based weapons. We don't know for sure what he will establish, but we know what the Air Force wants. It wants total, exclusive, and perpetual military superiority in space. We examine the benefits, the costs, and the political and scientific ramifications of space-based weapons.
#007 -- In which we listen to the Space Shuttle Launch being scrubbed, have a look at Kennewick Man, and discover that any nutcase can walk in to the Defense Department's computers and scarf super-secret files about suppressed technologies.