podcast
I found this jazz podcast in the weekend edition of the Wall Street Journal. Joseph Vella gathers classic and contemporary musicians for a series of intimate conversations on John Coltrane: traneumentary.
“The Traneumentary” is a documentary presented in podcast form. Unlike traditional radio or television profiles, it’s parcelled out in free five-minute weekly installments. In each […]
Fresh Air is finally available as a podcast.
Fresh Air from WHYY, the Peabody Award-winning weekday magazine of contemporary arts and issues, is one of public radio’s most popular programs. Hosted by Terry Gross, the show features intimate conversations with today’s biggest luminaries.
Subscribe directly in iTunes here.
If you’ve got 90 minutes, listen in (or watch, if you have enough hard drive space) to David Harvey’s keynote lecture:
podcast mp3 (audio), mp4 (video)
Internationally recognized urban geographer and social theorist David Harvey delivers a keynote lecture at the Middlebury College Symposium, “Urban Landscapes: The Politics of Expression.”
from the University Channel
Has anyone found other […]
KCRW interviews Zadie Smith in the Bookworm podcast on her recently released (in the US) novel, On Beauty, which incorporates everyone from Forster to Elaine Scarry:
But the problem with readers, the idea we’re given of reading is that the model of a reader is the person watching a film, or watching television. So the greatest […]
Since downloading the new iTunes 7 update, I’ve started browsing through the podcast directory. I stumbled across the BBC’s documentary (4-part podcast) from August, titled “The Communications Revolution:”
Part 1: Communications: Transformation of business and leisure, and the structure of family and society? (mp3)
Part 2: […]
The University Channel offers an excellent podcast (mp3) and transcript (.doc) featuring James Wilkinson, Director of the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, Harvard University explaining an international perspective on the historical development and current state of undergraduate education.
As I will argue, the “what” and the “how” are intimately related. Each student personally constructs […]
The BBC offers a special three part audio series on urban development.
It is projected that in the next 50 years two thirds of humanity will live in cities. Architecture critic Dejan Sudjic presents a four part series which looks at cutting edge solutions for transport and housing as well as ways of making cities […]
BioTech nation's newest podcast (mp3).
On BioTech Nation, Dr. Bjorn Mellin from the Argentinian firm BioSidus explains the economic reason which drove Argentina to become #2 worldwide cultivating genetically-modified crops.
Then for the BioIssue of the Week, David Ewing Duncan takes up Malaria.
The Wealth of Networks (mp3)
Yochai Benkler, Professor of Law at Yale University, explores the effects of laws that regulate information production and exchange on the distribution of control over information flows, knowledge, and culture in the digital environment.
Professor Lawrence Lessig of Stanford Law School has written about Yochai Benkler’s book, The Wealth of Networks. He […]
Gladwell delivering a keynote at the South by Southwest Festival in 2005. About an hour long: mp3
Malcolm Gladwell, author, reporter and staff writer at The New Yorker, talks about his new book "Blink:Thin-Slicing, Snap Judgments and the Power of Thinking Without Thinking". He discusses how we interact with our environment and take instantaneous decisions based […]
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