Episode 92: Can We Get Elizabeth Holmes and Mike Tyson to Debate?

15/07/2019 36 min
Episode 92: Can We Get Elizabeth Holmes and Mike Tyson to Debate?

Listen "Episode 92: Can We Get Elizabeth Holmes and Mike Tyson to Debate?"

Episode Synopsis

In This Episode:


NASA Sends Tiny Atomic Clock to Space (2:28)
Theranos Founder to Face Trial Next Year on Fraud Charges (4:50)
Machine learning has been used to automatically translate long-lost languages (5:57)
Amazon will crash on Prime Day, 60% of surveyed eBay employees say (7:45)
7-Eleven's Bad App Design Let Criminals Steal More Than $500,000 (9:04)
Emojis are increasingly coming up in court cases. Judges are struggling with how to interpret them (12:03)
Yes, your emails are being tracked. Here's how to stop it. (15:03)
Internet group brands Mozilla ‘internet villain’ for supporting DNS privacy feature (17:25)
Apple trolled Google again by giant billboard next to its controversial smart neighborhood (21:10)


Weird & Wacky Tech:


Hate listening to high-fidelity music? Here’s a Bluetooth cassette Walkman. (23:00)
IT'S OK - The World's First Bluetooth 5.0 Cassette Player
The Pentagon has a laser that can identify people from a distance—by their heartbeat (24:47)
This 392-Year-Old Bonsai Tree Survived the Hiroshima Atomic Blast & Still Flourishes Today: The Power of Resilience (27:22)
Windows 1.0 Release Video (28:50)
Apple’s new iPhone software makes it look like you’re making eye contact in video calls even if you aren’t (30:15)


Tech Recommendations (31:42)


Adam - Shortcuts iOS App
Sanjay - Cam Scanner


Ad music is from "Partly Cloudy" by A Tape Full of Mistakes
Weird & Wacky theme music is from "Brainwavves" by Strong Suit Links:NASA Sends Tiny Atomic Clock to Space - ExtremeTechTheranos Founder Elizabeth Holmes to Face Trial Next Year on Fraud Charges - WSJMachine learning has been used to automatically translate long-lost languages - MIT Technology ReviewAmazon will crash on Prime Day, 60% of surveyed eBay employees say7-Eleven's Bad App Design Let Criminals Steal More Than $500,000Emojis are increasingly coming up in court cases. Judges are struggling with how to interpret them

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