adactio / Jeremy Keith

An Irish web developer living in Brighton, England working with Clearleft.

I built Huffduffer.

There are thirty-six people in adactio’s collective.

Huffduffed (4810)

  1. The Compositions of Finbarr Dwyer (Part 2) - At the Crossroads | Acast

    In today's podcast I am looking at the rest of Finbarr Dwyer's compositions. These are lesser-known and lesser-recorded tunes and, as well as the expected collection of reels, will also include some jigs, waltzes and a polka. Towards the end of the programme I will also detail some commonly mis-attributed tunes that Finbarr did not compose as well as a brief "maybe" pile on which the jury is still out til further notice.

    https://shows.acast.com/at-the-crossroads/episodes/the-compositions-of-finbarr-dwyer-part-2

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  2. A New Frontier: 1. A Message to Ourselves

    In this special series from Sideways, called A New Frontier, Matthew Syed explores the most out of this world ethical questions posed by the evolution of human space exploration.

    He takes us into the cosmos with stories from astronauts who’ve been there and those who can only dream of going, to explore the moral debates that have permeated space exploration since before the moon landings, and are evolving dramatically today in a new era of commercial space flight, of asteroid mining and almost daily satellite launches.

    Matthew begins the series by diving into the ethics of humanity’s search for extra-terrestrial life.

    In 1974, Richard Isaacman was a young graduate, studying to become an astronomer, from some of the field's biggest names - like Carl Sagan and Frank Drake. At just 21-years-old, he’s asked to contribute to humankind's first ever deliberate attempt to send a targeted radio transmission to a cluster of stars in the outer reaches of the galaxy. A rudimentary picture, designed to be intercepted and decoded by aliens.

    Delving into our obsession with aliens, science fiction and the vastness of space, Matthew discovers how asking questions about space ethics can often lead us to answers that tell us much more about the ways we treat our own environment, other animals, and each other, than it does about little green men.

    With former NASA astronaut John Herrington, York University astronomer Sarah Rugheimer and space ethicist, podcaster and author Erika Nesvold.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0020y2h

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  3. The Mandolins and Beer Podcast Episode #120 Martin Howley (We Banjo 3) – Mandolins and Beer Podcast

    My guest this week on the podcast is Martin Howley from We Banjo 3. While the band name has banjo in it, what you may not realize is Martin is an incredible mandolin player! We have a great chat and it was fantastic talking with him!

    https://mandolinsandbeer.com/the-mandolins-and-beer-podcast-episode-120-martin-howley-we-banjo-3/

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  4. Why Don’t We Have a 15-hour Work Week? | The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos

    By 2030 we’ll only work 15 hours a week, predicted the legendary economist John Maynard Keynes back in 1930. He thought advances in technology and wealth would let us earn enough money to live in a day or two – leaving the rest of the week for leisure and community service.

    How wrong he was. We seem to be working more than ever – with technology adding extra tasks to our workdays (like answering emails and monitoring Slack). Dr Laurie longs for more leisure time, but how can she tame her fear of being “unproductive”?

    Computer scientist Cal Newport explains how we all got into this mess – and why we still treat modern employees as if they were farm laborers or assembly line workers. Reformed “productivity junkie” Oliver Burkeman also offers tips on how to concentrate our minds on fulfilling and important work – and not little tasks that chew up so much of our days.

    https://www.pushkin.fm/podcasts/the-happiness-lab-with-dr-laurie-santos/why-dont-we-have-a-15-hour-work-week

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  5. The Variable Man with Gary Goldman and Angus Fletcher: Development Hell | Revisionist History

    Gary Goldman was a writer on “Total Recall”, a Philip K. Dick adaptation directed by Paul Verhoeven and starring Arnold Schwarzeneger. It was a big hit. So why do Gary and his writing partner, Angus Fletcher, have so much trouble selling another Philip K. Dick adaptation? They tell Malcolm that it all came down to a roller coaster ride of plot twists that even A-List action actors couldn’t stomach, and an early attempt at AI that was too dumb to pick a smart script.

    https://www.pushkin.fm/podcasts/revisionist-history/the-variable-man-with-gary-goldman-and-angus-fletcher-development-hell

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  6. General Ludd’s Rage Against the Machines - Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Omny.fm

    1. A band of "Luddites" is laying siege to a textile mill in the North of England, under cover of night. They plan to destroy the machines that are replacing their jobs. But mill owner William Cartwright is prepared: he's fortified his factory with skilled marksmen, fearsome eighteen-inch metal spikes and barrels of sulphuric acid.

    Today "Luddite" is a term of mockery — a description for someone who's scared of technology. But in 1812, Luddism was no laughing matter for the likes of Cartwright. And he plans to teach the intruders a lesson.

    For a full list of sources for this episode, please visit timharford.com.

    https://omny.fm/shows/cautionary-tales-with-tim-harford/general-ludds-rage-against-the-machines

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  7. Reimagining the Gods

    Madeline Miller received critical acclaim for her novels The Song of Achilles and Circe – which reimagine The Iliad and The Odyssey told from the perspective of minor characters in the original texts by Homer. As someone who grew up loving Greek myths, she wanted to capture the sense of wonder she felt about them, and the raw emotional truth inside those very human tales of immortal beings. But she struggled for years to find a modern voice for these classical characters, and rewriting Homer was daunting task.

    https://www.imaginaryworldspodcast.org/episodes/reimagining-the-gods

    —Huffduffed by adactio

  8. Fantasy in Translation

    We all know that something is always lost in translation, but what is gained when a story transitions from one language and culture to another? Chen Malul tells the story of Israeli pilots who translated The Hobbit while in captivity. Olga Zilberbourg remembers the Soviet version of The Wizard of Oz – which was very different from the original story. Emily Jin discusses the nuances of translating Chinese science fiction at a time when everyday life in China feels like sci-fi. And translators Gord Sellar and Jihyun Park explain how feminism revitalized science fiction literature in South Korea.

    https://www.imaginaryworldspodcast.org/episodes/fantasy-in-translation

    —Huffduffed by adactio

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