Multimedia
SciFri 031612 Hour 1: High-tech Talent, LEGO Shuttle
March 16, 2012 3:43 pm Podcasts CommentsA panel of experts debate whether there is a shortage of scientists and engineers in America, and an amateur trip to the skies.
Easy ways 4 - Development of the Lesser Sac(3)
March 15, 2012 9:41 pm Podcasts CommentsThis is the fourth in our series on easy ways of remembering tricky areas of anatomy, covering the Development of the Lesser Sac - see www.instantanatomy.net for more details
Podcast 37- Overview of the Autonomic Nervous System
March 15, 2012 3:44 pm Podcasts CommentsPodcast 37 is an overview of the Autonomic Nervous System - see www.instantanatomy.net for more details
Easy ways 4 - Episode notes - Development of the Lesser Sac
March 15, 2012 3:43 pm Podcasts CommentsThese are the episode notes from the fourth in our series on easy ways of remembering tricky areas of anatomy, covering the Development of the Lesser Sac - see www.instantanatomy.net for more details
Easy ways 4 - Development of the Lesser Sac(2)
March 15, 2012 3:42 pm Podcasts CommentsThis is the fourth in our series on easy ways of remembering tricky areas of anatomy, covering the Development of the Lesser Sac - see www.instantanatomy.net for more details
SciFri 030912 Hour 2: Dark Matter Clumps, Early Spring, New Horizons Mission to Pluto
March 11, 2012 9:39 pm Podcasts CommentsMapping dark matter in a distant galaxy, how an early spring affects the natural world, and an update on a mission to Pluto.
Futures In Biotech 92: Foldit - Crowd Sourcing God's Work
March 9, 2012 7:39 pm Podcasts CommentsHost: Marc Pelletier Co-Host: Markus Veolter Dr. David Baker explains how the game Foldit uses crowdsourcing to intelligently design artificial proteins never seen before in nature. Guest: Dr. David Baker We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes. Comments and...
SciFri 030912 Hour 1: Gorilla Genome, Taste and Food, Exercise and DNA, Animal Locomotion
March 9, 2012 10:41 am Podcasts CommentsA look at how the gorilla genome compares to our own, a chat about how to taste, how exercise affects your genes, and a trip to the Concord Field Station.
SciFri 030212 Hour 2: Neil deGrasse Tyson On Exploring Cosmic Frontiers
March 4, 2012 9:41 pm Podcasts CommentsIn Space Chronicles, Tyson argues that space exploration is vital to human progress.
SciFri 030212 Hour 1: New Pharma Biz Models, Climate Wars, Galileo Play
March 2, 2012 10:41 am Podcasts CommentsDrug development and the patient, Michael Mann on climate, and an off-Broadway production of Galileo.
MOCON's Ed Emerson Demonstrates Non-Invasive Oxygen Detection System for Packaging
February 27, 2012 7:42 am | by mdteditor Videos CommentsEd Emerson, medical business development manager at MOCON, demonstrates how the new OpTech®-O2 Platinum system works for medical device packaging when oxygen detection is required. The system enables non-invasive, non-destructive measurement of oxygen levels within the packaging. Visit...
Specialty Coating Systems' Lonny Wolgemuth talks Parylene conformal coating
February 27, 2012 6:42 am | by mdteditor Videos CommentsLonny Wolgemuth, sr. medical market specialist at SCS, talks about a conformal coating technology--Parylene--and how it can be used for medical devices. He highlights the benefits offered by the coating and reviews most common application areas in which it is being used by medical device...
SciFri 022412 Hour 2: Flu Update, Gene Testing, Microbial Fuel Cell, Tuberculosis
February 26, 2012 8:40 pm Podcasts CommentsAn update on the flu season, a personal look at genome testing, a fuel cell of microbes and mud, and the history of the word tuberculosis.
SciFri 022412 Hour 1: Tiny Transistors, Web Privacy, Moon Geology, Ice Video
February 24, 2012 10:40 am Podcasts CommentsBuilding a transistor from a single atom, companies sidestepping web privacy controls, new research into geologic activity on the moon.
SciFri 021712 Hour 2: New Nuclear Reactors Approved, Concrete, Digital Dictionaries
February 19, 2012 8:40 pm Podcasts CommentsFederal agency approves a license to build two nuclear reactors, a look at concrete--from its use in the Paleolithic Age to modern greener alternatives, and a linguist unveils thousands of audio recordings of words and sentences from dying languages.


