Search Engine is your open source to all the surprising and significant ways the Internet is transforming our world. Each week host Jesse Brown looks at politics and culture through the lens of the Net.
BuzzOut Loud is CNET’s “podcast of indeterminate length,” featuring Tom, Molly, and producer Veronica’s entertaining, sometimes caustic, and always skeptical take on technology news.
Future Tense is a daily program that chronicles the social impact of computers, the Internet, and technology in general. Future Tense is produced by American Public Media.
This is an always insightful podcast from Robert X. Cringely, who wrote the Notes From the Field column in InfoWorld. He is also the author of the best-selling book Accidental Empires: How the Boys of Silicon Valley Make Their Millions, Battle Foreign Competition, and Still Can’t Get a Date.
Dr. Moira Gunn is the host of Public Radio’s Tech Nation, where she has conducted over 2,000 interviews with space pioneers and cyber-novelists, venture capitalists and genetics researchers, teachers and technophobes.
Scott Sherman and Michael Stein bring you the latest news on digital cameras, tips and tricks to improve your image-making, and interviews with famous photographers, authors, and bloggers in the field of digital photography.
You can find specific TWIT programs below. However, because they offer so many individual podcasts, we have offered this general entry point to their collection.
Your first podcast of the week is the last word in tech. Join Leo Laporte, Patrick Norton, Kevin Rose, John C. Dvorak, and other tech luminaries in a roundtable discussion of the latest trends in digital technology. Released every Sunday at midnight Pacific.
A weekly look at all things Microsoft including Windows Vista, Office 2007, and Xbox from the foremost Windows expert in the world, Paul Thurrott of the Super Site for Windows..
Hi. I have a podcast called Super Tech Live. I take a look at some of the best features in applications, and step by step guides on how to do stuff with your computer.
None, as it in not one, well, next to none, of these links has anything to do with technology.
They are all to do with computing. This is but a tiny and overrated subset of technology.
Technology is the product of engineering. Much of the stuff written about at these places has never been anywhere near an engineer, as you can tell from the poor quality.
If you must abuse the T word, the least you can do is to call this stiff "information technology".
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Open Culture editor Dan Colman scours
the web for the best cultural and
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