Hanselminutes Podcast 101 - Dr. Michio Kaku on the Physics of the Impossible
My one-hundred-and-first podcast is up. Last week I was at an internal Microsoft conference and Dr. Kaku was speaking. I reached out to him personally and was able to interview him at 6 in the morning between his keynote rehearsal and his actual talk, just before he flew back to New York. Needless to say, he's a busy guy and I really appreciated his willingness to chat with me.
Dr. Michio Kaku is a theoretical physicist, best-selling author, and popularizer of science. He's the co-founder of string field theory (a branch of string theory), and continues Einstein's search to unite the four fundamental forces of nature into one unified theory. His book tour starts March 18th and the new book ships March 11th.
In this show, Scott talks with theoretical physicist and futurist Dr. Michio Kaku about making what was once considered impossible technology into reality. This is the topic of his new book, Physics of the Impossible: A Scientific Exploration into the World of Phasers, Force Fields, Teleportation, and Time Travel.
- Download: MP3 Full Show
- ACTION: Please vote for us on Podcast Alley! Digg us at Digg Podcasts!
If you have trouble downloading, or your download is slow, do try the torrent with µtorrent or another BitTorrent Downloader.
Do also remember the complete archives are always up and they have PDF Transcripts, a little known feature that show up a few weeks after each show.
Telerik is our sponsor for this show.
Check out their UI Suite of controls for ASP.NET. It's very hardcore stuff. One of the things I appreciate about Telerik is their commitment to completeness. For example, they have a page about their Right-to-Left support while some vendors have zero support, or don't bother testing. They also are committed to XHTML compliance and publish their roadmap. It's nice when your controls vendor is very transparent.
As I've said before this show comes to you with the audio expertise and stewardship of Carl Franklin. The name comes from Travis Illig, but the goal of the show is simple. Avoid wasting the listener's time. (and make the commute less boring)
Enjoy. Who knows what'll happen in the next show?
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
About Newsletter
I've always been fascinated by Astro-Physics and Quantum Mechanics; admiring them from afar as a layman. It all started for me back in high school when I discovered Carl Sagan's "Cosmos" series on Nova. I too read "Hyperspace" when it first came out. As well as several other pop-physics books like Hawking's "A Brief History In Time", and Thorne's "Black Holes & Time Warps" etc. Not to mention that old series of books from Time-Life. Remember the ones with the dark grey-blue hard covers?
I took Physics in high school and college but computers and programming took over my interests. Thanks for reminding me of my adolescent musings!
I'm curious though, what did Dr. Kaku speak about at Microsoft?
I'm loving the variety from some of the shows. Don't get me wrong, I love the technical (i.e. specifically relating to programming and computers), but this show was awesome! What Dr. Kaku spoke about regarding kids and "when you were 10" was very true for me. I've always been fascinated by theoretical physics and hearing an expert speak on these things was great. I might have to pick up his book.
Thanks again and keep up the great work!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/documentaries/features/time.shtml
Fabulous stuff - one of the best justifications for the continuing existence of the BBC I've seen in recent years.
Believe it or not a few of us developers are actually Ph.D.s in physics. Coding and the cosmos -- what a great combination.
Thanks,
Petr
Most of these things you spoke about were already developed. The Russians placed most of their government funding into development of the more 'paranormal' aspects of life such as astral projection, remote viewing, magnetic anomolies in the earth, and we know our government accidentally found out about other dimensions with their experiments concerning electromagnetic fields and microwaves.
Anyway, that's off topic. Excellent show. I've been studying programming for roughly ten years now and I just began c# and 3D math. Then comes all the physics, chemistry and other fun stuff. This show just gives me more motivation :) Thanks.
Towards the end of the interview the Dr Kaku mentions about how we should kindle our kids interests in Physics and Advanced physics is so true and I can totally relate to it.
can;t wait for more interesting shows..
Thx
-Yogesh
Definitely gonna download this and listen to it on my 3.5 day train ride to the MVP summit.
Comments are closed.