Future Tense - Full Program Podcast

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 122:24:58
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

A critical look at new technologies, new approaches and new ways of thinking, from politics to media to environmental sustainability.

Episodes

  • Controlled Environmental Agriculture

    02/11/2019 Duration: 29min

    Controlled Environmental Agriculture promises to be cleaner and greener. It’s focussed on technology and it’s essentially about bringing food production closer to the point of consumption. We examine the potential and the pitfalls.

  • The Privacy Paradox

    26/10/2019 Duration: 29min

    Future Tense a look at how we might be revealing more private details online than we think and the value in the information that’s being mined - and you’ll hear how you could protect your data by actually revealing more than you already are.

  • Planning for a problematic future

    19/10/2019 Duration: 29min

    We all know the value of planning, but in a complex, complicated and often confounding world it can be difficult knowing how to start. Scenario Planning is planning tool for uncertain situations - find out what it entails and how it might benefit organisations and businesses.

  • Great Green Walls – holding back the deserts

    12/10/2019 Duration: 29min

    Desertification and land degradation affect the lives of around three billion people, according to UN estimates. Two ambitious projects aim at halting desertification and returning soil to productivity: the Great Green Wall project in northern Africa; and the Green Great Wall initiative in China.

  • Offshore architecture and marine urban sprawl

    05/10/2019 Duration: 29min

    There’s a new emphasis on land reclamation and building floating structures for everything from accommodation to marine farming to energy generation. Re-defining the use of the ocean is part of the emerging “blue economy” – one that can be both economically beneficial and environmentally responsible. How well can these often contradictory goals be reconciled?

  • The Psychology of Silicon Valley

    29/09/2019 Duration: 29min

    To understand new technology we need to comprehend the social, cultural and economic influences of the developers. Also, making direct comparisons between the human mind and Artificial Intelligence is counterproductive.

  • 3D printing and the “plateau of productivity”

    22/09/2019 Duration: 29min

    When the hype around 3D printing was at its peak, it was confidently predicted that every household would soon have a personal printer. That’s not the way it turned out. But 3D printing is coming back and it’s slowly making its way toward the verdant “plateau of productivity”.

  • The creeping militarisation of our police

    15/09/2019 Duration: 29min

    Police officers in many  western countries now dress like paramilitaries. Special police units are being trained and organised along military lines and issued with military-grade weapons. Is this creeping “militarisation” justified and what are the future implications for the effectiveness of policing in democratic societies?

  • Strengthening public interest journalism while defending media freedom

    08/09/2019 Duration: 29min

    A tale of two media environments: in the US, journalistic freedom is increasingly under threat from demonising rhetoric and the violent personal targeting of reporters; while in Ethiopia, the country’s new leader has opened the gate to press freedom. What can we learn from both experiences?

  • Google’s future city; the space-wide web; and how the ancients strategized for the future

    01/09/2019 Duration: 29min

    Get an update on Google’s controversial proposal to take over the construction and regulation of a section of Toronto; learn about how the ancient Athenians used Tragedy to guide their future decision-making and follow the rush to develop low-orbit satellites to secure the future of the Internet.  

  • Future doom and the rose-coloured past

    25/08/2019 Duration: 29min

    Why do we see the past through rose-coloured glasses, but not the future? Psychologists tell us that human beings have a tendency to be fearful and pessimistic about the future, while simultaneously romanticising the past. If the theory is true, it might help explain the difficulties we often have in making informed decisions and effectively planning for the future.

  • With nature against climate change

    18/08/2019 Duration: 29min

    Nature Based Solutions is an environmental approach that seeks to counter the negative effects of climate change by working with nature.

  • Netflix's decline and why stricter regulation could strengthen the tech giants

    11/08/2019 Duration: 29min

    Netflix dominates online TV streaming, but for how long? Also, Cory Doctorow on how more government regulation could inadvertently make the tech giants even stronger.

  • Ensuring a classical future

    04/08/2019 Duration: 29min

    The world of classical music is changing. Some are predicting the demise of orchestral events. Others see opportunity in social media and a new sense of engagement between the audience and musicians.

  • Counterculture, consumerism and the far right

    28/07/2019 Duration: 29min

    Countercultural movements, like Occupy Wall Street, are meant to be future-focussed — revolutionary even. So why do they often fade into commercialism? Are they simply a function of consumer capitalism? If so, what future do they have? And must they always be progressive?

  • Western spies face a difficult future

    21/07/2019 Duration: 29min

    The CIA’s former counterintelligence chief warns Western spy agencies are being “overwhelmed” by their adversaries. And new surveillance technologies could spell the death of the traditional agent-in-the-field. The future of espionage looks problematic indeed.

  • Outsourcing, automation and the messiness of global labour

    14/07/2019 Duration: 29min

    Automation and outsourcing are dirty words for many people in Western countries worried about their future employment prospects. Developing countries are seen to be the major beneficiaries of off-shore labour, with multinationals hoovering up increased profits. But the reality is a lot more complex and even messy. Now, even developing countries are starting to feel the pain.

  • Prescient Predictions: 1984; Brave New World; and Network

    07/07/2019 Duration: 29min

    The dystopian best-seller 1984 was published exactly seventy years ago. Its influence has been profound. But does it really speak to today’s politico-cultural environment?

  • How to ensure free speech; and the EU's new copyright directive

    30/06/2019 Duration: 29min

    Many Western governments continue to struggle with free speech. It’s not that they’re necessarily against it, it’s just that they don’t know how to effectively regulate out the offensive stuff.

  • Emotions, relationships & technology

    23/06/2019 Duration: 29min

    Our emotions are being manipulated, hacked and shared like never before. So what does this mean for their future, our relationships and the technology that's reading them?

page 8 from 13