Topic: Technology History

7 chapters across the catalog

Clippers 'n Whittlers
Episode 1387 2:07:56 - 2:12:06

1387: Clippers 'n Whittlers

John C. Dvorak's 2004 "Podcasting Not Ready for Prime Time" Column

A 2004 column by John C. Dvorak is revisited, in which he famously claimed podcasting was "not ready for prime time." The article described podcasting as a "kludge" that was too difficult for non-Mac users to access and ranked it below "whittling wood" and "fingernail clipping" in terms of entertainment value. Dvorak stands by the accuracy of the technical criticisms at the time, noting that the medium eventually succeeded once it moved beyond the "Mac-head" community.

Kackling Kamala
Episode 1334 47:37 - 51:01

1334: Kackling Kamala

Smart Card History and Utopian Technology

The concept of a single card containing all personal, medical, and financial data was viewed as a utopian convenience in the 1980s. References were made to AT&T's "You Will" commercials featuring Tom Selleck, which predicted mobile computing and remote communication. However, the modern reality of data tracking has shifted public perception toward the dystopian surveillance themes found in George Orwell's 1984.

Tom Tatoe
Episode 715 2:10:09 - 2:13:22

715: Tom Tatoe

MTV Technology Documentary, Honest Liar, and Personal Anecdotes

A host describes being interviewed for an MTV documentary about the history of technology and cable television. The discussion touches on the early days of MTV.com and the parallels between the gatekeepers of cable TV and the modern internet. The segment also mentions the documentary "An Honest Liar" regarding James Randi.

Bots & Girls!
Episode 566 10:40 - 13:10

566: Bots & Girls!

VHS vs. Betamax, Sports Recording, and Porn Industry Innovation

The victory of VHS over Sony's Betamax format is attributed to the longer recording times required for full sports games rather than the influence of the adult film industry. While the porn industry is often credited with driving technological adoption like live streaming and pop-up ads, the four-to-six-hour capacity of VHS tapes was the decisive factor for consumers.

100 Billion Dollars!
Episode 56 1:18:11 - 1:20:24

56: 100 Billion Dollars!

Evolution of Color Television and Rotary Phones

The history of broadcasting is traced from the massive, clunky color cameras of the 1950s at WGN Chicago to the failed analog HDTV experiments of the 1980s. This technological nostalgia extends to Bakelite rotary phones and the lost culture of prank calling. The rapid pace of change has rendered many once-ubiquitous devices, like the car phone, completely obsolete.

100 Billion Dollars!
Episode 56 1:29:20 - 1:31:51

56: 100 Billion Dollars!

Computing History and Sir Clive Sinclair

A retrospective on early personal computers highlights the Sinclair ZX80 and the Commodore VIC-20 as foundational devices for a generation of programmers. Sir Clive Sinclair is remembered for his commitment to simplicity, famously quipping that he used an 8-bit microprocessor because he "couldn't find a 4-bit." Despite his success in computing, his foray into electric vehicles with the Sinclair C5 was a notable failure.