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We would really appreciate it! All versions of Linux — Direct Development drivers included. RadioL a bs — Downloads. Radiolabs Product Manuals and Instructions. Driver Download Links. WiJacker-v2 Instruction Manual. WaveRV II. Top tier reporting and production assistance was provided by Eli Cohen. And to Arash Aziz for helping us every step of the way with our story about Khomeini.
And Simon Goodwin for making us that secret code. And to Micah Loewinger to tipping me off to these software radio broadcasts. As the Vietnam war dragged on, the US military began desperately searching for any vulnerability in their North Vietnamese enemy. In , they found it. It was an old Vietnamese folktale involving a ghost, eternal damnation and fear - a tailor made weaponizable myth.
And so, armed with tape recorders and microphones, the military set out to win the war by bringing this ghost story to life. Today, the story of these efforts and their ghosts that still haunt us today. Indispensable reporting and production assistance was provided by Eli Cohen. This episode was produced by Annie McEwen, with original music by Annie.
And to Mathew Campbell for introducing me to the Wandering Soul tape to begin with. And to Erik Villard for all his help pulling those tapes and voices for us.
In Bing Crosby was the king of media. He was the movie star, the pop star and his radio show was reaching a third of American living rooms each week. But then, it all started to fall apart. His ratings were plummeting and his fans were fleeing. Bing however, was not going down without a fight. Today, the story of how Bing Crosby and some stolen Nazi technology won his audience back, changed media forever and accidentally broke reality along the way.
Mixtape is reported, produced, scored and sound designed by Simon Adler with original music throughout by Simon Adler. Invaluable reporting and production assistance was provided by Eli Cohen. Through the s, the vast majority of people in China had never heard western music, save for John Denver, the Carpenters, and a few other artists included on the hand-picked list of songs sanctioned by the Communist Party.
But in the late 90s, a mysterious man named Professor Ye made a discovery at a plastic recycling center in Heping. This episode would not have happened without each and every one of them. On the other end of the line was The U. And we need your help to save it. Collection Collection. Creator Creator. Language Language. Remembering is a tricky, unstable business. This hour of Radiolab: implanting false memories in loved ones, and erasing painful ones by simply swallowing a pill.
Plus: the story of a man with the worst case of amnesia ever documented. We play some never-released tape from the vault, and reveal a bit about what techniques we used to try and make it sing. When presented with a choice, logic and emotion pipe up. This hour of Radiolab, we turn up the volume on those voices in our heads, and try to get to the bottom of what really steers our decisions.
In this podcast, Jad talks to Charles Fernyhough about the connection between thought and the voice in your head. How did it get there? And what's happening when people hear someone else's voice in their head? For meditation number fifteen we have a reading from David Eagleman's book Sum.
It's a vision of the after life that's both playful and Sum is read by actor Jeffrey Tambor. In this short, Jonathan Schooler tells us about a discovery that launched his career and led to a puzzle that has haunted him ever since.
In this new short, a tree full of blood-sucking bats lends a startling twist to our understanding of altruism and natural selection.
This hour of Radiolab: stories of adaptation. Is a peacenik baboon, a man in a dress, or a cuddly fox a sign of things to come? Or just a flukey outlier? We reframe our ideas about normalcy. Psychologist Walter Mischel explains how one little test involving a marshmallow might tell you a frightening amount about what kind of person you are.
Sometimes on the podcast, we like to talk about musicians and the music they make. Today we introduce you to Juana Molina. Last season we used some of her of music in the breaks for the Sperm show. Jad geeks out on digital sound editing, and Robert raises editorial questions. And film editor joins them to Walter Murch weigh in on storytelling. After hearing our show about moments of death, filmmaker Will Hoffman went out in search of moments of life. What follows is what he found.
Writer Ian Frazier made a startling discovery several years ago in eastern Siberia: no one he met there had ever heard of tic tac toe. In this short, Jad and Robert wonder how a game that seems carved into childhood DNA could be completely unknown in some parts of the world. This hour of Radiolab: we explore the line between music and language, and turn to physics and biochemistry to ask how sound becomes feeling. Biopsychologist Barbara Smuts takes us to a remote area of Kenya, where she tried to gain the trust of a troop of baboons in the s.
In this podcast, a story about obsession, creativity, and a strange symmetry between a biologist and a composer that revolves around one famously repetitive piece of music. Winners, losers, underdogs--what can games tell us about who we really are?
Death is inevitable. But is it truly final? We stare down the very moment of passing, and speculate about what may lie beyond. Alan Turing's mental leaps about machines and computers were some of the most innovative ideas of the 20th century. But the world wasn't kind to him.
In this short, Robert wonders how Turing's personal life shaped his understanding of mechanical minds and human emotions. In this short, a neurologist issues a dare to a ragtime piano player and a famous conductor. When the two men face off in an fMRI machine, the challenge is so unimaginably difficult that one man instantly gives up.
But the other achieves a musical feat that ought to be impossible. How would you describe life on Earth to an alien? In , the Voyager spacecraft launched into space. And with it, went the Golden Record-- a sort of time capsule, a collection of sounds and images that would describe life on Earth to whomever or whatever might find it. In this podcast, Jad and Robert throw some physics at a bible story.
We find out just how many trumpeters you'd actually need to blow down the walls of Jericho. Sometimes being a good scientist requires putting aside your emotions. But what happens when objectivity isn't enough to make sense of a seemingly senseless act of violence?
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