Podcast appearances and mentions of John B Goodenough

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Latest podcast episodes about John B Goodenough

Tech Talk Y'all
It's gonna take something better than the speed of light

Tech Talk Y'all

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2023 34:58


Brought to you by TogetherLetters & Edgewise! In this episode:  Lawyers fined $5K for using ChatGPT to file lawsuit filled with fake cases Meta to follow through on Facebook, Instagram block in Canada after content bill advances As Canada Passes Corrupt Link Tax, Meta Says No More News Links In Canada TikTok is discontinuing its BeReal clone Unicorn social app IRL to shut down after admitting 95% of its users were fake John B. Goodenough, 100, Dies; Nobel-Winning Creator of the Lithium-Ion Battery America's largest EV charging network adopts Tesla's NACS connector The Pixel Fold shows how far ahead Samsung's folding phones are The Biden administration's $42 billion broadband program is finally getting underway Nasa recovers 98% water from urine and sweat on ISS; breakthrough to help in long space missions First space factory is already testing how to make drugs in space DeepMind claims its next chatbot will rival ChatGPT House restricts congressional use of ChatGPT We've reached peak tech bro, with billionaires suggesting cage fights and bench-press contests Universal Analytics is going away Weird and Wacky:  Netflix to Stream Titanic on July 1 Following Submersible Tragedy, Draws Ire for Supposed 'Poor Taste' False 911 Calls Skyrocket During Bonnaroo as the iPhone Mistakes Dancing for Car Crashes Tech Rec: Mickey - Obsidian Adam - Marvel Snap --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/techtalkyall/message

Refactored
104: Build vs Buy

Refactored

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 61:59


Wherein Chris loves John B. Goodenough and Frank hates Apple.

apple john b goodenough
Still To Be Determined
138: Smarter Lithium Mining and Next Gen Batteries

Still To Be Determined

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2022 46:55


https://youtu.be/xZJFzaNybWIMatt talks to Teague Egan, EnergyX's CEO, about their direct extraction lithium mining pilot project in Bolivia, and what they're planning for a lithium metal next gen battery. Check out the Undecided With Matt Ferrell channel here: https://www.youtube.com/undecidedmfYouTube version of the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/stilltbdpodcastGet in touch: https://undecidedmf.com/podcast-feedbackSupport the show: https://pod.fan/still-to-be-determinedFollow us on Twitter: @stilltbdfm @byseanferrell @mattferrell or @undecidedmf ★ Support this podcast ★

Planet Philadelphia
Nobel Laureate Dr. John Goodenough, inventor of the lithium-ion battery

Planet Philadelphia

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2020 28:14


The Nobel Committee awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry Awarded to Developers of Lithium-Ion Batteries, John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino this year. They share the prize. Developing lithium-ion batteries are the power sources that touched off a technological revolution that gave rise to cellphones and electric cars. Dr. Goodenough, age 97, gives few interviews. Planet Philadelphia was honored that he chose to give us an interview about his revolutionary new battery and the future of energy storage in 2017. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kay-wood9/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kay-wood9/support

Christian News Bulletin
John B Goodenough - Lithium Ion batteries

Christian News Bulletin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2020


Christian News Bulletin reported last year that John B. Goodenough, the father of the lithium-ion battery, the rechargeable power source inside your mobile phone or laptop, is a Christian. This Professor from the Cockrell School of Engineering at the University of Texas in Austin has been awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work at Oxford University which made possible the development of lithium-ion batteries. Goodenough joins a long list of Nobel laureates who are Christian; some lists suggest 65 per cent of prize winners are followers of Christ.

World Christian News
John B Goodenough - Lithium Ion batteries

World Christian News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2020


Christian News Bulletin reported last year that John B. Goodenough, the father of the lithium-ion battery, the rechargeable power source inside your mobile phone or laptop, is a Christian. This Professor from the Cockrell School of Engineering at the University of Texas in Austin has been awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work at Oxford University which made possible the development of lithium-ion batteries. Goodenough joins a long list of Nobel laureates who are Christian; some lists suggest 65 per cent of prize winners are followers of Christ.

Blind Tech Guys
Big "Thank you"

Blind Tech Guys

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2020 61:20


In our 5th installment of the ANTAD Podcast, Nimer and myself, Warren, took the time to show our gratitude for the inventors of the Lithium ion battery--John B Goodenough of the University of Texas at Austin,M Stanley Whittingham of Binghamton Universityand Akira Yoshino of Meijo University.We talked about the new feature of the Google maps "detailed guidance navigation" intended for eyes-free navigation that debuted on Thursday, October 10 during "World sight day."Some Japanese lady demonstrated the new feature at the following Youtube URl's in both English and Japanese:English URL:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEMoCmvpHgo&feature=youtu.beJapanese url:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0pNyHs-aKA&feature=youtu.beThis feature is only available in the U.S. and Japan for the time being.Nimer demonstrated a couple apps from a developer known as "In Pocket software" that show you what your phone is up to and the internals of your Android phone. This is by way of the "phone information" found at:https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.inpocketsoftware.andInfoand then the one that shows you the phone signal found at the following URL:https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.inpocketsoftware.phoneSignalProWe ventured into a territory that would probably leave me, Warren, having some nightmares!Yes, we compared some apps on the Fruitvale (iOS) device and on Android.I happened to be the one that showed the Fruitvale side of things!The Session closed with the answering of mail we got from a listener.As always, we appreciate hearing from you and to send us your questions concerns or suggestions, please, send those to:antadpodcast@gmail.com--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/anatadpodcast/messageSupport the show (https://www.pod.fan/blind-tech-guys)★ Support this podcast ★

PTERODACTYL
006: THE SKY IS THE LIMIT

PTERODACTYL

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2020 82:04


The Limiting Factor is a youtube channel covering advancements in battery technologies in the fields of both Electric Vehicles and grid energy storage. Find The Limiting Factor on YouTube at THE LIMITING FACTOR. You can also follow him on Twitter @LimitingThe As always, please subscribe to the podcast! You can find the rest of our episodes at www.CentralEV.org/podcast While you're there, check out our "EV 101" page, it's got a lot of awesome knowledge for beginners! timestamps: 00:00 ∞ "Carl Sagan" speaks on spacetime. 2:04 ∞ Announcements 03:34 ∞ The Mustache in the room 06:39 ∞ What is "The Limiting Factor"? ~ Why New Zealand? ~ Why did you start a YouTube channel 11:16 ∞ What video editing software do you use? 11:40 ∞ Do you own a Tesla? 12:59 ∞ Audio editing software 14:46 ∞ The Do-It-Yourself battery movement ~ What does a "Million Mile Battery mean?" 16:12 ∞ JB Straubel's racing days 17:20 ∞ Small-town living, weather, wind power, and Wellington 22:24 ∞ Elon and Tesla ~ What would you do if Elon went full Charlie Sheen?24:56 ∞ Are Elon's fans "Cult Members"?26:45 ∞ Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy 29:13 ∞ Keeping up with Battery Developments 32:09 ∞ Solving the world's energy demand 33:46 ∞ Wallbox's "Star-Trek" themed EV Chargers 34:27 ∞ Game - "John B. Goodenough" 38:58 ∞ Have you been motivated to live sustainably? 39:48 ∞ Is New Zealand a Continent? 42:18 ∞ Making the world a better place through technology. 43:41 ∞ Do you believe in Humanity? 45:23 ∞ Batteries are REALLY complicated. 54:05 ∞ Battery Developer Profiles 58:30 ∞ How do you make money? 1:01:05 ∞ New Zealand perspectives on China vs. America 1:06:15 ∞ New Zealand, where nothing hurts you 1:09:32 ∞ Talking about Lord of the Rings (you can't do a podcast about New Zealand without talking about LOTR, it's the law) 1:12:09 ∞ What was your greatest adventure? 1:16:02 ∞ What do you fear the most? What are you most hopeful for? 1:19:07 ∞ Epilogue --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The History of Computing
The Brief History Of The Battery

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 8:14


Most computers today have multiple batteries. Going way, way, back, most had a CMOS or BIOS battery used to run the clock and keep BIOS configurations when the computer was powered down. These have mostly centered around the CR2032 lithium button cell battery, also common in things like garage door openers and many of my kids toys!   Given the transition to laptops for a lot of people now that families, schools, and companies mostly deploy one computer per person, there's a larger battery in a good percentage of machines made. Laptops mostly use lithium ion batteries, which    The oldest known batteries are “Baghdad batteries”, dating back to about 200BC. They could have been used for a number of things, like electroplating. But it would take 2,000 years to get back to it. As is often the case, things we knew as humans, once backed up with science, became much, much more. First, scientists were studying positive and negative elements and forming an understanding that electricity flowed between them. Like the English natural scientist, William Gilbert  - who first established some of the basics of electricity and magnetism. And Sir Thomas Browne, who continued to refine theories and was the first to call it “electricity.” Then another British scientist, Peter Collinson, sent Franklin an electricity tube, which these previous experiments had begun to produce.    Benjamin Franklin spent some time writing back and forth with Collinson and flew a kite and proved that electrical currents flowed through a kite string and that a metal key was used to conduct that electricity. This proved that electricity was fluid. Linked capacitors came along in 1749. That was 1752 and Thomas-Francois Dalibard also proved the hypothesis using a large metal pole struck by lightning.    Budding scientists continued to study electricity and refine the theories. 1799, Alessandro Volta built a battery by alternating zinc, cloth soaked in brine, and silver and stacking them. This was known as a voltaic pile and would release a steady current. The batteries corroded fast but today we still refer to the resistance of an ohm when the current of an amp flows through it as a volt. Suddenly we were creating electricity from an electrochemical reaction.    People continued to experiment with batteries and electricity in general. Giuseppe Zamboni, another Italian, physicist invented the Zamboni pile in 1812. Here, he switched to zinc foil and manganese oxide. Completely unconnected, Swedish chemist Johann August Arfvedson discovered Lithium in 1817. Lithium. Atomic number 3. Lithium is an alkali metal found all over the world. It can be used to treat manic depression and bipolar disorder. And it powers todays modern smart-everything and Internet of thingsy world. But no one knew that yet.    The English chemist John Frederick Daniell invented the Daniell cell in 1836, building on the concept but using a copper plate in a copper sulfate solution in a plate and hanging a zinc plate in the jar or beaker. Each plate had a wire and the zinc plate would become a negative terminal, while the copper plate would be a positive terminal and suddenly we were able to reliably produce electricity.    Robert Anderson would build the first electric car using a battery at around the same time, but Gaston Plante would build the first rechargeable battery in 1859, which is very much resembles the ones in our cars today. He gave us the lead-acid battery, switching to lead oxide in sulfuric acid.    In the 1860s the Daniell cell would be improved by Callaud and a lot of different experiments continued on. The Gassner dry cell came from Germany in 1886, mixing ammonium chloride with plaster of Paris and adding zinc chloride. Shelf life shot up. The National Carbon Company would swap out the plaster of Paris with coiled cardboard. That Colombia Dry Cell would be commercially sold throughout the United States and National Carbon Company, which would become Eveready, who makes the Energizer batteries that power the weird bunny with the drum.    Swedish scientist Jungner would give us nickel-cadmium or NiCd in 1899, but they were a bit too leaky. So Thomas Edison would patent a new model in 1901, iterations of these are pretty much common through to today. Litum would start being used shortly after by GN Lewis but would not become standard until the 1970s when push button cells started to be put in cameras. Asahi Chemical out of Japan would then give us the Lithium Ion battery in 1985, brought to market by Sony in 1991, leading to  John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham, and Akira Yoshino winning the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2019.    Those lithium ion batteries are used in most computers and smart phones today. The Osborne 1 came in 1981. It was what we now look back on as luggable computer. A 25 pound computer that could be taken on the road. But you plugged it directly into the wall. But the Epson HX-20 would ship the same year, with a battery, opening the door to batteries powering computers.    Solar cells and other larger batteries require much larger amounts. This causes an exponential increase in demand and thus a jump in the price, making it more lucrative to mine.    Mining lithium to create these batteries is, as with all other large scale operations taken on by humans, destroying entire ecosystems, such as those in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and the Tibetan plateau. Each ton of lithium takes half a million gallons of water, another resource that's becoming more precious. And the waste is usually filtered back into the ecosystem. Most other areas mine lithium out of rock using traditional methods, but there's certainly still an environmental impact. There are similar impacts to mining Cobalt and Nickel, the other two metals used in most batteries.    So I think we're glad we have batteries. Thank you to all these pioneers who brought us to the point that we have batteries in pretty much everything. And thank you, listeners, for sticking through to the end of this episode of the History of Computing Podcast. We're lucky to have you. 

jimmydoane's podcast
131 - UK, David, NASA, Charles, Cyber Weekend,, Andrew, Battery, Ward, Patriot 2019Dec01 Jimy Doane

jimmydoane's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2019 59:18


1:30 London Bridge attack, 3:33 David Attenborough  and NASA on Climate, 18:40 Prince Charles to take over, 21:38 Black  Friday and Cyber Monday, Amazon, Ford, and Labor, 27:54 AOC outraises  Pelosi crew, 31:00 Prince Andrew, 34:04 TSA Turkeys and Pressure  Cookers, 37:37 Population implosion, 42:04 John B. Goodenough's new  battery update, 45:43 Mexico drug wars, Amazon fires, 49:42 FAA on  airline seat safety, 51:11 Shopping news, 55:15 Mike Ward loses appeal,  57:04 Patriot Act.

I Dinamitardi
S01E05 - I Premi Nobel 2019

I Dinamitardi

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2019 96:24


I Premi Nobel assegnati nel 2019 sono: Economia: Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Duflo, Michael Kremer “per il loro approccio sperimentale nella lotta contro la povertà globale” Fisica: “per il contributo alla comprensione dell’evoluzione dell’universo e del posto della Terra nel cosmo”Metà premio a James Peebles “per le scoperte teoriche di fisica cosmologica”  Metà premio a Michel Mayor, Didier Queloz “per la scoperta di un exopianeta in orbita ad una stella di tipo solare” Chimica: John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham, Akira Yoshino “per lo sviluppo delle batterie a ioni di litio” Medicina: William G. Kaelin, Jr., Sir Peter J. Ratcliffe, Gregg L. Semenza “per la scoperta di come le cellule percepiscano e si adattino alla disponibilità di ossigeno” Questa puntata vede i nostri quattro autori tutti riuniti in studio per discutere dei premi di quest'anno, in maniera a volte scanzonata e irriverente.   Consigli per la lettura Nel corso della puntata, i nostri autori hanno consigliato degli articoli da leggere o dei podcast o video da ascoltare. Vi alleghiamo qui i link: Marcello vi consiglia l'affascinante storia di un lavoratore statale di nessuna importanza. Massimo invece consiglia un articolo su come i mammiferi conquistarono il mondo dopo l'estinzione di massa dei dinosauri. Serena ci segnala ben tre cose! Un articolo sulla storia del Litio, un altro articolo sul rapporto scomodo tra giornalismo e attivismo ed infine un podcast di Michela Murgia su Ippazia, scienziata dell'età ellenistica. Silvia Kuna ci racconta della nube assassina che tormentò un'ignara cittadina della Pennsylvania.

Señales
27: El premio Nobel explosivo que todos llevamos en el bolsillo

Señales

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2019 27:08


En este episodio, Ariel Torres, Ricardo Sametband y Guillermo Tomoyose hablan de la batería de iones de litio, cuya invención le deparó el premio Nobel de Química 2019 a sus creadores, Stanley Wittingham, John B. Goodenough y Akira Yoshino.

good enough nobel llevamos bolsillo explosivo el premio nobel ariel torres john b goodenough guillermo tomoyose ricardo sametband
24小时新闻直播间
快讯!2019诺贝尔化学奖揭晓

24小时新闻直播间

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2019 0:19


瑞典皇家科学院宣布,将2019年诺贝尔化学奖授予约翰·B·古迪纳夫(John B. Goodenough)、M·斯坦利·威廷汉(M. Stanley Whittingham )、吉野彰(Akira Yoshino)。

john b goodenough
天方烨谈
热点 | 2019诺贝尔化学奖出炉,这是锂电池和三个男人的故事!

天方烨谈

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2019 7:20


2019年诺贝尔化学奖授予约翰·B·古迪纳(John B. Goodenough)、斯坦利·惠廷汉(M. Stanley Whittingham)和吉野彰(Akira Yoshino),以表彰他们在开发锂离子电池方面做出的卓越贡献。

good enough john b goodenough
Science Talk
Lithium-Ion Battery Creators Win Chemistry Nobel Prize

Science Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 15:46


John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino share the 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for the development of lithium-ion batteries” that have led to portable electronic devices that are rechargeable virtually anywhere on the planet.

SWR2 Impuls - Wissen aktuell
Nobelpreis geht an Batterienforscher

SWR2 Impuls - Wissen aktuell

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 5:35


Der Nobelpreis für Chemie geht in diesem Jahr an den in Jena geborenen US-Amerikaner John B. Goodenough, den Briten Stanley Whittingham und Akira Yoshino aus Japan für die Entwicklung von Lithium-Ionen-Batterien. Ralf Caspary im Gespräch mit Hellmuth Nordwig.

Vetandets värld
Nobelpriset i kemi – Utvecklingen av litiumjonbatteriet

Vetandets värld

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 20:54


Detta lätta och uppladdningsbara batteri används i mobiltelefoner, laptops och elbilar. Den sparar energi från sol och vind och gör det möjligt för oss att gå mot ett fossilfritt samhälle. Priset går gemensamt till John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino. Vetenskapsradions Lena Nordlund och Lars Broström är på plats på Kungliga Vetenskapsakademien, som tillsammans med Gunnar von Heijne tar oss igenom upptäckten och vilka pristagarna är. Rättelse: Batteriets anod är positiv och katoden är negativ. Inte tvärtom. Programledare Lena Nordlund Lars Broström Producent Peter Normark peter.normark@sverigesradio.se

Tech Talk Radio Podcast
March 7, 2015 Tech Talk Radio Show

Tech Talk Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2015 58:59


Net neutrality (telecoms vs content providers), digital photographs (preserving, printing, sharing, selling), digital photoframes, Netflix on TV options (Chromecast, Apple TV, Roku, Blu-Ray players, game consoles, smart TVs), royalty-free photographs (iStockPhotos.com, Shutterstock.com, and more), most popular programming languages (top 10, Java most popular), dealing with spam (do not download images), Profiles in IT (John B. Goodenough, developer of the Li-ion battery), science of freezing rain, Dressgate (how we perceive colors), and future-proof your data files. This show originally aired on Saturday, March 7, 2015, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).