Podcast appearances and mentions of Robert Howard

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Best podcasts about Robert Howard

Latest podcast episodes about Robert Howard

One Piece React Forever
GB 155 Conan A Ciméria

One Piece React Forever

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2025 18:20


Conan part 12. Adaptação de um poema, repito, de um POEMA do Robert Howard! Estamos no Omnibus volume 3 da Mythos!

Monsters, Madness and Magic
EP#302: The Fate of Felimid Mac Fal - An Interview with Keith Taylor

Monsters, Madness and Magic

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 50:34


Join Justin as he chats with author Keith Taylor about the origins of Felimid Mac Fal, Conan, continuing the legacy of Robert Howard's horror stories, Irish mythology, historical fiction, and more!Keith Taylor bio:“Keith John Taylor (born 26 December 1946) is an Australian science fictionand fantasy writer.Born in Tasmania, Taylor now resides in Melbourne, Australia. Getting his start in Ted White's Fantastic, Taylor went on to collaborate with Andrew J. Offutt on two novels based upon the Robert E. Howard hero, Cormac Mac Art – an Irish Viking active in King Arthur's time.Taylor's series of novels centering on an Irish character of his own creation – the bard Felimid mac Fal – was published throughout the 1980s. Much of Taylor's fictional output in the 1990s was in the Arthurian fantasy subgenre. Many stories featuring his character, Kamose the Magician, were published in Weird Tales in the late 1990s and early 2000s. “Monsters, Madness and Magic Official Website. Monsters, Madness and Magic on Linktree.Monsters, Madness and Magic on Instagram.Monsters, Madness and Magic on Facebook.Monsters, Madness and Magic on Twitter.Monsters, Madness and Magic on YouTube.

Leaders and Legends
Stephen L. Moore, Author of “Beyond the Call of Duty: The Life of Colonel Robert Howard, America's Most Decorated Green Beret”

Leaders and Legends

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2025 59:05


A recipient of the Medal of Honor—he also was awarded eight Purple Hearts, a Distinguished Service Cross, and a Silver Star. In all, Colonel Robert Howard earned more than 50 awards for valor and distinctive service in combat. On this week's “Leaders and Legends” podcast, we interview author Stephen L. Moore about his new biography, “Beyond the Call of Duty: The Life of Colonel Robert Howard, America's Most Decorated Green Beret”Sponsors• Veteran Strategies• NFP - A leading insurance broker and consultant• Garmong Construction• Crowne Plaza Downtown Indianapolis Historic Union StationAbout Veteran Strategies‘Leaders and Legends' is brought to you by Veteran Strategies—your local veteran business enterprise specializing in media relations, crisis communications, public outreach, and digital photography. Learn more at www.veteranstrategies.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Get Connected
BEYOND THE CALL OF DUTY: The Most Decorated U.S. Special Forces Solider

Get Connected

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 14:54 Transcription Available


For Veteran's Day, our guest is respected military historian Stephen L. Moore, who takes us into the heart of the Vietnam War's covert Special Ops jungle warfare in BEYOND THE CALL OF THE DUTY, telling the story of the life and achievements of Robert Howard, the most decorated Special Forces soldier of all time.  Stephen L. Moore, a sixth-generation Texan, graduated from Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas. He is the author of two dozen books on World War II, Vietnam, and Texas history, including Patton's Payback and Blood and Fury.

The BelTel
The disappearance of Castlederg teen Arlene Arkinson and the search for her body

The BelTel

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 19:03


Arlene Arkinson was 15 years old the last time she was seen alive. She disappeared in August 1994 after leaving Castlederg in County Tyrone to attend a disco across the border. She was last seen with convicted sex offender Robert Howard, who was released without charge for her murder. Today it was announced that the Gardaí have started a new search for her body in Donegal. Olivia Peden is joined by Belfast Telegraph's Andrew Madden Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Vietnam Veteran News with Mack Payne
Episode 2800 – Medal of Honor tribute for Army Green Beret Robert Howard

Vietnam Veteran News with Mack Payne

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024


Episode 2800 of the Vietnam Veteran News Podcast will feature a story about Army Green Beret Robert Howard and his Congressional Medal of Honor award. The featured story comes from The We Are The Mighty website and was titled: This … Continue reading →

Over Our Garden Wall
LIVE MUSIC & ME - ROBERT HOWARD. EPISODE 19

Over Our Garden Wall

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 29:06


We have now recorded around 20 episodes of Live Music & Me, and every one of them has been very enjoyable. However, we were extra excited for this one, as our guest was the musician and singer/songwriter Robert Howard ( we have been Blow Monkeys fans for a long time) It was also the first time we had attempted a pan European podcast with a time difference ( Robert lives in Spain now) ,and thankfully the technology passed the test ( and the time difference) We never know where the guests will take us with their musical memories. Robert took us from Kings Lynn, Norfolk to Sydney, Australia with his first answer! ( If you want a good trivia question, ask a friend what Jethro Tull & Marc Bolan have in common) We also found out that Robert actually wanted The Blow Monkeys to be like The Birthday Party, that you are never too old to say no to a guest gig pass from a good friend ( Mr Weller), and that Robert thinks there is more than one live album we should all own a copy of.... And, if you stick to your beliefs and values by making a political statement on the stage at Wembley Stadium you will upset a lot of Rod Stewart fans ( and Paula Yates too !) We are really pleased with this one - our 30 minute chat flew in. Big thanks to Robert, both for the podcast chat and for The Blow Monkeys giving us 40 years of great music.

Pop: The History Makers with Steve Blame
Dr. Robert/The Blow Monkeys

Pop: The History Makers with Steve Blame

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 47:28


Dr. Robert, born Robert Howard, is a British musician and lead vocalist of the band The Blow Monkeys. Emerging in the 1980s, the band found success with their distinctive blend of pop, soul, new wave. and Dr. Robert's socially conscious lyrics, all hallmarks of the band's soulful sound.Their hits included "Digging Your Scene" and "It Doesn't Have to Be This Way" gained international acclaim.Please copy and share the YouTube interview:https://youtu.be/ZCUHCJq1ojc?si=aaRZ-OHwDtHxwht8Dr. Robert also achieved success with Kym Mazelle on wait, formed Slam Slam with Paul Weller and Dee C. Lee, and is also known for his activism, and continues to tour with the Blow Monkeys.For tour dates - the UK and Spanish tour dates are already announced!https://www.theblowmonkeys.com/live-datesAnd for their new album Together/Alone and further information:www.theblowmonkeys.comPlease subscribe to this channel! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Voices of Today
Red Shadows sample

Voices of Today

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 2:53


The complete audiobook is available for purchase at Audible.com: https://www.audible.com/pd/Red-Shadows-Audiobook/B0CV2T53WR Red Shadows By Robert E. Howard Narrated by Andre Baum "Excitement and sorcery mixed with blades of steel. The mysterious stranger who appears out of nowhere to avenge injustice and defend the defenseless. Robert Howard, in this early story of his, gives us Solomon Kane; the man who walks like a leopard, wears all black and is relentless in pursuing evil doers. But he is pitted against voodoo and the superbly skillful opponent - Le Loupe - The Wolfe. Has Solomon Kane met his doom?"

Murder Most Irish
And There's A Toilet in Covent Garden! Episode 133

Murder Most Irish

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 65:45


**TRIGGER WARNING: Mentions of violence, sexual abuse and rape**Friends!This week Emma covers the case of Hannah Williams and Arlene Arkinson who were murdered by Robert Howard. Hannah and Arlene's families were failed massively by both the media and the police in cases steeped in classism.Look after yourselves lads and we'll see you next week!Case begins at 27:09References:https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2006/mar/25/northernireland.ukcrimehttps://www.irishmirror.ie/news/irish-news/netflix-series-cover-four-unsolved-31117111https://www.kentlive.news/news/kent-news/forgotten-murder-missing-girl-hannah-3564042https://www.theguardian.com/world/2002/mar/28/gender.uk#:~:text=They%20all%20know%20her%2C%20and,was%20heading%20for%20the%20market.https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/day-kathleens-world-turned-upside-down/28373563.htmlhttps://www.netflix.com/watch/81661764?trackId=255824129https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Hannah_Williams

Desperately Seeking Paul : Paul Weller Fan Podcast
EP170 - Robert Howard / Dr. Robert - The Blow Monkeys

Desperately Seeking Paul : Paul Weller Fan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 67:35


Episode 170: Robert Howard / Dr. Robert - The Blow MonkeysOn this episode of the Paul Weller Fan Podcast, I am joined by Singer, Songwriter, Multi-instrumentalist and Producer, Robert Howard, aka Dr. Robert of The Blow Monkeys.We take a journey through his youth and his discovery of punk, politics and The Jam whilst living in Australia in the 1970s... He returned home in 1981 and formed the band, leading to so many fabulous albums and singles - their debut Limping for a Generation, that breakthrough LP Animal Magic and their hit singles Digging Your Scene, It Doesn't Have To Be This Way, Choice - right up to their brilliant 2021 album release Journey To You...On the podcast, we hear so many personal stories , never told before, about his friendship and collaborations with Paul Weller - whether it's recording at Solid Bond, being part of Red Wedge, an Honorary Councillor for the final The Style Council live shows, co-producing Dee C. Lee's Slam Slam project and playing on each others early solo albums.We also chat about Rise Up Singing - the Monks Road Social collaboration that saw Paul and Robert come together for a new song together in 2022... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Pop: The History Makers with Steve Blame
Kym Mazelle - First Lady of House Music

Pop: The History Makers with Steve Blame

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2023 65:39


First Lady of House Music; this was the moniker Kym Mazelle received when she signed to EMI in London as their first House Music artist. Born on August 10, 1960, in Gary, Indiana, just two doors down to where the Jackson's would first record. If you want to see this interview on YouTube - go here:https://youtu.be/or2f-T9yRQg?si=-Y8bJABZhj5jJSp0And Subscribe!Her dynamic vocals and stage presence is what Kym became known for, and gained widespread recognition - one of our friends at MTV Europe during the late 1980s with her breakthrough single, "Useless (I Don't Need You Now)," which not only showcased her impressive vocal range but furhter established her as a prominent figure in the emerging house music scene, after her first Marshall Jefferson produced single 'Taste my Love' in 1987.Later Kym worked with Soul II Soul and Robert Howard of The Blow Monkeys. Kym's unwavering passion for music continue to inspire new generations of artists, and she remains one of the greatest icons of the house music scene.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/pop-the-history-makers-with-steve-blame/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

featured Wiki of the Day
Robert Howard Hodgkin

featured Wiki of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 2:47


Episode 2330: Our featured article of the day is Robert Howard Hodgkin.

Historias con voz propia
La cosa en el tejado, de Robert Howard

Historias con voz propia

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2023 30:22


Robert Howard fue un escritor estadounidense, nacido el 22 de enero de 1906 en Peaster, Texas, y fallecido el 11 de junio de 1936 en Cross Plains, localidad del mismo estado. Conocido especialmente por las historias de corte fantástico que publicó en la revista Weird Tales, también cultivó la temática histórica, como por ejemplo en Las puertas del imperio, una historia ambientada en la época de Saladino. La creación más importante de Howard fue, definitivamente, Conan, un héroe bárbaro que aparece en diversas historias situadas en una época ficticia denominada Era Hyboria o Primera Era (que empezaría tras el hundimiento de la Atlántida). Tras el suicidio del autor en 1936 al conocer la inminente muerte de su madre han sido numerosos los autores que han continuado la labor de escribir acerca de este personaje, creando una mitología propia que se cuenta entre las más extensas de la fantasía heroica literaria. Conan ha sido adaptado en varias ocasiones al cine, así como a la televisión, el cómic, etc., convirtiéndose en uno de los iconos más significativos del siglo XX. (Fuente: Lecturalia.com)

True Crime Podcast 2023 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast
Full Police Interrogation of the Predator Who Strangled a 12-Year-Old Girl

True Crime Podcast 2023 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 143:43


Full Police Interrogation of the Predator Who Strangled a 12-Year-OldThis podcast contains the full interrogation of Robert Howard, the man accused of raping and killing 12-year-old Naomi Jones. After five days of Jones missing, her body was discovered by a local fisherman, covered in duct tape, and thrown into a creek close to her mother's apartment. Howard, a registered sex offender, was a suspect because he lived near the apartment complex Jones and her family lived in. Howard was arrested for the murder of Jones on June 7, 2017. The next day while in jail, Howard admitted to strangling Jones and throwing her body over a bridge. On August 18, 2021, Howard confessed again during his trial. He was sentenced to life in prison, without the possibility of paroleTrue Crime Podcast 2023 Police Interrogations, 911 Calls True Police Stories Podcast

Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023
Full Police Interrogation of the Predator Who Strangled a 12-Year-Old

Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 143:43


Full Police Interrogation of the Predator Who Strangled a 12-Year-OldThis podcast contains the full interrogation of Robert Howard, the man accused of raping and killing 12-year-old Naomi Jones. After five days of Jones missing, her body was discovered by a local fisherman, covered in duct tape, and thrown into a creek close to her mother's apartment. Howard, a registered sex offender, was a suspect because he lived near the apartment complex Jones and her family lived in. Howard was arrested for the murder of Jones on June 7, 2017. The next day while in jail, Howard admitted to strangling Jones and throwing her body over a bridge. On August 18, 2021, Howard confessed again during his trial. He was sentenced to life in prison, without the possibility of paroleTrue Crime Podcast 2023 Police Interrogations, 911 Calls True Police Stories Podcast

Crime & Comedy
Robert Howard Bruce - The Ether Man - C&C Capsule - 34

Crime & Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2023 35:16


Robert Howard Bruce sembra davvero l'uomo ideale per Joy Lynn Martinez. Sembra che fin da subito dopo il matrimonio, alcune cose non convincono. Forse è un po' troppo geloso, anche possessivo. Ma questo è niente, un giorno Joy Lynn vede un video di Robert Howard Bruce e viene catapultata nel mondo malato di Ether Man. --------- Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/crimeandcomedy Magliette: https://www.cucshop.com/collections/crime-comedy Sconto 20%: CRIME20 Youtube: https://youtu.be/NVUJTkWEK5c Tutti i Podcast: https://link.chtbl.com/CrimeandComedy Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crimeandcomedy.podcast/ Telegram: https://t.me/crimeandcomedy Sito: https://www.crimeandcomedy.it Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/crimeandcomedy/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CrimeComedy Instagram: Clara Campi: https://www.instagram.com/claracampicomedy/ Marco Champier: https://www.instagram.com/mrchreddy/ Caricature - Giorgio Brambilla: https://www.instagram.com/giorgio_brambilla_bookscomedy/ Capitoli: (00:00:00) | Intro (00:00:23) | Sigla (00:00:37) | Robert Howard Bruce: Ether Man è Uomo Etere o Uomo dell'Etere? (00:01:39) | Ringraziamenti Patreon (00:01:57) | Crime & comedy Live! @Arena Milano Est (00:02:23) | Joy Lynn Martinez conosce e si innamora di Robert Howard Bruce (00:09:36) | Robert Howard Bruce fa un passo falso e Joy Lynn lo lascia (00:14:04) | Joy Lynn sospetta che Robert Howard Bruce sia l'Ether Man (00:19:28) | Robert Howard Bruce è l'Ether Man, ma c'è molto di più (00:30:32) | I nostri Patreon Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Race to Value Podcast
Ep 169 – The Patient Priority: Solve Health Care's Value Crisis by Measuring and Delivering Outcomes That Matter to Patients, with Dr. Stefan Larsson and Robert Howard

The Race to Value Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 74:03


The only way for the health care sector to sustainably contain costs and fulfill its mission is by putting the patient -- and the delivery of outcomes that matter to patients -- at the center of the industry's efforts. We must align incentives around the continuous improvement of health outcomes in a cost-effective matter. This is what value-based health care is all about – better health outcomes to patients for the money spent. Contrary to traditional approaches to health system reform that emphasize cost containment, value-based health care shifts the focus to continuous improvement in the outcomes delivered to patients. On the Race to Value this week, we are joined by two of the four authors from the new healthcare book, “The Patient Priority”. With this book, they wrote a practical step-by-step guide for clinicians, payers, policymakers, and other industry stakeholders to lead patient-centered, value-based health care innovation. It presents case studies from leading innovators and provides a roadmap for the comprehensive value-based transformation of national health systems. On the show this week is Stefan Larsson, MD, PhD -- an independent advisor in health care and life sciences, and a senior advisor to Boston Consulting Group (BCG).  Joining him is Robert Howard, a former senior editor at Harvard Business Review and MIT Technology Review who collaborates with BCG on the topics of value-based care and health system transformation.   Episode Bookmarks: 01:30 Putting patients first is the only way for the health care sector to sustainably contain costs and fulfill its mission. 02:00 Introduction to Stefan Larsson, MD, PhD and Robert Howard and their new book, “The Patient Priority.” 03:00 Support Race to Value by subscribing to our weekly newsletter and leaving a review/rating on Apple Podcasts. 04:30 The Triple Crisis:  There is a Crisis of Value, a Crisis of Evidence, and a Crisis of Purpose in American Healthcare! 05:30 How the vicious cycle of how a continued explosion of medical research knowledge drives higher costs due to anxiety and lack of guidance. 07:00 The crisis of outcomes (e.g. obesity, declining life expectancy) have persisted over a long period of time. 07:30 “The health care crisis will only get worse unless there is a fundamental shift in how we lead, define success, and agree on what good looks like.” 08:00 The criticality of shifting to an outcomes measurement model that values what matters to patients. 08:30 “Outcomes that matter to patients is the essence of the future of health care.” 09:00 Why the value-based care movement should focus more on the system than the individual provider organizations. 09:30 “The only way individual organizations can sustain value-based change is if we transform health systems as a whole – on a regional, national, and even international level.” 10:00 Health care is a complex adaptive system, and you don't change it through rules-based policy. 11:00 “Measuring outcomes in accordance to what matters to patients should be the key metric to drive change in health care.” 12:30 This importance of clinical registries that collect comprehensive data on health outcomes in a population of patients with the same condition. 13:00 How a fragmented specialty-dominated healthcare system limits our ability to develop consensus standards for measuring outcomes that matter to patients. 15:00 “By measuring the outcomes that matter to patients, we take a holistic view of health care.  We can then integrate all the different professional capabilities in the most ultimate way.” 15:45 The important work of the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM). 16:00 How Sweden is a driving force for the international adoption of patient-centered outcomes measures and clinical registries. 17:30 Why a health care comparison of Sweden to the United States is relevant. (Patient needs are the same!) 18:00 Stefan discusses how his partnership with Michael P...

The History of Computing
One History Of 3D Printing

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 30:59


One of the hardest parts of telling any history, is which innovations are significant enough to warrant mention. Too much, and the history is so vast that it can't be told. Too few, and it's incomplete. Arguably, no history is ever complete. Yet there's a critical path of innovation to get where we are today, and hundreds of smaller innovations that get missed along the way, or are out of scope for this exact story. Children have probably been placing sand into buckets to make sandcastles since the beginning of time. Bricks have survived from round 7500BC in modern-day Turkey where humans made molds to allow clay to dry and bake in the sun until it formed bricks. Bricks that could be stacked. And it wasn't long before molds were used for more. Now we can just print a mold on a 3d printer.   A mold is simply a block with a hollow cavity that allows putting some material in there. People then allow it to set and pull out a shape. Humanity has known how to do this for more than 6,000 years, initially with lost wax casting with statues surviving from the Indus Valley Civilization, stretching between parts of modern day Pakistan and India. That evolved to allow casting in gold and silver and copper and then flourished in the Bronze Age when stone molds were used to cast axes around 3,000 BCE. The Egyptians used plaster to cast molds of the heads of rulers. So molds and then casting were known throughout the time of the earliest written works and so the beginning of civilization. The next few thousand years saw humanity learn to pack more into those molds, to replace objects from nature with those we made synthetically, and ultimately molding and casting did its part on the path to industrialization. As we came out of the industrial revolution, the impact of all these technologies gave us more and more options both in terms of free time as humans to think as well as new modes of thinking. And so in 1868 John Wesley Hyatt invented injection molding, patenting the machine in 1872. And we were able to mass produce not just with metal and glass and clay but with synthetics. And more options came but that whole idea of a mold to avoid manual carving and be able to produce replicas stretched back far into the history of humanity. So here we are on the precipice of yet another world-changing technology becoming ubiquitous. And yet not. 3d printing still feels like a hobbyists journey rather than a mature technology like we see in science fiction shows like Star Trek with their replicators or printing a gun in the Netflix show Lost In Space. In fact the initial idea of 3d printing came from a story called Things Pass By written all the way back in 1945! I have a love-hate relationship with 3D printing. Some jobs just work out great. Others feel very much like personal computers in the hobbyist era - just hacking away until things work. It's usually my fault when things go awry. Just as it was when I wanted to print things out on the dot matrix printer on the Apple II. Maybe I fed the paper crooked or didn't check that there was ink first or sent the print job using the wrong driver. One of the many things that could go wrong.  But those fast prints don't match with the reality of leveling and cleaning nozzles and waiting for them to heat up and pulling filament out of weird places (how did it get there, exactly)! Or printing 10 add-ons for a printer to make it work the way it probably should have out of the box.  Another area where 3d printing is similar to the early days of the personal computer revolution is that there are a few different types of technology in use today. These include color-jet printing (CJP), direct metal printing (DMP), fused deposition modeling (FDM), Laser Additive Manufacturing (LAM, multi-jet printing (MJP), stereolithography (SLA), selective laser melting (SLM), and selective laser sintering (SLS). Each could be better for a given type of print job to be done. Some forms have flourished while others are either their infancy or have been abandoned like extinct languages. Language isolates are languages that don't fit into other families. Many are the last in a branch of a larger language family tree. Others come out of geographically isolated groups. Technology also has isolates. Konrad Zuse built computers in pre-World War II Germany and after that aren't considered to influence other computers. In other words, every technology seems to have a couple of false starts. Hideo Kodama filed the first patent to 3d print in 1980 - but his method of using UV lights to harden material doesn't get commercialized.  Another type of 3d printing includes printers that were inkjets that shot metal alloys onto surfaces. Inkjet printing was invented by Ichiro Endo at Canon in the 1950s, supposedly when he left a hot iron on a pen and ink bubbled out. Thus the “Bubble jet” printer. And Jon Vaught at HP was working on the same idea at about the same time. These were patented and used to print images from computers over the coming decades. Johannes Gottwald patented a printer like this in 1971. Experiments continued through the 1970s when companies like Exxon were trying to improve various prototyping processes. Some of their engineers joined an inventor Robert Howard in the early 1980s to found a company called Howtek and they produced the Pixelmaster, using hot-melt inks to increment the ink jet with solid inks, which then went on to be used by Sanders Prototype, which evolved into a company called Solidscape to market the Modelmaker. And some have been used to print solar cells, living cells, tissue, and even edible birthday cakes. That same technique is available with a number of different solutions but isn't the most widely marketable amongst the types of 3D printers available. SLA There's often a root from which most technology of the day is derived. Charles, or Chuck, Hull coined the term stereolithography, where he could lay down small layers of an object and then cure the object with UV light, much as the dentists do with fillings today. This is made possibly by photopolymers, or plastics that are easily cured by an ultraviolet light. He then invented the stereolithography apparatus, or SLA for short, a machine that printed from the bottom to the top by focusing a laser on photopolymer while in a liquid form to cure the plastic into place. He worked on it in 1983, filed the patent in 1984, and was granted the patent in 1986.  Hull also developed a file format for 3D printing called STL. STL files describe the surface of a three-dimensional object, geometrically using Cartesian coordinates. Describing coordinates and vectors means we can make objects bigger or smaller when we're ready to print them. 3D printers print using layers, or slices. Those can change based on the filament on the head of a modern printer, the size of the liquid being cured, and even the heat of a nozzle. So the STL file gets put into a slicer that then converts the coordinates on the outside to the polygons that are cured. These are polygons in layers, so they may appear striated rather than perfectly curved according to the size of the layers. However, more layers take more time and energy. Such is the evolution of 3D printing. Hull then founded a company called 3D Systems in Valencia California to take his innovation to market. They sold their first printer, the SLA-1 in 1988. New technologies start out big and expensive. And that was the case with 3D Systems. They initially sold to large engineering companies but when solid-state lasers came along in 1996 they were able to provide better systems for cheaper.  Languages also have other branches. Another branch in 3d printing came in 1987, just before the first SLA-1 was sold.  Carl Deckard  and his academic adviser Joe Beaman at the University of Texas worked on a DARPA grant to experiment with creating physical objects with lasers. They formed a company to take their solution to market called DTM and filed a patent for what they called selective laser sintering. This compacts and hardens a material with a heat source without having to liquify it. So a laser, guided by a computer, can move around a material and harden areas to produce a 3D model. Now in addition to SLA we had a second option, with the release of the Sinterstation 2500plus. Then 3D Systems then acquired DTM for $45 million in 2001. FDM After Hull published his findings for SLA and created the STL format, other standards we use today emerged. FDM is short for Fused Deposition Modeling and was created by Scott Crump in 1989. He then started a company with his wife Lisa to take the product to market, taking the company public in 1994. Crump's first patent expired in 2009.  In addition to FDM, there are other formats and techniques. AeroMat made the first 3D printer that could produce metal in 1997. These use a laser additive manufacturing process, where lasers fuse powdered titanium alloys. Some go the opposite direction and create out of bacteria or tissue. That began in 1999, when Wake Forest Institute of Regenerative medicine grew a 3D printed urinary bladder in a lab to be used as a transplant. We now call this bioprinting and can take tissue and lasers to rebuild damaged organs or even create a new organ. Organs are still in their infancy with success trials on smaller animals like rabbits. Another aspect is printing dinner using cell fibers from cows or other animals. There are a number of types of materials used in 3D printing. Most printers today use a continuous feed of one of these filaments, or small coiled fibers of thermoplastics that melt instead of burn when they're heated up. The most common in use today is PLA, or polylactic acid, is a plastic initially created by Wall Carothers of DuPont, the same person that brought us nylon, neoprene, and other plastic derivatives. It typically melts between 200 and 260 degrees Celsius. Printers can also take ABS filament, which is short for acrylonitrile-butadien-styerene. Other filament types include HIPS, PET, CPE, PVA, and their derivative forms.  Filament is fed into a heated extruder assembly that melts the plastic. Once melted, filament extrudes into place through a nozzle as a motor sends the nozzle on a x and y axis per layer.  Once a layer of plastic is finished being delivered to the areas required to make up the desired slice, the motor moves the extruder assembly up or down on a z axis between layers. Filament is just between 1.75 millimeters and 3 millimeters and comes in spools between half a kilogram and two kilograms. These thermoplastics cool very quickly. Once all of the slices are squirted into place, the print is removed from the bed and the nozzle cools off. Filament comes in a number of colors and styles. For example, wood fibers can be added to filament to get a wood-grained finish. Metal can be added to make prints appear metallic and be part metal.  Printing isn't foolproof, though. Filament often gets jammed or the spool gets stuck, usually when something goes wrong. Filament also needs to be stored in a temperature and moisture controlled location or it can cause jobs to fail. Sometimes the software used to slice the .stl file has an incorrect setting, like the wrong size of filament. But in general, 3D printing using the FDM format is pretty straight forward these days. Yet this is technology that should have moved faster in terms of adoption. The past 10 years have seen more progress than the previous ten though. Primarily due to the maker community. Enter the Makers The FDM patent expired in 2009. In 2005, a few years before the FDM patent expired, Dr. Adrian Bowyer started a project to bring inexpensive 3D printers to labs and homes around the world. That project evolved into what we now call the Replicating Rapid Prototyper, or RepRap for short.  RepRap evolved into an open source concept to create self-replicating 3D printers and by 2008, the Darwin printer was the first printer to use RepRap. As a community started to form, more collaborators designed more parts. Some were custom parts to improve the performance of the printer, or replicate the printer to become other printers. Others held the computing mechanisms in place. Some even wrote code to make the printer able to boot off a MicroSD card and then added a network interface so files could be uploaded to the printer wirelessly. There was a rising tide of printers. People were reading about what 3D printers were doing and wanted to get involved. There was also a movement in the maker space, so people wanted to make things themselves. There was a craft to it. Part of that was wanting to share. Whether that was at a maker space or share ideas and plans and code online. Like the RepRap team had done.  One of those maker spaces was NYC Resistor, founded in 2007. Bre Pettis, Adam Mayer, and Zach Smith from there took some of the work from the RepRap project and had ideas for a few new projects they'd like to start. The first was a site that Zach Smith created called Thingiverse. Bre Pettis joined in and they allowed users to upload .stl files and trade them. It's now the largest site for trading hundreds of thousands of designs to print about anything imaginable. Well, everything except guns. Then comes 2009. The patent for FDM expires and a number of companies respond by launching printers and services. Almost overnight the price for a 3D printer fell from $10,000 to $1,000 and continued to drop. Shapeways had created a company the year before to take files and print them for people. Pettis, Mayer, and Smith from NYC Resistor also founded a company called MakerBot Industries. They'd already made a little bit of a name for themselves with the Thingiverse site. They knew the mind of a maker. And so they decided to make a kit to sell to people that wanted to build their own printers. They sold 3,500 kits in the first couple of years. They had a good brand and knew the people who bought these kinds of devices. So they took venture funding to grow the company. So they raised $10M in funding in 2011 in a round led by the Foundry Group, along with Bezos, RRE, 500 Startups and a few others. They hired and grew fast. Smith left in 2012 and they were getting closer and closer with Stratasys, who if we remember were the original creators of FDM. So Stratasys ended up buying out the company in 2013 for $403M. Sales were disappointing so there was a changeup in leadership, with Pettis leaving and they've become much more about additive manufacturing than a company built to appeal to makers. And yet the opportunity to own that market is still there. This was also an era of Kickstarter campaigns. Plenty of 3D printing companies launched through kickstarter including some to take PLA (a biodegradable filament) and ABS materials to the next level. The ExtrusionBot, the MagicBox, the ProtoPlant, the Protopasta, Mixture, Plybot, Robo3D, Mantis, and so many more.  Meanwhile, 3D printing was in the news. 2011 saw the University of Southhampton design a 3d printed aircraft. Ecologic printing cars, and practically every other car company following suit that they were fabricating prototypes with 3d printers, even full cars that ran. Some on their own, some accidentally when parts are published in .stl files online violating various patents.  Ultimaker was another RepRap company that came out of the early Darwin reviews. Martijn Elserman, Erik de Bruin, and Siert Wijnia who couldn't get the Darwin to work so they designed a new printer and took it to market. After a few iterations, they came up with the Ultimaker 2 and have since been growing and releasing new printers  A few years later, a team of Chinese makers, Jack Chen, Huilin Liu, Jingke Tang, Danjun Ao, and Dr. Shengui Chen took the RepRap designs and started a company to manufacturing (Do It Yourself) kits called Creality. They have maintained the open source manifesto of 3D printing that they inherited from RepRap and developed version after version, even raising over $33M to develop the Ender6 on Kickstarter in 2018, then building a new factory and now have the capacity to ship well over half a million printers a year. The future of 3D Printing We can now buy 3D printing pens, over 170 3D Printer manufacturers including 3D systems, Stratasys, and Ceality but also down-market solutions like Fusion3, Formlabs, Desktop Metal, Prusa, and Voxel8. There's also a RecycleBot concept and additional patents expiring every year.  There is little doubt that at some point, instead of driving to Home Depot to get screws or basic parts, we'll print them. Need a new auger for the snow blower? Just print it. Cover on the weed eater break?  Print it. Need a dracolich mini for the next Dungeons and Dragons game? Print it. Need a new pinky toe. OK, maybe that's a bit far. Or is it? In 2015, Swedish Cellink releases bio-ink made from seaweed and algae, which could be used to print cartilage and later released the INKREDIBLE 3D printer for bio printing. The market in 2020 was valued at $13.78 billion with 2.1 million printers shipped. That's expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 21% for the next few years. But a lot of that is healthcare, automotive, aerospace, and prototyping still. Apple made the personal computer simple and elegant. But no Apple has emerged for 3D printing. Instead it still feels like the Apple II era, where there are 3D printers in a lot of schools and many offer classes on generating files and printing.  3D printers are certainly great for prototypers and additive manufacturing. They're great for hobbyists, which we call makers these days. But there will be a time when there is a printer in most homes, the way we have electricity, televisions, phones, and other critical technologies. But there are a few things that have to happen first, to make the printers easier to use. These include: Every printer needs to automatically level. This is one of the biggest reasons jobs fail and new users become frustrated. More consistent filament. Spools are still all just a little bit different. Printers need sensors in the extruder that detect if a job should be paused because the filament is jammed, humid, or caught. This adds the ability to potentially resume print jobs and waste less filament and time. Automated slicing in the printer microcode that senses the filament and slices. Better system boards (e.g. there's a tool called Klipper that moves the math from the system board on a Creality Ender 3 to a Raspberry Pi). Cameras on the printer should watch jobs and use TinyML to determine if they are going to fail as early as possible to halt printing so it can start over. Most of the consumer solutions don't have great support. Maybe users are limited to calling a place in a foreign country where support hours don't make sense for them or maybe the products are just too much of a hacker/maker/hobbyist solution. There needs to be an option for color printing. This could be a really expensive sprayer or ink like inkjet printers use at first We love to paint minis we make for Dungeons and Dragons but could get amazingly accurate resolutions to create amazing things with automated coloring.  For a real game changer, the RecycleBot concept needs to be merged with the printer. Imagine if we dropped our plastics into a recycling bin that 3D printers of the world used to create filament. This would help reduce the amount of plastics used in the world in general. And when combined with less moving around of cheap plastic goods that could be printed at home, this also means less energy consumed by transporting goods. The 3D printing technology is still a generation or two away from getting truly mass-marketed. Most hobbyists don't necessarily think of building an elegant, easy-to-use solution because they are so experienced it's hard to understand what the barriers of entry are for any old person. But the company who finally manages to crack that nut might just be the next Apple, Microsoft, or Google of the world.

Badass of the Week
Robert Howard: A one man army.

Badass of the Week

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 43:51 Transcription Available


Author Ben Thompson and Professor of History Dr. Pat Larash discuss the most-decorated American soldier of the Vietnam War, First Sergeant Robert Howard, a one-man army who survived 14 wounds and was nominated for the Medal of Honor three different times. His story might not be as well known as those of Sergeant York or Audie Murphy, but his unbelievable exploits battling for his life deep in the jungles of Southeast Asia are no less heroic.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

All Things Aviation & Aerospace
Space Architecture Masters of Science Program University of Houston Cullen College of Engineering, Sasakawa International Center for Space Architecture the Only One of its Kind in the World

All Things Aviation & Aerospace

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2023 35:15


Part 3: There is only one university in the World that offers a Masters of Science graduate degree in Space Architecture. The Cullen College of Engineering, Sasakawa International Center for Space Architecture at the University of Houston. Professor Bannova shared with me everything you need to know about getting an advanced degree in Space Architecture.Dr. Olga Bannova, a Research Professor at the University of Houston's Cullen College of Engineering, is the Director of the world's only Masters of Science in Space Architecture program and Sasakawa International Center for Space Architecture. Dr. Bannova earned her PhD in Architecture and Civil Engineering from Chalmers University of Technology in Goteborg, Sweden.My guests backgrounds:Robert Howard, PhD, is the Habitability Domain Lead in NASA's Habitability and Human Factors Branch and Co-Lead of the Center for Design and Space Architecture at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. He earned Bachelor Degrees from Morehouse College and Georgia Tech; has a Master of Science Degree from North Carolina A&T State University, and received his doctorate from the University of Tennessee Space InstituteClare Luckey works in NASA's Mission Analysis and Integrated Assessments (MAIA), and is a member of the Mars Architecture Team at the Johnson Space Center, Houston. She received her Bachelors of Science in Space Weather Engineering from the University of Michigan and her Masters in Space Architecture from the Cullen College of Engineering at the University of Houston.Dr. Olga Bannova, a Research Professor at the University of Houston's Cullen College of Engineering, is the Director of the world's only Masters of Science in Space Architecture program and Sasakawa International Center for Space Architecture. Dr. Bannova earned her PhD in Architecture and Civil Engineering from Chalmers University of Technology in Goteborg, Sweden.All Things Aviation & Aerospace is an aviation career oriented webcast/podcast providing insight on the variety of opportunities and possibilities in the aviation and aerospace industries. It's host and moderator Vince Mickens, is a long time private pilot who flies frequently for both personal and business. Mickens' background includes 17 years in aviation advocacy executive roles with the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), and the Bob Hoover Legacy Foundation, all after a 28-year broadcast journalism career working in seven major television and radio broadcast markets nationwide.All Things Aviation & Aerospace is also available on my Private Air Media YouTube Channel, Facebook Live Page, and Linkedin Profile.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnAgvYp8gF4w8WSRdU7Dn4whttps://www.facebook.com/privateairmediagrouphttps://www.linkedin.com/in/vincentmickens-privateairmediagroup-allthingsaviationandaerospace/

All Things Aviation & Aerospace
Meet NASA's Clare Luckey, One of the Youngest African American Woman Space Architects and Member of the Mars Architecture Team

All Things Aviation & Aerospace

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2023 38:35


In Part 2 of my 3-part interview series on Space Architecture, I spoke with Ms. Clare Luckey from NASA Johnson Space Center, and a member of the Mission Analysis and Integrated Assessments team, as well as the Mars Architecture Team.In Part 3 will be my conversation with Dr. Olga Bannova from the University of Houston, Cullen College of Engineering.My guests backgrounds:Clare Luckey works in NASA's Mission Analysis and Integrated Assessments (MAIA), and is a member of the Mars Architecture Team at the Johnson Space Center, Houston. She received her Bachelors of Science in Space Weather Engineering from the University of Michigan and her Masters in Space Architecture from the Cullen College of Engineering at the University of Houston.Dr. Olga Bannova, a Research Professor at the University of Houston's Cullen College of Engineering, is the Director of the world's only Masters of Science in Space Architecture program and Sasakawa International Center for Space Architecture. Dr. Bannova earned her PhD in Architecture and Civil Engineering from Chalmers University of Technology in Goteborg, Sweden.Robert Howard, PhD, is the Habitability Domain Lead in NASA's Habitability and Human Factors Branch and Co-Lead of the Center for Design and Space Architecture at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. He earned Bachelor Degrees from Morehouse College and Georgia Tech; has a Master of Science Degree from North Carolina A&T State University, and received his doctorate from the University of Tennessee Space InstituteAll Things Aviation & Aerospace is an aviation career oriented webcast/podcast providing insight on the variety of opportunities and possibilities in the aviation and aerospace industries. It's host and moderator Vince Mickens, is a long time private pilot who flies frequently for both personal and business. Mickens' background includes 17 years in aviation advocacy executive roles with the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), and the Bob Hoover Legacy Foundation, all after a 28-year broadcast journalism career working in seven major television and radio broadcast markets nationwide.All Things Aviation & Aerospace is also available on my Private Air Media YouTube Channel, Facebook Live Page, and Linkedin Profile.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnAgvYp8gF4w8WSRdU7Dn4whttps://www.facebook.com/privateairmediagrouphttps://www.linkedin.com/in/vincentmickens-privateairmediagroup-allthingsaviationandaerospace/

All Things Aviation & Aerospace
What exactly are Space Architects? They design Human Focused Space Habitability, Life Support, and Infrastructure for our NASA Astronauts.

All Things Aviation & Aerospace

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2023 41:20


Becoming a Space Architect is a unique opportunity to be involved in spaceflight habitation design, transport vehicles and systems, and spacesuit design for human space travel. Here are three of NASA's best:Robert Howard, PhD, is the Habitability Domain Lead in NASA's Habitability and Human Factors Branch and Co-Lead of the Center for Design and Space Architecture at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. He earned Bachelor Degrees from Morehouse College and Georgia Tech; has a Master of Science Degree from North Carolina A&T State University, and received his doctorate from the University of Tennessee Space InstituteClare Luckey works in NASA's Mission Analysis and Integrated Assessments (MAIA), and is a member of the Mars Architecture Team at the Johnson Space Center, Houston. She received her Bachelors of Science in Space Weather Engineering from the University of Michigan and her Masters in Space Architecture from the Cullen College of Engineering at the University of Houston.Dr. Olga Bannova, a Research Professor at the University of Houston's Cullen College of Engineering, is the Director of the world's only Masters of Science in Space Architecture program and Sasakawa International Center for Space Architecture. Dr. Bannova earned her PhD in Architecture and Civil Engineering from Chalmers University of Technology in Goteborg, Sweden.All Things Aviation & Aerospace is an aviation career oriented webcast/podcast providing insight on the variety of opportunities and possibilities in the aviation and aerospace industries. It's host and moderator Vince Mickens, is a long time private pilot who flies frequently for both personal and business. Mickens' background includes 17 years in aviation advocacy executive roles with the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), and the Bob Hoover Legacy Foundation, all after a 28-year broadcast journalism career working in seven major television and radio broadcast markets nationwide.All Things Aviation & Aerospace is also available on my Private Air Media YouTube Channel, Facebook Live Page, and Linkedin Profile.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnAgvYp8gF4w8WSRdU7Dn4whttps://www.facebook.com/privateairmediagrouphttps://www.linkedin.com/in/vincentmickens-privateairmediagroup-allthingsaviationandaerospace/

SER Historia
Cronovisor | Robert Howard y la espada de Conan

SER Historia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 32:03


Robert Howard pasa por ser uno de los creadores más grandes de relatos de espada y brujería, un género que él mismo inauguró en sus publicaciones en Weird Tales, la revista estadounidense en donde dio a conocer, entre otros muchos personajes a Conan de Cimeria, Conan el Bárbaro. Robert Howard será el protagonista de nuestro cronovisor

SER Historia
SER Historia | Robert E. Howard, el padre de Conan

SER Historia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 94:40


Robert Howard publicaba sus relatos de fantasía en Weird Tales. En ellos dio a conocer personajes que hoy, más de 100 años después, se han convertido en clásicos del cómic o del cine. Uno de los más populares es Conan el Bárbaro. A Howard hemos dedicado el cronovisor junto a Jesús Callejo. Luego visitamos el Museo Egipcio de Melilla. Lo hacemos junto a Gustavo Cabanillas, su director. Después nos vuelve a visitar Los libros de Candela con la recomendación de libros de nuestra colaboradora más joven. Acabamos el programa visitando el palacio de Liria, casa de los duques de Alba. Álvaro Romero, director cultural de la Fundación Casa de Alba nos hace de guía

The VAUMC Connection
VAUMC Conversations - Mission Volunteers

The VAUMC Connection

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 21:47


Mission Volunteers are individuals or couples (ages 18 and up) who seek more extended partnerships with communities around the world and fund themselves. The length of service ranges from two months to more than two years. We invited Rev. Robert Howard, retired clergy who served as a Mission Volunteer at Birchwood Camp, Alaska. For more information about Mission Volunteers visit https://vaumc.org/missionvolunteer/

FloWrestling Radio Live
FRL 857 - We've Got Probable Iowa & Penn State Starting Lineups

FloWrestling Radio Live

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2022 86:36


Shane Sparks joins the show to talk about what we learned from the recent Tom Brand and Cael Sanderson press conferences. Send in user submissions to 515-509-5071 or FRLsubmissions@flosports.tv! (0:00) Ben has a new music idea (1:15) Christian Carroll to Oklahoma State (4:45) Robert Howard is out for the year, Gary Steen to start at 125 for PSU (8:30) Ben and CP once again argue about how good Beau Bartlett is going to be this year (21:45) Bernie Truax could make history this year (28:10) Jacori Teemer is out for the year (32:10) how much does Lovett redshirting hurt Nebraska? (35:00) what did we learn from Cael Sanderson's press conference? (44:20) what did we learn from Tom Brands' press conference? (56:45) questions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Alimenta Tu Mente
Robert Howard: Cuanto más veo lo que llamas civilización, más pienso en lo que llamas salvajismo

Alimenta Tu Mente

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 5:23


Robert E. Howard fue un escritor estadounidense. Es reconocido por su personaje Conan el Bárbaro y es considerado el padre del subgénero de la espada y la hechicería. Desde los nueve años soñó con convertirse en escritor de ficción de aventuras, pero no tuvo un éxito real hasta los 23. Su mayor éxito se produjo después de su muerte. Hoy, reflexionamos con esta frase:“Cuanto más veo lo que llamas civilización, más pienso en lo que llamas salvajismo.”

Mark 2.0 Podcast
The Blow Monkeys Robert Howard

Mark 2.0 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2022 58:18


Robert Howard of The Blow Monkeys comes on the podcast to talk about his complete life and career in music. He tells stories of his love for music, some of the best live performances including when he played at Royal Albert Hall and other fascinating stories into his life and gives insights into being a musician, the changes in putting out music in this digital age.  He also discusses the latest album Journey To You and their upcoming concerts.Make sure to subscribe to their YouTube Page and check out their website as well as follow them on social media. The Blow Monkeys YouTube channelhttps://www.youtube.com/c/TheBlowMonkeysOfficialThe Blow Monkeys Website https://www.theblowmonkeys.com/The Blow Monkeys Instagram Pagehttps://www.instagram.com/theblowmonkeys/As always we are Mark 2.0 Make sure to subscribe to our YouTube Channel and follow us on all social media platforms just look for our blue moon logo. 

Mientras Tanto en las Historietas
Edgar Rice Burroughs, Robert Howard y Michael Moorcock

Mientras Tanto en las Historietas

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 23:06


En este número hablamos de tres escritores que, también si no se dedicaron directamente  a las historietas, fueron inspiración y modelo para el comic como lo conocemos. 

Total Information AM
FEMA officials in St. Louis

Total Information AM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2022 8:58


FEMA officials are in St. Louis, surveying damage from recent flash floods.  FEMA's Robert Howard joins Tom Ackerman and Carol Daniel to explain their role here.

Gcomics
318 – Fantasía heroica en la historieta

Gcomics

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 54:18


¿Te gustan las novelas de Robert Howard? ¿O el comic de Red Sonja? ¿Y Berserk? En este podcast hablaremos sobre el género fantástico, ahondando en la fantasía heroica, un subgénero que puede ser parecido a otros, pero tiene sus particularidades que los hacen muy interesantes tanto para escribir como para leer. ¡Vamos a conocerlas! ¿Qué […]

Gcomics
318 – Fantasía heroica en la historieta

Gcomics

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 54:18


¿Te gustan las novelas de Robert Howard? ¿O el comic de Red Sonja? ¿Y Berserk? En este podcast hablaremos sobre el género fantástico, ahondando en la fantasía heroica, un subgénero que puede ser parecido a otros, pero tiene sus particularidades que los hacen muy interesantes tanto para escribir como para leer. ¡Vamos a conocerlas! ¿Qué […]

Ironside Podcast
Ep. 53 - What is Best in Life? With Conan, Esq.

Ironside Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 136:06


Conan, Esquire joins me to discuss how and what and when to read, watch, and write things. We talk about some of his favorite stories, the needless divide between nerds and jocks, and the importance of a fully integrated life. We talk about marriage, fatherhood, and finishing our work. We discuss losers like George R. R. Martin and Patrick Rothfuss and winners like J.R.R. Tolkien and Robert Howard. Conan shares his book as well as a preview of his works in progress. Follow him on Twitter @conan_esq Buy his book, "The Turquoise Serpent" at https://www.amazon.com/Turquoise-Serpent-Ashes-Urn-Book-ebook/dp/B088F4KMTZ

Sky Racing Radio's Going Greyhounds
Going Greyhounds with Matt Jackson 26.04.22

Sky Racing Radio's Going Greyhounds

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 24:49


On today's edition of Going Greyhounds Matt Jackson is joined by Steve Kavanagh, Darryl Thomas and Robert Howard.

Books, Beards, Booze
October Short Read!

Books, Beards, Booze

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2021 57:51


These episode the guys talk the latest beard and booze news, and then go into a deep dive of The Scarlet Citadel by Robert Howard.

Books, Beards, Booze
September Short Reads!

Books, Beards, Booze

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2021 44:25


We ran a little late, but here we are! In this episode the guys chat about the latest beard and booze news, sip some rye, and do a deep dive on The Phoenix on the Sword by Robert Howard.

Wrestling History X
Ep 130 - Summerslam 1994

Wrestling History X

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2021 102:00


Ep 130 – Summerslam 1994 “So Hot It's Scary” 0:24 - Welcome 8:58 - Summerslam Opening 9:32– The Million Dollar Corporation (Irwin R Schyster/Bam Bam Bigelow) (w/ “The Million Dollar Man” Ted DiBiase) vs the Headshrinkers (Fatu/Samu) (w/ Afa and Capt Lou Albano) 16:55 - Bull Nakano (w/ Luna Vachon) vs Alundra Blayze for the WWF Women's Championship 22:57– Diesel (w/ Shawn Michaels) vs Razor Ramon (w/ Walter Payton) for the WWF Intercontinental Championship 31:50 – Tatanka vs Lex Luger 35:44 - Jeff Jarrett vs Mabel (w/Oscar) 45:14 - “The King of Harts” Owen Hart vs Bret “The Hitman” Hart in a Cage match for the WWF Championship 1:07:28– The Undertaker (w/ “The Million Dollar Man” Ted DiBIase) vs the Undertaker (w/ Paul Bearer) 1:16:15 - Overall Thoughts 1:24:44 - Smarking It Up 1:35:05 - Making Their Way to the Ring 1:39:19 - Goodbyes Music from this week's show is “Summerslam Opening Theme” by Robert Howard and “Grim Reaper” by Jim Johnston Rate and review us on iTunes, Stitcher, GooglePlay, or wherever you find your podcasts Email – WrestlingHistoryX@gmail.com Twitter – WrestlingHistoX

Prose and Bros
S2: E38 Pulp and Robert E Howard

Prose and Bros

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2021 59:37


What is best in life?  To crush your enemies. See them driven before you. And to drink the fermentations of their hops. Yes, listeners, this week we're talking about Conan the Barbarian, or more specifically the father of Conan, Sword and Sorcery, and a master of the Pulp Genre the one and only Robert E Howard. We talk Texas and the oil life, but all that talking causes a mighty thirst. That's where RAR comes in. In addition to sounding like a dinosaur's roar, this brewery brings us "Pulp!" Not wood pulp, citrus pulp, and we talk Batman and Beer for a bit while rating this brew and author. Grab the pulp of your choice, flex your strong man might, and as always, enjoy.Cheers!

Crime Over Cocktails
Episode 35 - Robert Howard Bruce

Crime Over Cocktails

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 12:24


In this episode of Crime over Cocktails Tiff goes over the case of Robert Howard Bruce. Joy Lynn Martinez thought they were going to have a perfect blended family.  All that changed when she uncovered his secrets. More ways to help support the show: Cash App- $crimeovercocktailss /PayPal- Crimeovercocktailss@gmail.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/crimeovercocktailss)

Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021
#291 Los Muertos no Olvidan de Robert E. Howard

Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2021 24:30


Hola chicos y chicas aquí Doc. El relato que estáis a punto de oír es es otra de las incursiones de Robert Howard en el genero del terror. En Los Muertos no Olvidan, Howard mezcla este genero con uno de los que el prefería escribir, el western. El formato de esa historia es de el de una relación de testimonios en los que se nos cuenta desde varios puntos de vista el suceso que tiene lugar en el mismo, hasta su escalofriante final. Este audio supone el debut como colaborador de Relatos Salvajes de Ramón Lage, director del nuevo podcast de audiolibros y ficciones sonoras "Ramon Lage: El Otro Lado" y al que podréis oír relatando "El Hobbit" de J.R.R, Tolkien, interpretando el solo todas las voces. Ramón, como estáis a punto de comprobar, posee una voz increíble, capaz de transformar como quiere y es para nosotros un placer tenerle con nosotros. Os dejo el enlace a su podcast aquí abajo. https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-ramon-lage-el-otro-lado_sq_f11323099_1.html Participan en este audio: Ramon Lage como James A. Gordon Fernando "Marqués" como John Elston Sergio Murata como Mike O´Donnell Antonio "Darwan" como Agente Grimes Doc como Tom Allison Y Dani Domínguez como el Juez de Instrucción Nos vemos pronto con mas Relatos Salvajes...

Relatos Salvajes
#291 Los Muertos no Olvidan de Robert E. Howard

Relatos Salvajes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2021 24:30


Hola chicos y chicas aquí Doc. El relato que estáis a punto de oír es es otra de las incursiones de Robert Howard en el genero del terror. En Los Muertos no Olvidan, Howard mezcla este genero con uno de los que el prefería escribir, el western. El formato de esa historia es de el de una relación de testimonios en los que se nos cuenta desde varios puntos de vista el suceso que tiene lugar en el mismo, hasta su escalofriante final. Este audio supone el debut como colaborador de Relatos Salvajes de Ramón Lage, director del nuevo podcast de audiolibros y ficciones sonoras "Ramon Lage: El Otro Lado" y al que podréis oír relatando "El Hobbit" de J.R.R, Tolkien, interpretando el solo todas las voces. Ramón, como estáis a punto de comprobar, posee una voz increíble, capaz de transformar como quiere y es para nosotros un placer tenerle con nosotros. Os dejo el enlace a su podcast aquí abajo. https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-ramon-lage-el-otro-lado_sq_f11323099_1.html Participan en este audio: Ramon Lage como James A. Gordon Fernando "Marqués" como John Elston Sergio Murata como Mike O´Donnell Antonio "Darwan" como Agente Grimes Doc como Tom Allison Y Dani Domínguez como el Juez de Instrucción Nos vemos pronto con mas Relatos Salvajes... Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals

The Hydrogen Podcast
A Misleading Report On Hydrogen Viability From The Guardian Has To Be Set Straight. Also, An Interesting Development Leads To $600 Million Worth Of Potential Hydrogen Projects.

The Hydrogen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2021 8:17 Transcription Available


Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!In episode 038, Wood is looking to develop $600 million worth of potential hydrogen projects. And I take issue with an article from the guardian. All of this on today's hydrogen podcast. Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. Respectfully,Paul RoddenVISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITEhttps://thehydrogenpodcast.comCHECK OUT OUR BLOGhttps://thehydrogenpodcast.com/blog/WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? Send us an email to: info@thehydrogenpodcast.comNEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen

So I'm Writing a Novel...
Ep8 Language & Race in Speculative Fiction

So I'm Writing a Novel...

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2021 47:30


Oliver gets into universal translators and "The Common Tongue", Robert Howard's prose, reads a few cool paragraphs by Howard and a handful of his S&S contemporaries, gets into writing while not being entirely aware of the precise terminology for the techniques you're using, our old friend racism, and doing your best to avoid the inherent potholes in representing large groups as separate species instead of simply humans with a different culture. In the listener question segment Oliver answers a request for details on how many short stories will make up Untitled Sword & Sorcery Novel and how much variety there will be between them in length & tone. And here's, as promised in the episode, a link to where you can read The Dark Eidolon by Clark Ashton Smith for free. www.soimwritinganovel.com PATREON: www.patreon.com/soimwritinganovel BUY OLIVER'S BOOKS: https://www.oliverbrackenbury.com/store SO I'M WRITING A NOVEL... TWITTER: https://twitter.com/so_writing OLIVER'S TWITTER: https://twitter.com/obrackenbury Oliver's Link Tree (For everything else): https://linktr.ee/obrackenbury

Relatos Salvajes
#286 La Piedra Negra Robert E. Howard (Seleccion Salvaje)

Relatos Salvajes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 53:05


Esta fué una de las escasas intervenciones de Robert Howard en el Horror Cósmico, subgenero que segun el "no era precisamente su punto fuerte". Así, sin saberlo, Howard escribió uno de los mejores relatos de los Mitos de Cthulhu, que mejorando al maestro de Providence, se hayan escrito jamas. Dense un paseo a la luz de la luna por un bosque centro europeo de la mano de Howard y sean testigos de los horrores de la Piedra Negra. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Murder of Arlene Arkinson

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2021 7:26


Barry Cummins discusses the background to the murder of Arlene Arkinson by Robert Howard

murder robert howard barry cummins
ReconCinemation
Conan the Barbarian

ReconCinemation

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2021 100:37


This week, the bad boys of podcasting travel back in time to the Hyborian Age as they search for the Riddle of Steel with a look back at 1982's CONAN THE BARBARIAN in their Season 3 finale!  There's much to discuss as Jon, David & Brent welcome Arnold Schwarzenegger back to the show! From Arnold's rise to prominence to John Milius's journey to the film to the creation of Conan in Robert Howard's early writings to the resurgence in the 1970's to Frank Frazetta's amazing artwork to the development of the film itself! Plus, a look into how Oliver Stone plays in, the depiction of violence in the film, James Earl Jones's status at this time, the reaction upon release, early memories of the film, how it holds up today & so much more! Thief. Warrior. Gladiator. King. Podcaster... it's CONAN THE BARBARIAN! Twitter/IG: @reconcinemation facebook.com/reconcinemation Cover and Episode Art by Curtis Moore (IG: curt986) Theme by E.K. Wimmer (ekwimmer.com)

Pêssego Podcasts
Pêssego Entrevista - Marco Antônio Collares (Fórum Conan)

Pêssego Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 71:56


Olá cães hiborianos! Episódio dessa semana está muito especial, pois todos sabem que sempre fico feliz em falar de Conan. Agora imagina conversar com um pesquisador acadêmico especialista em Conan de Robert E. Howard?

 No episódio dessa semana Marco Antônio Collares, integrante do Fórum Conan, conta como conheceu o personagem, como levou a espada e feitiçaria para sua vida acadêmica, fala do Seu livro publicado (Civilização e Barbárie em Conan de Robert Howard), e claro, fala de todos os trabalhos lançados no Fórum. 
 Curtiu o papo? Gosta de Conan? Deixe ai seu comentário, considerações, pois é muito importante. 

   Confira:


Gcomics
157 – Conan el Bárbaro

Gcomics

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2018 66:57


Hablamos de Conan el Bárbaro, un personaje que surgió en la literatura pulp con Robert Howard y luego se expandió a la historieta con “La Reina de la Costa Negra” y llegó a Marvel Comics de la mano de Barry Windsor-Smith, Roy Thomas y John Buscema entre otros grandes dibujantes. ¡Clic para leer!

CobraCast Podcast with Bobby Sharron
#55 Derek Davis, Robert Howard and Rick Ciampi from "Dongle"

CobraCast Podcast with Bobby Sharron

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2017 144:20


What can I say about this homerun of an episode??... Derek Davis, Robert Howard and Rick Ciampi from Austin's own "Dongle" join me in the studio... For what has to be one of the most fun episodes yet... If you're looking to learn a little about what's going on in the Austin music scene plus laugh your ass off along the way, this is your episode... I had a blast with these guys and for sure they will be back at some point for a part 2.... Much Love ;)