This podcast is a platform for different folks from the DIY science movement to tell their stories and talk about their diverse projects, motivations, and their local communities.
Date | Title & Description | Contributors |
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2018-11-14 |
Ariane Krause on appropriate technology, compost toilets, and bridging practice, research and policy For this edition we spoke to Ariane Krause, engineer, researcher, and founding member of KAnTe (Kollektiv für Angepasste Technik - in English, “Collective for Appropriate Technology”) about their work around sustainable technologies. Focusing primarily... |
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2018-09-25 |
Hacking the wild: Tasneem Kahn & Andy Quitmeyer putting science in local context Lucy reports back from her trip to Dinacon – the “digital naturalism conference” – where she spoke to organisers, Tasneem Kahn and Andy Quitmeyer, about why they brought 120 interdisciplinary artists, scientists and hackers to a small island in Thailan... |
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2018-06-11 | Open Science is a concept understood very differently by those taking part in it. Institutions and administrations focus on funding for publications, researches care about open access to their publications and the public wants to be an integral part of... |
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2018-02-27 |
Kat Austen on DIY science, art practice, and creating empathy with the environment Kat Austen combines art and science as an independent artist and researcher. Deeply concerned with environmental issues, she started out as an academic chemist, but now combines artistic research, installations, workshops and performances to inspire em... |
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2018-01-27 | Winnie Poncelet is the co-founder of ReaGent and Magma Nova, among others, in Gent Belgium. For the last years Winnie worked with a growing community of biohackers and found interesting ways of being productive, research different topics and become goo... |
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2017-12-30 | The work of the Environmental Data & Governance Initiative presented by activist Dawn Walker |
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