William Gibson, author of "Zero History
Tagged with x_ref125mc
Also huffduffed as…
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William Gibson, author of Zero History: Interview on The Sound of Young America
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William Gibson, author of "Zero History
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William Gibson, author of “Zero History”;: Interview on The Sound of Young America
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William Gibson, author of Zero History: Interview on The Sound of Young America
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William Gibson, author of "Zero History
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William Gibson, author of "Zero History": Interview on The Sound of Young America | Maximum Fun
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William Gibson, author of "Zero History
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William Gibson, author of "Zero History": Interview on The Sound of Young America | Maximum Fun
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William Gibson, author of "Zero History
Possibly related…
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Stross-Krugman 2009-08-06.mp3
"At the Science Fiction World Convention in Montreal, Hugo Award winning author Charlie Stross and Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman opened the show with a 75-minute, wide-ranging conversation on stage. From flying cars to decoding the genome of the Pacific Ocean to vat-grown Long Pig, it’s all there"
Anticipation World Con, Montreal, Quebec August 6, 2009
From http://cluebytwelve.net/anticipation/ (via http://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/09/08/11/0211257/Charlie-Stross-Paul-Krugman-Discuss-the-Future)
Tagged with charles stross paul krugman future science fiction x_ref125mc
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Phonautogram
USED TO TEACH a Mass Communications module in our creative multimedia curriculum that credited Thomas Alva Edison with making the spoken words "Mary had a little lamb" into the first recording. In several of our textbooks, Thomas Edison holds the title of "father of recorded sound". This academic term, a French student pointed to the 10-second recording of a singer crooning the folk song "Au Clair de la Lune" from an archive in Paris. A group of American audio historians believes the recording was made on 9 April 1860, on a phonautograph, a machine designed to record sounds visually, not to play them back. But the phonautograph recording, or phonautogram, was made playable when scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory converted the squiggles on paper to sound.
Tagged with x_ref125mc history audio
