A weekly talk show about technology, science, and human creativity that excites, educates, and fosters curiosity. Discussions touch upon how technology affects society and how we react to that change. Hosts are passionate about explaining complex concepts in simple, easy to digest, chunks. We bridge the gaps between Geeks and the rest of humanity.
Large Language Models and Human Minds
Most people say LLM are just language prediction systems… but how do human minds work comparatively? Can ChatGPT think, understand, or comprehend? Can you?
It’s been a while since Ben, Brian, and Lyle geeked out… join us.Sparks of Artificial General Intelligence: Early experiments with GPT-4 - Microsoft Research
6/6/2023 • 1 hour, 25 minutes, 55 seconds
Tech News and Non Woo Meditation
NFT insider trading, tech experts urge to resist Crypto industry influences, larges plant is a Sea Grass in Australia, Safari is popular, Microsoft Excel reduces remote data types – and Lyle’s hot take on meditation.U.S. charges OpenSea ex-employee in first NFT insider trading case | ReutersTech Experts Urge Washington To Resist Crypto Industry's Influence - SlashdotThe World's Largest Plant Is a Self-Cloning Sea Grass in Australia - SlashdotNew data shows only two browsers with more than 1 billion users | Ars TechnicaMicrosoft is killing Money in Excel along with Wolfram Alpha data typesSamsung To Close LCD Business - SlashdotQuestion your Perception episode with Ben Jaffe on Lunch with LyleMuller-Lyer Illusion: Optical Illusions in PsychologyThe True Purpose of Mindfulness
6/1/2022 • 28 minutes, 18 seconds
Delegate, Automate, Concentrate
Quincy Larson is founder and CEO of the non-profit software school freeCodeCamp, where anyone can go and lear to program for free. Quincy is making real change in the world.
This episode was recorded for my podcast Lunch with LyleQuincy mentioned two corses on freeCodeCamp
Learn Responsive Web Design by Building 20 Projects
Relational Database Course
1/19/2022 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 8 seconds
The Software Arts: Algorithm - Arithmetic
Professor Warren Sack joins me to speak about the history of Algorithm, including Donald Knuth – Art of Computer Programing, Five Axioms of Algorithms, and When Computers Were Human.
This is Part 1 of 2 on Algorithm.
1/4/2022 • 52 minutes, 43 seconds
Lasers for listening and seeing, music production, and recycling
In this non-edited episode of GeekSpeak Lyle calls Ben impromptu to chat about using lasers for listening to rooms remotely, lasers being used to view into rooms, Ben’s recent focus on Music Production, and finally a story about California being better about communicating recycling possibilities on packaging.NLOS Keyhole Imaging Can See Inside a Closed RoomBen Here (Ben Jaffe's music)Recycling symbol can’t appear on non-recyclable items, California bill says | Ars TechnicaGary Anderson - the creation of the "chasing arrows" Recycling symbol (pdf)This Episode as Video on YouTube
9/16/2021 • 37 minutes, 23 seconds
Internal Company Podcasts, Some Thoughts
Due to the popularity of the WeAreNetflix podcast I am contacted a bit about my thoughts on company podcasts. The WeAreNetflix podcast started off based on an internal only podcast that Michael Paulson and I started as a hack-day project.
This episode is 20min of me talking about company internal podcasts. Feel free to ask me questions about this episode on twitter. -@lyleLower Street - an example podcast providerOne example of a company providing Private Podcast support – I have no affiliation.
Blog Building an Internal Company Podcast
Create, Publish, Host & Secure Your Private Podcast | Lower Street
How To Launch A Private Podcast With Exclusive AccessEpisode with Michael Paulson - Engineering FlatBuffers Programing sans JSONWeAreNetflix Podcast
1/27/2021 • 22 minutes, 51 seconds
Wildfire-Caused Water Contamination
The San Lorenzo Valley in Santa Cruz County has a partial Do Not Drink / Do Not Boil order in affect: is that order appropriate, what causes Wildfire water contamination, and what are good actions we as a community can take?
Our guest is Andrew J Whelton, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering and Environmental and Ecological Engineering at Purdue University.
Professor Whelton has studied two other Wildfires in California with water contamination and has some thoughts on our situation for the #CZULightningComplexTopics by Time13:49 Water Utility vs State Responsibility
22:28 Can you smell VOCs
24:07 Danger Long Term vs Acute
25:11 Stuck in the Pipes?
26:28 SVOCs
27:18 Can we just flush the system?
29:47 If you lived here…
31:00 Activate Mutual Aid
31:47 Testing Issues – UCSC help?
34:13 When would you be less concerned
36:49 What changes should we make?
39:15 California level issue?
43:20 Take Aways
44:24 Home Water TreatmentWildfire caused widespread drinking water distribution network contamination - Proctor - 2020 - AWWA Water Science - Wiley Online LibrarySan Lorenzo Valley Water DistrictFire Response, How You Can Help – Community Foundation Santa Cruz CountyListener Miles Z made some notes while listening - here they are:In case of doubt, consult the interview, as I am not an expert. The notes are about in the same order as the interview. =miles=
Contamination and Testing/Monitoring
The state (CA) only requires the water district to test at the source of the water, i.e. where they start pumping it into the distribution system. The rest (downstream testing) is up to the water district.
Contamination can come from multiple sources, including backflow when the system becomes depressurized and air contaminated with smoke leaks into the pipes. It can also result from homes that were equipped with plastic pipes that burned. As well as the pipes we know about that burned, i.e. the 5 miles of HDPE pipe through the forest.
The monitoring tests that the water district routinely runs downstream are limited to only particular VOC’s (Volatile Organic Compounds) and are targeted at only those that might be produced by adding chlorine to the system. These less stringent tests are for THM’s (trihalomethanes) which are a form of VOC.
These tests are not adequate to certify the safety of water possibly contaminated from a fire (as described above).
In the Paradise fire, the State refused to take ultimate responsibility for certifying that the water is safe, saying it was up to the local district to do so. (but there are ways the district can reach out for qualified help, discussed below) It is unclear whether or not SLVWD realizes this yet.
Additionally, he said “there is nuance” regarding these DND/DNB orders, which I think means that experts disagree on what exactly they mean. (ndlr: good luck with that!)
“You have to test fast.” The 7-day turnaround and only 40 samples are woefully inadequate. They should be getting results within a day by utilizing more labs. Apparently the number of laboratories used is a key bottleneck.
VOC’s and SVOC’s
Benzene can come from burning brush or trees. This VOC (and others) prefer to be airborne, so washing vegetables or taking a shower could release them. Quantities that are toxic may be odorless, so don’t count on being able to detect them by smell.
Multiple contaminants can interact, which is one reason why thorough and rapid testing is essential.
SVOC’s (Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds) are larger and heavier, so they tend to stay in the water. They also collect in the body in fatty tissue, so the acceptable limits for safe exposure are lower than those for VOC’s.
Both VOC’s and SVOC’s can work their way into plastic pipes, so they are hard to get rid of. That’s not a problem with metal, but metal is more expensive.
The Water District can reach out for help
SLVWD can and should call in other agencies for “mutual aid” as the fire and PG&E crews are doing.
They really need to be taking 100-300 samples per week, and use multiple laboratories for effective turnaround. The current turnaround of 7 days is way too long.
The equipment required is a GCMS system (Gas Chromatograph Mass Spectrometer). UCSC probably has them, but (a) not the funding (which might be able to come from FEMA) and (b) are probably not certified by the state, though they still could be useful for preliminary results.
The current 40 samples will not be representative, and the conditions of the water can change at any time. Contaminants can flow from one place to another within the system.
Note that the State is responsible for providing emergency water if the local district cannot in an emergency.
Home Water Treatment
It’s possible to install a water treatment system for your own home. In general, this is not the best way to deal with the VOC/SVOC contamination for several reasons.
There is no official certification for these systems, and the company that sells them will typically run only a single test (for $250-300) which means they could easily misestimate the amount of actual contamination. This has actually happened in Paradise.
So what happens is that your insurance pays for it, then they’re done. So if it turns out the system is inadequate, you are on your own. In other words, the financial incentive is designed to create a potentially hazardous situation.
It’s much better for the water district to handle everything.
One measure Paradise implemented was requiring new homes to have backflow check valves (at $3000-$4000 a piece). Sometimes FEMA money can pay for these.
9/7/2020 • 53 minutes, 9 seconds
20 Years of Ubiquitous Rust
Dedi finds a wifi solution they like, Greg is on the road for the first time since the pandemic, Miles is playing with Rust, and Lyle is happy to have the Geeks virtually together to celebrate 20 years of hosting the show.Amplifi vs UnifiMTV Cribs: Quarantine editionSketchupBlenderActix, the Rust Web FrameworkWeb Framework BenchmarksGo, The Programming LanguageWaze Reports: Cloudy with a Chance of Pananoiae3 and Star WarsHome Networking - Ubiquiti EdgeRouter X
8/18/2020 • 57 minutes, 28 seconds
Motivations of Podcasting and Fretless Instruments
Ben Jaffe deciding to end his fantastic podcast Linear Digressions, Lyle celebrating 20 years hosting GeekSpeak, and geeking out on playing instruments that do not have “frets” like the Cello and Trombone.
8/11/2020 • 48 minutes, 18 seconds
Vacation with Chainsaws, Motors, and Glasses
My vacation included fixing motors, accepting glasses, and milling redwood with chainsaws.My Replacement Fan MotorThermal Fuse CutoffNew Thermostat Switch with "Firestat"Milling RedwoodHere are some pix from our milling.
The Logs:
Me with my orange cap and our family friend Jack.
My wife Maggi finishing a log:
Samples of what we are making:
I have GlassesHere I am with new readers…. and a great scotch, I mean it was still vacation!
7/16/2020 • 25 minutes, 24 seconds
The Software Arts: Language
Warren Sack is back for a conversation of the Natural and Institutional Language from the French Encyclopédistes, touching on The Wealth of Nations, Babbage, Lovelace, Donald Knuth, Information Theory, Work vs Work, James Prescott Joule, Functions & Operations and much more.
Learn why the true language of Software is not Physics.
5/24/2020 • 53 minutes, 39 seconds
Highschool Social Software Usage
On this episode Lyle interviews his daughter Gwendolyn about the social software she uses in High School – iMessage, Instagram, SnapChat, TikTok.
And they play with Lyle’s new RodeCASTER Pro.Rode RODECaster Pro Integrated Podcast Production Studio RCP B&HAll possible pythagorean triples, visualized - YouTubeCat puts paw in water and freaks out funny vine - YouTubeThe SnapChat video we record during this episode.
3/20/2020 • 40 minutes, 46 seconds
Elevating fears of Dropping Thoughts over Time
Ben and Lyle chat about elevators, the fear of dropping things, Podcasting, how we experience thoughts, drawing, learning, music, meditation, Time Tracking, Theme:Focus, Memory and being Present.Are you a 1,2,3,4 or 5 in this apple visualization exercise?Toggl - Free Time Tracking SoftwareQbserve app - Mac Time Tracking and Productivity Improvement
2/21/2020 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 5 seconds
Translation: The Software Arts (chapter 2)
What does it mean to implement “hailing a cab” in software and how does this new translation stack up to the existing institution?
Discussions based around “The Software Arts: Chapter 2”, "Translation"with the author Warren Sack.
We talk about the differences of the humanities understanding of translation where meaning is lost, created, or changed, and compare it with the software concepts of perfect translation like compiling code.
Make sure to check out Part 1.Francis Bacon - WikipediaHistory of calculus - WikiquoteLudwig Wittgenstein - WikipediaSoftware is not problem solving...
What I am saying is that software is an art and a form of design. Where you don’t necessarily know what the problem is.
Narrative IntelligenceIn the after-show Warren mentions a chapter he pulled from the book about narrative.. here is a paper and talk on the subject:
Narrative Intelligence
JS.everywhere(2013): Warren Sack – JS in Research – YouTube
1/6/2020 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 41 seconds
Introduction to The Software Arts
This episode kicks off a limited series of discussions with Warren Sack centered around his book The Software Arts, MIT Press, forward by John Rajchman
The Software Arts offers an alternative history of software that places the liberal arts at the very center of software’s evolution.Join us in this discussion...Warren’s book is available from MIT Press – grab a copy and enjoy a multi-episode virtual book club with me and the author. We plan to release an episode for each chapter:
Introduction (this episode)
Translation
Language
Algorithm
Logic
Rhetoric
Grammar
Conclusion
Reading along is not necessary to enjoy this series or episodes. And feel free to give us feedback and ask questions. Please contact us via Twitter: @WarrenSack, @Lyle.Where are the numbers? - Tracy ChouEric A. HavelockMarshall McLuhan
10/24/2019 • 39 minutes, 49 seconds
Micro Extensions Expand State of Emergency
MicroLEDs, Google Chrome Extensions are more private, macOS is locking things down, Expanse and other shows we are watching, and a post show covering wonderfully geeky PostGraphile.MicroLED Displays Could Show Up in Products as Soon as 2020Lyle Surgery UpdateGoogle to Minimize the Data Collected by Chrome ExtensionsmacOS Lockdown and merging with iOSExpanse fans, no need to worry—Amazon orders season 5 of its new sci-fi showWe’ve got our first peek at S4 of The Expanse and an airdate: December 13Louisiana declares state of emergency in response to ransomware attackIs the Phone DeadGraphile | Powerful, Extensible and Performant GraphQL APIs Rapidly
8/27/2019 • 1 hour, 35 minutes, 32 seconds
Simplecast - Podcasting and Business Development
Brad Smith (@brad), the founder and CEO of Simplecast, talks with me about the creation of Simplecast from initial musings to venture capital infused growth, and building partnerships. Brad is also an expert on the podcasting landscape and walks us through some wonderful changes that Apple and Google have recently made that should help the podcasting community.
And, of course, this wouldn’t be GeekSpeak if we didn’t get technical – Brad is a geek and is proud of it.Podcast Hosting, Distribution & Analytics - SimplecastPodnews podcasting newsGoogle Podcasts rolling out to desktop, iOS in Google Search - 9to5GoogleLyle's Setup for Podcasting
7/30/2019 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 22 seconds
Lyle's Back Surgery and Podcasting Conversations
Lyle Troxell and Ben Jaffe about the current state of the Geek Speak podcast, conversation styles, and Lyle’s L5 S1 Back Surgery Fusion with instrumentation.
6/30/2019 • 45 minutes, 5 seconds
Oruk-hai's Eugenics Star Trek in 1996
New Geek Rich Zurad joins Ben and Lyle to cover the JRR universe badly, the Star Wars vs Star Trek argument, cover some of the podcasts they like, and their pet health problems.This gravity-powered battery could be the future of energy storage - Archpaper.com
5/25/2019 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 24 seconds
Lyle Update from Amsterdam
For the Netflix podcast I did a quick jaunt to Amsterdam – here is an audio-blog type entry of my time there – Lyle.Lyle's Photos Amsterdam - Kinda over-doing it.BanksyLaugh now - Moco MuseumYayoi Kusama - Moco MuseumExit Through the Gift Shop (2010) - IMDb
5/17/2019 • 12 minutes, 58 seconds
Ben Joins Netflix
Ben Jaffe and Lyle Troxell talk about the culture at Facebook and at Netflix and about vulnerability at work.
Lyle tells a story about doing a branching talk about branching narratives. A quick chat about Star Trek Next Generation and even Ben’s broken dryer.Bandersnatch - Branching Narrative Black Mirror EpisodePuss In Book - Branching Narrative TitleWhy Netflix move away from the 5 StarsBrené Brown and Vernā Myers Discuss Inclusion and Diversity
4/24/2019 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 58 seconds
Web Auth; Predicting Wind; Anti-Vax Videos
Wind prediction with AI, Anti-Vax movies pulled from Amazon Prime, Web Authn, and Home Automation and the cloud.Alphabet Subsidiary Trained AI to Predict Wind Output 36 Hours in AdvanceAmazon Removes Anti-Vaccine Content After CNN Business ReportW3C Approves WebAuthn, Web Standard for Password-Free Logins
3/22/2019 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 16 seconds
Software: Android, Ruby, ORM, & Podcasting
Miles and Lyle chat about software development esp. about Ruby and ORMs which leads to a bit about the GeekSpeak Rails website, podcast chapter marks, recording podcasting, including hardware and budgets. A bit of inside baseball.Kotlin and AndroidRuby Programming LanguageObject-relational impedance mismatchDjango and a Better ORMID3
3/9/2019 • 50 minutes, 47 seconds
Fake Images Undergo Existential Crisis
Generative Adversarial Networks are a pattern of Machine Learning that can do some amazing things – in this episode we chat about them effecting our concepts of truth.
And we include an episode of Linear Digressions from Ben and Katie to really explain how GANs really work.This Person Does Not Exist Is the Best One-Off Website of 2019How to recognize fake AI-generated imagesNeural Nets Play Cops and Robbers (aka generative adversarial networks) — Linear Digressions
3/1/2019 • 41 minutes, 32 seconds
Updating Broken Laptops with Bad Languages
Miles walks us through buying a used 2015 MacBook Pro and upgrading it with a better hard drive. And we talk programing languages: Kotlin, Swift, Groovy, Java, Python and more.
It’s a programing rich episode of GeekSpeak.Netflix Takes Broadband to the Broken ScreenNGFF M.2 nVME SSD Adapter CardMultiplatform Project: iOS and Android - Kotlin Programming LanguageWhy has the Groovy programming language lost its momentum? - Quorattfkam/pg_gnufind: GNU find output as PostgreSQL foreign tables (multicorn)
2/23/2019 • 39 minutes, 7 seconds
Hacking NES Across Kazakhstan for Better Netflix
Software engineer and “I’ll show it to you at hackday… chap”, Guy Cirino joins Lyle for a chat about hacking at Netflix, driving across Asia, high energy particle physics at CERN, and improving streaming video better for everyone.Netflix Stream Possible VideoNetflix Hack Day — Winter 2015 – Netflix TechBlog – MediumGeekSpeak About AR Tech: Martian Telescope Senses Wrecked TeslasGeekSpeak Episode: Engineering FlatBuffers Programing sans JSONTeleFlix - Full Blog PostThe real Hawkins National Labs from Stranger Things - BNL, the g-2 experimentScintillator - WikipediaCMS | CERNSuperconducting Super Collider - WikipediaMongol Rally - WikipediaThe Magic Modem: A Global Network Emulator – @ScaleBlog of Some Guy14quick.org - Final Fantasy 14 Done Quick for CharityWhat Is Extra Life? | Extra LifeFINAL FANTASY XIVExtra Life 2018 Live from Netflix HQ! - YouTubeGeekSpeak Episode: Ready Player OneFree Code Camp with Quincy LarsonRaspberry Pi Zero W - Raspberry PiTexas Instruments TI-99/4A - WikipediaNES Processor -> CPU - Nesdev wikiApplesoft BASIC Programming Reference Manual - Apple Computer : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
1/9/2019 • 1 hour, 34 minutes, 55 seconds
Computational Medicine
UCLA Health technical project manager Robert Smith joins for a discussion on the state of personalized medicine and computational medicine.
The goal of personal genomics is to move toward being able to interpret each person’s individual genetic sequence, and predict it’s effect on their bodies and health.Preoperative predictions of in-hospital mortality using electronic medical record data | bioRxivLarge-scale transcriptome-wide association study identifies new prostate cancer risk regions | Nature Communications