Patented: History of Inventions – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Patented: History of Inventions
History Hit
Fréquence : 1 épisode/4j. Total Éps: 164

This podcast investigates the curious history of invention and innovation. Did Thomas Edison take credit for things he didn’t actually invent? What everyday items have surprising origins? And would man have ever got to the moon without… the bra?
Each episode host Dallas Campbell dives into stories of flukey discoveries, erased individuals and merky marketing ploys with the help of experts, scientists and historians.
Expect new episodes every Wednesday and Sunday.
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Things vs. Humans: the spiteful behaviour of inanimate objects
Épisode 158
mercredi 27 septembre 2023 • Durée 30:26
If you can never connect to a printer, if furniture jumps out to stub your toe, if when you do the dishes the water jumps out the sink to soak you - then you are victim of the inanimate malice of things.
The belief that all things are essentially out to get us us has a name - Resistentialism. This is a theory created by columnist Paul Jennings. On one level it's clearly a joke, on another level though he was convinced of its truth. Dallas, a man who has spent a lifetime celebrating tech, agrees.
Paul's daughter joined Dallas to help explain her father's theory about the spiteful behaviour of inanimate objects. Les choses sont contre nous.
Produced by Charlotte Long and Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long
Get 50% off your first 3 months with code PATENTED. Download the app on your smart TV or in the app store or sign up at historyhit.com/subscribe
First Ever Submarine
Épisode 157
dimanche 24 septembre 2023 • Durée 39:38
400 years ago on the River Thames a mad genius showed off the world's first submarine. A crowd of thousands including King James watched as Cornelis Drebbel disappeared beneath the murky water, only reemerging after three whole hours had passed.
The same genius also came up with perpetual motion machines, self-regulating ovens, chemical air conditioning for Westminster Cathedral, and a project to provide central heating for all of London by building a perpetual fire on a hill outside the city, transporting the flames in pipes to people's houses.
Elon Musk eat your heart out.
Dallas's guest today is the amazing Vera Keller, historian of technology and author of a new book "The Interlopers: Early Stuart Projects and the Undisciplining of Knowledge"
Edited by Tom Delargy, Produced by Freddy Chick, Senior Producer is Charlotte Long
Get 50% off your first 3 months with code PATENTED. Download the app on your smart TV or in the app store or sign up at historyhit.com/subscribe
Nanotechnology
Épisode 148
mercredi 23 août 2023 • Durée 48:58
Nanotechnology may seem like something from a sci-fi movie plot, but it’s a very real thing and has likely affected many areas of your life, whether you realise it, or not.
Nanotechnology looks at dimension and tolerances of less than 100 nanometers. For context, hair follicles or a sheet of paper are 100,000 nanometers thick. So, pretty small…
But what is it? How are scientists changing our lives with it? And why was King Charles III famously afraid of it?
Dallas Campbell is joined by nanochemist Suze Kundu to find out more.
Discover the past on History Hit with ad-free original podcasts and documentaries released weekly presented by world renowned historians like Dan Snow, James Holland, Mary Beard and more.
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Recorded Sound
Épisode 58
mercredi 5 octobre 2022 • Durée 36:50
From talking sponges to voices frozen in ice, the history of recorded sound is not what you expect.
People fantasised about being able to record sound long before it was possible. We begin by hearing a few of the most remarkable ways that were dreamt up. Then we meet the first person ever to record sound. *Spoiler alert* it wasn’t Thomas Edison.
Our guests for this episode are Will Sutton, author of the Campbell Lawless series of Victorian mystery novels, and Patrick Feaster who is part of a small team of people who discovered and brought back to life the earliest ever sound recording.
Produced by Freddy Chick
Sound Design by Thomas Ntinas
Executive Producer is Charlotte Long
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FORENSICS: Lie Detectors
Épisode 57
dimanche 2 octobre 2022 • Durée 30:48
What does Wonder Woman have to do with the invention of the lie detector? Does refusing to yank a donkey’s tail make you a liar? Is it folly to believe that a machine can ever peer inside the human mind?
The invention of the lie detector is a strange story full of eccentric characters, fascinating true crime, and some incomplete science at its heart.
These days there are lie detectors based on artificial intelligence and MRI scans and detectors are used in policing across the world. But the fundamental problems at the heart of ‘lie detectors’ have not changed since they were invented a hundred years ago.
Our guest today is Amit Katwala, a senior writer at WIRED and author of Tremors in The Blood: Murder, Obsession, and the Birth of the Lie Detector.
This is the third episode in our mini-series about the invention of forensics. Next week is the fourth and final instalment – DNA Fingerprinting.
Produced by Freddy Chick
Editing and Sound Design by Anisha Deva
Executive Producer is Charlotte Long
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Space Food
Épisode 56
mercredi 28 septembre 2022 • Durée 40:44
If humans travel to Mars then by the time they come home all the food they eat will be five years old. Want a bite?
Food often gets overlooked in stories about space flight. Yet space food has a fascinating history and will become an ever-increasing challenge the further we journey into space.
Our guest today is Vickie Kloeris who worked in the NASA food program for 34 years and was head of food systems for both Shuttle and the International Space Station. She takes us on a potted history (or maybe that should be a freeze-dried history) of the history of food in space. From early space flight to life on Mars.
Produced by Freddy Chick
Editing and sound design by Thomas Ntinas
Executive produced by Charlotte Long
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FORENSICS: Fingerprinting
Épisode 55
dimanche 25 septembre 2022 • Durée 41:04
We hear from London’s most inaccessible museum, the Met police’s Crime Museum, and take you back to India in the time of the British Raj. We hear about the first murder case ever to hinge on fingerprint evidence.
No one had to invent fingerprints. They’ve been around for ages…But to be able to use fingerprints in fighting crime required an obsessive colonial administrator, hard science and the invention of an ingenious filing system that would revolutionise policing around the world.
Our guests today are Chandak Sengoopta, historian at Birkbeck University and author of Imprint of the Raj: How Fingerprinting was Born in Colonial India and Paul Bickley, curator of the Crime Museum housed in New Scotland Yard.
This is the second episode in a mini-series we’re bringing you all about the invention of Forensics. Next week it’s Lie Detectors.
Produced by Freddy Chick
Executive Producer is Charlotte Long
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Perfume
Épisode 54
mercredi 21 septembre 2022 • Durée 34:57
First Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel shocked the world’s eyeballs with her fashion designs. Then she shocked its nostrils with a new smell - Chanel No. 5.
“It’s punk rock but with feather boas and fragrance”. That’s how today’s guest, Suzy Nightingale, describes the impact that Coco Chanel had on society. Coco was at the heart of a revolution that was overthrowing the old world’s traditions and ideas of propriety.
In 1921, in search of a perfume that would capture the smell of the modern woman, she launched Chanel No. 5. It changed perfume forever and now more than a hundred years on remains the most famous perfume in the world.
Suzy Nightingale is Dallas’s guest to talk about all things perfume and Chanel. She is an award winning writer on perfume and co-host of the wonderful podcast On The Scent (https://pod.link/1573786577).
Produced by Freddy Chick
Edited by Thomas Ntinas
Executive Producer is Charlotte Long
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FORENSICS: The Beginning
Épisode 53
dimanche 18 septembre 2022 • Durée 32:28
Death by tiger bites. Death by prodding. Death from sexual excess. Deaths from over-eating and over-drinking. The opening of graves.
These are a few of the chapter headings in a 13th century Chinese book called ‘The Washing Away of Wrongs’. It is a compendium of grizzly, gory, bizarre murders and deaths.
Its author was Song Ci, a Confucian trained bureaucrat who, like his fellow officials all over China, was responsible for investigating murders in his jurisdiction. According to the Wikipedia page for ‘forensic science’ this book is the earliest written evidence of forensic thinking. Is that correct?
Our guest today is Daniel Asen, a historian of China at Rutgers University.
This is the first episode in a mini-series we’re bringing you all about the invention of Forensics. Next week it’s Fingerprints.
Produced by Freddy Chick
Edited by Pete Dennis and Anisha Deva
Actors were Lucy Davidson and Tristan Hughes
Executive Producer is Charlotte Long
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PowerPoint
Épisode 52
mercredi 14 septembre 2022 • Durée 30:18
We take PowerPoint for granted. It's as much a fact of life as concrete. Or rainy afternoons. But it hasn’t always been here. It has a story. And once you’ve heard it, you’ll never look at PowerPoint the same way again.
Those old enough can remember the world before PowerPoint. A world where presentations were done on overhead projectors or 35mm slideshow carousels. In 1985, in the US alone, people made over 600 million 35mm slides and more than 500 million overhead transparencies. Large companies had departments dedicated to producing them.
Robert Gaskins, the inventor of PowerPoint, had a vision of how computers could produce these slides and transparencies more efficiently, and eventually consign them to the dustbin of history.
Russell Davies is our guest today and author of Everything I Know about Life I Learned from PowerPoint. He’s here to tell us that the inventor of PowerPoint, Robert Gaskins, is the tech hero we should all have.
Produced by Freddy Chick
Edited by Anisha Deva
Executive Producer was Charlotte Long
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