Found in the Machine: Forgotten Tech History – Details, episodes & analysis

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Found in the Machine: Forgotten Tech History

Found in the Machine: Forgotten Tech History

Daina Bouquin

Technology
History
Education

Frequency: 1 episode/8d. Total Eps: 11

Buzzsprout

Every line of code has a story. Most of us just never hear it.


Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computing history or internet lore to surface the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world.


If you've ever wondered who actually made something you use every day, and why you've never heard their name before, you'll feel at home here. This show is for the curious, not the credentialed. You don't need a technical background to follow along. You just need to be the kind of person who pulls on threads.


New episodes every other week.

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  • 🇨🇦 Canada - technology

    24/05/2026
    #100
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - technology

    21/05/2026
    #77

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The Weavers: Memory and the Moon

Season 1 · Episode 9

mardi 12 mai 2026Duration 14:15

In 1965, engineers were building a computer to fly men to the moon. It had to survive a rocket launch and the vacuum of space. It could not be erased by a power failure, a hard landing, or anything short of physical destruction. They needed to make the code permanent. They needed to weave it.

In this episode

  • Hilda Carpenter - MIT technician who assembled the first magnetic-core memory plane
  • The Raytheon weavers - Textile workers and watchmakers recruited to encode Apollo's computer
  • The Fairchild Semiconductor plant - Where Navajo women built integrated circuits so men could walk on the moon


Episode Music



Additional Reading

CuriousMarc. (2019). Core memory explained and demonstrated [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/AwsInQLmjXc

Nakamura, L. (2014). Indigenous circuits. Computer History Museum. https://computerhistory.org/blog/indigenous-circuits/

Rankin, J. L. (2022, February 18). Core memory weavers and Navajo women made the Apollo missions possible. Science News. https://www.sciencenews.org/article/core-memory-weavers-navajo-apollo-raytheon-computer-nasa

Shirriff, K. (2019). Software woven into wire. Ken Shirriff's Blog. https://www.righto.com/2019/07/software-woven-into-wire-core-rope-and.html

Stark, L. (2018). Hilda wove all those wires [Zine]. https://www.liza-stark.com/projects/zines/hilda.html

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. (2017). "Hear my voice" artist profile: D.Y. Begay [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9wmz5rf1NU

Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

Found

Season 1

lundi 11 mai 2026Duration 01:03

The show has a new name. 

Starting with this episode, Lore in the Machine is now Found in the Machine. Same stories, same voice. The name just finally says what the show actually does. 

If you're subscribed, your feed will keep updating automatically. If you want to share the show with someone new, the new home is foundinthemachine.com.

Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

Trailer: Unexpected Stories from Computing History

Season 1

mardi 24 février 2026Duration 01:47

Every line of code has a story. Most of us just never hear it. 

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computing history or internet lore to surface the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you've ever wondered who actually made something you use every day, and why you've never heard their name before, you'll feel at home here. This show is for the curious, not the credentialed. You don't need a technical background to follow along. You just need to be the kind of person who pulls on threads. 

New episodes every other week.

Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

I’m Not a Robot: The Internet's Human Test

Season 1 · Episode 8

mardi 28 avril 2026Duration 09:24

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode.  

You’ve done this so many times you don’t think about it anymore. A box appears. You squint at some blurry letters, type them out, check the box. It takes about ten seconds.


You probably didn’t know that those ten seconds were going somewhere. For years, millions of people solving these security tests were quietly doing something else entirely. They were rescuing forgotten history that computers couldn’t read.


In 1950, Alan Turing proposed a test where machines tried to pass as human. Half a century later, a graduate student inverted it. The machine would do the judging. And the humans would get to work.

In this episode

  • Turing's imitation game - the thought experiment that set the terms for AI
  • Luis von Ahn and Manuel Blum - the Carnegie Mellon graduate student and his professor who built the wall between humans and bots
  • reCAPTCHA - the internet security test that became the largest digitization project in history
  • reCAPTCHA v3 - the invisible version


Episode Music



Additional Reading

Pandey, K. (2022, July 25). History & evolution of CAPTCHA. Masai School. https://www.masaischool.com/blog/history-evolution-of-captcha/

Gugliotta, G. (2011, March 29). Deciphering Old Texts, One Woozy, Curvy Word at a Time. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/29/science/29recaptcha.html

Weintraub, S. (2009, September). Google acquires reCAPTCHA in two-for-one deal. Computerworld. https://www.computerworld.com/article/1331965/google-acquires-recaptcha-in-two-for-one-deal.html

Schwab, K. (2019, June 27). Google's new reCAPTCHA has a dark side. Fast Company. https://www.fastcompany.com/90369697/googles-new-recaptcha-has-a-dark-side

Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

The Silent Duel: David Blackwell and the Math Inside AI

Season 1 · Episode 7

mardi 14 avril 2026Duration 11:08

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode. 

Two people walk toward each other on a dirt road. One bullet each. In a normal duel, a missed shot makes a sound. But in a silent duel, a miss would be invisible. You wouldn't know if your opponent was holding their fire, or had already taken their one shot. How would you know when to stop walking and take your own?

In 2024, NVIDIA named the most powerful piece of AI hardware ever built after the man who spent his career thinking about this exact problem. His name was David Blackwell.


In this episode

  • David Blackwell: brilliant professor and researcher at the RAND Corporation. Seventh African American to earn a PhD in mathematics.
  • Kriegsspiel: the blind chess variant that Blackwell played daily.
  • Blackwell's silent duel: a thought experiment from Cold War-era game theory, and why related math ended up in machine learning textbooks.
  • The economist's question: the most important question in the world at that moment, asked in good faith, and why every mathematician Blackwell knew gave the same useless answer.



Episode Music


Additional Reading

AYE Conference. (n.d.). Activity sheet 1: David Blackwell and the theory of duels [PDF]. https://www.ayeconference.com/Articles/gameTheory.pdf

Black, R. (2019). David Blackwell and the deadliest duel. Royal Fireworks Press.

Blackwell, D. (2003). An oral history with David Blackwell [Oral history transcript; conducted by N. Wilmot, 2002–2003]. Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. https://bpb-us-e1.wpmucdn.com/sites.tufts.edu/dist/8/3572/files/2015/11/blackwell.pdf

NVIDIA. (2024). NVIDIA Blackwell architecture. https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/data-center/technologies/blackwell-architecture/

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Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

Strangers with Keys: A Ritual to Secure the Internet

Season 1 · Episode 6

mardi 31 mars 2026Duration 11:34

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode. 

Four times a year, a small group of people fly to a secure facility in either Virginia or California. They submit to retina scanners and palm readers. They enter a metal cage in a signal-proof room. They turn keys in unison.

These people are volunteers, and they're there to perform a ritual to secure the internet's core directory. 

If you build a master key for the internet, who do you trust to hold it?


In this episode

  • The Ceremony of the Keys - the 700-year-old nightly ritual at the Tower of London, and what it has to do with cyber security
  • The Crypto Officers - who they are, and what they carry
  • The Ritual - over 100 scripted steps, a self-destructing lockbox, and a laptop with no memory
  • The things that went wrong - because they do


Episode Music


Additional Notes

This episode is the follow-up to "Poison in the Cache." 

If you want to see this ritual for yourself, you can. The root signing relies on radical transparency, so every step is shared. The list of ceremonies is available via the IANA along with the full list of Crypto Officers.


Additional Reading

Internet Assigned Numbers Authority. (2026, February 10). Root Zone KSK ceremony 60 annotated script [Ceremony script]. https://data.iana.org/ksk-ceremony/60/AT60_Annotated_Script.pdf

Internet Hall of Fame. (2014, March 25). Our online safety is protected by one "stubborn lady." https://www.internethalloffame.org/2014/03/25/our-online-safety-protected-one-stubborn-lady/

McCarthy, K. (2020, February 13). Internet's safe-keepers forced to postpone crucial DNSSEC root key signing ceremony. The Register. https://www.theregister.com/2020/02/13/iana_dnssec_ksk_delay/

--

Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

Poison in the Cache: Dan Kaminsky Saves the Internet

Season 1 · Episode 5

mardi 17 mars 2026Duration 08:18

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode. 

Every time you type a web address, you're trusting a directory. A vast, invisible system that translates the names you know into the numbers that actually move data across the internet. You trust it the way a town trusts its well.

In 2008, a security researcher named Dan Kaminsky discovered that the well had no lid.


In this episode

  • DNS - the Domain Name System and why it matters
  • Dan Kaminsky - security researcher and internet advocate 
  • Cache poisoning - the class of attack Dan found hiding in the internet's foundation
  • The patch - a secret meeting, a deadline, and a synchronized fix


Episode Music


Additional Reading

Choi, S. G. (n.d.). Remote DNS attacks and DNS defenses [Lecture notes, IT432 Advanced Computer and Network Security]. U.S. Naval Academy. https://www.usna.edu/Users/cs/choi/it432/lec/l07/lec.html

Vixie, P. (2008, July 14). Not a guessing game. CircleID. https://circleid.com/posts/87143_dns_not_a_guessing_game/

Internet Hall of Fame. (2022, March 23). A dedicated approach to Internet security: Daniel Kaminsky. https://www.internethalloffame.org/2022/03/23/dedicated-approach-internet-security-daniel-kaminsky/

Kaminsky, D. (2008). Black Ops 2008: It's the end of the cache as we know it [Conference presentation, DEF CON 16]. Video: https://media.blackhat.com/bh-usa-08/video/bh-us-08-Kaminsky/black-hat-usa-08-kaminsky-blackops08-hires.m4v (Note: this is Kaminsky's DEF CON Black Ops talk, not Black Hat)


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Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

Lipstick and Runes: Hedy Lamarr and the History of Bluetooth

Season 1 · Episode 4

mardi 3 mars 2026Duration 11:22

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode. 

Look at your phone settings. There's a small angular icon there that you've probably never thought about much. It's a bind rune showing two characters from the ancient Younger Futhark alphabet, fused together. It's on billions of devices worldwide.

How that symbol ended up there is two stories separated by half a century. One starts with a Hollywood actress listening at a dinner table full of fascists. The other starts with two engineers bombing a pitch meeting and ending up in a Canadian pub.


In this episode

  • Hedy Lamarr - after the cameras and the dinner parties
  • The patent - a collaboration and what the Navy said about it
  • Two engineers in a pub - a failed pitch meeting and a conversation about Vikings and a Danish king


Episode Music


Additional Reading

Sinclair. (2018, May 17). How the pianola played a part in Hedy Lamarr's invention. American Masters, PBS. https://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/blog/bombshell-hedy-lamarr-story-pianola-played-part-hedy-lamarrs-invention/

Lamarr, H. (1966). Ecstasy and me: My life as a woman. Bartholomew House. https://archive.org/details/ecstasymemylife00lama

Bedi, J. (2015, November 12). A movie star, some player pianos, and torpedoes. Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation, Smithsonian Institution. https://invention.si.edu/invention-stories/movie-star-some-player-pianos-and-torpedoes

Kardach, J. (n.d.). Naming Bluetooth. https://www.kardach.com/bluetooth/naming_bluetooth

Rhodes, R. (2011). Hedy's Folly: The life and breakthrough inventions of Hedy Lamarr, the most beautiful woman in the world. Doubleday. https://archive.org/details/hedysfollylifea00rhod_0

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Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

Drink Me, Eat Me, README: What Programmers Learned from Alice in Wonderland

Season 1 · Episode 3

mardi 3 mars 2026Duration 07:39

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode. 

Every software project has one. It's easy to scroll past. Most of the time it's just a manual telling you system requirements, installation steps, and known bugs. 

But the README file owes a debt to Lewis Carroll, and a quiet trick built into its name that has been manipulating computers for decades. 

In this episode, we follow the README from its earliest appearances through the conventions that made it a standard, and to the programmers who decided it could be much more than documentation.


In this episode

  • Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - the literary origin programmers point to as inspiration
  • The ASCII trick - the quiet reason README is written in all capitals
  • The printer in the woods - a README that went somewhere unexpected


Episode Music

Additional Reading

Raymond, E. S. (Ed.). (2003). README file. In The Jargon File (Version 4.4.7). http://catb.org/jargon/html/R/README-file.html

[ADG]. (ca. 1981). README.TXT [Software documentation, DECUS program 20-0079]. DECUS. https://pdp-10.trailing-edge.com/decus_20tap3_198111/01/decus/20-0079/readme.txt.html

Yokota, E. [eed3si9n]. (2012, October 19). README [GitHub Gist]. https://gist.github.com/eed3si9n/3920236

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Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.

The Bug, The Cat, and The Wooden Mouse: The Unexpected History of the Computer Mouse

Season 1 · Episode 2

mardi 3 mars 2026Duration 09:39

Listeners, please note that this episode was recorded before the show’s name changed to Found in the Machine, so you’ll hear the old name in this episode. 

In 1968, a researcher named Douglas Engelbart took the stage in San Francisco and showed a thousand computer professionals something they had never seen: text editing, clickable links, and video conferencing, all controlled by a small wooden block with a wire trailing out the back.

But the mouse didn't begin with Engelbart. In this episode, we follow the tangled history of the world's most common computer peripheral and its origins as a Cold War secret. We'll also find out why your cursor is tilted 45 degrees.


In this episode

  • The Mother of All Demos - the 1968 presentation that changed computing
  • DATAR - a classified Cold War radar project, and an unlikely contribution to computing history
  • The Rollkugel - a German parallel invention and a patent rejection
  • Xerox PARC and Apple - how the mouse finally reached the world


Music


Additional Reading

The Mother of All Demos. (n.d.). Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mother_of_All_Demos

Computer History Museum. (n.d.). DATAR trackball (Object ID 500004669). CHM Revolution: Input & Output. https://www.computerhistory.org/revolution/input-output/14/350/1881

Bardini, T. (2000). Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart, coevolution, and the origins of personal computing. Stanford University Press. https://archive.org/details/bootstrapping00thie

Hill-Khurana, J. (2020, May). A brief history of the mouse cursor, from Engelbart to PARC. https://jameshk.com/mouse-cursor

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Support the show

Found in the Machine is a narrative technology podcast about the forgotten history of computing, software, and the internet. Hosted by Daina Bouquin, each episode uncovers the true story behind a piece of computer history. These are the forgotten people, decisions, and accidents that quietly shaped the digital world. 

If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

You can support the show and independent booksellers by purchasing from the show's bookshop at bookshop.org/shop/foundinthemachine.

You can also support the show by donating at buymeacoffee.com/foundinthemachine.


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