NerdTV
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NerdTV is PBS's new tech TV show. NerdTV is not aired; instead each episode is released as a MPEG-4 video file, freely downloadable and licensed under a Creative Commons license. Transcripts and audio-only versions of the released episodes are available as well.
The show features Robert X. Cringely interviewing famous and influential nerds. Each episode is about one hour and features a single guest from the world of technology. Initially, a new episode was released on the Internet approximately every week but the pace of releases slowed down in late 2005/early 2006. Twelve episodes comprising the first season have been released and another twelve have been promised for season two (in "late summer" after an initial delay [1]), along with a more consistent release schedule and better quality video files.
Contents |
[edit] Schedule
Date | Transcript | Guest | Most remembered as |
---|---|---|---|
2005-09-06 | NerdTV #1 | Andy Hertzfeld | Macintosh operating system programmer |
2005-09-13 | NerdTV #2 | Max Levchin | PayPal co-founder |
2005-09-20 | NerdTV #3 | Bill Joy | Sun Microsystems co-founder |
2005-09-27 | NerdTV #4 | Brewster Kahle | Internet Archive founder |
2005-10-04 | NerdTV #5 | Tim O'Reilly | Internet publisher |
2005-10-11 | NerdTV #6 | Dave Winer | Father of RSS |
2005-10-19 | NerdTV #7 | Dan Drake | Autodesk co-founder |
2005-10-28 | NerdTV #8 | Avram Miller | Intel Capital co-founder |
2005-11-09 | NerdTV #9 | Anina | Mobile-oriented model |
2005-11-25 | NerdTV #10 | Dan Bricklin | Spreadsheet inventor |
2005-12-09 | NerdTV #11 | Doug Engelbart | Computer mouse inventor |
2006-01-30 | NerdTV #12 | Bob Kahn | TCP/IP inventor |
2006-04-10 | NerdTV #13 | Judy Estrin | Internet entrepreneur |
[edit] Episode Highlights
[edit] NerdTV008 - Avram Miller
This episode is one of the first where subject is not an entrepreneur, which is to say he didn't create a company that was successful, though he did facilitate many successful startup companies through his investment portfolio while at Intel. The show follows his career in chronological including:
- Biotech (although the term didn't exist yet) experiences with brain-wave analysis
- networked computer monitoring in the hospital environment in the mid-late 1960s
- starting & running a company in Israel at the end of the War of Attrition
- working with Ken Olsen for Digital Equipment Corporation around the time of IBM's launch of the PC
- to finally joining Intel and working with them to develop numerous new ideas, and venture capitalist investments Intel Capital