1. Why Real Stuff Is Making a Comeback

    Now that everything’s digital, connected, automated and efficient, what are we missing from the analog world? My guest today wrote a book called “The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter.” Here’s my conversation with David Sax. 

    https://ia601507.us.archive.org/4/items/FATcast23/FATcast23.mp3

     

  2. This Gadget Turns Any Glasses Into Smart Glasses

    Dylan Rose is kickstarting a new kind of wearable. It’s a virtual assistant appliance called Kai that clips onto any glasses and transmits audio through bone conduction. It’s a brilliant concept, but here’s the best part: Dylan is still in high school. Here’s my conversation with Dylan Rose.

    https://ia601508.us.archive.org/28/items/FATcast22/FATcast22.mp3

     

  3. Crickets, Algae and Lab-Grown Burgers. It’s What’s for Dinner!

    In the future, will we all eat crickets, algae and burgers grown in a lab? I asked the founder of Studio Industries at the recent reThinkFood conference in Napa, California. Later in the podcast, I’ll take you inside a San Francisco startup inventing the future of smart glasses. But first, here’s my conversation with Mike Lee.

    https://ia601508.us.archive.org/24/items/FATcast21/FATcast21.mp3

     

  4. This Bot Orders, Pays for Lunch (So You Don’t Have To)

    Grabbing a quick lunch at a busy restaurant puts you at the mercy of ordering and payment processes from the Spanish inquisition. Now, a startup called Allset is using technology to get you in and out in 30 minutes. 

    Here’s my conversation with Allset founder and CEO, Stas Matviyenko.

    https://ia601505.us.archive.org/28/items/FATcast20/FATcast20.mp3

     

  5. Pizza Delivered In Five Minutes, Thanks to A.I. and Robots!

    Silicon Valley’s Zume Pizza can deliver in five minutes because artificial intelligence predicts your order, robots make the pizza and automated ovens inside the truck bake it just before delivery. 

    Here’s my conversation with Zume co-founder and co-CEO, Julia Collins.

    https://ia601507.us.archive.org/3/items/FATcast19/FATcast19.mp3

     

  6. Test Your Own Food, Water and Weed for Purity, Quality

    The label says it’s organic. But can you really trust the label? 

    Soon you’ll be able to test the food you buy, the water you drink and more with a handheld gadget from MyDx, a company founded by former Pfizer scientist Daniel Yazbeck. 

    Here’s my conversation with Daniel Yazbeck.

    https://ia601501.us.archive.org/8/items/fatcast18/fatcast18.mp3

     

  7. What’s In Your Food? No, I Mean What’s REALLY In There?

    Sam Slover’s “Sage Project” is connecting people with better information about food. Sam and his colleagues are building a giant database of ingredients and augmenting it with health information, personalization and killer design. Here’s my conversation with Sam Slover.

    https://ia601506.us.archive.org/22/items/FATcast17/FATcast17.mp3

     

  8. This Garden Robot Will Pay For Itself In One Year

    The Open Source FarmBot does it all, from planting seeds to watering to monitoring the soil to snuffing out weeds without pesticides. Best of all, the FarmBot enables people to grow fresh, organic agriculture in a way that’s environmentally friendly and costs far less than buying produce at the store. What’s not to love? Here’s my conversation with FarmBot founder Rory Aronson.

    Listen:

    https://ia601500.us.archive.org/0/items/fatcast16/fatcast16.mp3

     

  9. It’s Your Data. So Why Don’t You Control Who Gets It?

    Your data is precious. So why are you just giving it away? The reason is that nobody is helping you control it. But all that may be about to change.

    This week I’m talking to Julian Ranger, the founder and executive chairman of Digi me.

    What Digi Me does is enables you to download all your social activity – all of it – which you can then search and manage, right there on your device.

    Better still, they’re working on a system for letting you control your data and decide what you share and which companies you share it with.

    You can also use Digi Me as a powerful lifelogging tool, and Julian and I get into that.

    This conversation will change the way you think about your own personal data, so get ready to have your mind blown.

    Here’s my conversation with Julian Ranger.

    Listen:

    https://ia801506.us.archive.org/3/items/fatcast15/fatcast15.mp3

     

  10. It’s Time to Disrupt Your Dinner

    Food sucks. Let’s change it.

    So much of our food is unhealthy. People feel like they don’t have time to cook, let alone learn to cook. And nearly 40 percent of the food produced in the United States is wasted.

    Solutions abound. And these include countertop food processors, such as the revOILution olive oil press to Amazon’s secret Kabinet project – a kind of food-centric Amazon Echo – to the creation of lab grown meat.

    One Silicon Valley company called Innit – as in “in it to win it” – is working on an extensible platform that enables the food you buy to provide the kitchen appliances you use with information that streamlines and optimizes the entire cooking process.

    I spoke to Innit’s founder and CEO, Eugenio Minvielle, about his product and about the future of food.

    Here’s my conversation with Eugenio Minvielle.

    Listen:

    https://ia601507.us.archive.org/34/items/FATcast14/FATcast14.mp3

     

  11. The Internet Of Modular Things!

    Electronic LEGO? Maybe the future of consumer electronics and the internet of things is hinted at by everyone’s favorite plastic pastime.

    A company called Nascent Objects is building such a future, brick by brick. In this special FATcast interview, I talk to Nascent Objects founder & CEO Baback Elmieh about his company’s approach to rapid deployment and reducing rampant waste in the electronics industry.

    Listen:

    https://ia801505.us.archive.org/5/items/fatcast13/fatcast13.mp3

     

  12. Use This App as If Your Life Depended On It!

    Part personal trainer, part nutrition consultant, part holistic health counselor, the new Shae virtual assistant tells you exactly how and when and what to eat and exercise. I talked to the founder and CEO behind Shae, health entrepreneur Matt Riemann.

    Listen:

    https://ia601502.us.archive.org/18/items/FATcast11/FATcast11.mp3

     

  13. The Quantified Life of Gordon Bell

    I asked Gordon Bell about lifelogging, about the quantified self movement and about predicting the future of technology.

    Listen:

    https://ia801500.us.archive.org/19/items/fatcast10/fatcast10.mp3

     

  14. Hacking the Hackers

    Kevin Mitnick is known as a “superhacker.” But he’s also a behavioral psychologist, educator and showman – and that’s what makes him so effective as a hacker-for-hire for some of the world’s biggest corporations.

    Catch up with the world’s most famous hacker in this surprising interview.

    Listen:

    https://ia601504.us.archive.org/11/items/fatcast9/fatcast9.mp3

     

  15. Why the Digital Economy Sucks

    Don’t throw rocks at the Google bus. You’ll only be hurting yourself (and people like you).

    Writer Douglas Rushkoff has a new book called “Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus: How Growth Became the Enemy of Prosperity.” In the book, he lays out why we’re all on that bus together.

    The growth-centered digital economy seeks to extract value from people, instead of helping us all create and share value with each other in a trusted, mutually beneficial community.

    Rushkoff says there’s a better way, and tells us how to start getting there.

    Listen:

    https://ia601500.us.archive.org/3/items/fatcast8/fatcast8.mp3