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Nature Podcast

The challenge of reproducing results from ten-year-old code

Nature Podcast

podcast@nature.com

Science, Technology, News

4.5893 Ratings

🗓️ 26 August 2020

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Protecting delicate quantum bits, and a competition to replicate findings from ancient computer code.


In this episode:


01:04 Quantum computers vs ionizing radiation

The quantum bits, or ‘qubits’, central to the operation of quantum computers are notoriously sensitive. Now, researchers have assessed the damaging effects that ionizing radiation can have on these qubits and what can be done about it. Research Article: Vepsäläinen et al.


08:15 Coronapod

We discuss the US Food and Drug Administration’s decision to authorize convalescent plasma for emergency use in COVID-19 patients. As accusations of political interference fly, what might this mean for the future of the US coronavirus response?


20:39 Research Highlights

Finding new populations of a long-lost elephant shrew, and the hunting method of ancient ichthyosaurs. Research Highlight: An elephant-nosed creature ‘lost to science’ was living just next door; Research Highlight: An extinct reptile’s last meal shows it was a grip-and-tear killer


22:34 The reproducibility of computer code

Many scientists have published papers based on code. Recently though, a gauntlet was thrown down for researchers to try to replicate their code, 10 years or more after they wrote it. Tech Feature: Challenge to scientists: does your ten-year-old code still run?


28:06 Briefing Chat

We take a look at some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time we discuss a cancer diagnosis in a dinosaur, and how to brew yourself a career outside of academia. Science: Doctors diagnose advanced cancer—in a dinosaur; Nature Careers Feature: The brews and bakes that forged career paths outside academia


Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.


Other links

Video: March of the microscopic robots


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Imagine sweeping through green fields, floating five feet above ground, sun on your face as you slide by on track to your destination.

0:11.1

Not a care in the world as you simply lean back and before you know it, you're there.

0:16.7

London to Glasgow from just 46 pounds each way.

0:20.5

Avanti West Coast.

0:22.0

Feel good travel.

0:23.8

Exclusions and limitations apply.

0:25.6

Full terms and conditions can be found at avantiwestcoastcoast.com.

0:28.0

UK forward slash plan.

0:36.1

In an experiment, I don't know yet. Why is it?

0:38.3

It's blind so far.

0:40.3

Like it sounds so simple.

0:41.7

They had no idea.

0:43.2

But now the data's...

0:44.3

I find this not only refreshing, but at some level astounding.

0:52.3

Nature.

0:58.0

Welcome back to the Nature podcast.

1:02.5

This week, the effects of radiation on quantum computer chips and attempts to execute aging computer code.

1:07.4

I'm Nick Al and I'm Benjamin Thompson.

1:19.8

Okay. I'm Nick Howell and I'm Benjamin Thompson. Once again this week, we'll be bringing you our coronavirus-specific segment,

1:23.8

CoronaPod, later on in the podcast. As ever, if you're here just for that, have a look

1:29.8

at the timings in this week's show notes so you can skip straight to it. Otherwise, stick

1:34.1

around for lots more non-corona science. That's right. In fact, first up, we've got a story

...

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