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Science Friday

What Is The Metaverse, Missouri Groundwater Contamination, Eight Billion People On Earth. November 18, 2022, Part 1

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Life Sciences, Natural Sciences, Wnyc, Science, Friday

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 18 November 2022

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There Are Now Eight Billion People On Earth. What’s Next?

Humankind just hit a big milestone this week: a world population of eight billion people. A hundred years ago, there were less than two billion, and now we’ve more than quadrupled that. But after decades of quick population growth, what will the next few decades hold?

Sophie Bushwick, technology editor at Scientific American, explains this to Ira live from the studio. They also talk about other science news this week, like a new initiative from COP 27 to help transition poor countries away from fossil fuels, an ambitious plan to put solar panels in space, how mental health apps aren’t protecting user data, what the discovery of the earliest cooked meal in history tells us about human evolution, and the very first lab-grown meat to gain FDA approval.

Groundwater Contamination In Springfield, Missouri Kept Secret From Residents

Early in 2019, Ed Galbraith faced a crowd of some 200 unhappy Springfield, Missouri residents. He wanted to make amends. Galbraith, then director of Missouri Department of Natural Resources’ environmental quality division, acknowledged that the state agency in charge of protecting the environment should have announced sooner that contaminated water had spread from an old industrial site near the Springfield-Branson National Airport. Residents had recently found out that a harmful chemical known to cause cancer had been detected in the groundwater. The contamination came from the site of the now-shuttered Litton Systems, a former defense contractor that had employed thousands of people in Springfield to make circuit boards for the Navy and telecommunications industry.

Read the rest at sciencefriday.com.

Can A New Surge Of Tech Interest Make The Metaverse A Thing?

Late last year, Mark Zuckerberg took the company then known as Facebook in a new direction. He renamed it Meta, short for “metaverse.” And he promised the company would go all in on building a virtual reality world like the first famous metaverse—the fictional topic of Neal Stephenson’s 1992 novel “Snow Crash.”

While many companies have tried to make metaverses in the 30 years since “Snow Crash” came out, including the popular virtual world called Second Life, we seem to be entering a new era of metaverse hype: besides Zuckerberg, Apple seems to be investing in a VR world. And even Nike wants to make a metaverse.

So what are users actually getting if these companies succeed at their goals? And are there other, perhaps better, ways to go about bringing people together virtually? Ira talks to science fiction writer and tech journalist Annalee Newitz, and Avi Bar-Zeev, a pioneer of extended-reality technologies for companies like Disney, Apple, and others.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Science Friday, I am I Replayed O. A bit later we're going to look at what the metaverse is and could be.

0:06.8

What do you think? You got questions or comments about the metaverse? Well, we are live today. Yes, and we're taking your calls at 844-724-8255-844-724-8255.

0:20.7

But first, the planet just hit a big milestone this week at a world population of 8 billion people.

0:27.6

A hundred years ago, we weren't even at 2 billion. And now we've quadrupled that.

0:32.4

Here with the details and other science news of the week is Sophie Bushwick,

0:36.0

Technology Editor at Scientific American based in New York, Sophie, so good to see you again.

0:41.2

You too.

0:42.0

Let's talk about this. How much of that population growth has happened in recent decades?

0:46.8

I ask because I remember from my ecology 101 course that population does not go in a straight line.

0:52.4

That's right. It hasn't been a linear increase.

0:54.9

It's, once it starts growing, it starts growing faster and faster.

0:58.6

Although it does look like the rate of growth is going to start slowing down now.

1:03.0

So especially earlier in the 20th century, we had a lot of improvements in public health and in medicine.

1:12.6

And so a lot of this increase in population is because people who would otherwise have died in childhood of diseases that were spread through

1:21.2

unhygienic waste management practices or through childhood diseases that we now have vaccines for.

1:27.6

They were surviving childhood. And so that was increasing the population.

1:31.2

And at the same time, fertility rates weren't necessarily dropping in proportion to that.

1:37.8

So that's why the population has just kept going up.

1:40.0

How do they know a 8 billion? Do they count every single fail count every single present, right?

1:44.4

That would take a really long time and a big effort.

1:46.8

No, they've got models. And according to the latest most updated UN models, 8 billion was hit roughly Tuesday of this week.

1:54.4

Roughly Tuesday.

...

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