Mon, Dec 23, 2019
From GPS to Google search, meet the innovators and engineers who shape our digital world. Teenagers from around the globe talk to the tech pioneers who have changed our lives. Hosted by 17-year-old Anna Zanelli - herself a budding designer from London - we find out about the trials, errors, incredible hard work and sometimes just plain luck that made some of the most important digital inventions possible. And in the process of describing how they achieved their goals, we hear some words of wisdom for a new generation of innovators. Using the BBC and other archives we'll also hear journalists, experts and the public talking at the time, giving their first reaction when the technology was launched.
Fri, Jan 10, 2020
The breakthrough design of the iPod - a portable music player that made the CDs and cassette tapes that had gone before redundant - totally changed our listening habits. Tony Fadell is its inventor. Speaking to 17-year-old budding designer Anna Zanelli in London, he explains how his love of DJing inspired his iconic creation. And, he tells her, the design would go on to transform how we talk to each other, with the launch of the iPhone.
Fri, Jan 17, 2020
Assistive robots can act as companions and coaches to young and old alike, from autistic children to stroke survivors. Eighteen-year-old Saliha, from Bangladesh, talks to Professor Maja Mataric, from the University of Southern California, about why she is convinced technology can be a force for good.
Fri, Jan 24, 2020
Forty years ago, Professor John Goodenough developed the lithium ion battery and kick-started the wireless revolution. From electric cars to mobile phones, the world now relies on rechargeable batteries. Now, 97, and just awarded the 'Nobel Prize for Chemistry', Professor Goodenough still works at the University of Austin in Texas. Seventeen-year-old Adam from Poland asks him about lessons from life as well as lessons from science, and why he still works on developing the lithium ion battery even further.
Fri, Jan 31, 2020
The digital world only works if it is connected. In the early 1970s, Professor Bradford Parkinson was working with the United States Air Force as an engineer leading the team that developed the Global Positioning System, or GPS, which uses satellites to pinpoint users wherever they are. Sixteen-year-old Malak from Israel finds out from Professor Parkinson how it all came about, and why he still uses maps to sail by.
Fri, Feb 7, 2020
In 1998, a small company was launched offering a simple way to search the World Wide Web. That company was Google. Now every day billions of questions are put into the search engine. Ben Gomes, head of Google Search, talks about these early days - and what followed - to 17-year-old Osine from Nigeria.
Fri, Feb 14, 2020
In 1995, 'Pixar Animation Studios' created 'Toy Story', the first feature length computer animated film, and a blockbuster that changed cinema history. Here we bring together Danielle Feinberg, director of photography for lighting at Pixar, and 16-year-old Robin, an aspiring animator himself. Danielle has worked on many films including 'Monsters Inc', 'The Incredibles' and 'Finding Nemo'. Hear about what inspired her to work in animation, and how to realise your own dreams.
Fri, Feb 21, 2020
Computer programmer Radia Perlman is often called "the mother of the internet". In the late 1970s, she started working in network routing - the way data is moved from one network to another - and made a huge contribution to the internet as we know it today. Seventeen-year-old Audrey from the Philippines, who is a budding developer herself, asks Radia about what it has been like working in a male-dominated field, and what she makes of the way we use the internet today.
Fri, Mar 6, 2020
In the late 1990s, engineer Dr Caroline Hargrove was working with the 'McLaren motor racing team' when she developed the first Formula 1 simulator - a machine that helps racing teams design faster cars and improve performance. Sixteen-year-old motor racing fan, Marielle from Hong Kong, quizzes Caroline on her work in motor sport, how the simulator works and how drivers came to love it - eventually.
Fri, Mar 13, 2020
Eighteen-old-entrepreneur Leander, from Greece, discovers how sci-fi became reality, through the work of leading orthopaedic surgeon Professor Munjed Al Muderis. He has developed a new generation of implants for amputees which replaces the traditional socket based technology with a robotic prosthetic limb. We also hear about Professor Al Muderis's life, and the journey he made as a refugee from Iraq to Australia.
Fri, Mar 20, 2020
Eighteen year old Michael, from Dubai, who wants to become an engineer, talks to Keller Rinaudo, whose company Zipline has built what they say is the world's fastest delivery drone. Travelling at more than 100 km per hour, these battery-powered aircraft look like small planes. Doctors in remote areas of Rwanda and Ghana send requests for medical supplies via text and Whatsapp, which the drone then delivers. We hear how they work and how the doctors first reacted to them.
Fri, Mar 27, 2020
Aerospace engineer Dr Anita Sengupta led the team that developed the supersonic parachute which helped land Nasa's Curiosity rover on Mars in 2012. It's still on the Red Planet today, and its main goal is to assess whether there is, or ever was, life on Mars. She tells 17-year-old astrophysics enthusiast Avantika, from India, how her love of space began when she watched a science-fiction show on TV.
Fri, Sep 11, 2020
Teenagers meet pioneers whose inventions shaped our digital world. In the first episode of a two-part special, we hear from Tony Fadell, one of the creators of the 'Apple iPod'; Professor John Goodenough, whose lithium-ion battery kick-started the digital revolution; Professor Bradford Parkinson, the leader of the team that developed GPS; computer programmer Radia Perlman, often referred to as the "Mother of the Internet"; Keller Rinaudo, whose company has built what it claims is the world's fastest delivery drone; and Dr Caroline Hargrove, an engineer who developed the first Formula One simulator. How did they develop their brilliant ideas, and what lessons do they have for the aspiring engineers, designers and innovators of the future?
Fri, Sep 18, 2020
Teenagers meet pioneering inventors whose creations shaped our world, including Marty Cooper, the creator of the first mobile phone; 'Pixar's Danielle Feinberg, who has worked on films including 'Monsters Inc', 'Finding Nemo' and 'The Incredibles'; Professor Maja Mataric, whose robots help people including stroke survivors and autistic children; Ben Gomes, head of Search at Google; orthopaedic surgeon Professor Munjed Al Muderis, developer of innovative implants for amputees; and Dr Anita Sengupta, whose team developed the parachute which helped land Nasa's Curiosity Rover on Mars.