エピソード

  • Why Your Phone Knows Exactly Where You Are (The Real Science) 
    2026/05/04

    Every time you open Google Maps, you’re relying on 31 satellites, atomic clocks accurate to one second every 300 million years, and a relativistic correction Albert Einstein made possible in 1915.

    Most people use GPS dozens of times a day and have no idea how it actually works. In this episode of The Static Frontier, we break down the real mechanism — from satellites and signal timing to why the word “triangulation” is wrong, and why GPS would be 6 miles off within a day if we didn’t correct for Einstein’s theory of general relativity.

    🔍 WHAT YOU’LL LEARN:
    • How GPS calculates your position using signal travel time — not angles
    • Why trilateration is different from triangulation (and why it matters)
    • How atomic clocks work and why they’re accurate to 1 second per 300 million years
    • Why Einstein’s relativity theories are baked into every GPS calculation
    • How your phone blends satellites, cell towers, and Wi-Fi to track you indoors
    • Why a GPS outage would crash financial markets, power grids, and air traffic control

    🎙️ ABOUT THE STATIC FRONTIER:
    Science and technology explained like you’re hearing it for the first time. New episode every week, 20–30 minutes. Also on Spotify and Apple Podcasts — search “The Static Frontier.”

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    12 分
  • The Internet You’ve Never Seen
    2026/04/21

    Most people have heard of the dark web. Almost nobody actually understands it.


    In our very first episode, Alex and Morgan pull back the curtain on the 96% of the internet your browser never shows you. It’s not what true crime documentaries made you think — and the real story is far stranger and more fascinating than the myth.


    Here’s what we get into:
    •The difference between the Surface Web, the Deep Web, and the Dark Web — and why most people get this completely wrong


    •How the dark web was actually invented by the United States Navy in the 1990s — not by criminals


    •What “onion routing” is and how it makes anonymity structural, not just a setting you toggle


    •What’s legitimately on the dark web right now — including why The New York Times and ProPublica both have addresses there


    •Why this matters in 2026 more than ever — AI, billion-record data breaches, and what law enforcement has figured out


    •Three things you can do today to find out if your data is already out there — and what to do if it is
    No PhD required. Just curiosity.

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    11 分