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Time is Honey

2/13/202639 min

In the early 2000s, Sunil Nakrani felt stuck. 

Back then, websites crashed all the time. When Sunil noticed this, he decided he was going to fix the internet. But after nearly a year of studying the architecture of the web, he was no closer to an answer. In desperation, Sunil sent out a raft of cold emails to engineering professors. He hoped someone, anyone, could help him figure this out. Eventually, he learned that the internet could only be fixed if he paid attention to the humble honeybee. 

This is the story of the Honeybee Algorithm: How tech used honeybees to build the internet as we know it.

Special thanks to John Bartholdi, John Vande Vate, Sammy Ramsey, James Marshall, Steve Strogatz, Duc Pham, and Heiko Hamann.

We found out about this story thanks to our friends at AAAS, who run the one and only Golden Goose Awards. The award goes to government funded science that sounds trivial or bizarre, but goes on to change the world. The Honeybee Algorithm won a Golden Goose Award back in 2016 (https://www.goldengooseaward.org/01awardees/honey-bee-algorithm). Thank you to our friends there: Erin Heath, Gwendolyn Bogard, Valeria Sabate, Joanne Padron Carney, and Meredith Asbury. 

EPISODE CREDITS: 
Reported by - Latif Nasser
with help from - Maria Paz Gutiérrez
Produced by - Maria Paz Gutiérrez, Annie McEwen and Pat Walters
and Edited by  - Pat Walters

EPISODE CITATIONS:

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Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Speaker 00:00

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  2. Latif Nasser· Host0:30

    ... Oh, wait, you're listening.

  3. Lulu Miller· Host0:33

    [laughing] Okay.

  4. Latif Nasser· Host0:35

    All right.

  5. Lulu Miller· Host0:36

    Okay.

  6. Latif Nasser· Host0:37

    All right.

  7. Speaker 00:38

    [clears throat] You're listening- Listening- -to Radiolab.

  8. Craig Tovey· Guest0:41

    Radiolab.

  9. Speaker 00:42

    From- WNYC.

  10. Lulu Miller· Host0:44

    C!

  11. Speaker 00:45

    C?

  12. Latif Nasser· Host0:45

    Yeah. [upbeat music] Lulu?

  13. Lulu Miller· Host0:50

    Hello.

  14. Latif Nasser· Host0:51

    Hey, should we start?

  15. Lulu Miller· Host0:53

    Let's do it.

  16. Latif Nasser· Host0:54

    Okay. All right, so today we're gonna start with a guy, a very sweet, very tall guy named Sunil Nakrani.

  17. Speaker 41:03

    Yeah, hi, I, I'm Sunil Nakrani.

  18. Latif Nasser· Host1:05

    Where did you grow up, and were you just a computer kid? Like, you, you just loved computers- No, um- ... or how did that, how did this all start?

  19. Speaker 41:10

    So do you want to start from there?

  20. Latif Nasser· Host1:11

    Yeah, I mean, a little bit.

  21. Speaker 41:12

    Yeah, so I, I was actually born in Kenya.

  22. Latif Nasser· Host1:15

    But he grew up between India and the UK.

  23. Speaker 41:17

    Right.

  24. Latif Nasser· Host1:17

    He studies hard.

  25. Speaker 41:18

    Bachelor's and a master's degree in, in electrical engineering.

  26. Latif Nasser· Host1:21

    And in 1989, he lands a job at IBM, [upbeat music] just as the world is encountering this new thing called the

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