Share Sounds.

Podcast Directory


Strand: Share Radio Morning with Sarah Pennells
Clear Selection

Simon Rose

Gadgets & Gizmos: Police hover bikes

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Gadgets and Gizmos

Gadgets & Gizmos: Police hover bikes
Steve Caplin looks at Dubai's police hover bikes, Google Maps on Mars and other planets, a rubberised car, Oculus Go, an electric E-type Jag, Ikea's smart lighting and the Mobu cable clip.
Guest:

Steve Caplin


Published:
Simon Rose

The Week That Was 19th October

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Week That Was

The Week That Was 19th October
Helal Miah of the Share Centre discusses numbers from Convatec, Merlin, Reckitts and Unilever and looks forward to the main banks reporting.
Guest:

Helal Miah


Published:
Simon Rose

Business of Film: LEGO Ninjago Movie

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Business Of Film

Business of Film: LEGO Ninjago Movie
James Cameron-Wilson looks at LEGO Ninjago Movie, The Snowman, Polish film Botoks (#5!) and The Party, also reviewing the DVD/BluRay release of the 1968 Peter Sellers/Blake Edwards comedy The Party.
Guest:

James Cameron Wilson


Published:
Adam Cox

Modern Mindset: Talking cyber security

Adam Cox
Modern Mindset: Talking cyber security
In our first episode of Modern Mindset, Adam Cox has a discussion with Perry Carpenter, a cyber security evangelist, talking about the growing issues concerning phishing and ransomware and how emails play to the human emotions of fear, curiosity and greed. A warning of modern day tactics by someone who has been on the front line of cyber security his whole working life.

Published:
Matthew Cook

Mobile News: Technology Developments

Matthew Cook
Mobile News: Technology Developments
On the first episode of Mobile news we speak with Honor UK’s Sales and Marketing Director Wilkin Lee about its ethos, advertising approach and their technology developments. We also spoke with Will Black, a Senior Policy Advisor at FSB about EE’s recent voice outage last week, and the effect this can have on small business.

Published:
Simon Rose

Motley Fool Show: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Motley Fool Show

Motley Fool Show: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google
Want to keep up with the latest earnings updates from the States? Well join Chris Hill and the Motley Fool Radio Show team here on Share Radio - direct from Washington DC for news, views and analysis of the US stocks which matter. In this week's show, Delta flies higher on earnings. Wells Fargo slips on higher legal costs. Domino's drops despite strong sales. And MercadoLibre sells off on concerns over Amazon. Plus, NYU business professor Scott Galloway talks about his new book.

Published:
Georgie Frost

This is Money: Can a nudge make you richer?

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

This is Money

This is Money: Can a nudge make you richer?
On this week’s podcast, Simon Lambert, Rachel Rickard Straus and Georgie Frost take a look at Professor Thaler’s work, his prize, behavioural economics and the whole nudge idea. Does this all really work? Behavioural economists believe a gentle nudge in the right direction can make you richer and over recent years they have managed to win the ears of governments around the world – including the UK’s. This week one of the thinkers who helped spread the word on behavioural economics, Professor Richard Thaler, won a Nobel Prize for economics. In the old world of economics textbooks, people behaved perfectly rationally and made the right choices. In the real world, of course, we don’t. We make irrational decisions that fly in the face of economic theory all the time. Yet, our irrational behaviour can be an asset. It means that we can be nudged into making the best choices. Professor Thaler’s catch-all advice is whether you’re a business or a government, if you want people to do something, make it easy. In Britain, one example adopted by the Government has been pensions. Instead of getting people to opt into a pension, we’re now automatically enrolled and then offered the chance to opt out. It’s now easier to have a pension than not to. Unsurprisingly, more people now save into pensions.

Published:
Kate Andrews

IEA: How Would Unilateral Free Trade Work in Practice

Kate Andrews
Original Broadcast:

Share Politics

IEA: How Would Unilateral Free Trade Work in Practice
On this podcast, you’ll hear an update from our Brexit Unit, run by the IEA’s chief economist Julian Jessop. Coming up, digital Officer Madeline Grant discusses the concept of unilateral free trade with Julian – a policy he thinks should be considered during the Brexit negotiations. Julian gives a comprehensive explanation of what unilateral free trade would mean in practice – and how after Brexit, the UK will be free to set its own trade rules and tariff barriers. Julian and Madeline also discuss the potential disadvantages, especially in the short term, of such a policy – mainly the disadvantages to British producers, who will face increased competition, with no guarantee it’ll be easier to export to other parts of the world.

Published:
Sue Dougan

Track Record: Shed Simove

Sue Dougan
Original Broadcast:

Track Record

Track Record: Shed Simove
In this edition of Track Record: A former commissioning editor for TV's 'Big Brother' who's now recognised as an entrepreneur, motivational coach and speaker. He's Shed Simove and his latest work is 'Ideas Man', which is a look at his career to date, his maverick yet fun outlook, and how dozens of his ideas came to be - some successful and others disastrous failures.

Published:
Kate Andrews

IEA: What's next for Uber and the Gig Economy?

Kate Andrews
Original Broadcast:

Share Politics

IEA: What's next for Uber and the Gig Economy?
We’re joined by Diego Zuluaga, Head of Tech Policy at the IEA, and Digital Officer Madeline Grant, as they discuss Uber and the gig economy in the light of last week’s decision from TfL not to reissue Uber’s licence. The pair discuss the ruling – how it came about, and take a look at some of TfL’s motivations. They also explore what the ruling means in practice – for the 40,000 drivers who earn a living from the platform, for the app’s 3.5 million users in London, and for the broader future of tech and innovation in Britain.

Published: