April 06, 2005
Dr David Huang
David is a theoretical chemist and occasional
journalist, editor and world traveller. Pathologically
afraid of the real world, he has wasted … spent 10
years studying at uni and has no immediate plans of
leaving.
August 18, 2004
Dr Tim Baynes
Ahhh, the man with the velvet tonsils. Poor Scouser Tim is a Magnetic Physicist and Everton FC fan. A man who is proud of his Morris Minor and unhealthy love of Geoffrey Boycott and Max Planck, he is most likely found roaming the streets of Canberra trying to record vox pop’s for no apparent reason.
August 18, 2004 dialupChris Stewart
Kipper is the straight man of the team. A self confessed thespian trapped in the body of an astrophysicist, Chris is currently on assignment with the Laotian government looking at space travel using recycled waste products.
August 18, 2004 dialupKeir Smith
After 7 years roaming the Antarctic wilderness in search of a place to call to home, or at least a hot meal, Keir was rescued by the Discovery helicopter. He has spent the time since then working off the debt by producing funny, sometimes informative, pieces for your listening pleasure.
August 18, 2004 dialupGina Sartore
Gina Sartore is simultaneously hiding from her thesis supervisor, teaching
science to rural uni students, and communing with a bunch of alpaca (her favourite country-type animal). She is an occasional contributor, but is
having trouble finding a tin can with a long enough string. If you know the collective noun for alpaca or have some string to sell, drop her an email.
March 03, 2004
Ian Woolf
Ian Woolf lives in Sydney, has a degree in Applied Physics, worked as a solar astronomer, software engineer, systems programmer, webmaster, Cisco CCNA tutor, Computational Theory lecturer, and subject coordinator; while changing his career to professional writing and broadcasting. Read more at Here’s Why


To see a world in a grain of sand