SOL ONE
John Savoie
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Top 10 SOL ONE Episodes
Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best SOL ONE episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to SOL ONE for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite SOL ONE episode by adding your comments to the episode page.
SOL ONE E15
SOL ONE
03/30/18 • 1 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E13
SOL ONE
03/22/18 • 2 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E12
SOL ONE
03/13/18 • 2 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E11
SOL ONE
03/07/18 • 2 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E10
SOL ONE
03/06/18 • 1 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E02
SOL ONE
02/12/18 • 2 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E03
SOL ONE
02/08/18 • 3 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E16
SOL ONE
04/01/18 • 9 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E14
SOL ONE
03/25/18 • 4 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SOL ONE E07
SOL ONE
02/27/18 • 3 min
Welcome to the Sol One Podcast. Let me just explain what this is all about first. I was employed at The Audio Development Laboratory in Houston, Texas that consisted of acoustic test facilities and supporting equipment for testing and development of audio communications and elector-acoustic systems and equipment.
Our main contractor was NASA and I had high clearance into working with and developing their audio equipment that they use with astronauts in space and on the International Space Station. I often worked alone and late into the evening. There was a lot of security, but very few NASA employees that late at night. On one such evening I was asked to listen to an audio file recorded by a physicists monitoring incoming signals from the University of Berkley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.
He pulled me into a room and placed headphones onto my ears. Listen, he said. Tell me what you think. What you will hear is impossible. We have no one on Mars. No one. He kept repeating this. I listened to a few of his recordings. They were impossible.
The physicist was excited and made a call. I scanned his equipment and noted the frequency. When he returned he was very nervous and sweaty and asked me to leave. He said he should never have involved me and asked me not to say that he did.
The next day I was followed by two men in a Black Crown Vic on my way to work. That morning I was laid off from ADL. They said there wasn't enough work to keep me on. The Crown Vic was in the parking lot. When I returned to my apartment, it was ransacked. Someone was looking for something.
But the thing I never featured on my resume was that I had a photographic memory and I remembered that specific frequency. The frequency.
That was the reason for all this. Whatever the hell was going on I needed to find out.
My identity shall remain anonymous.
My location unknown.
The frequency unidentified.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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FAQ
How many episodes does SOL ONE have?
SOL ONE currently has 16 episodes available.
What topics does SOL ONE cover?
The podcast is about Space, Audio Fiction, Society & Culture, Audio Book, Podcasts, Sci Fi, Books and Arts.
What is the most popular episode on SOL ONE?
The episode title 'SOL ONE E16' is the most popular.
What is the average episode length on SOL ONE?
The average episode length on SOL ONE is 4 minutes.
How often are episodes of SOL ONE released?
Episodes of SOL ONE are typically released every 3 days, 14 hours.
When was the first episode of SOL ONE?
The first episode of SOL ONE was released on Feb 3, 2018.
Show more FAQ
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