
A New Release And Some Clips : Trekzone’s Fan Film Update
Welcome to Trekzone’s Fan Film Updates. The bite size podcast catching you up on the latest Star Trek fan film news… it’s a bit of a quiet week… but we’ll
Welcome to Trekzone’s Fan Film Updates. The bite size podcast catching you up on the latest Star Trek fan film news… it’s a bit of a quiet week… but we’ll
The beginning of 2020 was a great time to be a scifi fan. Not only was it the 25th anniversary of Voyager, but we had new seasons of Doctor Who
We’re live now with Trekzone TV, playing all of Trekzone’s hits from the past nine and a half years of podcasting. From the very beginning, when I was a very
Trekzone stalwart Larry Nemecek beamed in at the start of 2020 to chat about the first few episodes of Star Trek: Picard… lets flash back to That Time When now…
Back at the start of 2020 – just before Covid took over the world – it was a time of celebration … twenty five years since Voyager premiered. And what
Journey back to the start of 2020 and That Time When Matt caught up with Nick Cook about Starship Intrepid… how far we’ve come!
Welcome to Talkin’ Science… it’s the bite sized edition where we bring you what you need to know now. Coming up today – Southern Launch gears up, construction begins on
Today – four premieres, a crowd funding update, another fake new release from can’t make a fan film land and a plug for Trekzone TV.
Our second watch party from the past weekend’s epic triple release. Nick Cook beams in live today to chat about The One With The Whales… an incredible homage to Star
It was an epic weekend for Star Trek Fan Films. Three incredible shorts dropped and we’re catching up with an exclusive chat with their directors this week. First up Resistance,
Welcome to Talkin’ Science… your bite sized wrap of the latest science and space headlines. Coming up today from red giant supernovas to remote WA radio telescopes painting a map
Welcome to Trekzone’s Fan Film Update. The bite size podcast catching you up on the latest Star Trek fan film news. Today – three big releases, catching up on a
Sam Cockings’ most ambitious crowd funding campaign is well underway and in a Trekzone first we’re giving him a bit of a plug. Join us for a watch party of
Hurricanes, fuel leaks and a faulty temperature sensor may have forced NASA’s hand for the first three launch attempts – but now we’re on track to launch our next adventure
Star Trek is awesome. Books are awesome. Put them together and you have a subset of our franchise. And then when you throw in kids books, to help young minds
This is your bite size podcast catching you up on the latest science fiction production info… coming up today, the continued fall from grace for Vic Mignogna, teases for Prodigy
It’s the end of the third week of March 2025. Here’s the science and space
Astronauts often experience immune dysfunction, skin rashes, and other inflammatory conditions while travelling in space, and international researchers believe these issues are likely due to the overly sterile nature of the International Space Station.
Australia’s first state government funded satellite, Kanyini, has delivered its first images from space, marking
Data from NASA’s InSight mission suggest Mars has a liquid core similar to Earth’s, but European scientists say the core may be solid, at least below a certain temperature.
Scientists have successfully used lasers to identify microbe fossils in rocks from Earth, which are like the rocks found on Mars, opening up the possibility of searching for fossils on the Red Planet.
International scientists, including an Australian, say they’ve found evidence of the highest-energy neutrino detected to date. The result suggests the particle came from beyond our Milky Way, they say, although its precise origin remains mysterious.
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It’s the end of the third week of March 2025. Here’s the science and space headlines from the week that was… Kanyini phones home, shows
Astronauts often experience immune dysfunction, skin rashes, and other inflammatory conditions while travelling in space, and international researchers believe these issues are likely due to the overly sterile nature of the International Space Station.
Australia’s first state government funded satellite, Kanyini, has delivered its first images from space, marking a significant milestone for the space mission. Mission Director Peter
Data from NASA’s InSight mission suggest Mars has a liquid core similar to Earth’s, but European scientists say the core may be solid, at least below a certain temperature.
Scientists have successfully used lasers to identify microbe fossils in rocks from Earth, which are like the rocks found on Mars, opening up the possibility of searching for fossils on the Red Planet.
International scientists, including an Australian, say they’ve found evidence of the highest-energy neutrino detected to date. The result suggests the particle came from beyond our Milky Way, they say, although its precise origin remains mysterious.
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