TechTime with Nathan Mumm

Nathan Mumm

You can grab your weekly technology without having to geek out on TechTime with Nathan Mumm. The Technology Show for your commute, exercise, or drinking fun. Listen to the best 60 minutes of Technology News and Information in a segmented format while sipping a little Whiskey on the side. We cover Top Tech Stories with a funny spin, with information that will make you go Hmmm. Listen once a week and stay up-to-date on technology in the world without getting into the weeds. This Broadcast style format is perfect for the everyday person wanting a quick update on technology, with two fun personalities driving the show Mike and Nathan. Listen once, Listen twice, and you will be sold on the program. @TechtimeRadio | #TechtimeRadio.com | www.techtimeradio.com

  1. VOR 12 STD.

    292: What Happens When Machines Become The Main Users Online, Big Tech Could Lose Legal Protection Over Addictive Social Apps, Toilet Broadband Plus Other April Fools Tech Lore, and Why Networks Are Shifting To AI Data Centers | Air Date: 3/31- 4/6/26

    AI is quietly taking the wheel of the internet, and the ride is getting weird. We’re seeing data centers merge with cloud platforms, edge computing, and telecom networks into one distributed machine that can predict failures, reroute traffic, and optimize energy in real time. That sounds amazing until you realize how much of today’s traffic is no longer humans, but machines talking to machines, and every company’s AI is fighting for the “best” path across the same shared pipes. Then we jump to a legal shift that could hit social media and online video hard: juries labeling Meta and YouTube as “defective products” over addictive design and harm to kids. We talk through what it means if courts stop treating Section 230 like an all-purpose shield, and we wrestle with the messy tradeoffs. More safety and accountability? Or a future of over-censorship, weaker privacy, and platforms ripping out end-to-end encryption just to reduce liability? Security headlines keep the pressure on. From a high-profile personal email hack to a banking app glitch that exposed other customers’ transactions, this week is a reminder that “it probably won’t happen to me” is not a strategy. We keep it Tech Time Radio style with April Fools tech lore, a spirited Apple product rant, and a French whiskey tasting to round it out. If you like smart tech news with humor and practical takeaways, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find us. Support the show

    58 Min.
  2. 24. MÄRZ

    291: Explore Shifting Digital‑Privacy Rules, a Malfunctioning Humanoid Robot, Lively Hardware Debate on Apple's NEO, AI‑Driven Entertainment Trends, all while the FBI Spies on You, and with a little whiskey on the side | Air Date: 3/24- 3/30/26

    Your digital life is being priced, packaged, and sold, and sometimes the buyer is the government. We dig into the headline that reignites America’s privacy debate: the FBI confirming it purchases commercially available data that can be used to track Americans online. We talk about why this feels like a warrant shortcut, how the data broker economy thrives on “legal” loopholes, and why AI-powered analysis makes mass surveillance more scalable than ever. Then we shift from invisible tracking to very visible chaos: a humanoid robot in a restaurant reportedly loses spatial awareness and starts thrashing near tables. It sounds hilarious until you remember hot soup, tight spaces, and the fact that a “kill switch” only helps if staff know how to use it. We use the moment to ask a bigger question about robotics safety in public spaces: do we actually need humanoid performers, or are simpler service bots the smarter design? From there, we debate the MacBook Neo phenomenon, the kind of budget-friendly Apple product that sells fast and starts arguments even faster. We break down what people really buy when they buy a brand, where performance limits matter, and why “good enough” tech can be both practical and frustrating. We also tackle the unsettling edge of AI in Hollywood, including the plan to use a generative AI replica of Val Kilmer, and what consent, taste, and likeness rights should mean when an actor is no longer here to speak for themselves. We wrap with hard security reality: a major benefits data breach exposing sensitive identity details, plus a surprising ransomware trend where fewer victims pay even as attacks rise. If you like smart tech news with real opinions and a little whiskey on the side, subscribe, share the episode, and leave us a review so more people can find Tech Time Radio. Support the show

    58 Min.
  3. 17. MÄRZ

    290: This week, We Blend Quirky Tech "FARTS" into Real‑World Data. Starting with Digestion‑Tracking Wearables to Hollywood’s Push for One‑Minute Vertical Dramas and the Reality Behind Wi‑Fi 7 Marketing Claims | Air Date: 3/17- 3/23/26

    A wearable that logs your digestion by tracking hydrogen “events,” Hollywood betting big on one-minute vertical soap operas, and Wi‑Fi 7 routers that may not do what the box implies, this hour is packed with the kind of technology news that makes you stop and go, “wait, is that real?” We take each headline and separate the joke from the actual value, because the story behind the gimmick is usually where the truth lives.  We also shift into practical mode with a stack of real scam and phishing emails that show how people get trapped by urgency, fake account warnings, and that tempting unsubscribe link. We talk through the easiest tells like mismatched sender domains, scripts that don’t match the offer, and why “just click to verify” is still one of the most effective social engineering moves online. If you’ve got family members who get nervous when they see “final notice,” this segment is worth sharing.  From there, we hit modern tech contradictions: Tinder trying to fix dating app fatigue by pushing in-person singles events, and a promising offline AI board that runs local inference without relying on cloud services. Edge AI and offline AI can mean faster responses, fewer privacy risks, and less dependence on internet outages, but it also raises real questions about updates and long-term support. Subscribe for more consumer tech reality checks, share the show with a friend who needs scam-proofing, and leave us a review with the strangest tech headline you’ve seen lately. Support the show

    56 Min.
  4. 7. MÄRZ

    289: Microsoft’s Project Helix Headlines Gaming Debates, Gwen Reviews the Pen Pulse Ring, and Will the MacBook Neo Be Worth It? Plus iOS exploit, Spotlights Lego’s Smart Brick, and We End with Glenlivet 12 | Air Date: 3/10 - 3/16/26

    Episode 289: TechTime Radio: This week, we open with Microsoft’s Project Helix, the ambitious “one box to rule them all” promising native PC gaming, Wi‑Fi 7 speeds, and a next‑gen low‑latency controller. With a rumored $1,000 price and a 2027 release window, we dig into whether true backward compatibility across Xbox generations finally makes a premium console worth the splurge. Or should we pass on the New X-box for the rumored Steam Machines? What new gaming machine will be the SNES, and what unit will end up being the Virtual Boy?  Then Gwen Way takes over Gadgets & Gear with a packed lineup, starting with the Pen Pulse Smart Ring on Kickstarter—sleep, activity, metabolism, and glucose‑leaning insights with no subscription and a practical sizing kit backed by an on‑time delivery history. We pair that with a hard look at Apple’s $599 MacBook Neo hitting Walmart and Amazon, asking whether it’s a budget Mac breakthrough or a Chromebook in a fancy suit. Finally, we have a nation‑state iOS exploit framework now circulating in criminal hands. Nathan spotlights Lego’s reactive Smart Brick, and closes the segment with a smooth Glenlivet 12 tasting to keep things classy. Full Episode Details: A single box that runs Halo and Half‑Life without hacks? When Microsoft unveiled Project Helix, we dug into what it really means to merge Xbox simplicity with full PC gaming. From native access to Steam, Epic, and GOG to Wi‑Fi 7, a new low‑latency controller, and whispers of Surface‑team handhelds and OEM “Xbox” devices, the pitch is bold. But can a $1,000 hybrid win over builders who already plug their PCs into the living room? We map the business case, the tech hurdles, and the one promise that could flip skeptics into buyers: honest, full‑fidelity backward compatibility across the entire Xbox library. The episode takes a sharp turn into AI safety with a lawsuit tied to Google Gemini, forcing a conversation most platforms sidestep: what happens when users form emotional bonds with chatbots? We talk guardrails, roleplay, and the hard truth that you can’t program remorse. If companies market “AI companions,” what duty do they owe when simulation bleeds into support? Expect a candid look at crisis detection, liability, and the growing gap between automated empathy and human care. On the hardware front, Apple’s budget‑leaning MacBook Neo shows up at Walmart and Amazon for $599, raising eyebrows about specs, placement, and brand identity. Is it a smart entry point for students and switchers, or a dressed‑up Chromebook in bright colors? Then our Gadgets & Gear feature spotlights the Pen Pulse smart ring—a subscription‑free wearable that tracks sleep, breathing, activity, and even glucose trends. With a real sizing kit, solid delivery history, and early pricing far below Oura, it’s a compelling option for anyone tired of monthly fees. We round things out with a smooth pour of Glenlivet 12 and a quick look at Lego’s sensor‑packed Smart Brick, asking where innovation ends and cash‑grab begins. If you’re curious about the future of gaming platforms, the ethics of AI companionship, and the shifting value equation in laptops and wearables, you’ll feel right at home. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves tech hot takes, and drop your verdict: would you buy a $1,000 Xbox‑PC hybrid or build your own? Support the show

    59 Min.
  5. 25. FEB.

    287: TechTime Radio: A Courtroom Clash with META, Sci‑Fi Pigeons, and a Hardware Squeeze Reveal the Growing Tension Between Innovation and Control. Why Do Your Devices, Data, and Autonomy Feel Increasingly Up for Grabs? | Air Date: 2/24 - 3/2/26

    287: TechTime Radio: A landmark social‑media addiction trial, brain‑steered pigeons, and a global memory crunch collide in an hour that questions who really controls attention, autonomy, and access. We break down Zuckerberg’s courtroom spotlight, the stakes of age‑verification and identity collection, and the eerie rise of biodrone pigeons that blur the line between experimentation and coercive tech. The conversation widens to AI‑driven DRAM shortages slowing devices, inflating prices, and reshaping hardware roadmaps, all while Copilot’s sensitive‑email summarization misstep raises fresh questions about guardrails and trust. From bioethics to supply chains, the episode tracks how emerging systems quietly reshape daily life—from slower AI tools to pricier gadgets to new surveillance risks. We even detour into Japan’s “Monster Wolf” deterrent, a reminder that strange inventions often surface deeper debates about safety and unintended consequences. And as always, we ground the big stories with our whiskey tasting and game segment, keeping the tech turbulence both sharp and fun. Full Details: A courtroom showdown, brain-steered birds, and a supply chain squeeze collide in a fast-moving hour where we probe who truly controls attention, autonomy, and access. We start with the landmark social media addiction trial putting Mark Zuckerberg under the spotlight and ask what “less than one percent of ad revenue” really means against testimony, internal emails, and the lived experiences of teens and parents. We debate how age verification could evolve, why “government made us do it” might justify deeper identity collection, and where meaningful safety ends and surveillance begins. Then we pivot to a story that feels ripped from science fiction: a Russian startup turning pigeons into biodrones via neural stimulation. The birds navigate cities with uncanny stealth—no rotors, no glare, just feathers and control signals—raising red flags for bioethics, law enforcement, and civil liberties. We unpack the slippery slope from animal experiments to human augmentation, along with the unsettling possibility that autonomy becomes optional when enhancement is sold as progress. Meanwhile, the hardware reality bites. AI data centers are inhaling global DRAM, driving prices up and forcing even top-tier firms to rethink roadmaps. With a handful of manufacturers controlling production and expansion lagging demand, the industry faces delayed launches, pricier devices, and a renewed interest in repair and refurbishment. We connect the dots to everyday users: why your AI tools feel slower, why memory costs more, and how scarcity triggers hoarding and gray markets. We also break down Microsoft Copilot’s eyebrow-raising leap into summarizing sensitive emails and drafts, exploring what went wrong, why “code issue” isn’t a satisfying answer, and what robust guardrails should look like. Plus, a wild detour into Japan’s “Monster Wolf” bear deterrent, proof that even quirky gadgets can surface deep questions about safety, design, and unintended consequences. Along the way, we keep it grounded with our whiskey tasting and game segment. If you’re curious about where tech policy, bioethics, and infrastructure collide—and what it means for your devices, data, and daily life—this one’s for you. If it sparks a thought, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review with the one change you’d make to social platforms today. Support the show

    58 Min.
  6. 18. FEB.

    286: TechTime Radio: From TikTok's Tracking Pixels Tracking Your Every Move, to AI‑Polished Photos, Ring Camera Surveillance Creep, Invoice Scams, and a Massive Identity Breach, Learn Practical Defenses on Tech Shaping Your Life | Air Date: 2/17 - 2/2

    Think you’re safe because you never downloaded TikTok? We unpack why that’s a myth, how a tiny pixel follows you across unrelated sites, and what to do right now to shut it down. From there we dig into a subtler dilemma hiding in your camera roll: computational photography that quietly invents detail, polishes your face, and reshapes memories. It looks great—until it doesn’t. We trade quick tips for getting more honest photos, including RAW capture, disabled scene “optimizations,” and when to favor control over convenience. The conversation then turns to surveillance on your street. A glossy Ring ad promised neighborly teamwork; what many saw instead was a blueprint for crowdsourced tracking layered on top of license plate readers and a standing law enforcement portal. We walk the line between investigative value and normalized monitoring, and share concrete steps communities can take—warrants where appropriate, tighter retention windows, clear opt‑in controls, and public transparency logs. We also open our mailbag for three scams worth saving to muscle memory: a fake Netflix billing email that leads to a sketchy multi‑service “store,” a highly convincing invoice from a compromised vendor account, and an Amazon credential harvester that ends with a fake password‑changed screen. Our playbook is simple and effective: never pay from an email link, verify invoices by phone using a known number, enable multi‑factor authentication, and avoid ACH unless absolutely necessary. Then a hard lesson from the Odido breach in the Netherlands, where millions had full identity records exposed—why port‑out PINs, credit freezes, and vigilant monitoring matter more than ever. Yes, we still make room for pleasure: a Weller Full Proof tasting and a chuckle at a drone‑powered umbrella that follows you around. Through it all, our goal stays the same—decode the tech shaping daily life and hand you tools you can use. If this helped you spot a tracker, dodge a phish, or rethink your camera settings, tap follow, share the show with a friend, and drop us a review with the one privacy step you’re taking this week. Support the show

    56 Min.
  7. 11. FEB.

    285: TechTime Radio: This Week, TikTok’s Algorithm Reset, Waymo’s Scrape, a Stalled D.C. Robo‑minibus, New Security Risks, and a Hands‑on Look at the Ziea‑One Gadget from Gwen Way, Plus Even More, with Whiskey‑Fueled Insights | Air Date: 2/1

    Episode 285: Join us this week on TechTime Radio with Nathan Mumm: The Show That Makes You Go "HMMM." Welcome to our show as we guide you through all things tech with a lil' whiskey on the side. This week on TechTime Radio, we cut through a week where algorithms, automation, and accountability all collided. We opened with TikTok’s regulatory shakeup, where EU pressure and U.S. oversight triggered an algorithm reset that left creators scrambling. The conversation centered on what responsible design looks like when addictive features meet real duty of care, especially for younger users. We shifted to the automotive world this week, from Waymo scraping parked cars to a D.C. robo‑minibus that froze in the middle of the lane after a minor crash. The show explained how fragile edge cases and confusing human handoffs still make these systems unreliable, even as automation becomes more common. We wrapped up with enterprise updates, new security concerns, and a hands-on look at Gwen Ways Gadget, the Ziea-One, the calendar-organizer clock robot, all finished off with a lively American whiskey tasting that sparked plenty of debate. Feed fatigue, robo-fender-benders, and a desk gadget with egg eyes take center stage as we untangle a week where regulation, automation, and attention collide. We start with TikTok’s new reality: EU regulators label its design addictive, while U.S. oversight and ownership shifts trigger a jarring algorithm reset. Creators see their niche content vanish, reach plummet, and feeds feel sanitized or broken. We explore what accountability looks like when infinite scroll and autoplay meet duty of care—especially for younger users—and whether smarter design can keep discovery without weaponizing compulsion. Then we pivot to the streets, where autonomy hit a pothole. A Waymo vehicle, even with a specialist onboard, scraped parked cars; a D.C. robo-minibus froze mid-lane after a minor crash; and an AI-enhanced used-car listing offered up cobblestone floor mats and two gear shifters. It’s funny until it isn’t. We cut through the headlines to the heart of the problem: brittle edge cases, unclear handoffs, and the non-negotiable need for human-in-the-loop safeguards. From staged rollouts to geofencing and real-world failover plans, we map the practices that separate novelty from reliability. On the enterprise side, Microsoft’s long goodbye to Exchange Web Services sounds mundane—until your calendar syncs and SaaS bridges hiccup. We explain the timeline, what’s replacing EWS, and how to audit your hidden dependencies before 2027 arrives. To actually tame your day, we test-drive Zia One, a Kickstarter AI calendar that merges Google, Outlook, and more into a glanceable desktop display with voice commands, Pomodoro timers, and playful animations. It’s a focused bet on ambient computing—and we share how to evaluate crowdfunded hardware for real-world viability. Security stakes stay high as Coinbase reports a contractor-enabled data access incident, complete with leaked screenshots of internal tools. We detail why outsourced support is a prime attack surface and lay out a practical blueprint for least privilege, session monitoring, and vendor governance. And yes, we sip through a four-bottle American whiskey flight, trade takes on flavor and finish, and crown a winner—with a few confident opinions that may not age well. Hit play for a fast, clear, and funny tour through the week’s most consequential tech shifts, grounded in practical steps you can apply today. If you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave us a review—then tell us: which trend needs the toughest guardrails right now? Support the show

    56 Min.

Moderation und Gäste

Info

You can grab your weekly technology without having to geek out on TechTime with Nathan Mumm. The Technology Show for your commute, exercise, or drinking fun. Listen to the best 60 minutes of Technology News and Information in a segmented format while sipping a little Whiskey on the side. We cover Top Tech Stories with a funny spin, with information that will make you go Hmmm. Listen once a week and stay up-to-date on technology in the world without getting into the weeds. This Broadcast style format is perfect for the everyday person wanting a quick update on technology, with two fun personalities driving the show Mike and Nathan. Listen once, Listen twice, and you will be sold on the program. @TechtimeRadio | #TechtimeRadio.com | www.techtimeradio.com

Das gefällt dir vielleicht auch