GizmoSapiens Podcast

Christopher T. Centers

GizmoSapiens discusses the intersection of Technology, Ethics, Politics & Pop Culture!

  1. 13h ago

    GizmoSapiens Show 273 - Didn't We Learn Anything from the Movies?

    In this episode, Chris and Matt explore four stories that show what happens when AI, automation, and gadgets step off our screens and into the physical world. First, we look at a live demo where security researchers hijacked a commercially available humanoid robot using nothing but spoken commands, then used short‑range wireless to spread the exploit to an offline robot—turning embodied AI into a potential physical weapon.   Next, we head to Japan, where Ishinomaki City is deploying Terra Drone–built “bear‑repellent spray drones” to deal with record numbers of human‑bear encounters, injuries, and deaths, using capsaicin spray as a non‑lethal deterrent from up to a kilometer away.   Back at the dinner table, pasta sauce brand Prego and nonprofit StoryCorps have created the “Connection Keeper,” a $20, puck‑shaped, screen‑free recorder meant to get phones off the table and preserve family conversations, with an option to archive them via StoryCorps and even the Library of Congress.   Finally, we discuss de‑extinction company Colossal’s claim that it has hatched 26 live chicks from artificial eggshells—3D‑printed honeycomb containers with silicone membranes—positioning the technology as a step toward bringing back extinct birds like the dodo and giant moa.   Together, these stories raise big questions about safety, surveillance, conservation, and what counts as “humane” technology in a world where bits are increasingly attached to atoms. Links discussed: “Researchers Show Some Robots Can Be Hijacked Just Through Spoken Commands” (Slashdot / Interesting Engineering, DARKNAVY demo) “Japanese city deploys anti-bear drones as ‘human casualties at an all-time high’” (Terra Drone coverage and news reports) “Has the smartphone hijacked your dinner table? StoryCorps and Prego made this gadget to rescue your dinner convos” (TechRadar and Prego materials) “Chickens without eggs? De-extinction company creates artificial egg.” (Ars Technica, Colossal Biosciences) See you on the Digital Flip-side!

    44 min
  2. Jun 8

    GizmoSapiens Show 272 - Apple of My Eye

    Chris and Matt discuss school and university systems are quietly rethinking some of their biggest bets of the last two decades. In K‑12, districts that spent billions on laptops and tablets during the pandemic are now limiting screen time or putting devices away in response to parent concerns about distraction, mental health, and academic performance. At the same time, Kansas City Public Schools is making a dramatic platform shift, replacing around 30,000 Windows PCs and Chromebooks with Apple devices it describes as more secure, durable, and reliable.   In higher education, Harvard has voted to cap straight‑A grades at roughly 20 percent per class starting in 2027, its most aggressive effort yet to push back against grade inflation. And new labor‑market data show that a master’s degree no longer offers the job security it once did, with unemployment among under‑35 master’s holders near a 20‑year high.   We tie these stories together into a bigger question: are we watching the beginning of a reset on educational technology, grading, and credentials? And what should students, parents, and educators do about it? Links discussed: Why some US schools are cutting back on the technology they spent billions on (Slashdot / Washington Post) Harvard votes on limiting A grades (Slashdot, Axios, Washington Post, The Crimson) “A Master’s Degree Isn’t the Job Guarantee It Used To Be” (Slashdot / Wall Street Journal) Kansas City Public Schools to replace 30,000 Windows PCs and Chromebooks with Apple devices (9to5Mac / PCMag) See you on the Digital Flipside!

    1h 6m
  3. Jun 1

    GimzoSapiens Show 271 - PC World

    In this episode, Chris and Matt break down a wave of new laptop and PC news that’s reshaping the platform landscape for the next few years. Nvidia’s N1X Arm chips are finally headed to consumer Windows gaming laptops, with a next‑gen N2 platform already on the roadmap for 2027. Intel is firing back at Apple’s MacBook Neo with its new Core Series 3 mobile CPUs, while Microsoft doubles down on Intel for its latest business‑focused Surface Pro 12 and Surface Laptop 8 models. We also look at Googlebook, Google’s new AI‑native laptop platform that blends Android and ChromeOS with deep Gemini integration—complete with a “Magic Pointer” and prompt‑based custom widgets meant to succeed the traditional Chromebook. Then we zoom out to hardware design and reliability, from HP’s EliteBoard G1a “PC inside a keyboard” to a new report claiming Windows PCs crash three times as often as Macs in the workplace. If you’re trying to decide what laptop ecosystem to bet on for the next 3–5 years—Windows, Mac, or Google’s new AI‑centric world—this episode is for you. Links discussed: Nvidia’s Arm-based N1X gaming laptops roadmap (Tom’s Hardware) Windows PCs crash three times as often as Macs, study says (Slashdot) Intel’s Core Series 3 as answer to MacBook Neo (Slashdot) HP EliteBoard G1a: PC in a keyboard (The Register) Googlebook: Gemini-powered AI laptop platform (Tom’s Hardware, Google blog and coverage) Microsoft launches Surface Pro 12 and Surface Laptop 8 with Intel chips (Slashdot) See you on the Digital Flip-side!!!

    42 min

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GizmoSapiens discusses the intersection of Technology, Ethics, Politics & Pop Culture!