Command Control Power: Apple Tech Support & Business Talk

Jerry Zigmont, Joe Saponare, Sam Valencia

Sam, Jerry, and Joe discuss their thoughts and draw from their combined experience of over 20 years in the Apple Consultants Network (ACN).

  1. 9 GIỜ TRƯỚC

    Michael Thomsen of Origin 84 on Building a Process-Driven MSP and Using Compliance Frameworks for Strategy

    CCP welcomes returning guest Michael Thomsen of Origin 84 from Sydney, Australia and discusses how he prepares to leave his business for long travel by relying on organizational design, documentation, and clear accountability, using Confluence and EOS-style role success criteria to prevent gaps and duplication. They explore perfectionism versus "good enough," emphasizing repeatable standards a team can deliver, protecting integrity, and avoiding preventable mistakes. The conversation shifts to why SOC 2, HIPAA, and ISO 27001 matter as clients face more vendor-risk questions, and how policies differ from procedures by enabling decentralized decisions. Michael explains Origin 84's fixed-fee, services-first model and a "magic quadrant" approach that moves from help desk and IT admin to account management and strategy, using root-cause fixes across all clients. He details standardizing on Microsoft-first tooling (including Entra SSO for Google), vendor-risk concerns, and how certification frameworks drive continual improvement and practical, auditable policies.   00:00 Welcome Back Michael 00:35 Travel Rituals Offline 01:14 Leaving the Business 03:23 Planning Like Military 04:47 Runbooks EOS Accountability 07:22 Perfection Versus Good 13:53 Standards And Certifications 16:32 Policy Versus Procedure 17:56 Building Sticky Services 20:14 Magic Quadrant Strategy 23:16 Fix Root Causes 26:21 Flat Rate Incentives 27:45 Strategy Alignment Limits 29:13 Listening Before Pushing 30:08 Pricing Pushback Story 31:52 Standardize Security Baselines 34:33 Paying for Certification Proof 36:10 Cut Costs via Account Management 36:50 Client Owned Subscriptions 39:21 Microsoft as North Star 41:10 Vendor Risk and Contingencies 47:37 Entra SSO for Google 50:46 ISO 27001 Policy Reality Check 54:57 Part Two Wrap Up

    58 phút
  2. 14 THG 4

    Apple's 50th Anniversary Old Shortcuts, and What Still Delights - Part 2

    The hosts revisit early Apple and Mac experiences and discuss first keyboard shortcuts, focusing on "Command Control Power" after a photographer client referenced it while troubleshooting a MacBook Pro that died on location from a drained battery. They debate the proper shortcut key order versus Apple's conventions, recall Apple II shortcuts like Control–Open Apple–Reset, and reflect on floppy-drive workflows and multi-disk backups. The conversation shifts to Apple's attempts to break into business hardware, Steve Jobs' impact and management style, and a perceived reversal where hardware fit-and-finish improved while macOS feels buggier, with annual OS releases and settings moving cited as problems. They note Rapid Security Response/Background Security Improvements placement changes, praise Apple Watch and AirPods, share audience photos and Apple memorabilia, and close with gratitude to Apple, colleagues, and listeners.   00:00 Apple 50th Kickoff 00:27 Shortcut Origin Story 01:08 Photo Shoot Panic 02:17 Shortcut Order Debate 03:27 Open Apple Keys 05:16 Save Changes Shutdown 07:33 Floppy Boot Days 09:02 Apple In Business 12:22 Jobs Magic And Myth 14:03 Modern OS Buggy Era 19:27 Settings Search Problem 23:17 Yearly OS Cadence 26:04 Planned Obsolescence Talk 27:46 Software Sells Hardware 28:07 Mac CPU Transitions 29:12 Snow Leopard Lessons 31:37 Intel Era Reality Check 33:11 Security Updates Moved 34:22 Throwback Mac Photos 35:52 Daily Delight Devices 40:12 Old iPhones and iPods 42:29 Apple Employee Card 44:37 Startup Office Memories 46:13 50 Years of Apple

    50 phút
  3. 7 THG 4

    Apple at 50 - First Macs, HyperCard, iPod Halo, and Memories from the Early Days - Part 1

    Apple at 50: First Macs, HyperCard, iPod Halo, and Memories from the Early Days - Part 1   The hosts celebrate Apple's 50th anniversary (recorded April 1) and recommend David Pogue's book "Apple at 50," including his Computer History Museum interview. They invite listener stories and discuss first Apple computers (Apple IIe/IIc/II Plus), early BASIC programming habits, and Apple's influence in schools via HyperCard/HyperTalk. Jerry recounts starting on PC compatibles in a tool-and-die business, moving into Macs for music/MIDI and Finale, and shows a 1989 receipt for a Macintosh IIx system costing about $7,000 (roughly $14,730 in 2026 dollars). Listener Dwayne Moss shares memories working at Apple, concerts at sales conferences, seeing Steve Jobs introduce the iPod at Town Hall, and being hired and laid off three times. The group reflects on the iPod's Windows support, the "digital hub" era, early CD burning, Airport cards, Macworld/iPhone displays, Newton hardware, and transitions from PowerPC to Intel to Apple silicon.    00:00 Apple Turns 50 00:40 David Pogue Book Pick 01:59 First Apple Computers 03:56 Learning BASIC Early 06:34 Jerry's First Macs 09:25 Sticker Shock Pricing 11:55 From Punch Cards to AI 13:42 HyperCard Magic 15:38 Listener Story Dwayne 18:30 iPod Halo Effect 20:37 Digital Hub Creativity 24:15 CD Burning Nostalgia 26:31 Iconic iPhone Sounds 27:26 First Business Macs 28:49 Early WiFi Upgrades 30:35 Offline Computing Era 31:45 Macworld iPhone Memories 36:09 Newton Surprise Find 39:12 Early Influences 39:55 Jerry Career Pivot 46:23 Vintage Server Rooms 50:33 G4 to Intel Shift 50:55 Wrap

    55 phút
  4. 31 THG 3

    No Slam Dunk: Apple Setup Snags & Compliance Hoops

    Joe and Jerry discuss Apple's redesigned online store, noting that Mac configuration choices are now embedded in the URL, making it easier to share exact specs with clients. Jerry describes upgrading from an M3 MacBook Air to an M5 Air via trade-in and 0% financing, then they compare experiences with Migration Assistant failures during remote migrations, including restarts, antivirus removal, and workarounds like migrating via an external drive. They talk about battery-life and thermal concerns on smaller MacBook Pros, using Low Power Mode, and consider how an entry-level "Neo" Mac might expand education or large deployments. Joe warns Apple's Partner Network locator has worse search and may mishandle reviews, recommending saving reviews via Claude-generated HTML. They gripe about post-update "Welcome to Mac" and Apple Intelligence prompts disrupting remote access, share an iPhone brightness mishap, cover RingCentral shared-inbox texting requiring opt-in/terms/privacy compliance, and Jerry previews a job cleaning mouse contamination from a network closet using protective gear.   00:00 Show kickoff Sam missing 00:20 Apple Store URL configs 04:35 Jerry upgrades MacBook Air 05:29 Migration Assistant failures 07:21 Remote setup workflow 13:44 Trade in timing value 14:53 Battery life low power mode 16:29 Thermals 14 inch Pro 18:45 Mac Neo market wildcard 20:48 Partner locator review backup 24:23 Locator search broken 28:39 AI Bugs and Review Backups 30:03 Claude Recreates Review Page 31:34 Welcome Screen Update Rage 33:14 Remote Access Blocked by Prompts 35:22 Stability Over New Features 37:37 iPhone Brightness Disaster 40:19 Shared SMS Inbox with RingCentral 41:44 Business SMS Compliance Hoops 49:34 Hazmat Tech Closet Cleanup 54:41 Patreon and Wrap Up

    58 phút
  5. 10 THG 3

    660: Clouds of Doubt: Are We Crossing the Data Line?

    When "Cloud-Only" Starts to Crack: Costs, Control, AI Risks, and Hybrid Reality The hosts discuss an AI-suggested topic: why "cloud-only" thinking is cracking, focusing on broken cost predictability from usage-based pricing, vendor lock-in and loss of control, latency and dependency on internet uptime, and growing compliance and data-residency pressures. They explore how AI increases data exposure risk while also driving demand for integrations like Copilot and Gemini, debate ethical/environmental concerns and whether banning AI would matter, and note AI may reduce support work while increasing competition. They argue hybrid setups are becoming a practical middle ground, enabled by smaller local hardware like Mac minis. They also cover new Apple Magic Mouse and keyboard purchases, announce the UniFi Cloud Gateway Industrial (high-power PoE and SIM slot features), promote ACES 2026 with code CCP, and describe difficulty playing a purchased MP4 on Apple TV due to AirPlay audio dropouts. 00:00 Show Kickoff 00:40 Cloud Costs Rising 04:57 AI Data Exposure 08:34 Ethics And Environment 13:22 Jobs And Competition 15:42 Latency And Outages 18:26 Vendor Control Drift 23:15 Hybrid Middle Ground 24:34 Compliance And Risk 27:20 How We Use AI 31:49 AI Hits Support Work 32:21 Apple AI Troubleshooting Vision 34:16 Staying Valuable Beyond AI 35:29 New Magic Mouse Setup 37:50 Fixing Accidental Gestures 40:45 UCG Industrial Gateway 41:43 Starlink Mini Power Options 45:42 Remote SIM And WiFi 7 47:09 ACEs 2026 And Discount 48:23 MP4 To Apple TV Struggles 51:47 Wrap Up And Thanks

    54 phút
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Giới Thiệu

Sam, Jerry, and Joe discuss their thoughts and draw from their combined experience of over 20 years in the Apple Consultants Network (ACN).

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