Tech That Serves You, or Owns You?
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In this episode of TechWatch Radio, Sam Bushman and Jay Harrison dig into the strange, fascinating, and sometimes unsettling ways technology is weaving itself into everyday life. From a magician who implanted an RFID chip in his hand and then forgot the password, to Googles bold vision of solar powered data centers in space. Just because we can do something with tech, does that mean we should? What happens when innovation moves faster than common sense or reliability?
The discussion moves through some truly eye opening developments, including Voyager 1 reaching a distance where signals take a full day to travel one way, and the hidden costs of the AI boom that are driving memory shortages and higher prices for consumer devices. Can AI data centers really help solve housing affordability, or do they just move the problem around? Are we rushing AI into everything, from enterprise software to everyday gadgets, without stopping to ask if it actually helps?
Finally, Sam and Jay turn a critical eye toward Microsoft's rapid release cycle, chronic Windows bugs, broken updates, and security vulnerabilities that affect everyone from home users to governments. They contrast this with the rise of privacy focused alternatives like Proton, and make a case for slowing down, prioritizing stability, and letting technology serve people rather than dominate them.