• "When a contrarian shows up, I listen."
    Aug 13 2021

    This month, we talk with the fascinating Michelle Atlas, a coach who works with female entrepreneurs. She helps them take that leap of faith, whether it's starting a new business or up-shifting their business to the next level.


    We start off by discussing Palantir CEO Alex Karp's scathing comments about Silicon Valley. He explains how this arrogant, condescending group of engineers huddled in an isolated corner of the world might be good at software, but that doesn't give them the right to: Reorganize society, decide what is moral and just, deem who can and cannot use certain technologies, surveil us, or govern us. He says it so perfectly when he says "the bargain between the public and the technology sector has for the most part been consensual"... but people will hopefully stop tolerating it once they realize what's going on.


    We then discuss Google's latest drunken idea called Duplex, an AI technology that further anti-improves society. If you don't feel like calling a local business to order food or make an appointment, you just tell a Google website to do it, and then their AI auto-bot calls the business for you and (after scaring them) makes the request on your behalf. This further disconnects the already-disconnected Millennial from reality, completely removing the human factor and the empathy for those few people out there who are still working hard.


    We talk about what makes a good coach/counselor (intuition and experience) versus a bad one (cookie-cutter advice and templates). We also discuss a bit about how you can still shift yourself into where you want to be, no matter how old you are. Remember, Colonel Sanders and many other people didn't succeed until their 50s or 60s!


    We remind people about the new scandal of cloud-controlled devices - these are devices that will actually be disabled by their creators when they hit a certain age. We mention how Facebook welcomes further regulation (ironically they know that it'll just make it harder for new competitors to enter the market) and how awareness, then, is the only key to stopping the insanity. Finally, we brainstorm ways Marc can bring this under-reported information to a larger audience, and we come up with an idea for an exposé video series... who knows... might be coming down the pipeline!


    Thanks to lofi geek for the music, and thanks as always for telling your friends about the show!

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  • Machine Learning: The Next Bad Idea
    Jun 14 2021

    It's the June 2021 episode of The Computer Exorcist Bonus Show!

    This month's articles were so bleak, I had to enlist the help of no less than Dr. Mike to help me get through them:

    How the Norks are getting dangerously good at hacking, while humanity lumbers on using naked Microsoft computers

    How programmers are "training" computers to "learn" on their own - and the disastrous (and usually racist) results that follow

    The false promise of technology vs. the reality, such as how Google's Voice to Text thing always messes up words consistently

    How nerds never, ever, ever consider the consequences of unbridled technology and the Pandora's boxes they keep opening, but feel selectively guilty on occasion

    Microsoft removing the ability to disable Windows Defender, and the arrogant nerds who CANNOT COMPREHEND why anyone would want to override things in certain cases

    And the "odd-even curse" of Microsoft Windows - They're all disasters, but it seems as though every other version is a greater disaster.

    Stay tuned at the end for a deleted scene, and thanks to Nolan Derosia for the music!


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  • As if any of this stuff functions in real life!
    Feb 26 2021

    Today we talk with multi-faceted IT bureaucrat James Coffin about The False Promise of Technology. We hear it all the time: Technology is this salve that you can rub all over a situation to make it better.

    Well, in reality it's not the case. Even if it helps some things a little, it's not going to take away all your problems, and if you think so, you're in for a surprise.

    "As if any of this stuff functions in real life!" sums it up nicely. Computers are unreliable garbage designed with framework that depends on framework that depends on framework, so if there's a flaw or an update, a chain reaction of annoyance takes place. It's all garbage.


    We discuss:

    How India's Welfare Revolution Is Starving Citizens (and what the article's author doesn't even realize is the problem)

    How the Norks go on virtual bank heists by breaking into bank computers that have lax security, and how they're actually safer than we are by virtue of not using cloud-controlled gadgets!

    Why one author thinks Lenovo PCs are bad (and why they're actually the best)

    Colleges that don't require tuition payment until you've gotten a real job (and THE REAL REASON WHY education is so expensive)

    Microsoft claiming it's going to make its products more consistent soon (HA)

    Now that Facebook owns your personal life, it's out to control your work life too

    Colleges being sued for recording students' biometrics

    The false promise of autonomous vehicles, and how it's inevitable that nerds call for the deprecation of all human drivers

    How one company aims to keep steering wheels in cars, but only if you prove to the car that you're worthy of driving it

    And finally, how the You Know What might be the downfall of the much-heralded ride-sharing and car-sharing services.


    Thanks to Dis-Harmony for the music, and thanks to Gotham Podcast Studio and Tandem Podcast platform for hosting the show!

    As always, thanks for telling your friends about the show!



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  • The day the world almost ended
    Feb 7 2021

    In today's episode, we welcome Sean Cronin, church planter and personal trainer. He's a non-techie and a calm, cool, collected guy, so he's the antithesis of Marc. Thanks to this opposite perspective, he brings up a lot of great points that Marc wouldn't have thought of!


    In our first article, we explore the precise reasons why Kodak failed. Hint: It had to do with trying to quash the digital photography revolution rather than compete in it.


    How the monochrome Game Boy succeeded by being simpler than its more advanced color-screen rivals, and what we can learn from that.


    The reason why there's a surprising number of people still using dial-up Internet (and why these EXXTREEM broadband packages are useless).


    How and why Google uses algorithms to change the results of your searches, and the debate about whether they should control what 90% of the world sees, or let us decide for ourselves what we should and should not read.


    We discuss Apple's latest $1700 throwaway computer (shouldn't computers be repairable at that price?) and why it's less bad than other recent Apple machines.


    Finally... our last article focuses on 26 Sept 1983. The day a Soviet system detected incoming American nukes. Was it real, or was it a false alarm?

    It was up to one man to decide what to do. Listen to the incredible story of how cooler heads prevailed that day and the world was quite literally saved.


    Thanks to Nolan Derosia for the chill music. Thanks to Gotham Podcast Studio and Tandem Podcasts for hosting our show. Thanks to you for listening and telling your friends about the show!

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  • Shut up and Lift
    Dec 4 2020

    "We always bring you fascinating guests, and tonight is no exception."

    Tonight's episode is full of "ramblings about business and tech" with bodybuilder entrepreneur Anatoly Shilman:

    Social media and who should police it

    How cutting-edge tech gadgets are "ageist" and nobody actually wants any of it

    Graphene and diamond batteries that can harvest energy from the air

    WHY Russians break into our computers

    Hiring people to do things you don't like to do (saves you time and giving someone a job in the process)

    How WhatsApp will soon be gobbled into the Facebook messaging monopoly (and how to move away from it)

    Yuval Noah Harari's warnings that 21st Century "Soviets" can surveil and influence us

    How new scary technology can be used for evil, but also for good

    How "Perception is reality" - If people think Big Box stores are the only place to buy computers, that's where they'll go


    Tons of inspiring quotes, such as:

    All things are impossible until we've seen it done.

    Keep working; nobody cares. (in a good way!)

    Shut up and lift (my personal favorite)

    Be at peace with your imperfections and just go for it

    We hope you fail; because that's the only time you're learning.


    Thanks to Egzod for the music!



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  • These things dont run on magical unicorn juice; they run on diesel!
    Oct 24 2020

    Today we approach the Wallace Memorial Microphone to do a car episode, with special guest star mechanic Nick Laborde, the wealth of knowledge owner of Nick's Auto Repair.


    We discuss:

    The Nexcel, which aims to replace a simple oil change with an evil printer-cartridge-like gizmo that's computer-controlled and force you to buy their brand of oil.

    The billions of dollars that could be made by selling a Corvette SUV... and the heritage that would be destroyed if it happens

    Recalls that fix what the last recall broke, and recalls to fix what those recalls broke

    Recall fatigue

    How wireless update attacks will soon plague cars

    The Corvette Flying Frunk debacle, and how GM is blaming customers for shoddy latches

    Good news from Mazda, Nissan, and Ford about keeping good simple retro cars alive

    The shop class instructor who teaches kids to electrify old cars

    The John Deere right-to-repair scandal

    A company that tears down a car and sells their findings to its competing automakers

    The VW Dieselgate scandal: Why didn't they order them to put that money toward something good?

    The 1970s VW ethos of not reinventing the wheel

    The single mom who couldn't afford to put tires on her car because she had to buy a new catalytic converter to pass inspection

    The massive need for young people to enter auto repair and other trades

    "The industry is a casino and the auto manufacturers are the house."

    "I shake my head so much that I think I have two bad discs because of it."

    "I remove more rodents than the Orkin man."

    ...and many more quotable quotes from Nick!


    Hope you're glued to your speakers throughout the show. I know I was!

    Thanks to Xela for the music.



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  • The Wu Tang Clan stole my lunch from the breakroom
    Sep 6 2020

    On today's episode we're joined by special guest Mike Ortiz of Gotham Podcast Studio, and we discuss:

    How he helps people start their own podcasts (including this one!)

    His encounters with celebrities, including the time when the Wu Tang Clan took his lunch from the breakroom

    The day Verizon bought the two dumpster-fires known as AOL and Yahoo, combined to create one giant cesspool of clickbait articles, and then wrote off half their value

    How young people don't even know how to get their photos back from the iCloud One-Way Street

    How prosecutors find photos on social media to show how unrepentant some drunk drivers are

    The unknown fact that there's more to life than Trump and Covid

    How you really ought to "cleanse" your Facebook posts from when you were young

    Bonus bonus: Stay tuned to the very end for the mic test deleted scene!


    Thanks to Nolan Derosia for the music!



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  • Internalizing Anger and Living in Fear with Ric Warren
    Jul 3 2020

    In today's episode, Marc invites local Renaissance man and healer Ric Warren to talk about how technology is causing people to fear, and how taking a sabbatical from tech lowers your blood pressure and removes that "fear of missing out".


    We draw parallels between the holistic Teknosophy Method and his holistic and personal approach to health, including how we both dispel fear in our clients, and how sometimes the key to healing is as simple as an empathetic touch.

    We talk about how we've helped people who nobody else could seem to help, thanks to our out-of-the-box approach.

    We discuss Support Scams, and how really they're just holding up a bank with a pop gun, in other words all bark and no bite.

    We talk about an incredible survey a hospital did, that revealed that most disease comes from internalizing your anger.

    We remind people that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself, and rather than pay for an "addiction" to the false sense of security that a virus scan offers, all the security you need is right there inside you.

    We explain some Buddhist and Christian tactics against fear... and so much more!

    Stick around for a "deleted scene" at the very end, and as always, thanks for telling your friends about the show!


    Thanks to Dave Mancini for today's music!


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