
Show overview
TechStuff has been publishing since 2008, and across the 18 years since has built a catalogue of 2,573 episodes, alongside 4 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to over 1700 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence, with the show now in its 4th season.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 32 min and 48 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language Technology show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed yesterday, with 43 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2023, with 265 episodes published. Published by iHeartPodcasts.
From the publisher
Behind every innovation is a new kind of power. TechStuff unpacks how technology reshapes influence, creativity, and control, from Silicon Valley’s rising moguls to the cultural forces they create. Because tech is the new religion, economy, and entertainment, all at once. Each week, Oz Woloshyn and the brightest minds covering tech dig into the weird, funny, and sometimes unsettling ways technology, AI, and the internet shape our daily lives. From AI and social media to privacy, digital burnout, and the creator economy, they ask how all this innovation is changing who we are, how we work, love, and make meaning. Smart talk, strange stories, and the questions everyone’s Googling: whether AI will replace us, how social media is affecting our kids, and what it all says about us. Get in touch here: [email protected]
Latest Episodes
View all 2,573 episodesInside Formula One’s Speed Hunt with Atlassian Williams’ Team Principal James Vowles - The Story
One Nation United Against Data Centers - Week in Tech
We've Been Sold a Bad Bill of Goods About the Future
The Trial Where Two Billionaires Could Lose — And Everyone Would Cheer - Week in Tech
Why Building AI At DeepMind Feels Like ‘Surfing’
Two Percent with Michael Easter: Is Social Media Addiction Real?
The Future Is Inherently Uncertain, But What Could Go Right?
LinkedIn Loved This AI Agent. And Then They Banned It.
Brewing Smarter: How HEINEKEN Is Using AI To Revolutionize Its Global Operations
Is Anthropic's Mythos Model Too Dangerous? - Week in Tech
Polymarket and Kalshi Have a Problem with Nepo Baby Insider Trading - The Story
Smart Talks with IBM Returns April 21
OpenAI's Sam Altman: Philosopher King Or Sociopath? - Week in Tech
Sam Altman Bought A Media Company. Now What? w/ Emily Sundberg - The Story

Introducing: Mostly Human with Laurie Segall
trailerMostly Human is a weekly podcast that explores technology through the most important lens: the human one. Hosted by award-winning tech journalist Laurie Segall, the immersive interview and investigative show tackles some of the defining questions of our time with headline-making tech titans and the people you don't know yet, but should. Mostly Human will leave you with a sense of agency over fear, and a clearer view of how tech can actually work for you. Listen here and subscribe to Mostly Human with Laurie Segall on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

AI Propaganda Goes Viral - Week in Tech
This week: Iranian propaganda gets a Lego makeover — and it's going viral. Kyle Chayka (The New Yorker) tracked down the collective behind the AI-animated videos flooding your feed. Nitasha Tiku (The Washington Post) was in a documentary, The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist, and the press tour feels like ChatGPT doomsday déjà vu. Reed Albergotti (Semafor) celebrates Apple’s 50th birthday, but wonders if the company is entering its Microsoft era. Plus: SpaceX files for IPO — it could be the largest in history. Additional Reading: The Team Behind a Pro-Iran, Lego-Themed Viral-Video Campaign | The New Yorker See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

How Google DeepMind Accidentally Started the AI Race - The Story
What drives a man to turn down half a million pounds at 18, test Mark Zuckerberg's sincerity over dinner, and wonder aloud if he can win a second Nobel Prize? For Demis Hassabis, co-founder and CEO of Google DeepMind, the answer is a lifelong pursuit of artificial general intelligence — and an unshakeable belief that the technology he's creating will change everything about what it means to be human. Oz speaks with journalist and author Sebastian Mallaby about his new book, The Infinity Machine: Demis Hassabis, DeepMind, and the Quest for Superintelligence, tracing Demis's extraordinary journey from chess prodigy to the man at the center of the most consequential technological race of our time.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jury Blames Meta and YouTube, Goodbye Sora Videos, Weather Apps That Don't Suck - Week in Tech
The Week in Tech is back with a new roundtable! Every Friday, Oz and three of the best writers covering tech will discuss the latest news, decode emerging trends and debate what actually matters for the future of technology and for us. This week: Big Tech loses in court. Twice. Nitasha Tiku (The Washington Post) breaks down what the verdicts mean for Meta and YouTube and why it seems like we’re living in the past. Reed Albergotti (Semafor) explains why OpenAI killed Sora, its video-generation tool, and what it reveals about the resource war quietly reshaping the entire global economy. Plus, Kyle Chayka (The New Yorker) found a weather app worth caring about. We're as surprised as you are. Additional Reading: Verdicts against Meta, YouTube reshape legal protections for Big Tech A New Cost Crunch | Semafor Why You Hate Your Weather App | The New Yorker See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Is Software Dead? Finance and Tech Bros Clash - The Story
A $30,000-a-year piece of software has tech and finance bros beefing on LinkedIn. The Bloomberg Terminal has a rabid Wall Street fanbase. So when some tech bros claimed to have vibe-coded a version of the terminal, with one prompt, there were some strong emotions among its finance superfans. Oz talked to Isabelle Bousquette, a tech reporter for The Wall Street Journal, to break down the drama and what it says about the future of software. Then, Isabelle updates us on Nvidia’s massive developer conference last week, the company’s new OpenClaw obsession and why making a claw almost broke her brain. Additional Reaching: Finance Bros to Tech Bros: Don’t Mess With My Bloomberg Terminal | Wall Street Journal See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Did Nvidia Give OpenClaw Its ChatGPT Moment? - Week in Tech
The Week in Tech is now a roundtable! Every Friday, Oz and three of the best writers covering Silicon Valley will discuss the latest news, decode emerging trends and debate what actually matters for the future of technology and for us. This week, guests Reed Albergotti (Semafor), Kyle Chayka (The New Yorker) and returning panelist Taylor Lorenz (User Mag) each share a story. Reed fills us in on what he saw at the Nvidia GTC conference in San Jose, and why we shouldn’t ignore OpenClaw. Taylor gives a primer on Section 230, the 30-year-old foundational internet law, and why there’s a campaign to repeal it. And finally, Kyle tells us what ‘taste’ means to Silicon Valley’s tech bros and why it may annoy you. Additional Reading: We’re all living inside Jensen Huang’s ‘triangle’ | Semafor How Powerful People Became Obsessed w/ Section 230 | User Mag Why Tech Bros Are Now Obsessed with Taste | The New Yorker See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.