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That IT show

That IT show

thatitshow

178 episodesEN

Show overview

That IT show has been publishing since 2022, and across the 4 years since has built a catalogue of 178 episodes. That works out to roughly 170 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence, with the show now in its 4th season.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 49 min and 1h 7m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Technology show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 6 days ago, with 21 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2023, with 53 episodes published. Published by thatitshow.

Episodes
178
Running
2022–2026 · 4y
Median length
59 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

A couple of old-fashioned IT engineers/consultants turned college professors ranting about IT

Latest Episodes

View all 178 episodes

The Most Powerful AI Laptop Meets the Least Focused Podcast - (Episode 174)

Jun 6, 202631 min

Running AI on a CPU: Because Waiting 14 Minutes Builds Character - (Episode 173)

May 28, 202636 min

The datacenter will be ready right after the roundabout - (Episode 172)

May 21, 202632 min

When your home lab has a better disaster recovery plan than your career plan - (Episode 171)

May 14, 202651 min

The one where we discuss podcast Saturation: Now available in audio/video form - (Episode 170)

May 7, 202629 min

The one where Linux and AI were ready but Jasmin was not - (Episode 169)

Apr 23, 202641 min

Hallucinations, Hype, and Other AI Headaches - (Episode 168)

Apr 16, 202625 min

S3 Ep 15Claude Leak & Mythos Peak: A Perfect Storm - (Episode 167)

A simple packaging mistake exposes thousands of lines of internal AI code—and within days, it’s already being used as a malware lure. At the same time, a new model emerges that can reportedly discover zero-day vulnerabilities across operating systems and browsers, raising a serious question: are we building tools that are too powerful to release? In this episode, we break down the Claude Code leak, the controversial Mythos model, and what they reveal about the future of AI. This isn’t just about security—it’s about control, responsibility, and whether the industry is ready for what it’s creating.

Apr 9, 202612 min

S3 Ep 13Drivers, Drama, and Digital Chaos it is - (Episode 166)

In this episode, we dive headfirst into the beautifully chaotic world of modern tech, where nothing quite works the way it should—and somehow, that’s the theme. We start with Windows 11 and its ongoing talent for turning simple multimedia tasks into unsolved mysteries, then spiral into the usual driver-related frustrations that every IT professional knows all too well. Along the way, we touch on the ever-present buzz around AI—what’s real, what’s hype, and what actually works in practice. As if that wasn’t enough, we branch out into the growing influence of ARM-based chips and what they mean for the future of computing. It’s a classic mix of rants, insights, and “how is this still broken?” moments—unfiltered, slightly sarcastic, and very relatable to anyone living in today’s tech ecosystem.

Apr 2, 202631 min

S3 Ep 12AI reckoning: Is it coming? Or is it already here? - (Episode 165)

AI just made a quiet but massive shift. One of the most impressive generative AI tools ever released is being shut down as it rethinks its approach to commerce. At the same time, enterprises are doubling down on sovereign AI, agentic systems, and context-aware intelligence. This isn’t random—it’s a reset. The industry is moving away from flashy, expensive demos toward systems that are controllable, understandable, and economically viable. In this episode, we explore the connections between these shifts and their true implications: AI is maturing, and the future belongs to systems that not only impress but also effectively manage the world.

Mar 26, 202631 min

S3 Ep 11The hollow market: When ‘good enough’ isn’t good enough - (Episode 164)

In today’s tech landscape, the middle is disappearing. Products are either premium, high-performance, and expensive—or free, open, and “good enough.” From hardware to software, customers are no longer interested in compromise. This episode explores the rise of the barbell economy and why “average” has become obsolete. We dive into how companies that once dominated the middle—like Microsoft—are struggling to redefine their position in a world split between extremes. Should we prioritize top-tier innovation or prioritize scale and accessibility? What happens to vendors stuck in between? And more importantly—where should you position yourself in this new reality? If you’re building products, platforms, or strategies, this shift is something you can’t afford to ignore.

Mar 19, 202635 min

S3 Ep 10Prompt, pray, deploy: Adventures in accidental AI engineering - (Episode 163)

AI has officially escaped the lab—and now it’s everywhere. But instead of repeating the usual stories about chatbots and image generators, we decided to run our own experiments. What happens when you throw AI at real problems, weird ideas, or everyday tasks nobody thought about automating before? In this episode, we walk through a collection of unusual, sometimes surprising, and occasionally slightly ridiculous AI use cases we recently tested ourselves. Some worked brilliantly. Some worked… strangely. And a few made us question whether we should really be giving these tools so much power. From productivity hacks to unexpected creative tricks, this episode is basically our AI playground report: what we tried, what broke, what impressed us, and what might actually become useful sooner than anyone expects. Buckle up—this one gets interesting.

Mar 12, 202629 min

S3 Ep 9Productivity is overrated: Go build something weird - (Episode 162)

In a world preoccupied with productivity, optimization, and efficiency, hobbies often seem like a luxury or even a waste of time. But what if that’s exactly the point? In this episode, we talk about the strange, wonderful importance of doing things that don’t scale, don’t pay, and don’t necessarily make sense. Hobbies, whether they involve building model airplanes, learning guitar riffs from the 80s, restoring old computers, or designing something completely weird just for fun, provide our brains with a creative space. They create space for curiosity, experimentation, and creativity without deadlines or KPIs (key performance indicators). Ironically, the things we do purely for fun often teach us the most. So maybe productivity isn’t everything. Maybe the real trick is simple: stop optimizing for a moment… and go build something weird.

Mar 5, 202634 min

S3 Ep 8OpenClaw and the Wild Wild West of AI - (Episode 161)

Artificial intelligence is no longer a polished lab experiment — it’s a frontier town. In this episode, we dive into OpenClaw and what it represents in today’s rapidly shifting AI landscape: open models, decentralized power, GPU-driven innovation, and a race where regulation struggles to keep up. From open-source disruption to model autonomy, from enterprise control to digital anarchy, we explore whether this is the beginning of true AI democratization — or the calm before algorithmic chaos. Saddle up. The frontier is computational.

Feb 19, 202648 min

S3 Ep 7Schrödinger’s Documentation: It Exists Until You Need It - (Episode 160)

We’ve all seen it. The legendary documentation. The sacred diagrams. The “fully updated” runbooks. They absolutely exist — until the moment you actually need them. Then suddenly they’re archived, outdated, in someone’s inbox from 2017, or living exclusively inside the brain of the one engineer currently on vacation. In this episode, we open the box and observe the quantum state of IT documentation: simultaneously complete and nonexistent. From ghostly Visio files to tribal knowledge passed down like ancient folklore, we explore why the most critical infrastructure artifact is also the most elusive creature in the data center ecosystem.

Feb 12, 202646 min

S3 Ep 6ai.txt: This Website Does Not Consent to Being Smartened - (Episode 159)

For decades, robots.txt quietly told search engines where they were welcome and where they weren’t. Then AI showed up, read everything anyway, and called it “training.” Enter ai.txt — the hypothetical line in the sand where a website politely, clearly, and possibly angrily says: no scraping, no learning, no digital photocopying of my soul. In this episode, we explore whether consent still matters on the modern web, how AI crawlers differ from classic search bots, and whether ai.txt would be a genuine technical safeguard, a legal signal, or just a beautifully naive sign taped to the internet’s fridge saying “do not touch.” Spoiler: the file is tiny. The implications are not.

Feb 5, 202659 min

S3 Ep 5Audio Quality: We Used to Care - (Episode 158)

Once upon a time, audio quality mattered. We argued about sound cards, speaker placement, bitrates, and whether MP3s were ruining music forever. Fast forward to today: laptops whisper, Bluetooth drops packets, compression is everywhere—and nobody seems to care. Or do they? In this episode, we explore how “good enough” became the global audio standard, why convenience beat fidelity, and how computers quietly shifted from Hi-Fi machines to voice-first productivity tools. This isn’t a nostalgic rant—it’s a reality check on how our ears, habits, and expectations have changed.

Jan 29, 202650 min

S3 Ep 4This episode is already tracking you - (Episode 157)

Once upon a time, privacy meant closing a door, lowering your voice, or simply being left alone. Today, it means scrolling through settings, declining cookies for the fifth time, and hoping nobody is listening — while fully assuming someone is. We still talk about privacy as if it’s alive and well, protected by checkboxes, policies, and reassuring icons, even as our phones, homes, cars, and workplaces quietly log everything we do. This episode isn’t about panic or paranoia — it’s about honesty. Privacy didn’t suddenly die; it slowly dissolved into convenience, comfort, and “just one more app.” The real question isn’t whether privacy is gone, but why we keep pretending it isn’t — and who benefits from that fiction.

Jan 22, 202641 min

S3 Ep 3Synthetic Reality, Real Consequences - (Episode 156)

There was a time when a photo or a video meant something simple: this actually happened. Today, that assumption is quietly falling apart. We’re entering an era where reality can be generated, faces can be borrowed, voices can be cloned, and events can be convincingly fabricated in minutes. Not as science fiction, not as satire—but as everyday tooling. This episode isn’t about panic or moral grandstanding. It’s about what happens when trust becomes optional. When proof becomes negotiable. When institutions, media, courts, and even personal relationships must operate under the assumption that what they see might not be real—and that real evidence might be dismissed as fake. Synthetic reality doesn’t just blur lines between truth and fiction; it shifts the burden of proof onto everyone, all the time. And the consequences of that shift are far more serious than most people realize.

Jan 16, 202639 min

S4 Ep 2ThatITShow rant - Sorry I’m Late, I'm also somewhere else at the same time - (Episode 155)

Working from home was supposed to give us freedom—flexibility, focus, maybe even lunch that doesn’t come from a vending machine. Instead, many of us unlocked a new achievement: being in three places at once and still disappointing everyone. One meeting overlaps another, a “quick call” eats an hour, and suddenly you’re nodding thoughtfully on mute while answering emails, Slack messages, and existential questions about time itself. Online availability made us reachable, but scheduling turned us into calendar acrobats juggling overlapping priorities, time zones, and notifications that never sleep. This episode is a short, therapeutic rant about how remote work didn’t remove chaos—it just moved it into your calendar.

Jan 8, 202611 min
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