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Zero Downtime

Author: John Hass

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Zero Downtime brings together tech, business, and the everyday experiences of running an IT company. John and Logan discuss what’s going on in their world, the questions people ask them most, and talk with other business owners and professionals in conversations that are real, relaxed, and worth your time.

17 Episodes
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This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down the iPhone Fold CAD leak, Windows 12 rumors, Ray-Ban Meta privacy concerns, Apple’s MacBook Neo, and the real quantum threat to Bitcoin. They start with Apple’s foldable plans and whether the iPhone Fold could finally make foldables feel mainstream. Then they get into Windows 12 and the bigger shift happening inside Microsoft, where AI features, tighter hardware requirements, and a more controlled user experience are becoming part of the package. They also talk through the privacy side of Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, including what happens when wearable cameras and AI tools become part of everyday life. After that, they dig into the MacBook Neo and why Apple’s cheaper laptop strategy could matter a lot more than power users want to admit. To close, they look at quantum computing and Bitcoin. Could future quantum systems actually threaten old Bitcoin wallets or coins that have been sitting untouched for years? The answer is more complicated than the headlines make it sound. Topics in this episode: iPhone Fold CAD leak and Apple foldable rumors Windows 12, Copilot, AI PCs, and where Microsoft is heading Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses and privacy concerns MacBook Neo and Apple’s budget laptop strategy Quantum computing and the long-term threat to Bitcoin Zero Downtime is a weekly tech podcast covering Apple, Microsoft, AI, cybersecurity, privacy, crypto, infrastructure, and the technology decisions that affect real people and real businesses.
This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down Apple MacBook Neo rumors, DeepSeek vs Claude AI, suspicious Polymarket Iran bets, and the growing legal fight over 3D printer gun file bans. They also dig into operating system age verification and why Oracle could become one of the biggest winners in the next phase of medical AI. First up, 3D printer gun files. Several states are trying to restrict the digital files used to print firearm components, which raises a much bigger question than the headlines suggest. Are lawmakers regulating weapons, or are they regulating information? John and Logan unpack why G-code, printable blueprints, and open technology are now part of a much larger legal and political battle. Then they turn to Polymarket, the crypto prediction market where people trade probabilities instead of placing traditional bets. After reports of major positions ahead of bombing activity involving Iran, the conversation shifts to whether prediction markets are simply fast-moving public sentiment, or whether they are becoming a new kind of geopolitical signal. When anonymous wallets, blockchain transparency, and war speculation all collide, things get strange quickly. Next is Apple. Reports suggest Apple Stores were told to prepare for a spike in traffic as lower-cost hardware gets closer, including budget MacBooks, iPhones, and iPads. John and Logan discuss what an Apple MacBook Neo style launch could mean for the Windows PC market, why Apple may be pushing harder into the low end, and how a cheaper MacBook could shift the balance between macOS and Windows. After that, it is DeepSeek vs Claude. They explain why DeepSeek has become one of the most talked-about AI companies, how lower-cost open-weight models are changing the AI conversation, and why Anthropic continues to position Claude as the safer, enterprise-ready alternative. The bigger issue is model lineage. If AI systems are increasingly trained on outputs from other AI systems, how do we know where one model ends and another begins? They also look at age verification at the operating system level. New regulatory pushes could move age checks away from apps and platforms and directly into Windows, macOS, and even Linux. That raises major privacy, enforcement, and open source questions, especially when your personal computer starts looking less like a tool and more like a checkpoint. To close, John and Logan lay out a theory on Oracle and medical AI. The next major AI breakthrough may not come from scraping more internet data. It may come from whoever controls the cleanest, most structured medical records. With Cerner under Oracle and healthcare data becoming increasingly valuable, the future of AI may be shaped by hospital infrastructure, anonymized patient histories, and long-term medical outcomes. In this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan cover: • Apple MacBook Neo and Apple’s budget hardware push • DeepSeek vs Claude AI • Polymarket Iran bets and prediction markets • 3D printer gun file bans • Operating system age verification • Oracle medical AI and healthcare data Zero Downtime is a weekly podcast about cybersecurity, AI, privacy, infrastructure, and the real-world technology decisions that affect businesses and everyday users. Follow the show for weekly episodes and join the conversation on the biggest stories in tech.
On this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan dig into what happens when automation gets too much access. An internal Amazon AI agent was configured to “fix unused resources” and had the ability to terminate EC2 instances, delete S3 buckets, and modify IAM roles. It misread production state and started deleting critical infrastructure. Not malicious. Not hacked. Just overly trusted automation and a blast radius problem. They also cover NVIDIA’s AI PC strategy and why it is not a traditional “CPU comeback.” The focus is AI-enabled laptops, with partnership paths that include Arm-based designs (via MediaTek) and deeper integration in the Intel Windows ecosystem. The big question is what it takes to make Windows laptops feel competitive again in a world shaped by Apple’s M-series approach. CISA then ramps up the urgency with a Binding Operational Directive requiring federal agencies to patch within three days. The vulnerability is CVE-2026-22769, affecting Dell RecoverPoint for Virtual Machines in VMware environments, driven by hardcoded credentials and enabling remote takeover with no authentication. Researchers report exploitation in the wild going back to at least mid-2024, with attackers using the access for lateral movement, persistence, and sophisticated malware deployment. Finally, they break down password manager risks that rarely get discussed. Even with strong encryption, a compromised provider server can enable vault tampering, credential injection or replacement, downgrade-style attacks, risky recovery flows, and metadata leakage. The takeaway is not “encryption is broken.” The takeaway is that real-world security assumptions about server behavior matter. Topics covered: Amazon AI causes an AWS outage by deleting “unused” resources NVIDIA reenters consumer PCs with AI-focused laptop chips Zelda turns 40 and why it changed game design CISA 3-day patch mandate for an actively exploited Dell bug (CVE-2026-22769) Password manager hacks and “zero-knowledge” trust boundaries Story: the ROSAT satellite hack Zero Downtime is a weekly conversation about reliability, cybersecurity, privacy, and real-world tech decisions that impact businesses and everyday users.
This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down a Chrome zero-day being exploited in the wild, a ClickFix-style DNS attack that turns troubleshooting into malware delivery, and why Windows 11 is pushing more users toward Linux. They also dig into Apple’s rumored A18 MacBook aimed at the Chromebook market, plus the lawsuit alleging an AI “stolen voice” connected to Google NotebookLM. Topics covered: - ClickFix DNS attack, PowerShell delivery, and RAT payloads - Chrome zero-day patch now and what a use-after-free bug means - Apple A18 MacBook vs Chromebook and the student laptop market - Switching from Windows 11 to Linux, what is changing for gaming and drivers - Google NotebookLM stolen voice allegations and the consent problem in AI Zero Downtime is a weekly conversation about cybersecurity, privacy, reliability, and real-world tech decisions.
Every year, people buy a massive TV for the Super Bowl and return it days later. Retailers know it happens. Policies are built around it. And eventually, the cost shows up somewhere. In this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down the Super Bowl TV return cycle, how it creates waves of open box inventory, and why policy abuse always leads to tighter rules and higher prices. They also talk through the smarter approach most people overlook when it comes to buying open box tech. From there, the conversation moves to foldable iPhone rumors pointing toward a possible 2026 launch window. The question is not just when Apple enters the category, but what it would need to deliver for a foldable iPhone to feel like a real upgrade rather than a catch up move. They also dive into cross platform file sharing. Google is pushing toward two way sharing between Android and iPhone, beginning with Pixel 10. What would true Android to iOS sharing actually require to work smoothly for normal users? On the Windows side, Microsoft has begun phasing out legacy v3 and v4 print drivers from Windows Update starting in 2026. What does that mean for older printers and business environments that still depend on them? The episode closes with a grounded look at Cloud vs On Prem cost comparison and why some organizations are quietly rethinking cloud first strategies as storage, bandwidth, and reliability expectations increase. They also touch on Hollywood’s growing AI fatigue and why better storytelling still wins over technical gimmicks. Zero Downtime is a weekly conversation about reliability, cybersecurity, privacy, and the real world tradeoffs behind modern technology decisions.
John and Logan open this episode of Zero Downtime with a simple idea to fix the Olympics: bring back the drugs. They look at what was common in the earliest Games, why modern purity is mostly branding, and how the Olympics sell a cleaner story than the reality. From condoms to cardboard beds, they break down the myths that keep getting repeated and what the facts actually say. They then move into the privacy story of the week. Google has agreed to pay 68 million to settle a lawsuit claiming Google Assistant recorded private conversations after false activations. John and Logan explain how always listening assistants work in standby mode, what the lawsuit alleges happened when wake phrases triggered accidentally, and why this category keeps running into the same trust problem. From there the conversation shifts to new gear and practical tech. They talk through what is coming with new AirTags, including a better chipset, improved range, more precise finding, stronger haptics, and a louder speaker. They also dig into luggage tracking and airline participation through SITA, and why cooperation is the difference between peace of mind and actually getting your bag back. Next is Samsung’s Galaxy Z Trifold. A 2,899 folding phone that opens to roughly ten inches of screen. They discuss thickness, durability claims, whether it could realistically replace a phone and tablet, and why Samsung continues to lead on cameras and AI features. They close with the quiet end of a spec race as LG exits the 8K TV category. With almost no 8K content, extremely high prices, and minimal visible benefit, they ask whether 8K was ever meant to be anything more than a marketing number. The episode wraps with a quick but serious security story about the employee who outsourced his entire job to a contractor in China using VPN credentials and remote desktop access, and what that says about insider risk and corporate blind spots. Topics covered in this episode include Fixing the Olympics and why the clean games narrative does not match history Olympic myths including peace branding, drug testing reality, abstinence lore, the 1936 flame origin, and what gold medals are actually made of Google Assistant spying allegations and the 68 million dollar settlement How false wake word activations and accidental recordings create ongoing trust issues New AirTags and what actually matters in real world tracking Luggage tracking and airline participation through SITA Samsung Galaxy Z Trifold and whether a trifold phone can be a daily driver LG exiting the 8K TV market and why the category never took off The employee who outsourced himself and the security risks hidden behind good metrics Zero Downtime is a weekly conversation about privacy, cybersecurity, reliability, and real world technology tradeoffs.
In this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan open with the annual Groundhog Day debate and why the push to replace Punxsutawney Phil with a 3D projection keeps resurfacing. What starts as a cultural sideshow turns into a familiar argument about tradition, technology, and what we are actually trying to prove. The conversation then shifts into real world tech, breaking down how John Deere GPS guidance achieves inch level accuracy and why that precision matters for snow plows operating in whiteout conditions. They explain how recorded routes and correction data can keep crews moving safely when visibility drops to zero. Next, they look at Bring a Trailer and the growing concern that AI is starting to influence listings, images, and moderation. As generated content gets easier, they ask who verifies anything and whether human review becomes the premium feature in online marketplaces. They then cover a massive 96 GB credentials leak tied to info stealer malware, where real passwords were exposed instead of hashes. John and Logan explain why this changes the threat model entirely and walk through what to do immediately if you assume your credentials are included. The episode wraps with a clear explanation of Tor versus VPN, what each tool actually does, and why the real difference is trust. A VPN shifts trust to a provider. Tor is designed to remove trust altogether. They also discuss who uses Tor in the real world and when a VPN is still the better option. Bonus topics include Siri potentially evolving into a more capable chatbot in future iOS versions, the ongoing Apple and Google partnership conversation, and Android adding more depth and blur to its UI. Subscribe for weekly conversations on privacy, cybersecurity, reliability, and real world tech tradeoffs.
In this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down why you should ditch Ring doorbells after the Ring and Flock Safety connection, and how cloud stored footage can get pulled into bigger search networks. They explain the limits of opt in controls when video lives on someone else’s servers, what subpoenas and the data broker loophole change, and what a safer setup looks like with local recording using Reolink and Home Assistant. Then they dig into sleep, including why waking at 2 AM can be normal, how stress and cortisol turn it into insomnia, and what sleep paralysis really is. They talk about the Jinn and night hag experience, false wakes, and how those moments can lead into lucid dreaming once you understand the mechanics. They wrap with how Netflix era viewing changes filmmaking pacing, and what ads inside ChatGPT could mean for trust and incentives. Weekly conversations about reliability, privacy, and what holds up in the real world.
In this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan unpack reports that Iran was able to disrupt Starlink during protests and why that matters more than most people realize. If satellite internet can be jammed or interfered with, it changes a lot of assumptions about censorship resistance and always on connectivity. They dig into what actually works when traditional networks go dark, why mesh networks are still relevant, and where tools like Briar and low bandwidth radio meshes fit in real world scenarios. Then they shift gears into the ongoing WebP problem and why browser support does not equal production safety when embedded browsers, webviews, and legacy systems are still everywhere. AVIF comes up as the direction image pipelines are already moving. They wrap with CES 2026 feeling like the same AI story with better demos, and the practical reality of running Linux in 2026, what works daily, what still breaks, and when a Windows VM is still unavoidable. Weekly conversations about reliability, practical tech, and what actually holds up in the real world.
Most tech stories feel isolated until you connect the dots. John and Logan are back from the holiday break and dig into the stories that actually matter. Microsoft quietly ended phone activation for Windows 10 and Windows 11, which leads into the January 2038 problem and why some system “fixes” eventually hit a hard stop. The conversation then shifts to an unexpected trend. Physical keyboards are coming back. Keyboard focused phones and minimal devices are gaining traction, and they talk through why people are pushing back on constant apps and notifications. They also break down the Duolingo lock screen ad backlash and why user trust matters, then wrap with why car companies are ditching CarPlay and Android Auto and how data ownership is the real fight. If you want to understand where tech is actually heading, this episode is worth your time.
Most people trying to break into IT are doing the right things in the wrong order. If you are chasing certifications, trends, or degrees and still feel stuck, this conversation will challenge how you think about getting started. This is not an anti college episode. It is about what actually moves a tech career forward early. We talk through what John would do differently if he were starting today, including the one decision that can speed up learning faster than any class, why proximity to real systems matters more than perfect credentials, and what employers are actually looking for when they hire entry level roles. We also get into certifications and fundamentals, why some certs feel like table stakes now, and how hands on work with real environments builds confidence you cannot fake in an interview. If you are trying to land your first IT job, move beyond help desk, or avoid wasting time early in your career, this episode is worth your time.
John sits down with Kevin Robinson, the City Manager of Spencer, Iowa, for a real look at how city government actually works, from the day to day responsibilities people never see to how priorities get set when staffing, infrastructure, and public expectations all compete. They break down what a city budget really means, where the money comes from, and how property taxes and local option sales tax connect to the services residents rely on. Kevin also shares what Spencer learned from the 2024 flood, why real time communication became a core part of resilience, and how the Spencer Iowa app and push alerts change emergency response when minutes matter. If you want a clear and practical conversation about city operations, taxes, and what Spencer is building next, this episode is for you.
Ho ho holy… grandma got scammed. John and Logan break down why the holidays are prime time for fraud and why most scams are not “hacks,” they are simple deception built on urgency, embarrassment, and pressure. They walk through the biggest patterns showing up right now, including discounted gift card deals that get drained or voided, fake USPS package delay texts that lead to phishing sites, and recruiting messages offering ridiculous pay and pushing people onto WhatsApp. They also cover the fake jail call, the classic Microsoft support call that ends with remote access and gift card demands, and the Hallmark style romance scam that turns into a money request. To close it out, they unpack the Bitcoin ATM trap and the pig butchering long con, how it builds trust, shows fake profits, and then locks withdrawals behind endless fees. If you want a clear, practical guide to spotting red flags and a smart way to talk to your family, especially older relatives, before it happens, this episode is for you.
This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down Apple’s ongoing senior exits, AI driven pressure on DRAM and RAM pricing, another Cloudflare outage, and Samsung’s upcoming tri fold phone launch. Clear context, real impact, and what to watch next.
John and Logan break down a busy week in tech that hits privacy, retail, and global policy. They dig into Michigan’s proposed surveillance bill and why it has people concerned about how far government monitoring could go. They look at record Black Friday sales and the role AI played in pushing numbers to a new level. They also cover Australia’s plan to ban social media for anyone under sixteen and what this move might signal for other countries. If you want a clear and honest breakdown of what’s happening right now, this episode has it.
We are joined by John Hartwig of Utopia Grove for a deep dive into 3D printing and how he helps customers bring their ideas to life. John shares what his shop can do, the problems he solves, and why people come to him for custom projects. He also walks us through the different types of prints and materials he uses, with real examples. If you have ever wondered what 3D printing can actually do for you, this episode answers it.
In our first episode, John and Logan sit down to launch the show, land on the name Zero Downtime, and dive into some real conversations around tech. We talk about how AI is being misused with school aged children, why face manipulation tools are becoming a real problem, and the tech deals worth paying attention to this holiday season. It is the start of something we have wanted to build for a long time, and we are glad you are here for Episode One.
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