That IT show

That IT show

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

41 min · 23 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio The one where Linux and AI were ready but Jasmin was not - (Episode 169)

Descripción

Welcome to The One Where Linux and AI Were Ready, but Jasmin Was Not — a title that, honestly, wrote itself. The plan was simple: brand-new shiny Linux machine, proper setup, and finally an episode recorded exactly as promised. Linux was ready. AI was ready. The hardware was ready. Confidence was also very ready. And yet, somehow, the actual recording part remained a distant dream. So naturally, we turned that small technical betrayal into comedy and used it as the perfect launch point for a broader conversation about AI, hype, tools, promises, and the timeless truth that even the smartest technology in the world still depends on humans not forgetting the one thing they were supposed to do.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de That IT show!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

176 episodios

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

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

Welcome to The datacenter will be ready right after the roundabout, the only podcast brave enough to ask the important questions: can a hyperscale datacenter survive Croatian paperwork, three ministries, two environmental studies, and a mayor who still thinks “cloud” means rain? In this episode, we dive into the glorious collision of AI ambitions, megawatt fantasies, land permits, power grid realities, and the sacred regional tradition of discussing infrastructure projects for roughly twelve years before pouring a single cubic meter of concrete. We talk cooling, fiber, geopolitics, NIMBYism, diesel generators the size of apartment buildings, and the magical belief that “digital transformation” somehow works without electricity. The future is here — just as soon as somebody finishes the access road.

21 de may de 202632 min
episode When your home lab has a better disaster recovery plan than your career plan - (Episode 171) artwork

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

Somewhere along the way, “learning virtualization” turned into running a miniature Fortune 500 datacenter next to the washing machine. In this episode, we dive head-first into the glorious madness of over-engineered home labs: redundant power supplies for one user, Kubernetes clusters hosting absolutely nothing important, backup strategies more detailed than our retirement plans, and the eternal justification that “it’s for learning.” We talk about the slippery slope from a single Raspberry Pi to racks full of servers screaming through the night, why every homelabber eventually discovers VLANs at 2 AM, and how disaster recovery suddenly becomes deeply personal when Plex goes offline. If you’ve ever convinced yourself that a 100-gigabit upgrade was “necessary,” this episode may feel uncomfortably familiar.

14 de may de 202651 min
episode Hallucinations, Hype, and Other AI Headaches - (Episode 168) artwork

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

Welcome to Hallucinations, Hype, and Other AI Headaches — an episode about what starts to happen when artificial intelligence stops being just a tool and starts acting like a mirror, a therapist, a hype man, and sometimes a really confident idiot. We’ll talk about why AI people get uneasy when chatbots become too agreeable, too persuasive, too human-like, or simply too embedded in everyday life. From hallucinated facts and overconfident nonsense to emotional attachment, bad advice, sleepless scrolling, and machines that validate our worst ideas, this is the strange space where innovation meets irritation. AI is brilliant, useful, fascinating — and also increasingly weird. So today, we’re unpacking the headaches, the warning signs, and the uncomfortable questions that come with letting machines talk back, flatter us, mislead us, and quietly reshape how we think, work, and relate to one another.

16 de abr de 202625 min