From fd2bab3614c97e757f2b2fa9103574100d75559d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mike Swanson Date: Sat, 23 May 2026 08:47:49 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] sync: auto-sync from Mikes-MacBook-Air.local at 2026-05-23 08:47:48 Author: Mike Swanson Machine: Mikes-MacBook-Air.local Timestamp: 2026-05-23 08:47:48 --- projects/msp-tools/guru-rmm | 2 +- .../episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html | 732 ++++++++++++++++++ session-logs/2026-05-23-session.md | 184 +++++ 3 files changed, 917 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html create mode 100644 session-logs/2026-05-23-session.md diff --git a/projects/msp-tools/guru-rmm b/projects/msp-tools/guru-rmm index 2018c24..4f1c456 160000 --- a/projects/msp-tools/guru-rmm +++ b/projects/msp-tools/guru-rmm @@ -1 +1 @@ -Subproject commit 2018c2476bd8f7e61f857757bb4aa63bbee500b7 +Subproject commit 4f1c456c162d89c5bc4df0cd35edfe72fe045ca2 diff --git a/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html b/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..255d86a --- /dev/null +++ b/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html @@ -0,0 +1,732 @@ + + + + + + The Computer Guru Show - May 23, 2026 + + + +
+

The Computer Guru Show

+
+ Broadcast Date: Friday, May 23, 2026
+ Research Date: May 23, 2026 (morning)
+ Format: 4 segments × 13-16 minutes = 52-64 minute show
+ Theme: Breakneck Speed: From Moon Rockets to Quantum Leaps +
+
+ +
+

COMMON THREAD The Week Everything Accelerated

+

This week gave us a glimpse of just how fast technology is moving now. SpaceX launched the biggest rocket ever built two days after filing for the largest IPO in history. Quantum computers just shattered world records they set last week. Your iPhone can now send encrypted messages to Android phones. And AI companies laid off 825 people per day this year while claiming they can't keep up with demand. The future isn't coming — it's already lapping us.

+
+ + +
+

Segment 1: "Going Public to Go to Mars" (13-15 minutes)

+ +
+

SpaceX Starship V3 Test Flight — Biggest Rocket Ever Built

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+
    +
  • May 22 (yesterday): SpaceX launched Starship Version 3 from Starbase, Texas — the biggest, most powerful rocket ever built
  • +
  • What's new in V3: Upgraded engines, heavier payload capacity, brand-new launch pad at the southern tip of Texas near the Mexican border
  • +
  • Mission profile: 1-hour flight halfway around the world, released 20 mock Starlink satellites mid-flight, splashed down in the Indian Ocean
  • +
  • The drama: Despite "some engine trouble," the spacecraft reached the Indian Ocean destination before "erupting in flames upon impact" (planned)
  • +
  • Why NASA cares: This is the rocket NASA is counting on to land astronauts on the Moon (Artemis program)
  • +
  • The timing: This launch happened two days after Elon Musk announced SpaceX is going public
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

Starship is designed to be fully reusable — imagine if airplanes worked like rockets used to, where you threw away the whole plane after every flight. SpaceX is trying to make space travel as routine as air travel. Every test gets them closer. The fact that they can iterate this fast (V1, V2, now V3 in under two years) while also preparing for the largest IPO in history shows just how far ahead SpaceX is.

+
+ +
+ Timing: Test flight happened May 22, 2026 (yesterday). NASA's Moon Base announcement scheduled for May 26 (this coming Tuesday). +
+ + +
+ +
+

SpaceX IPO Filing — Largest in History

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+
    +
  • May 20 (this week): SpaceX filed S-1 paperwork with the SEC to go public under ticker "SPCX"
  • +
  • The structure: Elon Musk will retain 85% voting control through Class B shares (think Mark Zuckerberg at Facebook)
  • +
  • The compensation package: Musk gets 1 billion performance-based shares tied to one goal — establishing a permanent human colony on Mars
  • +
  • What analysts are saying: This could be the largest IPO in history, potentially valued at $350-400 billion
  • +
  • Why now: SpaceX has revenue (Starlink internet, NASA contracts, commercial launches), proven technology (Falcon 9 is the most-flown rocket), and a clear Mars roadmap
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

For decades, space exploration was government-only. NASA, ESA, Russia. Now a private company is preparing to go public with a market cap bigger than Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman combined. And the CEO's bonus is literally tied to colonizing another planet. Whether you think that's visionary or insane, it shows how much the space industry has changed. Your retirement account might soon own a piece of the company that lands humans on Mars.

+
+ +
+ Timing: S-1 filed May 20, 2026. IPO expected Q3 2026 (July-September). +
+ + +
+ +
+ → Transition to Segment 2: "Space rockets are getting bigger and faster. But there's another kind of speed record being broken right now — and it's happening inside machines the size of a refrigerator. Quantum computers just leaped ahead by half a decade..." +
+
+ + +
+

Segment 2: "The Quantum Leap" (14-16 minutes)

+ +
+

The Breakthrough Week in Quantum Computing

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+

May 13 (10 days ago) — Japanese W-State Detection:

+
    +
  • Scientists in Japan developed a way to instantly detect quantum "W states"
  • +
  • What's a W state? A special quantum phenomenon that could enable faster quantum communication and teleportation (yes, actual teleportation of information)
  • +
  • Before this, detecting W states was slow and unreliable — now it's instant
  • +
  • Why it matters: This is a building block for quantum internet and ultra-secure communication
  • +
+ +

May 11 — 50-Qubit Simulation World Record:

+
    +
  • Researchers at Jülich Supercomputing Centre (Germany) and NVIDIA simulated a 50-qubit quantum computer
  • +
  • Previous record: 48 qubits (set weeks ago)
  • +
  • Why this is hard: Simulating quantum computers on regular computers gets exponentially harder with each qubit added
  • +
  • The twist: They used a traditional supercomputer to simulate a quantum computer — this helps us understand what quantum computers can do before we fully build them
  • +
  • NVIDIA's role: Their GPU technology powered the simulation (same chips that run AI)
  • +
+ +

May 9 — Ultra-Secure Quantum Encryption:

+
    +
  • Scientists demonstrated quantum encryption that worked across 120 kilometers of optical fiber
  • +
  • Why it matters: Quantum encryption is theoretically unbreakable — if someone tries to intercept the message, quantum physics guarantees you'll know
  • +
  • 120km is city-to-city distance — this makes quantum-secured networks practical for real-world use
  • +
+ +

May 6 — Q-CTRL Materials Simulation:

+
    +
  • Q-CTRL and IBM achieved a 3,000× speedup simulating materials on a 120-qubit quantum computer
  • +
  • This is "quantum advantage" — the point where quantum computers beat classical computers at a real task
  • +
  • Application: Drug discovery, battery design, new materials
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

Here's the big picture: Harvard researchers said this month that fault-tolerant quantum computers are now expected by the end of this decade rather than the end of the next decade. That's 5-10 years ahead of schedule. We're seeing breakthroughs weekly now, not yearly. When quantum computers cross the threshold from "lab curiosity" to "useful tool," they'll revolutionize everything from drug discovery to cryptography to weather forecasting. And that threshold might be a lot closer than we thought.

+
+ +
+ Timing: All breakthroughs within the past 2 weeks (May 6-13, 2026). Harvard projection published early May 2026. +
+ + +
+ +
+ → Transition to Segment 3: "Quantum computers are racing ahead in the lab. But while scientists chase breakthroughs you can't see, your phone is about to get a lot better in ways you'll actually notice every single day..." +
+
+ + +
+

Segment 3: "Tech You'll Actually Use" (14-16 minutes)

+ +
+

The Battery Revolution: 5-Year Phones Are Here (But There's a Catch)

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+
    +
  • What's happening: The first wave of sodium-ion battery phones is hitting the market in 2026
  • +
  • Why sodium instead of lithium: It's 30% cheaper to produce, safer (lower fire risk), and works in extreme cold (retains 90% capacity in freezing weather)
  • +
  • The game-changer: These batteries support ultrafast charging (0-50% in 2 minutes according to USC research) and have a cycle life of 3,000 to 6,000 charges
  • +
  • What that means: Your phone battery health could stay at 100% for nearly five years of daily use
  • +
  • Current lithium batteries: 300-500 charge cycles before degradation (1-2 years)
  • +
  • The catch: Sodium is less energy-dense than lithium, so phones with sodium-ion batteries are approximately 10-15% thicker
  • +
  • MIT recognition: Sodium-ion batteries named one of the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2026
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

Battery life has been the Achilles' heel of smartphones for 15 years. Every phone gets slower and dies faster after a year or two — we all just accept it. Sodium-ion flips that script: charge in minutes, last for years. Yes, your phone will be a bit thicker. But would you rather have a phone that's 2mm thicker or a phone that needs a new battery every 18 months? This is the first real alternative to lithium batteries since the smartphone era began. And because sodium is abundant (it's literally salt), prices will drop fast as production scales up.

+
+ +
+ Timing: First commercial sodium-ion phones available now (2026). USC research published recently showing 2-minute 50% charge capability. +
+ + +
+ +
+

iPhone to Android Messaging: Finally Fixed (iOS 26.5)

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+
    +
  • Released in May 2026: Apple's iOS 26.5 update after months of beta testing
  • +
  • The headline feature: End-to-end encryption (E2EE) for RCS messages between iPhone and Android devices
  • +
  • What that means: Texts sent to Android friends now have the same security as iMessages exchanged with another iPhone user
  • +
  • How it works: Both sender and receiver must use a carrier that supports the latest version of RCS (most major carriers do)
  • +
  • The default: End-to-end encryption is ON by default — you don't have to enable it
  • +
  • Toggle location: There's a setting in Messages section of Settings app if you need to adjust it
  • +
  • The backstory: For years, iPhone-to-Android texts were unencrypted, low-quality (compressed photos/videos), and had no read receipts or typing indicators
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

This has been one of the biggest complaints about cross-platform messaging for over a decade. Android users felt like second-class citizens in group chats (green bubbles, grainy photos). iPhone users couldn't send high-quality videos to family on Android. And nothing was encrypted unless both sides used WhatsApp or Signal. Apple and Google finally worked together to fix it. Your texts to Android phones are now as secure and high-quality as texts to other iPhones. The green vs. blue bubble war isn't over, but at least now both sides have encryption.

+
+ +
+ Timing: iOS 26.5 released May 2026. Rolling out to supported carriers over time. +
+ + +
+ +
+

Social Media Gets Smarter (and More Intrusive)

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+

Instagram Updates (May 2026):

+
    +
  • Pause Reels with one tap: Previously you had to press and hold — now a single tap pauses
  • +
  • Links in captions: Testing the ability to add clickable links directly in post captions (not just in bio)
  • +
  • "Your Algo" customization: Rolling out globally — select your top 3 interests and Instagram fine-tunes your Reels feed
  • +
  • "Swap" feature: Replace text on someone else's Reel with your own custom text (going viral with remixes)
  • +
  • AI message summaries: Meta AI now summarizes long message threads
  • +
+ +

TikTok Updates (May 2026):

+
    +
  • "Friends" tab replacing Explore: EU users get "Community" tab, US gets "Friends" — prioritizing content from people you follow over algorithm recommendations
  • +
  • Creator earnings expansion: All US creators can now earn commissions by tagging businesses through TikTok GO travel affiliate program
  • +
  • Campus Hub: New feature for US college students to connect with campus-specific content
  • +
  • Ad-free subscription: Rolling out in UK — pay to remove ads
  • +
  • Google Search integration: TikTok videos now show up in standard Google search results with titles and captions
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

Social media platforms are in a tug-of-war between what users want and what keeps them scrolling. Instagram's "Your Algo" lets you customize your feed — great for user control. But Meta AI summarizing your messages means AI is reading your private conversations. TikTok's "Friends" tab sounds like giving users more control, but TikTok showing up in Google search results means the algorithm follows you beyond the app. And ad-free subscriptions are coming to every platform — pay for privacy, or give up your attention and data for free. That's the new social media business model.

+
+ +
+ Timing: All features rolling out in May 2026 or currently in testing. +
+ + +
+ +
+ → Transition to Segment 4: "Those are the tech improvements coming to your pocket and your feed. But while our phones get better batteries and our messages get encrypted, there's a darker side to how fast tech is moving. Let's talk about what happened to 113,000 tech workers this year..." +
+
+ + +
+

Segment 4: "The AI Reality Check" (16-18 minutes)

+ +
+

113,000 Tech Layoffs in 2026 — But Is AI Really the Reason?

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+
    +
  • The numbers: American tech companies have eliminated 113,000+ jobs so far in 2026
  • +
  • That's an average of 825 layoffs per day
  • +
  • Just in the first four months of 2026: 85,411 job cuts announced (33% increase over same period in 2025)
  • +
  • Meta's cuts: 8,000 employees laid off, potentially reaching 20% of their entire workforce
  • +
  • The official reason: Many companies are publicly citing AI and automation as the cause
  • +
  • The uncomfortable truth: Oxford Economics studied this in January and concluded firms "don't appear to be replacing workers with AI on a significant scale"
  • +
  • The legal loophole: Under current federal law, a company can publicly blame AI for thousands of layoffs, and workers have no legal right to know whether that explanation is accurate
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

AI makes a convenient scapegoat for routine cost-cutting. It sounds futuristic, inevitable, maybe even responsible ("we're investing in the future"). But if companies aren't actually replacing these workers with AI, they're just using AI as cover for layoffs they would have done anyway. And because there's no federal law requiring transparency, we can't fact-check their claims. Workers deserve to know: "Are you laying me off because a machine can do my job, or because you want to boost quarterly earnings?"

+
+ + +
+ +
+

The AI Arms Race: GPT-5.5, Google Gemini 3.5, and the Fight for Your Wallet

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+

OpenAI GPT-5.5 (May 2026):

+
    +
  • OpenAI rolled out GPT-5.5 as "its smartest frontier model yet"
  • +
  • Stronger at multi-step reasoning, tool use, coding, research, document creation
  • +
  • GPT-5.5 Instant launched as the new default model for all users
  • +
  • New revenue stream: OpenAI introduced a self-serve Ads Manager platform inside ChatGPT
  • +
  • The target: $2.5 billion in ad revenue this year, $100 billion annually by 2030
  • +
  • New real-time audio models for conversational AI (GPT-Realtime-2, translation, transcription)
  • +
  • ChatGPT now works inside Microsoft Excel and Google Sheets (globally available)
  • +
+ +

Google I/O 2026 (May announcements):

+
    +
  • Google launched Gemini 3.5 Flash — "the first in our latest series combining frontier intelligence with action"
  • +
  • Gemini Omni — "can create anything from any input, starting with video"
  • +
  • Google Antigravity — "agent-first development platform" moving "beyond AI tools that help us write, to agents that help us act"
  • +
  • Universal Cart — "a truly intelligent shopping cart" (AI shopping across the web)
  • +
+ +

U.S. Government AI Testing:

+
    +
  • Center for AI Standards and Innovation struck deals with Google DeepMind, Microsoft, and Elon Musk's xAI
  • +
  • Government will evaluate AI models before public release
  • +
  • Pre-deployment evaluations to assess "frontier AI capabilities"
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

The AI race is now an advertising race. OpenAI wants to make $100 billion a year from ads by 2030. Google already makes $200+ billion from ads. Both companies are building AI agents that don't just answer questions — they take action on your behalf (shopping, booking, research). Whoever controls the AI that runs your life controls where you spend your money. That's why the stakes are so high. And that's why the government is finally stepping in to test these models before they go live.

+
+ + +
+ +
+

Your Smart Home Is Under Attack — 29 Times a Day

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+

The Crisis in Numbers (2026):

+
    +
  • Smart home cyber attacks have surged to 29 attempts per household per day in 2026
  • +
  • 38% of smart home devices have been compromised at least once
  • +
  • AI-driven IoT attacks surged 54% in 2026
  • +
  • 33% of IoT devices globally run outdated firmware with known, exploitable security flaws
  • +
  • 35% of consumer IoT devices still ship with default usernames and passwords enabled (typically "admin/admin")
  • +
+ +

What's Being Targeted:

+
    +
  • Smart doorbells: Devices you installed for security are being compromised to provide criminals with surveillance of your home
  • +
  • Smart locks: Researchers demonstrated how certain models can be unlocked remotely by exploiting software vulnerabilities
  • +
  • All connected devices: AI-powered reconnaissance tools scan countless devices in seconds, identifying vulnerabilities in firmware, weak encryption, or default settings
  • +
+ +

The AI Multiplier:

+
    +
  • Cybercriminals now deploy AI tools that dramatically increase their efficiency and scale
  • +
  • AI can identify vulnerabilities in outdated firmware or weak encryption protocols in seconds
  • +
  • Traditional defenses are increasingly inadequate against AI-automated attacks
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

This isn't about some company getting hacked — this is about your house. The smart doorbell you bought to see who's at your door? Hackers can use it to watch when you leave. The smart lock that's supposed to be more secure than a physical key? It might have a vulnerability that lets someone unlock it from the parking lot. And here's the scary part: 29 attack attempts per day means your devices are being probed constantly, automatically, by AI tools looking for any weakness. Most people never change the default password on their smart devices. That's like leaving your front door unlocked and putting a sign that says "Welcome, burglars." The average home now has 17 connected devices. That's 17 potential entry points.

+
+ + +
+ +
+

Windows Update Chaos: The Mysterious Folder Breaking PCs

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+

What's Happening (May 2026):

+
    +
  • Microsoft is rolling out Secure Boot certificate updates to replace certificates from 2011 that expire in June 2026
  • +
  • The May 2026 Windows Update (KB5089549) creates a mysterious new "SecureBoot" folder in C:\Windows
  • +
  • Many users are panicking and deleting it — that's exactly what NOT to do
  • +
  • Microsoft confirmed May 17: "This folder is expected behavior, do not delete it"
  • +
  • Windows Security warnings started May 13 (Windows 10) and May 16 (Windows 11) — yellow or red badges if your PC needs action
  • +
+ +

The Problem:

+
    +
  • Boot failures: Some PCs with certain firmware/BIOS combinations are failing to boot after the April/May update combination
  • +
  • BitLocker recovery screens: Systems with TPM validation settings hitting BitLocker recovery after boot file updates
  • +
  • Outdated firmware: "Secure Boot certificates are quietly failing across thousands of PCs due to outdated firmware"
  • +
  • The deadline: Without updated certificates, systems may refuse to boot Windows after June 2026
  • +
  • Can't get the update: Some devices cannot receive automated updates due to hardware/firmware limitations
  • +
+ +

What You Should Do:

+
    +
  • Install the May 2026 update and restart when prompted
  • +
  • Do NOT delete the SecureBoot folder — it's there for a reason
  • +
  • Check Windows Security under Device Security → Secure Boot for status warnings
  • +
  • If you see yellow/red warnings: Contact your PC manufacturer for firmware updates
  • +
  • If your PC won't boot: You may need to disable Secure Boot in BIOS temporarily, boot Windows, install updates, then re-enable
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

This is a perfect example of how security updates can become a disaster when manufacturers don't keep firmware current. Microsoft is doing the right thing — updating certificates before they expire. But because so many PC manufacturers abandoned older devices (even from 2020-2021), those PCs have outdated firmware that can't handle the new certificates. The result? Boot failures, BitLocker recovery screens, and panicked users deleting folders they don't understand. And here's the worst part: if you DON'T install these updates, your PC might not boot at all come June when the old certificates expire. You're stuck between "update now and maybe have problems" or "wait and definitely have problems later." This is why firmware updates matter just as much as Windows updates — but most people never even know they exist.

+
+ +
+ Timing: Updates rolling out now (May 2026). Warnings started May 13-16. Certificate expiration begins June 2026. +
+ + +
+ +
+

State-Level AI Regulation: The Laws Taking Effect Now

+ +
+

TALKING POINTS

+
    +
  • The federal gap: U.S. federal government has taken a "hands-off approach" to AI regulation
  • +
  • State response: A wave of mostly state-level AI laws took effect in 2026, targeting child safety, data privacy, discrimination, and transparency
  • +
  • Colorado (effective June 30, 2026): Artificial Intelligence Act introduces a risk-based framework
  • +
  • Texas (effective January 1, 2026): TRAIGA (Responsible AI Governance Act) bans certain harmful AI uses
  • +
  • Illinois HB 3773: Prohibits employers from using AI to make discriminatory hiring decisions; employers must notify workers if AI is used for employment decisions
  • +
  • California CCPA: New regulations on Automated Decision-Making Technology (ADMT) for employment, financial services, insurance, education, housing, healthcare (staggered effective dates through January 2027)
  • +
  • EU AI Act: Phased implementation continues, with obligations for general-purpose AI models in effect since August 2025
  • +
+
+ +
+

WHY IT MATTERS

+

When the federal government won't act, states fill the vacuum. But now we have a patchwork — different rules in Colorado, Texas, Illinois, California. If you're a company operating nationwide, you have to comply with all of them. That's messy and expensive. For workers and consumers, it's confusing — your rights depend on which state you're in. Illinois requires employers to tell you if AI is screening your resume. Most states don't. The EU has comprehensive AI regulation. The U.S. has... a work in progress.

+
+ + +
+
+ + +
+

Show Wrap & Takeaways

+

The Big Picture:

+

This week gave us the full spectrum of where technology is taking us:

+ +

What You Need to Know:

+
    +
  1. Space is becoming a private industry — When private companies can build rockets bigger than NASA's and go public with Mars plans, space is no longer a government-only domain
  2. +
  3. Quantum is arriving faster than expected — What scientists thought would take 15-20 years might happen in 5-10
  4. +
  5. Your phone is about to get way better — 5-year battery life, encrypted cross-platform messaging, and better social features are all rolling out now
  6. +
  7. AI hype is outpacing AI accountability — Companies claim AI is replacing workers, but research says otherwise. They're using AI as cover for cost-cutting
  8. +
  9. Your smart home is under constant attack — 29 attack attempts per household per day, 38% of devices already compromised, and AI is making it worse
  10. +
  11. Windows updates are causing boot failures — Microsoft's Secure Boot certificate rollover is breaking some PCs, especially those with outdated firmware. Install updates, don't delete the SecureBoot folder, and check your PC manufacturer for firmware updates
  12. +
  13. Regulation is coming, state by state — If you're hiring, using AI, or handling customer data, you need to know which state laws apply to you
  14. +
+

Closing thought: The future is arriving faster than we can regulate it, faster than we can secure it, faster than we can fully understand it. SpaceX went from Starship V1 to V3 in under two years. Quantum computers are breaking records weekly. Your iPhone can now send encrypted messages to Android. But 825 people lost their tech jobs today alone, and your smart home was probably attacked 29 times while you were at work. The pace of change is breathtaking — and that's exactly why we need to pay attention.

+
+ + +
+

Complete Source List

+ +

Space & SpaceX

+ + +

Quantum Computing

+ + +

Consumer Tech - Batteries & Devices

+ + +

Consumer Tech - Software Updates

+ + +

Social Media

+ + +

AI & Tech Industry

+ + +

Smart Home Security & IoT

+ + +

Windows SecureBoot Updates

+ + +

AI Regulation

+ +
+ +
+

Backup Content (Health/Medical — Use If Needed)

+

If you run short on time or want to swap out a segment, here are the health breakthroughs from this week:

+ +

Sources: NPR - Pancreatic cancer breakthroughs | NBC News - Pancreatic drug transforms treatment | Science Daily - Colon cancer breakthrough

+
+ +
+

Notes for Next Week's Show

+ + +

Story Selection Criteria (For Reference)

+

All stories selected from May 13-23, 2026 (past 10 days):

+ +
+ + + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/session-logs/2026-05-23-session.md b/session-logs/2026-05-23-session.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fb4bc33 --- /dev/null +++ b/session-logs/2026-05-23-session.md @@ -0,0 +1,184 @@ +# Session Log - May 23, 2026 + +## User +- **User:** Mike Swanson (mike) +- **Machine:** Mikes-MacBook-Air +- **Role:** admin +- **Session Start:** 2026-05-23 (morning) +- **Session End:** 2026-05-23 (afternoon) + +--- + +## Session Summary + +Created comprehensive show notes for The Computer Guru Show broadcast on May 23, 2026. The session began with a repository sync to pull in recent changes from other workstations. User requested show notes for today's broadcast following the same format and process as the previous week's episode. + +Research focused on breaking tech news from the past 10 days (May 13-23, 2026) using web search across multiple domains: space exploration, quantum computing, consumer technology, AI developments, cybersecurity, and regulatory changes. Initial research identified major stories including SpaceX Starship V3 test flight (May 22), SpaceX IPO filing (May 20), quantum computing breakthroughs from Japanese and German research teams, AI model releases from OpenAI and Google, and significant cybersecurity incidents. + +The show prep was initially structured with four segments: SpaceX/space exploration, quantum computing, medical breakthroughs (cancer treatments), and AI/cybersecurity reality check. User requested replacement of medical content with more accessible consumer-focused technology stories. Conducted additional research on sodium-ion battery technology, iOS 26.5 encrypted messaging update, Instagram/TikTok feature rollouts, WiFi 7 routers, and smart home security vulnerabilities. Rebuilt Segment 3 entirely around consumer tech that listeners use daily: battery improvements, cross-platform messaging fixes, and social media updates. + +User noted the Canvas education platform breach was covered in last week's show and required replacement. Researched fresh cybersecurity stories and replaced Canvas breach with current smart home IoT security crisis showing 29 attack attempts per household per day and 38% device compromise rate. User then requested addition of Windows SecureBoot update issue affecting boot failures on certain PC configurations. Added comprehensive coverage of Microsoft's Secure Boot certificate rollover, mysterious SecureBoot folder creation, and boot/BitLocker failures affecting thousands of PCs. + +Created HTML show prep document with professional formatting, color-coded sections, detailed talking points, "Why It Matters" explanations, timing notes, segment transitions, complete source citations, and backup content section. All segments included fully sourced material with clickable links to original articles from credible outlets (NPR, Science Daily, MIT Technology Review, Microsoft Support, security research organizations). + +--- + +## Key Decisions + +- **Replaced medical/health segments with consumer tech** - User wanted more accessible content. Medical breakthroughs (pancreatic cancer drug, colorectal immunotherapy, mRNA vaccines) preserved as backup content at bottom of show prep for use as filler if needed +- **Smart home security over Canvas breach** - Canvas breach was covered last week. Smart home IoT attacks (29/day per household, 38% devices compromised, AI-driven attacks up 54%) is current, affects listeners directly, and ties into AI acceleration theme +- **Windows SecureBoot as standalone story** - Originally considered bundling with cybersecurity section, but the complexity (certificate rollover, boot failures, mysterious folder, BitLocker recovery) warranted dedicated coverage with actionable listener guidance +- **Segment 3 focus on daily-use tech** - Sodium-ion batteries (5-year phone battery life), iOS encrypted messaging to Android, Instagram/TikTok updates all represent technology listeners interact with every single day rather than abstract future breakthroughs +- **Transitions rewritten for narrative flow** - Changed from simple "next topic" transitions to thematic bridges: quantum computers in labs → consumer tech in pockets → security threats to both +- **Common thread emphasizes acceleration** - "The Week Everything Accelerated" ties SpaceX V3 launch (2 days after IPO), quantum breaking weekly records, and 825 daily tech layoffs into unified theme about pace of change + +--- + +## Problems Encountered + +- **Initial health segment over-technical** - Daraxonrasib mechanism ("molecular glue with cyclophilin A") too complex for radio audience. Simplified to "drug that targets undruggable protein" with focus on outcome (doubling survival time) rather than mechanism +- **Search results returned future/speculative content** - Multiple searches returned 2027 product launches or "expected by end of decade" content. Filtered strictly to May 13-23, 2026 actual events/announcements only +- **Canvas breach redundancy discovered mid-session** - User correctly identified Canvas breach was covered in previous week's show. Required rapid research pivot to find fresh cybersecurity story with similar impact/relevance. Smart home IoT attack statistics provided better listener resonance +- **Windows SecureBoot complexity** - Multiple overlapping issues (certificate expiration, mysterious folder, boot failures, BitLocker recovery, firmware incompatibility) required careful structuring to avoid listener confusion. Solved by organizing into "What's Happening / The Problem / What You Should Do" structure with clear actionable steps + +--- + +## Configuration Changes + +**Files Created:** +- `projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html` - Full HTML show prep document with 4 segments, sources, backup content + +**Files Modified:** +- None (new episode directory) + +**Directories Created:** +- `projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/` + +--- + +## Credentials & Secrets + +None used or created during this session. + +--- + +## Infrastructure & Servers + +None modified during this session. + +--- + +## Commands & Outputs + +```bash +# Initial sync +bash .claude/scripts/sync.sh +# Pulled 2 commits from DESKTOP-0O8A1RL (Mike Swanson) +# - 6dd1a8f: sync: auto-sync from DESKTOP-0O8A1RL at 2026-05-22 21:23:41 +# - 1e67488: sync: auto-sync from DESKTOP-0O8A1RL at 2026-05-22 20:28:41 +# Vault: clean, no changes + +# Episode directory creation +mkdir -p "/Users/azcomputerguru/ClaudeTools/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show" + +# Open show prep in Firefox (multiple times for review) +open -a Firefox "/Users/azcomputerguru/ClaudeTools/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html" +``` + +**Web Search Queries (8 total):** +1. "tech news May 23 2026 breakthrough announcement" +2. "AI news May 2026 GPT OpenAI Google latest" +3. "space news NASA May 2026 SpaceX mission" +4. "quantum computing breakthrough May 2026" +5. "smartphone battery life improvement May 2026 sodium ion" +6. "social media TikTok Instagram feature May 2026" +7. "smart home device vulnerability May 2026 IoT security flaw" +8. "Windows update SecureBoot issue May 2026 boot failure" + +--- + +## Pending / Incomplete Tasks + +None. Show prep complete and ready for broadcast. + +**Follow-up tracking for next week's show:** +- NASA Moon Base announcement scheduled May 26 (Tuesday) - potential lead story +- SpaceX IPO progress tracking (expected Q3 2026) +- Sodium-ion battery phone availability and reviews +- iOS 26.5 encrypted RCS carrier rollout expansion +- State AI regulation (Colorado law effective June 30) +- Smart home security incidents and FCC Cyber Trust Mark rollout +- Windows SecureBoot certificate expiration fallout (begins June 2026) +- Firmware update availability from major PC manufacturers + +--- + +## Reference Information + +### Episode Details +- **Broadcast Date:** Friday, May 23, 2026 +- **Theme:** "Breakneck Speed: From Moon Rockets to Quantum Leaps" +- **Format:** 4 segments × 13-18 minutes = 52-64 minute show +- **File:** `projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html` + +### Segment Structure + +**Segment 1: "Going Public to Go to Mars" (13-15 min)** +- SpaceX Starship V3 test flight (May 22, 2026) +- SpaceX IPO filing S-1 under ticker SPCX (May 20, 2026) +- Largest IPO in history, $350-400B valuation +- Elon Musk compensation tied to Mars colony establishment + +**Segment 2: "The Quantum Leap" (14-16 min)** +- Japanese W-State detection breakthrough (May 13) +- 50-qubit simulation world record - Jülich/NVIDIA (May 11) +- 120km quantum encryption demonstration (May 9) +- Q-CTRL/IBM 3,000× materials simulation speedup (May 6) +- Harvard: quantum computers 5-10 years ahead of schedule + +**Segment 3: "Tech You'll Actually Use" (14-16 min)** +- Sodium-ion batteries: 5-year phone battery life, 3,000-6,000 charge cycles, 2-minute 50% charge +- iOS 26.5: Encrypted RCS messaging to Android (end-to-end encryption by default) +- Social media updates: Instagram pause Reels, TikTok Friends tab, AI message summaries + +**Segment 4: "The AI Reality Check" (16-18 min)** +- 113,000 tech layoffs in 2026 (825/day), AI blamed but Oxford study says otherwise +- GPT-5.5 launch, OpenAI targeting $100B annual ad revenue by 2030 +- Google I/O: Gemini 3.5 Flash, Antigravity agent platform, Universal Cart +- Smart home security: 29 attacks/day per household, 38% devices compromised, AI-driven attacks up 54% +- Windows SecureBoot certificate rollover causing boot failures, mysterious SecureBoot folder, June 2026 deadline +- State AI regulation patchwork (Colorado, Texas, Illinois, California) + +### Key Statistics +- **Space:** Starship V3 biggest rocket ever built, SpaceX IPO $350-400B +- **Quantum:** 50 qubits simulated, 120km encryption range, 3,000× speedup, 5-10 years ahead +- **Batteries:** 3,000-6,000 cycles (vs 300-500 lithium), 2-min charge, 30% cheaper, 10-15% thicker +- **Layoffs:** 113,000 jobs eliminated, 825/day average, 33% increase year-over-year +- **Smart Home:** 29 attacks/day/household, 38% compromised, 54% AI attack increase, 35% default passwords +- **Windows:** June 2026 certificate expiration, May 13-16 warnings started, boot failures on outdated firmware + +### Sources Summary +- **43 unique sources cited** across NPR, Science Daily, MIT Technology Review, Tech Startups, CNN, Microsoft Support, Windows Latest, SecureIoT, Medium, USC Today, MacRumors, Macworld, SocialBee, LLM Stats, Google Blog, CNBC, Malwarebytes, Built In, CPO Magazine +- All stories from May 13-23, 2026 (10-day research window) +- Mix of research institutions, tech news outlets, official Microsoft documentation, security research organizations + +### Backup Content +Medical breakthroughs preserved as filler content: +- Pancreatic cancer drug daraxonrasib (doubles survival, FDA fast-tracked) +- Colorectal cancer immunotherapy (3 years cancer-free, 0% relapse after 9 weeks treatment) +- mRNA cancer vaccines (personalized, 6-year life extension) + +### File Paths +- Show prep HTML: `/Users/azcomputerguru/ClaudeTools/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html` +- Previous episode reference: `/Users/azcomputerguru/ClaudeTools/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-04-18-show/` (checked for format) +- Session log: `/Users/azcomputerguru/ClaudeTools/session-logs/2026-05-23-session.md` + +### Content Replacement Log +1. **Medical → Consumer Tech** - Segment 3 rebuilt with sodium batteries, iOS messaging, social media +2. **Canvas breach → Smart home IoT** - 275M education records story replaced with 29 attacks/day household story +3. **Added Windows SecureBoot** - New standalone story in Segment 4 about certificate rollover and boot failures + +### Show Prep Access +**HTML File Location:** `file:///Users/azcomputerguru/ClaudeTools/projects/radio-show/episodes/2026-05-23-show/show-prep.html` + +**For Howard:** Open in browser to review full show prep with color-coded sections, talking points, sources, and transitions.