Control Alt Impact: 14 Deals, Scams, and AI Shocks Rewiring Tech This Week (S4) S52

Control Alt Impact: 14 Deals, Scams, and AI Shocks Rewiring Tech This Week (S4) S52

58:44 Dec 20, 2025
About this episode
You’re tuned in to The JMOR Tech Talk Show with John C. Morley, Serial Entrepreneur, Engineer, Marketing Specialist, Video Producer, Podcast Host, Coach, Graduate Student, and lifelong learner—your guide to making sense of the wildest shifts in tech before they blindside your business and your life. This episode, “Control‑Alt‑Impact: 14 Deals, Scams, and AI Shocks Rewiring Tech This Week” (S4) S52, unpacks the stories behind the headlines—from bankrupt robots and trillion‑dollar content wars to AI privacy landmines and sci‑fi data storage—so you walk away not just informed, but equipped to act. 1️⃣ 💡 Roomba maker iRobot just filed Chapter 11 and is heading private under its Chinese contract manufacturer, Picea Robotics—your robot vacuum will keep working for now, but this is a wake‑up call about how fragile “smart” ecosystems really are when the company behind your hardware hits a wall. This segment dives into what Chapter 11 actually means for Roomba owners, how long you can realistically expect cloud features and parts to last, and whether 2025 is the year to stay loyal or finally jump ship to rivals like Ecovacs or Roborock before you’re stuck with an orphaned bot. 2️⃣ 💡 Paramount’s massive $108.4B bid is getting iced while Netflix aims to lock down Warner Bros Discovery’s non‑cable assets, turning HBO, classic films, and fan‑favorite franchises into potential exclusive ammo for a single platform. Here, the question isn’t just who wins the deal—it’s what happens to your streaming bill and choice when one app holds most of the crown jewels and the rest are left fighting over scraps, and how to future‑proof your own media habits before your watchlist gets paywalled into oblivion. 3️⃣ 💡 Airtel Africa’s partnership with Starlink means 14 countries are about to see dead zones vanish as phones connect directly to satellites, skipping towers entirely and bringing “bars from the sky” to people who never had a reliable signal. In this segment, you’ll hear how direct‑to‑cell tech works in real life, what it could mean for entrepreneurs, remote workers, schools, and emergency response, and why Africa might leapfrog older infrastructure and become a blueprint for the next wave of global connectivity. 4️⃣ 💡 Nvidia didn’t just buy another tool—it bought SchedMD, the company behind Slurm, the workload scheduler that quietly runs many of the world’s biggest supercomputers and AI clusters, giving it influence from the silicon up through the software that decides which jobs run where. We’ll break down how this deepens Nvidia’s grip on AI infrastructure, what it means for competitors and cloud providers, and why owning the “traffic cop” for GPU queues may matter just as much as owning the GPUs themselves. 5️⃣ 💡 US 3D‑printing pioneers accuse Chinese brands like Bambu Lab of copying key designs while racing ahead with faster, cheaper printers—and yet, 2025 buyers keep choosing performance and price over questions of originali
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