Logging In copertina

Logging In

Logging In

Di: Luna Techie & Kali
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A proposito di questo titolo

Welcome to Logging In — the comedy-tech show where Luna and Techie plug into the absurd side of digital life. From Wi-Fi meltdowns to gadget fails, trending tech to social media chaos, nothing escapes their sarcastic spin.


Each week, the duo breaks down what’s buzzing online — not like the experts on TV, but like your smartest, funniest friends who just accidentally closed all their tabs. Whether it’s viral nonsense, app updates, or why your phone’s battery always hits 1% at the worst possible time, Logging In keeps it light, clever, and laugh-out-loud relatable.


So grab your coffee, check your connection, and get ready to reboot your day — because the system’s ready… and you’re Logging In.

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Politica e governo
  • 010 – Apple’s Creator Shift, Subscriptions, and the Cost of Convenience
    Jan 15 2026

    In Episode 010 of Logging In, Techie and Luna dig into Apple’s evolving relationship with creators — and what happens when professional tools, subscriptions, and AI begin reshaping how creative work gets done.


    The conversation starts with Apple’s new creator-focused offerings and recurring subscription model, raising familiar concerns about affordability, access, and whether these tools genuinely empower artists or quietly gatekeep creativity. From there, the discussion expands to Google’s Gemini AI and its ability to pull from personal data across apps, prompting deeper questions about privacy, consent, and how much thinking people are willing to outsource.


    Midway through the episode, Kali delivers the Water Cooler, reporting on a wide range of current events including political pressure on the Federal Reserve, international tensions involving Greenland, a major nurses’ strike in New York, developments in medical and fertility research, childcare funding disputes, corporate conflicts over energy investments, consumer lawsuits, and a major NFL playoff comeback.


    As the episode unfolds, Techie and Luna connect technology’s convenience culture to creativity, relationships, and emotional labor — asking whether efficiency is starting to replace imagination, and what’s lost when tools begin doing the thinking for us.


    A thoughtful look at where modern tech is heading — and the human cost of making everything easier.



    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/loggingin/exclusive-content
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    47 min
  • 009 – At CES, LEGO Goes Smart While Dell Discloses AI Fatigue
    Jan 6 2026

    In Episode 009 of Logging In, Techie and Luna kick off the year with CES season — and the headline they didn’t expect: LEGO stepping on stage to announce a new “smart brick.” It’s screen-free and powered by proximity tech, but it still raises a big question: does adding lights and sounds make creativity better… or does it train kids to expect the toy to do the imagining for them?


    From there, the conversation shifts to a very different CES surprise: Dell publicly acknowledging that consumers are confused by AI marketing — and in many cases simply don’t care. As “AI everything” collides with real life, Techie and Luna talk about who actually benefits from AI features, who feels overwhelmed by them, and whether a backlash is brewing for simpler, quieter tech.


    A playful (and slightly exhausted) check-in on where tech is headed — and whether we’re building tools that help humans, or replace them.



    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/loggingin/exclusive-content
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    43 min
  • 008 – “Learing” Online: Are Social Influencers Journalists?
    Jan 1 2026

    What are we actually learning when stories go viral — and who decides what counts as “evidence”?


    In Episode 008 of Logging In, Techie and Luna unpack a viral video by content creator Nick Shirley, who accused Somali-owned daycare centers in Minnesota of fraud, using a misspelled word on a childcare sign as a key signal of alleged illegitimacy. Rather than adjudicating guilt or innocence, the episode focuses on something more fundamental: how people are learning to interpret information online.


    The conversation explores how algorithms reward confidence over context, how visual “gotchas” like spelling errors become stand-ins for truth, and how audiences are being trained — often unintentionally — to draw sweeping conclusions from incomplete data. From YouTube journalism and crowd-sourced investigations to the real-world harm caused when virality outpaces verification, the episode asks whether the internet is teaching people how to think critically, or simply how to react quickly.


    At its core, this episode is about learning: what we absorb, what we miss, and how easily the tools meant to inform us can end up distorting reality instead.



    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/loggingin/exclusive-content
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    52 min
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