Security Now is one of the TWiT shows built for listeners who want context, not just velocity.
Focus: clear cybersecurity context without fear bait.
Listen here:
twit.tv/shows/security-now
| website | https://twit.tv |
| https://twitter.com/TWiT |
Security Now is one of the TWiT shows built for listeners who want context, not just velocity.
Focus: clear cybersecurity context without fear bait.
Listen here:
twit.tv/shows/security-now
Tech people, quick question:
What home theater upgrade made the biggest difference for you?
Curious how this lands with people who care about privacy, open systems, repairability, and long term tech decisions.
Android 17 is here.
Tech News Weekly covers the best new features, Apple’s likely price hikes, Fox buying Roku, and cheap smart home devices being used in a massive residential proxy network.
Listen here:
https://twit.tv/shows/tech-news-weekly/episodes/442
Club TWiT is built for people who still value ad free media, smaller communities, and long form technology conversations.
Details:
twit.tv/clubtwit
A lot of technology coverage moves quickly from one announcement to the next.
The more useful question is often this:
TWiT works because smart people are allowed to think out loud about complicated technology instead of pretending every story is simple.
More thoughtful tech conversation from TWiT:
twit.tv/subscribe
The next AI fight is about power and control.
Intelligent Machines covers Anthropic’s Fable shutdown, Amazon’s AI influence, DeepMind preparing for millions of agents, and the copyright fight around AI music training.
Listen here:
https://twit.tv/shows/intelligent-machines/episodes/875
Microsoft has a clarity problem.
Xbox may be facing a reset.
Surface prices are getting hard to ignore.
The Windows Insider Program got more confusing.
Windows Weekly 988 covers the bigger picture.
This Week in Tech is one of the TWiT shows built for listeners who want context, not just velocity.
Focus: the smartest way to process the week in technology.
Listen here:
twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech
Tech people, quick question:
What piece of tech advice would you give everyone in your family?
Curious how this lands with people who care about privacy, open systems, repairability, and long term tech decisions.