Tek With Josh Podcast Por Joshua A. Rodriguez arte de portada

Tek With Josh

Tek With Josh

De: Joshua A. Rodriguez
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Tek With Josh delivers real talk about real tech for everyday people. From AI breakthroughs and the latest gadgets to must-have apps, software tips, and honest product reviews, Josh breaks everything down in a simple, down-to-earth way. If you want straightforward explanations, genuine opinions, and tech you can actually use—without the jargon—this is the podcast for you.

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Episodios
  • Episode 30 - My Thoughts On The S26 Ultra
    Mar 3 2026

    In this episode of Tek With Josh, I share my honest thoughts on the newly announced Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra. While it’s easily one of the most powerful Android phones Samsung has ever released, raw specs don’t always translate into meaningful upgrades for everyday users.

    I walk through what Samsung actually changed this year — including the Snapdragon Gen 5 for Galaxy, the new 10-bit display with a built-in privacy screen, faster wired and wireless charging, and improvements to thermal performance. I also talk about the areas where Samsung chose to play it safe, particularly with the camera system and overall design.

    We also get into Samsung’s evolving AI strategy with One UI 8.5, what the new task-based AI features can realistically do right now, and why the lack of built-in magnetic support for accessories feels like a missed opportunity in 2026.

    Finally, I break down who this phone makes sense for — especially for buyers in the U.S. — and why most people with a recent Ultra model are better off skipping this generation.

    What We Talk About

    Galaxy S26 Ultra specs vs real-world value

    Snapdragon Gen 5 for Galaxy performance

    The new 10-bit display and built-in privacy screen

    Thermal changes, materials, and vapor chamber cooling

    Camera updates (and what hasn’t changed)

    One UI 8.5, Galaxy AI, and task-based automation

    Faster charging and the magnet controversy

    Who should upgrade — and who shouldn’t

    Listen, read, and explore more at:

    👉 BooksByJosh.com

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    11 m
  • Episode 29 - HTC, I Miss You
    Feb 10 2026

    In this episode of Tek With Josh, I take a break from current tech news and go back to the company that made me fall in love with smartphones in the first place: HTC. Before phones became uniform slabs of glass, HTC was experimenting, taking risks, and giving users tools that encouraged curiosity and customization.

    This isn’t a spec breakdown or a history lesson. It’s a personal reflection on growing up with Windows Mobile, discovering early Android, learning how to root phones, and working retail during some of the biggest smartphone launches of all time. HTC didn’t just make devices — they shaped how many of us learned to use, understand, and care about technology.

    What We Talk About

    My first experiences with HTC phones during the Windows Mobile era

    The T-Mobile Dash, HTC Mogul, Pocket PC devices, and early smartphone experimentation

    Why Windows Mobile felt ahead of its time

    Playing games, watching videos, and customizing phones before app stores were polished

    HTC’s role in launching Android with the G1

    The Hero, EVO, and why the EVO felt like a true iPhone competitor

    Working retail during major HTC launches and what that era felt like

    Rooting phones, custom ROMs, and learning Android from the inside

    The Nexus lineup and HTC’s influence on Google hardware

    The rise and fall of HTC as a smartphone powerhouse

    Why phones today feel less exciting — and what we lost along the way

    Why This Episode Matters

    HTC represents a time when smartphones felt personal. When hardware experimentation mattered. When learning your phone meant something more than choosing an ecosystem. This episode is about remembering that era — and acknowledging how much modern smartphones owe to a company that no longer gets the recognition it deserves.

    Final Thoughts

    Phones are more powerful than ever, but they don’t always feel meaningful. HTC made me want to tinker, explore, and truly understand the technology in my pocket. That curiosity stuck — and it’s the reason I still care about tech today.

    About Tek With Josh

    Tek With Josh is a podcast focused on technology, nostalgia, and thoughtful commentary on the devices and platforms that shape our everyday lives.

    Listen, read, and explore more at:

    👉 BooksByJosh.com

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    20 m
  • Episode 28 - Apple Creator Studio
    Feb 3 2026

    In this episode of Tek With Josh, I take a close look at Apple’s newly launched Creator Studio plan and explain why it feels different from most subscription offerings we see today.

    This isn’t just another bundle of apps. Apple is clearly trying to collapse the entire creative workflow into one connected ecosystem, bringing together video editing, music production, image work, and upgraded productivity tools under a single subscription. At a time when creative software keeps getting more expensive, the pricing alone makes this worth talking about.

    I break down exactly what’s included in Apple Creator Studio, including Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage, along with premium features inside Keynote, Pages, and Numbers. I also explain how much these apps cost individually and why the bundle changes the conversation around access to professional tools.

    A major focus of this episode is Apple’s iPad strategy. Final Cut Pro for iPad, combined with the Final Cut Cameraapp, introduces a mobile-first workflow where your iPhone can act as a more serious camera and feed directly into your editing setup. For creators recording interviews, podcasts with video, or multi-angle content, this approach can significantly reduce friction between recording and publishing.

    I also compare Apple Creator Studio directly with Adobe Creative Cloud, including pricing, app scope, and the tradeoffs between Apple’s tightly optimized ecosystem and Adobe’s cross-platform flexibility. While Adobe still offers unmatched breadth, Apple’s pricing and performance on M-series hardware make this a compelling option for many creators, especially students.

    I wrap up by explaining why this is one of the few subscriptions I can actually get behind, particularly for younger creators and students who want access to professional-level tools without spending hundreds or thousands upfront.

    What I Cover in This Episode

    What Apple Creator Studio is and why it matters

    All the apps included in the subscription

    Monthly, annual, and student pricing breakdown

    Why Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro alone justify the value

    Final Cut Pro for iPad and Final Cut Camera integration

    Apple Creator Studio vs Adobe Creative Cloud

    Apple’s long-term ecosystem strategy for creators

    Who this subscription makes the most sense for

    Let Me Know

    If you’ve tried Apple Creator Studio, I’d love to hear how you’re using it and whether it fits your workflow. Reach out and let me know what stood out to you.

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    13 m
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