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Your dishwasher doesn’t need a firmware update to clean plates, and your oven shouldn’t require an account to roast dinner. We dig into the gap between promised convenience and the quiet reality of connected appliances: data collection, feature gating, and the steady creep of ads into places they don’t belong. As a broadcast engineer and Linux nerd, I break down what Wi‑Fi actually adds to your home, where it crosses the line, and how to keep the benefits without turning your kitchen into an ad platform. We start by separating three very different ideas that get lumped into “smart.” Optional convenience can be useful—notifications when laundry is done or a fridge door is left open. Maintenance and support can genuinely improve with remote diagnostics and targeted fixes. The third category is the problem: core features locked behind connectivity, accounts, or cloud services. Independent testing shows many appliances send megabytes of data home every week, and companion apps can include a startling number of third‑party trackers, building a timeline of your daily life. You’ll hear concrete examples of how this goes sideways: a high‑end oven that needed Wi‑Fi to unlock convection roast and smart fridge screens that double as ad surfaces. We talk about incentives, business models, and why toggles that exist today can vanish tomorrow. Most importantly, we share a practical, step‑by‑step playbook: decide if you need connectivity at all, connect only for warranty diagnostics, isolate devices on guest networks, minimize app permissions, and stop paying premiums for embedded screens that age poorly and invite ads. The shopping rule of thumb is simple—prefer appliances that work fully offline, with connectivity as an optional add‑on, not a gate to core functions. If you care about privacy, reliability, and value per dollar, this conversation gives you the tools to make better choices and configure what you already own with confidence. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s shopping for a new appliance, and leave a review with your smartest dumb device story—we might feature it next week. Send me a text message with your thoughts, questions, or feedback (https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/tex...) Support the show (https://www.tylerwoodward.me/2463382/...) If you enjoyed the show, be sure to follow The Tyler Woodward Project and leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts (https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id...) or your favorite podcast app (https://podcast.tylerwoodward.me/2463...) —it really helps more people discover the show. Follow the show on Instagram ( / tylerwoodward.me ) and Threads (https://www.threads.com/@tylerwoodwar...) . All views and opinions expressed in this show are solely those of the creator and do not represent or reflect the views, policies, or positions of any employer, organization, or professional affiliation.