The Vergecast is the flagship podcast from The Verge about small gadgets, Big Tech, and everything in between. Every Friday, hosts Nilay Patel and David Pierce hang out and make sense of the week’s most important technology news. And every Tuesday, David leads a selection of The Verge’s expert staffers in an exploration of how gadgets and software affect our lives – and which ones you should bring into yours.
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I just want AI to rename my photos
Sun, 30 Nov 2025
Raycast is an unusual app with an unusual amount of access: it's a launcher and application platform that can directly interact with all the files and apps on your computer. Raycast didn't start as an AI-centric product, but Thomas Paul Mann, the company's co-founder and CEO, thinks AI is the key to making Raycast even better. For this episode, the first in our two-part miniseries about how developers are using and building AI, Mann explains how he plans to turn models loose on your files and apps, how he's thinking about the security risks and privacy issues associated with that plan, and what it takes to build AI products that actually, you know, work. Mann also talks through how he uses AI, both in and out of Raycast, and how he became a prompt-first computer user.
Further reading:
Raycast
From the Raycast blog: One interface, many LLMs
How to use Raycast and how it compares to Spotlight and Alfred
Raycast’s iOS app is now available for AI chat and notes
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The geek's guide to running faster
Tue, 25 Nov 2025
It's a holiday week for many of us, which means a lot of Turkey Trots and a lot of TV. We have something for both in this episode! First, Nick Thompson, the CEO of The Atlantic and author of the new book, The Running Ground, joins the show to talk about his lifelong journey as a runner, and all the tech — from smartwatch to shoes to custom GPTs — he uses in training. After that, The Verge's John Higgins makes his first Vergecast appearance to help us understand how motion smoothing works, why you should turn it off, and all the other ways you can improve your TV watching experience this holiday season. Finally, David follows up on a question on the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) with some recommendations on inexpensive earbuds worth cranking up the volume on.
Further reading:
Nick Thompson's book, The Running Ground
From The Atlantic: Why I Run
TV manufacturers unite to tackle the scourge of motion smoothing
Dear Roku, you ruined my TV
How to turn off motion smoothing on your high-definition TV
Samsung’s Frame TV is finally getting the knockoffs it deserves
Samsung announces The Frame Pro: could this be the perfect TV?
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Version History: Vine
Sun, 23 Nov 2025
Vine was the original short-form video platform, and pioneered so many of the ideas we now take for granted in reels and TikToks. It was a cultural engine whose executives clashed with the creators who made it famous, before everybody decamped for other platforms. Marina Galperina, Sarah Jeong and Mia Sato join David Pierce to revisit their favorite Vines and discuss the platform's lasting impact on creator culture.
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AI agents are invading your PC
Fri, 21 Nov 2025
Like it or not, you may not be able to avoid the AI agents for long. David and Nilay discuss the ways Microsoft is pushing agents to practically every corner of Windows, and where Google plans to put Gemini 3 now that it's confident it makes the best model. After that, the hosts dig into the ruling in Meta's monopoly case, which has a lot to say about TikTok — and about the state and future of the internet. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for an extra-long Brendan Carr is a Dummy, some thoughts on domain names, and a quick Boox screen test.
Further reading:
Google cracked Apple’s AirDrop and is adding it to Pixel phones
Talking to Windows’ Copilot AI makes a computer feel incompetent
Microsoft is turning Windows into an ‘agentic OS,’ starting with the taskbar
Microsoft Agent 365 lets businesses manage AI agents like they do people
Screw it, I’m installing Linux
Google is launching Gemini 3, its ‘most intelligent’ AI model yet
Google Antigravity is an ‘agent-first’ coding tool built for Gemini 3
Google’s AI Mode can now help you visualize your travel plans
Google Gemini is getting better at identifying AI fakes | The Verge
Google’s Nano Banana AI image model goes Pro and is free to try | The Verge
Meta is not a monopolist, judge rules
FTC v. Meta: the antitrust battle over Instagram and WhatsApp
Inside the courthouse reshaping the future of the internet
Europe is scaling back its landmark privacy and AI laws
Here’s the Trump executive order that would ban state AI laws
Republicans are looking for a way to bring back the AI moratorium
Brendan Carr’s FCC launches probe into BBC’s Trump edit | The Verge
The FCC wants to roll back steps meant to stop a repeat of a massive telecom hack | The Verge
Matter 1.5 brings camera support at last — here’s what it means for your smart home
MSNBC’s website is now MS.NOW
Future Google TV devices might come with a solar-powered remote
Disney loses bid to block Sling TV’s one-day cable passes
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It's not your job to fix the internet
Tue, 18 Nov 2025
Enshittification. It's fun to say, hard to spell, and a useful descriptor of exactly how the internet has gone wrong. Cory Doctorow, the author and activist who coined the term a few years ago, recently published a book on the subject, called Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It. He was on Decoder a few weeks ago to explain what happened, and joins The Vergecast this week to help us figure out what to do about it. Can we, as regular people on the internet, help to de-enshittify the place? What responsibility do we have, and what kinds of choices should we be making? Cory has lots of thoughts on whether you can shop your way out of a monopoly, and what it really takes to enact structural change online.
Further reading:
Cory Doctorow on Decoder
Read Cory's book, Enshittification
Cory's last Vergecast appearance
From Pluralistic: How monopoly enshittified Amazon
AI is killing the old web, and the new web struggles to be born
FTC files a massive antitrust lawsuit against Amazon
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Version History: LimeWire
Sun, 16 Nov 2025
You wouldn't steal a car. You wouldn't steal a handbag. But plenty of people used LimeWire and other file sharing services to share music, movies and more. If Napster was the beginning of the piracy story, LimeWire may have been the final chapter. Nilay Patel and Sarah Jeong join David Pierce to chart the history of LimeWire and the legal cases that shaped U.S. copyright law and the lives of college students taxing the bandwidth of their dormitory internet.
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Valve made Microsoft's dream console
Fri, 14 Nov 2025
The console wars are back on. This week, Nilay Patel sits down with Jake Kastrenakes, Sean Hollister, and special guest Joanna Stern, senior columnist at The Wall Street Journal, to talk about Valve's return to the living room gaming race with the Steam Machine, Steam Controller, and Steam Frame VR headset. Then, Joanna discusses her time putting the Neo robot to the test and seeing whether it's capable of loading a dishwasher. Finally, it's time for the Lightning Round, where the crew is talking the YouTube/Disney spat, Apple's new mini apps, and letting Waymo speed down the highway.
Further reading:
Our first look at the Steam Machine, Valve’s ambitious new game console
Valve enters the console wars
Valve just built the Xbox that Microsoft is dreaming of
Valve’s new Steam Controller might be my dream controllerThe Steam Frame is a surprising new twist on VR
Steam Machines have returned: all the news about Valve’s new hardware universe
The Steam Frame has two speakers on each side of your face for vibration cancellation
Valve’s new VR streaming trick won’t just work with its own headset
How the Steam Frame compares to other VR headsets
Valve thinks Arm has ‘potential’ for SteamOS handhelds, laptops, and more
Valve is welcoming Android games into Steam
Valve has stopped manufacturing its Index VR headset
Valve has no news about Steam Deck 2 — because it’s still waiting for the right chip
We tried Valve’s new VR headset, PC, and controller — ask us anything!
I Tried the First Humanoid Home Robot. It Got Weird
Know Your Meme
1X Neo is a $20,000 home robot that will learn chores via teleoperation
Meet NEO, the AI-Driven Robot That’s Coming to Lend a Hand Around the House — for a Steep Price
The Problem with this Humanoid Robot
Samsung brings a generative AI-powered Bixby to its TVs
Gemini for TV is coming to Google TV Streamer starting today
Google says its confusing Gemini Home rollout is going just great
Google Photos lets iPhone users edit images by describing changes
Disney is losing over $4 million a day in revenue on the YouTube TV blackout
Disney is “trying really hard” to get ESPN back on YouTube TV
Peyton and Eli Manning Drop the Ball, Embarrass Themselves With Bob Iger Interview
Apple made a $230 crossbody… sock
Steve Jobs introduces iPod socks in 2004
Mini apps
Apple will take a mini commission from mini app developers
Amazon is cracking down on illegal streaming on its Fire TV Stick
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Extreme smart home makeover
Tue, 11 Nov 2025
David has a new house, and no idea what to do with it. So he taps The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy to help him make the place a lot smarter. Jen and David go room by room, figuring out how to improve everything from his lighting to his fridge to his front door. Some of the decisions are easy, like betting on Matter. Some are more complicated: what do you do when you have a split household between Android and iOS? Some are downright existential — how much would you spend for a better cup of coffee? Jen has ideas, and a vast set of product recommendations as well.
Kitchen:
Fridge - Bosch 100 Series
I found the first Matter smart fridge
Samsung
Bosh Home Connect app
Echo Show 8/11
Echo Show 15
Echo Dot Max
Thermomix
My smart kitchen: the good, the bad, and the future
GE Profile Nugget Ice maker
Typhur Dome 2 air fryer
Instant Pot Pro
Bosch 800 Series Coffee Machine
Living Room
FireTV Omni
FireTV Stick with voice remote
Inovelli smart switches
Philips Hue essentials bulbs
Philips Hue lights get bigger, brighter, and cheaper with a major product refresh
Philips Hue Bridge Pro / Motion Aware
Inside Philips Hue’s plans to make all your lights motion sensors
Ikea Bilresa Buttons
Lutron Caseta
SmartWings shades
Sonos / Hue
Bedroom:
Philips Hue Twilight
Fall into smarter lighting
Switchbot Air Purifier table
AIDot WeLov Air Purifiers
Amazon Smart Air Quality Monitor
Ikea Alpstuga air quality monitor
Belkin Boost Charge Pro Echo Spot
Big Ass Fans
Kids room:
Echo Glow
Echo Dot Kids
Switchbot robot vacuum K11 Plus
Office Basement:
Philips Hue downlights
Nanoleaf downlights
Nanoleaf Blocks
Nanoleaf Skylight
Sense Plus Switch
Nanoleaf launches a smart switch after eight years of trying
Govee Floor lamp
Philips Hue Floor Lamp
Nanoleaf Floor Lamp
Nanoleaf 4D Screen Mirror
Gardyn Studio Gen 2
Aqara Smart Lock U300 Lever Lock
Garden
Hue Festavia Globe Outdoor Lights
Nanoleaf String Lights
Lifx String lights
Eve Aqua
Apollo PLT-1 indoor plant multisensor
Others:
All Ikea’s new stuff
Shelly Relays
Third Reality Zigbee sensors
Zooz Z-Wave sensors
Eve Energy smart plug
Home Assistant
The little smart home platform that could
Home Assistant Green
Home Assistant Connect ZBT-1
Home Assistant Z-Wave
Home Assistant Energy Management
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Version History: Fire Phone
Sun, 09 Nov 2025
In 2014, the tech world was abuzz with the prospect of a phone made by Amazon. When the Fire Phone arrived, it was chock full of ideas — a "dynamic perspective" feature that created 3D illusions, an image-recognition feature called "Firefly," and many, many opportunities to buy Amazon products. Allison Johnson and Sean O’Kane join David Pierce to discuss why, unlike Amazon's successful e-readers, this device was a gigantic flop.
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Bring back the iBook, you cowards
Fri, 07 Nov 2025
The DoorDash problem just became Amazon's problem. Perplexity's Comet browser is allegedly stealthily shopping on the internet's largest mall, and the folks in Seattle want it to stop. It's just one example of the fast-moving power dynamics on the internet, as AI companies try to change the way we search, shop, and do everything else. Lots of companies are not going to settle for being dumb databases, and Nilay and David discuss how this fight might play out. After that, the hosts talk about the reports of an impending cheaper Mac with an iPhone chip, and whether that might mark Apple's true return to consumer laptops — or be something else entirely. Finally, in the lightning round, they talk Brendan Carr, late-night shows, party speakers, and sonic logos. Lots and lots of sonic logos.
Further reading:
Amazon and Perplexity have kicked off the great AI web browser fight
WEB WAR III
Apple is planning to use a custom version of Google Gemini for Apple Intelligence
OpenAI launches its Sora app on Android
Perplexity is going to power AI search in Snapchat.
Easier access to AI Mode, if that’s your thing.
Google Gemini’s Deep Research can look into your emails, drive, and chats
Google Maps taps Gemini AI to transform into an ‘all-knowing copilot’
Amazon is building Alexa Plus into its Music app
The AI industry is running on FOMO
Apple is reportedly working on a cheaper Mac laptop with an iPhone chip
iOS 26.1 lets you tweak Liquid Glass, and it’s out now
YouTube wants a piece of the late-night TV pie.
Apple TV’s new name now comes with a new sound
Brendan Carr votes to eliminate cybersecurity requirements
Epic and Google agree to settle their lawsuit and change Android’s fate globally
I’m amused by how Google is complying with the Epic injunction.
xAI used employee biometric data to train Elon Musk’s AI girlfriend
Into the Huluverse: The sonic evolution of Hulu
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Your smart home questions, answered
Tue, 04 Nov 2025
Here at The Vergecast, we get a lot of questions. Questions from you, which we love! Questions that, for some reason, often tend to be about the smart home and why it's often not so very smart. So on this episode, the first in a two-part series, The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy helps us answer a whole bunch of your questions. Questions like: what's Apple's deal with the smart home? Are there any good smart faucets? And what's about to happen to my robot vacuum cleaner? Jen helps us wade through all that and more. We also go on a long diversion about smart smoke detectors, which are pretty awesome.
Further reading:
My smart kitchen: the good, the bad, and the future
Moen’s Smart Faucet with Motion Control is totally hands free, and works with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant
The future of the Roomba, and the best robot vacuums
This smart smoke alarm could be a worthy Nest Protect replacement
Home Assistant’s next era begins now
Apple’s plan for AI could make Siri the animated center of your smart home
What’s in a smart home reviewer’s backyard
How Matter works, where it’s headed, and why it matters
The problems with AI in the smart home and how Amazon and Google plan to fix them
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Version History: Zune
Sun, 02 Nov 2025
In 2006, Microsoft came for the iPod's throne with an innovative MP3 player called the Zune. It had a bunch of features the iPod didn't: WiFi, music sharing, a bigger screen, a beautiful UI, even an FM radio. And to hear Microsoft describe it, it was even kind of a social network. Nilay Patel and Victoria Song join David Pierce to break down why, despite all that, the Zune never really took off. And why it came in brown.
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God will be declared by a panel of experts
Fri, 31 Oct 2025
If you want to understand the full spectrum of AI software, from "straightforward problem-solving tool" to "never-ending slop machine," all you need to do is pay attention to everything Adobe launched at its conference this week. David and Nilay run through the news, which will change how people use Photoshop but also maybe change our social feeds forever. After that, they talk about OpenAI's conversion to a for-profit business, and specifically the truly wild way OpenAI and Microsoft talk about the future of AGI. Finally, in the lightning round, they discuss Brendan Carr, Cybertrucks, the Trump Phone, Ghost Posts, and more.
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Further reading:
Photoshop and Premiere Pro’s new AI tools can instantly edit your work
You can tell Adobe Express’s new AI assistant to edit designs for you
Adobe’s AI social media admin is here with ‘Project Moonlight’
Mark Zuckerberg is excited to add more AI content to all your social feeds
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg defends AI spend: 'We're seeing the returns'
OpenAI completed its for-profit restructuring — and struck a new deal with Microsoft
The next chapter of the Microsoft–OpenAI partnership
OpenAI lays groundwork for juggernaut IPO at up to $1 trillion valuation | Reuters
OpenAI has an AGI problem — and Microsoft just made it worse
OpenAI made ChatGPT better at sifting through your work information
Sam, Jakub, and Wojciech on the future of OpenAI with audience Q&A
The Kingmaker | WIRED
Congratulations to the Tesla Cybertruck on its 10th recall.
Trump℠ Mobile | All-American Performance. Everyday Price. $47.45/Month
Threads is getting disappearing posts
Ads will arrive on Samsung Family Hub smart fridges next month.
The FCC is going after broadband nutrition labels.
Brendan Carr is a Dummy
Bending Spoons is buying AOL for some reason
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An Apple Shortcuts masterclass
Tue, 28 Oct 2025
Meta's smart glasses have been a hit in part because they don't try to do too much. With the new Display glasses, though, Meta is trying to do... a lot more. The Verge's Victoria Song joins the show to tell us about her experience with the glasses, from the impressive but very first-gen hardware to the somewhat underwhelming set of things you can do. After that, podcaster and creator Stephen Robles explains to David why he's dead wrong about Apple Shortcuts. Stephen shares how he uses Shortcuts, why he's found such a big audience of Shortcuts fans on YouTube and elsewhere, and why it's worth doing the work to learn Apple's most powerful app. Finally, David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about which wireless earbuds you should buy — and why it might be the pair you already own.
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Further reading:
The future I saw through the Meta Ray-Ban Display amazes and terrifies me
I regret to inform you Meta’s new smart glasses are the best I’ve ever tried
The smart glasses race is really on now
Stephen Robles' YouTube channel
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Version History: Guitar Hero
Sun, 26 Oct 2025
Millions of basements have fake plastic guitars in them thanks to the 2005 smash hit Guitar Hero. Chris Grant and Ash Parrish join David Pierce to rock out with a game created over a matter of months by a niche developer and a peripheral manufacturer, fueled by word-of-mouth and viral videos on a nascent YouTube. You probably don’t play Guitar Hero anymore, but you might still find it in surprising places.
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Burn Book: A Tech Love Story (Hardcover)
A witty, scathing, and fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead, by journalist Kara Swisher.
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ChatGPT enters the browser wars
Fri, 24 Oct 2025
The era of the AI browser is here, and OpenAI is finally in the game. Nilay, Jake, and Hayden sit down to chat about what it means to have ChatGPT in your browser and able to control your cursor and surf the web for you. Also this week: Nilay's warning about using old surge protectors, the devastating and inevitable outcome of the Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition, and Samsung's Galaxy XR headset, which looks a lot like a Vision Pro. Finally, Brendan Carr Is A Dummy makes its triumphant return. And we wrap it all up with the Lightning Round, talking about the the Friend protest, GM's decision to ditch CarPlay, the AWS outage, the future of the Xbox, and more.
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Further reading:
OpenAI’s AI-powered browser, ChatGPT Atlas, is here
The ChatGPT Atlas browser still feels like Googling with extra steps
OpenAI teases a string of updates for its AI-powered browser, ChatGPT Atlas
Opera’s Neon shows just how confusing AI browsers still are
Perplexity’s Comet browser is now available to everyone for free
Google is expanding Gemini in Chrome and letting it do stuff for you
Reddit sues Perplexity for allegedly ripping its content to feed AI
The Dia browser is a big bet on the web — and an even bigger bet on AI
OpenAI’s latest legal request is raising eyebrows
Meta is axing 600 roles across its AI division | The Verge
Warner Bros. Discovery is ready for a sale
WBD already rejected three offers from Paramount Skydance,
Netflix, Amazon, and Apple are reportedly interested in buying Warner Bros.
HBO Max is raising prices for the third year in a row
Hulu with Live TV now costs $90 monthly but you can lock in $65 for three months
Apple TV will be the only place to watch F1 in the US, starting next year
Samsung Galaxy XR hands-on: It’s like a cheaper Apple Vision Pro and launches today
The future I saw through the Meta Ray-Ban Display amazes and terrifies me
These Oakley smart glasses are perfect for weekend warriors and T-ball coaches
The Friend AI pendant’s creator publicized a ‘Friend protest’ in NYC
These nonprofits lobbied to regulate OpenAI — then the subpoenas came
Why GM will give you Gemini — but not CarPlay
Did Microsoft just tease that the next Xbox is a PC and console?
Major AWS outage took down Fortnite, Alexa, Snapchat, and more
Pitchfork is beta testing user reviews and comments as it approaches 30
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The new Xbox is not an Xbox
Tue, 21 Oct 2025
We're very bullish on the handheld future of gaming. But we're not bullish on the new ROG Xbox Ally. The Verge's Sean Hollister joins the show to explain why this Xbox-branded device barely feels like an Xbox, and why it's definitely not a threat to the Steam Deck, before he and David debate whether the future of Xbox is even in good hands. After that, The Verge's Hayden Field walks David through a couple of important recent studies, asking the same basic question: is AI making us dumb? Finally, Sean returns to answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about hybrid computers, which are an extremely 2012 idea and also maybe the future of computing. But probably not.
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Further reading:
Xbox Ally and Ally X review: this is not an Xbox
Prongs rock
MIT: Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task
How chatbots — and their makers — are enabling AI psychosis
Sam Altman says ChatGPT will stop talking about suicide with teens
Some doctors got worse at detecting cancer after relying on AI
Microsoft Research: The Impact of Generative AI on Critical Thinking: Self-Reported Reductions in Cognitive Effort and Confidence Effects From a Survey of Knowledge Workers
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Version History: Sony Watchman
Sun, 19 Oct 2025
1982's coolest gadget was the Sony Watchman portable TV. Decades before everyone was glued to YouTube on their smartphones, the Watchman popularized the concept of video on the go. In the early days of the personal-tech revolution, you’d find the Watchman antennas up everywhere from the church pew to the baseball bleacher. Victoria Song and Allison Johnson join David Pierce to dive into the engineering feat that made the first Watchman possible.
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AI can't even turn on the lights
Fri, 17 Oct 2025
Nilay’s back! And you can listen to The Vergecast with no ads, if you’re a Verge subscriber! Big week, really. Nilay and David start the show by talking about ads, podcasts, platforms, and subscriptions. Then they talk a bunch about Apple’s new M5-powered MacBook, iPad, and Vision Pro, and whether a chip bump is worth getting excited about. After that, Nilay reflects on a summer of using AI products, and explains why you can tell the whole story of this generation of AI just by talking about the smart home. Finally, in the lightning round, the hosts talk about AI song covers, Apple TV, TiVo, Roku, Cybertrucks, and the exploding Pixel 10 Pro Fold.
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Further reading:
Ad-free Verge podcasts have arrived
Netflix is making a big bet on video podcasts
Apple’s 2025 iPad Pro comes with an M5 chip inside
Apple just upgraded the Vision Pro with an M5 chip and new strap
Apple’s 14-inch MacBook Pro gets an M5 chip bump and faster storage
Logitech made an Apple Pencil-like stylus for the Vision Pro
Apple’s rumored smart home display hub might start at $350
Samsung officially teases Moohan headset launch for next week
Apple’s future smart glasses could have two separate UIs.
ChatGPT will soon help you shop at Walmart.
How OpenAI plans to make all its money.
Microsoft wants you to talk to your PC and let AI control it
As Microsoft bids farewell to Windows 10, millions of users won’t
Spotify says it’s working with labels on ‘responsible’ AI music tools
DirecTV will soon bring AI ads to your screensaver
OpenAI partners with Broadcom to produce its own AI chips
Sam Altman says ChatGPT will soon sext with verified adults
Apple TV Plus is being rebranded to… Apple TV
Apple exec on Apple TV rebranding: ‘let’s just do it’
Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold is the first to ‘go up in smoke during a bend test,’ JerryRigEverything says
Roku’s AI-upgraded voice assistant can answer questions about what you’re watching
DirecTV will soon bring AI ads to your screensaver
Soul Against the Machine
TiVo has sold its last DVR
Tesla Cybertruck sales are flatlining
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Announcing an ad-free Vergecast feed for Verge subscribers
Wed, 15 Oct 2025
If you're a paid subscriber to The Verge, there's great news: You can now listen to Decoder, Version History, and The Vergecast completely ad-free.
Just head to your Account Settings page to opt-in and start listening without ads.
Not a member of The Verge yet? No worries! You can sign up at theverge.com/subscribe to get ad-free podcasts, plus other perks like exclusive newsletters and unlimited access to everything we publish.
More here: Verge subscribers, here’s how to set up ad-free podcasts
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Google's gadgets, ranked
Tue, 14 Oct 2025
Google is on a bit of a heater when it comes to gadgets. The Pixel 10 lineup is one of the best Android phone options; the Pixel Watch 4 is suddenly a winner; the Pixel Buds are an excellent accessory; even the Pixel Fold got some welcome upgrades this year! With the help of The Verge’s Victoria Song and Allison Johnson, we do the impossible: we rank all six of Google’s Pixel gadgets, from worst to best. Are headphones better than smartphones? Can you really compare a tablet to a smartwatch? Who knows, but we try. After that, Allison and David answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about whether the dumbphone movement is a real one.
Further reading:
Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold review: finally, a more durable foldable
Google Pixel Buds 2A review: the right kind of compromise
The Google Pixel Watch 4 is the Android watch to beat
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Version History: BlackBerry Messenger
Sun, 12 Oct 2025
Back when text messages cost 10 cents each, BlackBerry came up with a better way: BlackBerry Messenger, commonly known as BBM. It was the first new idea about messaging in a long time, and it was a huge hit… for a while. Nilay Patel and Joanna Stern join David Pierce to talk about a messaging service that was years ahead of WhatsApp and iMessage, but ultimately fizzled.
If you like the show, subscribe to the Version History feed to make sure you get every new episode.
Let us know what you think: 866-VERGE-11 or vergecast@theverge.com.
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Maybe it's real, maybe it's Sora
Fri, 10 Oct 2025
Say this for OpenAI: it's very good at raising money, and it's very good at getting attention. David and Jake are joined by The Verge's Hayden Field to talk about OpenAI's demo day, the company's app store plans, why it's trying to build every possible ChatGPT feature all at the same time, and more. After that, the hosts talk about the ongoing popularity of the Sora app, and whether OpenAI has truly built a new kind of social network. Then Hayden has to leave, so David and Jake take on the lightning round to discuss Intel chips, Alex Cooper's Google deal, Starry internet, and more.
Further reading:
OpenAI will let developers build apps that work inside ChatGPT
ChatGPT apps are live: Here are the first ones you can try
OpenAI: all the news about the makers of ChatGPT
OpenAI’s head of ChatGPT said it will significantly evolve in the next six months.
OpenAI will eventually allow “mature” ChatGPT apps.
OpenAI and Jony Ive’s secret device won’t be ‘your weird AI girlfriend’
AMD teams up with OpenAI to challenge Nvidia’s AI chip dominance
Sam Altman says there are no current plans for ads within ChatGPT Pulse — but he’s not ruling it out
A busy week for OpenAI’s social video machine.
Sora now lets users limit how their AI double is used
OpenAI teases licensed fictional characters on Sora
OpenAI wasn’t expecting Sora’s copyright drama
Developers can bring Sora 2’s AI video generation into their own apps.
Katie Notopolous on Threads
Sora’s Slop Hits Different
A new iPhone setting will stop CarPlay from stealing your AirPods’ audio
Here is Panther Lake, Intel’s 2026 laptop chip with next-gen graphics\
Facebook is turning into TikTok
Alex Cooper is making ads for Google / Pixel
Here’s how Apple is locking down iPhones to comply with Texas’ age verification law
Verizon buys the not-quite-5G wireless ISP Starry to expand wireless broadband
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Google's extreme smart home makeover
Tue, 07 Oct 2025
Oh, you thought AI was just in your browser and on your phone? Well, the AI is coming from inside the house. The Verge's Jen Pattison Tuohy and Google's Anish Kattukaran both join the show to discuss last week's Google smart home news, including the company's big bet on the Gemini assistant. Anish explains why Google cares about the smart home in the first place, why things haven't exactly gone great so far, and why he's so convinced the new generation of AI can make it work. After that, The Verge's Vee Song joins the show to talk about Peloton's newest gear, including a $6,695 treadmill and a huge new push into personalized AI training features. Vee then sticks around to help David answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about how many smartwatches is too many smartwatches. Spoiler alert: the answer is two. But it's not quite as simple as that.
Further reading:
Peloton increases fees and introduces new hardware including a $6,695 treadmill
Peloton appoints Apple Fitness Plus cofounder as new CEO
Peloton is a media company now, with media company problems
Google dismantled Nest — can Gemini save what’s left?
Hey Google, meet Gemini: the new voice of your smart home
The new Google Home Speaker is built for Gemini
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Version History: Hoverboards
Sun, 05 Oct 2025
In 2015, self-balancing scooters (which quickly became known as hoverboards) exploded in popularity, and then began literally exploding. Andrew Hawkins and Sean O’Kane join David Pierce to explore the multiple conflicting origin stories behind the hugely popular rideable, the many knockoffs, and why a device that doesn't actually hover ended up being called "hoverboard."
If you like the show, subscribe to the Version History feed to make sure you get every new episode.
Let us know what you think: 866-VERGE-11 or vergecast@theverge.com.
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The real price of a free TV
Fri, 03 Oct 2025
This week, everything is a HomePod. And has ads. The Verge’s Jen Pattison-Tuohy joins the show to talk about all of Amazon’s new hardware, the current state of Alexa Plus, and whether the new Kindle Scribe is the one we’ve been waiting for. Then, The Verge’s Emma Roth tells Jen and David about her experience with Telly, the TV that ships to your house for free in exchange for showing you ads all the time. Telly may not be for everyone. Finally, in the lightning round, the gang talks about a handy new Spotify feature, Emma’s first Waymo ride, and the glory that is Chunk.
Further reading:
Amazon’s 2025 hardware event: the 8 biggest announcements
Here’s where to preorder all of Amazon’s new Alexa devices and when they arrive
Amazon finally did the damn hardware right
Amazon’s new Echo Dot Max smart speaker bumps up the bass
Alexa Plus is smarter — but it’s not yet smart enough
Alexa Plus on the TV is made to save you from your phone
Alexa Plus is smarter — but it’s not yet smart enough
Alexa Plus on the TV is made to save you from your phone
Amazon sticks two cameras together for the 180-degree Blink Arc
The new Google Home Speaker is built for Gemini
Hey Google, meet Gemini: the new voice of your smart home | The Verge
I spent three months with Telly, the free TV that’s always showing ads
OpenAI made a TikTok for deepfakes, and it’s getting hard to tell what’s real
Spotify now lets you exclude specific songs from your algorithm
All hail the new Fat Bear Champion
Ring launches upgraded cameras with ‘Retinal Vision’ 4K recording
Microsoft is giving Copilot AI faces you can chat with
Waymo adds YouTube Music
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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My other car is a cargo bike
Tue, 30 Sep 2025
Sure, you could drive to the grocery store and to school. But wouldn’t you rather grab a few hundred of your friends and bike-bus everywhere? The Verge’s Andy Hawkins joins the show to tell us all about his adventures with electric cargo bikes, and why he thinks they’re the ride of the future. After that, Lauren Feiner calls in from just outside a courthouse in Virginia, where she’s watching the remedies trial in Google’s adtech monopoly case. Google already lost the case; what happens next is still anyone’s guess. Finally, David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about how to feel about summarizing YouTube videos with AI. The short version: you should feel a lot of things.
Further reading:
Why your next car should be an electric cargo bike
Electric cargo bikes are rewiring cities
Can Google be trusted without a break up?
US v. Google redux: all the news from the ad tech trial
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Tick Tock, TikTok
Fri, 26 Sep 2025
After more than five years of backing and forthing, secret meetings and loud screeds, it appears the fate of TikTok in the US has finally been decided. Maybe. There are still a lot of unknowns, but we're pretty sure we know the bones of the deal — and we know which of President Trump's allies stand to benefit the most. Before we get to all that, though, David and Jake run through some big news in future gadgets, including the long-awaited-and-maybe-happening combination of Android and ChromeOS and the possibilities for a touchscreen MacBook. Then, The Verge's Liz Lopatto joins to talk TikTok. And Trump. Then, in the lightning round, the three hosts talk through Jimmy Kimmel's return, Nvidia's money problems, a surprising AmEx perk, and much more.
Further reading:
Google’s Android for PC: ‘I’ve seen it, it is incredible’
Our biggest questions about ChromeOS and Android merging
The foldable iPhone might look like two iPhone Airs stuck together
The touchscreen MacBook rumors are never ending
OpenAI might also be developing AI glasses, a voice recorder, and a pin
Trump claims the US is about to get a tremendous fee for taking TikTok out of China
Trump signs executive order approving TikTok deal
Some details of the TikTok deal have been worked out.
What Trump Wants from a TikTok Deal with China
American Investors Will License and Oversee TikTok’s U.S. Version, White House Says
TikTok Deal Could Make Oracle Founder Larry Ellison a New Kind of Media Mogul
Anker’s party speaker projector hits Kickstarter with a sizable discount.
Montblanc is getting into the digital notepad game
Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro can be easily scratched
It costs $895 per year to get American Express’ premium app theme
Nvidia is partnering up with OpenAI to offer compute and cash
Kimmel returns to television to mock FCC Chair Brendan Carr
Sinclair won’t air Kimmel.
Trump on Truth Social
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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YouTube wants you to go live
Tue, 23 Sep 2025
In all the tech news and world news last week, YouTube's Made On event got a little lost. So we circled back: The Verge's Mia Sato explains why YouTube is suddenly all-in on livestreaming, why it seems to be rapidly turning into a shopping mall, and whether all these AI features will improve YouTube or destroy it. After that, it's time for a second round of David's Summer Takes, in which he subjects The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes and Hayden Field to his thoughts on Threads, podcasts, and social media. Finally, Hayden sticks around to answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about the words we use when we talk AI.
Further reading:
YouTube makes it easier and more lucrative to go live
YouTube is inching closer to becoming a shopping channel
YouTube is going all in on AI
New YouTube AI tools help creators give viewers what they want
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Meta's quest to own your face
Fri, 19 Sep 2025
There’s a lot of gadget news this week! But we begin the show in an unprecedented way: with a bit of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, America’s favorite podcast within a podcast. Nilay pops on the show to discuss what happened to Jimmy Kimmel, why the FCC’s assault on speech is so dangerous, and why a couple of broadcast TV companies matter so much to the story. After that, Jake Kastrenakes and Richard Lawler join to talk about all of Meta’s new smart glasses, including the company’s first pair with a built-in display. Finally, in the lightning round, we talk about Reddit’s new AI deal with Google, Nvidia’s new chip deal with Intel, and Samsung’s terrible plan to put ads on your fridge.
Further reading:
Here’s the Jimmy Kimmel clip that got him pulled off the air
Jimmy Kimmel Live pulled after FCC threat over Charlie Kirk joke
Republicans are honoring Charlie Kirk’s memory by declaring war on the First Amendment
Charlie Kirk’s death got complicated by “extremely online” culture
The right wing is creating a society of snitches
Meta Ray-Ban Display hands-on: the best smart glasses I’ve ever tried
Oakley Meta Vanguard hands-on: what athletes actually want
Meta’s new Ray-Ban smart glasses have twice the battery life
Conversation focus is the first new feature on deck.
I sat down with Mark Zuckerberg to try Meta’s impressive new Ray-Ban Display glasses
Meta is opening up its smart glasses to developers | The Verge
Snap OS 2.0 is a small step towards AR glasses you might actually wear
Android’s next flagship processor is the ‘Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5’
Nothing wants you to talk to your earbuds’ charging case
Nvidia invests $5 billion into Intel to jointly develop PC and data center chips
The US and China might finally have a TikTok deal
U.S. Investors, Trump Close In on TikTok Deal With China
Samsung brings ads to US refrigerators
Reddit wants a better AI deal with Google: users in exchange for content
YouTube is inching closer to becoming a shopping channel
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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Who is the iPhone Air really for?
Wed, 17 Sep 2025
It's been a busy week for The Verge's product reviewers! We've got three new phones, three new watches, and a set of earbuds on the docket, and the team is ready to talk about (almost) all of it. First, Allison Johnson and Jake Kastrenakes join to talk about their experiences with the iPhone Air, iPhone 17, and iPhone 17 Pro. One is fabulous with some compromises, one is just a down-the-middle excellent phone, and the other is for camera nerds. After that, Victoria Song talks about the AirPods Pro 3, which are also a stellar upgrade, and then helps us make sense of the new lineup of Apple Watches. There's the SE 3, the Series 11, and the Ultra 3, but there's only one clear winner for most people. Finally, we answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about Apple's up-and-down focus on AI
Further reading:
The iPhone 17 is the one to get this year
Apple iPhone Air review: statement piece
Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro is a bold redesign but a basic upgrade
AirPods Pro 3 review: tripling down on a good thing
The Apple Watch SE 3 is the one to buy
Apple Watch Series 11 review: stuck in the middle
The unbearable sameness of Liquid Glass
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Our hottest takes on AI's wild summer
Fri, 12 Sep 2025
One thing you should know about the iPhone launch is that there’s... not usually a lot of other tech news around the iPhone launch. So David and Jake start this episode with some more information about the iPhone launch, including some controversial details we missed about the AirPods Pro 3 and the argument in favor of the crossbody strap. After that, with David back on the mic, it’s time for a round of AI-focused hot takes with The Verge’s Hayden Field. The gang talks ChatGPT, Claude, money, more money, and what counts as a real friend. (And money.) Finally, in the lightning round — yes, once again the LIGHTNING ROUND — the three co-hosts talk about Canon’s confusing new camera, the future of Reddit, Claude’s spreadsheet-y future, and much more.
Further reading:
Apple isn’t packing a charging cable in with the AirPods Pro 3
Apple’s misunderstood crossbody iPhone strap might be the best I’ve seen
Apple says the iPhone 17 comes with a massive security upgrade
New Beats earbuds leak hours before Apple’s big event
Nothing’s Ear 3 earbuds have a microphone and ‘talk’ button on their charging case
Google pulls the Pixel 10’s Daily Hub to ‘enhance its performance’
David Zaslav thinks HBO Max is ‘way underpriced’
Exclusive | Paramount Skydance Prepares Ellison-Backed Bid for Warner
Reddit is dropping subscriber counts on subreddits
Reddit is testing a way to read articles without leaving the app
Canon is bringing back a point-and-shoot from 2016 with fewer features and a higher price (it’s viral
Spotify adds lossless streaming after 8 years of teasing
Anthropic’s Claude can now make you a spreadsheet or slide deck.
The MechaHitler defense contract is raising red flags
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The orange iPhone stole the show
Wed, 10 Sep 2025
Fresh off a day filled with new Apple products, The Verge’s ground team reports back on everything they’ve seen — and touched. Allison Johnson walks us through the new iPhone Air, iPhone 17, and iPhone 17 Pro lineups, making sense of all the new camera features and wondering just how thin a phone really can be. After that, Victoria Song talks about why the AirPods Pro 3 may have been the big hit of the day, plus all the details on the three new models of Apple Watch. Finally, Jake Kastrenakes tells us about his first experience live at an Apple event, explains the appeal of a crossbody strap, and has a theory about why an orange phone is such a big deal.
Further reading:
The eight biggest announcements during Apple’s iPhone Air event | The Verge
All the news from Apple’s iPhone 17 event | The Verge
Apple announces the ultra-slim iPhone Air | The Verge
iPhone Air hands-on | The Verge
Apple iPhone 17 hands-on | The Verge
Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro has the biggest battery of any iPhone | The Verge
Apple’s iPhone 17 drops the Plus, but gains a bigger, faster display | The Verge
iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max: our initial hands-on impressions | The Verge
The 2TB iPhone 17 Pro Max costs $1,999. | The Verge
The iPhone 17 comes with Apple’s new in-house networking chip | The Verge
Apple’s new iPhone Air accessories include a slim MagSafe battery, TechWoven case, and crossbody strap
Apple’s new MagSafe battery is only designed for the new iPhone Air | The Verge
All right, what new Apple stuff are we buying? | The Verge
The new iPhones all have Center Stage front-facing cameras | The Verge
Apple announces AirPods Pro 3 with ‘world’s best ANC’ and heart rate sensing | The Verge
The Apple Watch Ultra 3 has 42 hours of battery life and satellite connectivity | The Verge
Apple announces new entry-level $249 Apple Watch SE 3 with always-on display | The Verge
The iPhone Air’s battery pack is slim, but not as slim as the iPhone Air
Apple’s new MagSafe battery is only designed for the new iPhone Air
Phone 17 Pro “clear” case that is MOSTLY NOT CLEAR
Apple barely talked about AI at its big iPhone 17 event | The Verge
iOS 26 is out on September 15th | The Verge
Apple’s macOS Tahoe 26 update releases September 15th | The Verge
Apple reveals iPadOS 26 release date | The Verge
Apple will launch watchOS 26 on September 15th | The Verge
Apple’s using more recycled materials in its iPhones and watches
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Your robot is about to get its own robot
Fri, 05 Sep 2025
It's a big week for the smart home. Jake, Vee, and Jen sit down to chat about all the new tech out of IFA, from robots that carry robot vacuums up stairs to upgrades that turn 10-year-old Hue bulbs into motion sensors. Then, Lauren joins the show to talk about the Google antitrust remedies ruling and what Google is going to have to do to allow more competition in the search market. Finally, the Thunder Round is back and better than ever. We're talking $2,000 smart watches, Amazon yanking a major Prime perk, the Pixel 10 Pro's 100x AI zoom, Instagram for iPad, and drama at the FTC.
Further reading:
Eufy built a stairlift for its robovacs
Inside Philips Hue’s plans to make all your lights motion sensors
Philips Hue responds to cheaper competitors with major product overhaul
SwitchBot has ambitions to be the AI that powers your smart home
Samsung’s Galaxy S25 FE and Tab S11 are thinner, lighter, and otherwise about the same
Google gets to keep Chrome, judge rules in search antitrust case
Google critics think the search remedies ruling is a total whiff
Here’s what Google and the DOJ had to say about the search remedies ruling
The tech antitrust renaissance may already be over
Garmin’s Fenix 8 Pro series finally lets you leave your phone at home — sort of
Instagram is coming to iPad, 15 years later
Amazon ends shared Prime free shipping outside your home
Ousted Democratic FTC commissioner can return (again) for now
Here’s how the Pixel’s AI zoom compares to a real 100x lens
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11. We love hearing from you.
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Why are online puzzle games having a moment?
Tue, 02 Sep 2025
Hooked on LinkedIn’s Queens? Gotta extend your Wordle streak in the New York Times games app before you start your day? You’re in good company on today’s Vergecast episode. Allison Johnson is joined by Simon Anthony and Mark Goodliffe, world-class puzzle champs and hosts of the delightful Cracking the Cryptic, a YouTube channel where they solve a puzzle on camera every single day.
They specialize in Sudoku — and not just the classic number games you might be familiar with. Simon and Mark tackle mind-bending, seemingly impossible puzzles, working through it all in realtime, sometimes over the course of several hours. What happens when you get stuck? How can you tell the difference between a puzzle made by a human and a computer-generated one? Why are we addicted to puzzle games all of a sudden? They help us crack the clues.
Then Allison sits down with Marc Levoy, one of the pioneers of computational photography, to talk about his new camera app: Project Indigo. Levoy is known for his earlier work on the Pixel camera, and was a driving force in shaping phone photography into what it is now. We last caught up with him in 2020 when he left Google for Adobe, so we got up to speed on what the heck he’s been doing for the last five years — and the important difference between HDR and an HDR-ish photo.
Finally, Allison takes a hotline question from someone who is not particular about their phone camera’s image quality, but does have a beef with camera bumps.
Cracking the Cryptic — YouTube
This 25-minute video is the most riveting sudoku puzzle you will ever watch
The Atlantic is making a big push into games
I regret to inform you that LinkedIn’s games are very fun
The mastermind of Google’s Pixel camera quietly left the company in March
The brain behind the Google Pixel camera is building a universal camera app for Adobe
Marc Levoy on the balance of camera hardware, software, and artistic expression
Adobe launches a new ‘computational photography’ camera app for iPhones
Adobe’s new camera app is making me rethink phone photography
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The Pixel 10's AI screamed at us
Fri, 29 Aug 2025
The Pixel 10 is in the house, and we’ve been testing them for over a week now. Allison and Vee sit down with Jake to discuss their tests — the good, the bad, and the poorly translated. They demo the Pixel 10's live phone call translations and dive into Pro Res Zoom, which uses AI to enhance photos zoomed in up to 100x. Then, it’s time to talk Dish, Intel, and Elon. Dish is giving up on being a major mobile carrier, Intel is now partially owned by the US government, and Elon has filed a questionable lawsuit against Apple. Finally, we wrap up with a Thunder Round to discuss K-Pop Demon Hunters, YouTube Shorts’ secret “AI,” Android’s registration requirement for developers, Taco Bell’s drive through AI attempt, and a delivery locker on wheels.
Further reading:
Google Pixel 10 Pro review: AI, Qi2, and a spec bump too
Apple’s iPhone 17 launch event is set for September 9th
Dish gives up on becoming the fourth major wireless carrier
The Trump administration promised a fourth wireless carrier — America got a hot mess instead
US government takes 10 percent stake in Intel in exchange for money it was already on the hook for
Elon Musk’s xAI is suing OpenAI and Apple
Elon Musk’s xAI quietly dropped its status as a public benefit corporation
My new beat is K-Pop Demon Hunters
Taco Bell AI Drive thru sna-fu
Is YouTube’s Shorts experiment using AI or just upscaling? | The Verge
This new delivery robot will bring the entire grocery store to you
Google will verify Android developers distributing apps outside the Play store
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Zooming in on weird cameras
Tue, 26 Aug 2025
This week on The Vergecast, Chris Niccolls and Jordan Drake of PetaPixel’s YouTube channel join The Verge’s Allison Johnson and Vjeran Pavic to geek out about the last half-decade of camera advancements — the good, the bad, and the Sigma BF of it all.
Then, Allison is joined by Verge News Editor and fellow phone nerd Dominic Preston to help answer a boatload of listener questions from people contemplating which smartphone to buy next. They help navigate the intricacies of living in a mixed iOS/Android household to the best options for someone who wants a headphone jack (spoiler alert: there aren’t many).
It’s a mega-hotline-turned-therapy session for iPhone Mini owners reluctant to let go of their tiny phones in a world where phones come in two sizes: big and bigger.
Further reading:
Sigma BF review: Beautiful Foolishness — PetaPixel
The Fujifilm X half is Just Plain FUN! — PetaPixel
Fujifilm X Half hands-on: whimsical, refreshing, and simply fun
Sigma BF review: the perfect camera for a minimalist
In pursuit of a viral, five-year-old compact camera
Samsung Galaxy S25 review: incredibly iterative
Nothing Phone 3 review: flagship-ish
If you really want a smaller phone, try the tiny Jelly 2
Oppo Find N5 review: the final evolution of foldables
Honor launches the ‘world’s thinnest’ foldable
Motorola spoiled a good budget phone with bloatware
The Xperia 1 VII is a greatest hits of Sony R&D
The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra isn’t so ‘ultra’ anymore
The Fairphone 6 no longer feels like a compromise (except in the US)
My first DIY phone fix made me a self-repair believer
Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold review: in great shape
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: stunning, bendy, and spendy
Ditching my phone for an LTE smartwatch was a humbling experience
I took my own advice and bought a last-gen iPhone — I regret nothing
How Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip failed me without actually breaking
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Google's AI-stuffed Pixel 10 event
Fri, 22 Aug 2025
It’s Pixel week. Jake, Vee, and Allison are chatting about all things Google. First, there’s the Pixel 10, 10 Pro, 10 Pro XL, and 10 Pro Fold, which get a mix of hardware upgrades (dust-proofing on a foldable!) and downgrades (a worse camera on the Pixel 10?) and a ton of new AI features, including Magic Cue and Pro Res Zoom, which puts AI right inside the camera app. Next, there’s the Pixel Watch 4, Fitbit’s AI fitness coach, the Pixel Buds 2A, and a tease of Google’s next smart home speaker. Finally, we wrap it up with the Thunder Round and a discussion of Hank Green’s Focus Friend, Ricoh’s GR IV, Netflix’s new content strategy, Masimo’s attempt to sue over the Apple Watch again, and most importantly, Chipotle’s drone delivery.
Further reading:
The Made by Google event felt like being sucked into an episode of Wandavision
The Google Pixel 10 and 10 Pro come with magnets, a new chip, and AI everywhere
The Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold is the first fully dust-resistant foldable
Google says the quiet part out loud: IP68 protection doesn’t last
The best new features of the Pixel 10 lineup
The Pixel 10 Pro puts generative AI right inside the camera
The magnets are the coolest thing about the Pixel 10
Google is launching its first magnetic wireless charging accessories
Building a more empathetic big phone.
The Pixel Pro 10 phones include a certified Thread radio.
Google’s Pixel Watch 4 has big ideas — and an even bigger focus on AI
Fitbit’s AI health coach is the first I might actually be interested in
The unbearable obviousness of AI fitness summaries
Google’s Pixel Buds 2A add Gemini, noise cancellation, and a replaceable battery
Google’s Pixel Buds Pro 2 are getting new AI-powered features in September
Gemini for Home is Google’s biggest smart home play in years
Is that a new Nest smart speaker I spy?
Hank Green’s Focus Friend swapped my screen time for bean time
Now Masimo is suing US Customs over Apple Watch imports
Ricoh GR IV will cost $1500
It's Raining Chips & Guac: Chipotle Is Testing Drone Delivery
YouTuber Mark Rober is getting a Netflix series
YouTube star Ms. Rachel is coming to Netflix
The Duffer Brothers are joining the Paramount family
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Do we really want Rosie the Robot?
Tue, 19 Aug 2025
This week on The Vergecast, the co-founder and former CEO of iRobot, Colin Angle, joins The Verge’s smart home reviewer, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, to discuss what the ideal home robot is. Are we close to creating a Rosie the Robot — an all-in-one humanoid robot that can take care of our homes, or should we take an entirely different approach to home robotics? They dive into the advances in technology powering this shift and ponder what purpose robotics in the home should really serve.
Then, Jen takes a journey back into smart home history to help us understand its future. Grant Erickson, Principal of Nuovations, a former Apple, Nest, and Google engineer who was part of the team that developed Thread, joins the show.
He shares the story of how and why, back in 2011, the Nest team, led by Tony Faddell and Matt Rogers, decided to create a smart home protocol. It involves a thermostat, fragmented ecosystems, and one of the best smart home products ever made.
They discuss how Thread became the foundation of the Matter smart home standard — an unprecedented industry collaboration with a herculean task — to make the smart home simpler.
To close out the show, Grant sticks around to help answer a Vergecast hotline question (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com) about how Matter manages your data.
Further reading:
Maybe I don’t want a Rosey the Robot after all
Amazon left Roomba with a huge mess to clean up
Figure will start ‘alpha testing’ its humanoid robot in the home in 2025
Amazon Astro review: too much Alexa, not enough arms
Samsung is finally releasing Ballie
This Pixar-style dancing lamp hints at Apple’s future home robot
iRobot’s founder is working on a new kind of home robot
iRobot OS is the newest ‘brain’ for your Roomba
Amazon bought iRobot to see inside your home
I tested a robot vacuum with an arm, and my dog may never forgive me
Inside the Nest: iPod creator Tony Fadell wants to reinvent the thermostat
Nest CEO Tony Fadell on Google acquisition
Fire drill: Can Tony Fadell and Nest build a better smoke detector?
How big companies kill ideas — and how to fight back, with Tony Fadell
Situation: there are too many competing smart home standards
Matter’s plan to save the smart home
Nest’s home security system costs $499 and comes with magnetic door sensors
Google says Matter is still set to fix the biggest smart home frustrations
Thread is Matter’s secret sauce for a better smart home
Nanoleaf launches a smart switch after eight years of trying
Thread count: Ikea is stitching together a smarter home
Why Thread is Matter’s biggest problem right now
The four changes in Thread 1.4 that could fix the protocol
It could be 2026 before all your Thread border routers work together
Matter will be better in 2025 — say the people who make it
The Nest Learning Thermostat gets its biggest upgrade in over a decade
killedbygoogle.com
Google’s ADT partnership finally has a new home security product to show for it
Google discontinues Nest Protect smoke alarm and Nest x Yale door lock
Google discontinues its Google Nest Secure alarm system
Appliance makers are teaming up to reduce your electricity usage — and save you cash
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Vibe coding through the GPT-5 mess
Fri, 15 Aug 2025
GPT-5 is here, and it’s not going so well. This week on The Vergecast, Jake, Vee, and Hayden discuss the bumpy launch of OpenAI’s latest model and why GPT-5 isn’t as big of a leap as GPT-4.
Then, everyone shares their vibe coding projects and the bumpy journey to making anything usable. After that, our newest segment: Corporate Shenanigans, where we rate the week in strange corporate moves on a scale from “actually serious” to “total joke.”
Finally, the Thunder Round returns, new and improved, to discuss ditching your phone for a smartwatch, doctors relying too much on AI, AOL dial-up shutting down, the Pebble Time 2, and why you shouldn’t trust what AI chatbots say about themselves.
Further reading:
ChatGPT won’t remove old models without warning after GPT-5 backlash
OpenAI will update GPT-5’s “personality” after user backlash
ChatGPT is bringing back 4o as an option because people missed it
Sam Altman shared more about what went wrong with those GPT-5 graphs
OpenAI gives some employees a ‘special’ multimillion-dollar bonus
Anthropic just made its latest move in the AI coding wars
Anthropic’s Claude chatbot can now remember your past conversations
Perplexity offers to buy Google Chrome for $34.5 billion
Apple is suing Apple Cinemas
Apple Cinemas responds to Apple lawsuit
Apple returns blood oxygen monitoring to the latest Apple Watches
Elon Musk says he’s suing Apple for rigging App Store rankings
Ditching my phone for an LTE smartwatch was a humbling experience
Here’s a look at the final Pebble Time 2 design
Some doctors got worse at detecting cancer after relying on AI
Google’s healthcare AI made up a body part — what happens when doctors don’t notice?
Chatbots aren’t telling you their secrets
AOL is finally shutting down dial-up
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How to save a smart home company
Tue, 12 Aug 2025
This week on The Vergecast, we enter the Jen-era of Hot Girl Vergecast Summer, with a deep dive into the business of the smart home. The Verge’s smart home reviewer, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy (aka Jen), chats with Ken Fairbanks, a longtime customer of Insteon who ended up buying the smart lighting company when it went into bankruptcy.
Ken shares the story of how one of the original smart lighting protocols, founded in the post-X10 era when home automation moved from wired to wireless, floundered, and how he and a band of users brought it back from the dead. He dishes what he’s learned about how to keep the lights on — from customer loyalty and the value of subscriptions, to what tariffs are doing to the industry and how some hardware companies are just pyramid schemes.
Then, in a special supersized (and we mean SUPER) Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com), Jen is joined by smart home expert Richard Gunther, co-host of The Smart Home Show, to tackle a bunch of your burning smart lighting questions. They answer everything from how to move your smart home to which Thread border router you should buy for your Matter setup. Plus, they run down their own smart lighting set-ups.
Further reading:
Insteon’s troubles are a smart home tale as old as time
Insteon Raises the Curtain for the Next Act
Someone turned Insteon’s lights back on
Insteon customers turned Insteon’s lights back on
Thread count: Ikea is stitching together a smarter home
Smart switches or smart bulbs? How to choose the right smart lighting for your home
Controller for HomeKit
Philips Hue Play sync box and gradient lightstrip review: wholly unnecessary, totally delightful
Taming Wi-Fi in the Smart Home:
Leviton’s new smart light switches don’t require a neutral wire
Every smart home device that works with Matter
Aqara’s new seven-inch home control tablet can replace a light switch
These smart lights could solve the kitchen cabinet problem
Hue launches a pricey new sunrise lamp
Smart string light showdown: Nanoleaf versus Lifx
The best floodlight camera to buy right now
How to move a smart home
Moving a smart home - The Smart Home Show
Living with the ghost of a smart home’s past
Smart ceiling light showdown: Aqara T1M versus Nanoleaf Skylight
Binding should be the next big thing for smart home devices
Aqara adds support for 50 new Matter device types
Flic is ready to control all your Matter devices
Thread is Matter’s secret sauce for a better smart home
Google Nest Thread border routers
Google TV Streamer review: smarter than your average set-top box
Google Nest Hub (2nd-gen) review: sleep on it
Why Thread is Matter’s biggest problem right now
The four changes in Thread 1.4 that could fix the protocol
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We found stuff AI is pretty good at
Sun, 10 Aug 2025
In this bonus episode of The Vergecast, Senior Reviewer Victoria Song sits down with a bunch of Verge staffers to talk about how they use AI tools in their everyday lives. Not all of it went smoothly — we definitely get into the ways these tools fall short — but we explore how AI can be used to help bedtime go more smoothly for parents, plan big cross-country moves, supplement your internet searches (always double-check!), and even vibe code an app for your next tabletop role-playing game.
If you have any examples where AI was useful to you, we’d love to hear them. (For what it’s worth, we’d also love to hear stories where it spectacularly failed.) Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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GPT-5's big new feature: less lying?
Fri, 08 Aug 2025
It’s a huge week in AI, with OpenAI releasing GPT-OSS and GPT-5, Grok getting deeply problematic again with its “spicy” video generator, and Tim Cook admitting that Apple may need to cut some deals. Then we talk the age gating of the internet and how you might soon need an ID card to get just about anywhere online. Finally, the Lightning Round gets re-rebranded. Adi Robertson and Alex Heath join the show to discuss.
Further reading:
GPT-5 is being released to all ChatGPT users
OpenAI releases a free GPT model that can run on your laptop
Why open-source AI became an American national priority
Mark Zuckerberg promises you can trust him with superintelligent AI
xAI’s new Grok image and video generator has a ‘spicy’ mode
Grok’s ‘spicy’ video setting instantly made me Taylor Swift nude deepfakes
I tested Grok’s Valentine sex chatbot and it (mostly) behaved
Tim Cook says Apple ‘must’ figure out AI and ‘will make the investment to do it’
Tim Cook says Apple is ‘open to’ AI acquisitions
Ready or not, age verification is rolling out across the internet
The UK is now age-gating the internet
The UK is slogging through an online age-gate apocalyps
The UK’s new age-gating rules are easy to bypass
Reddit and Discord’s UK age verification can be defeated by Death Stranding’s photo mode
Reddit rolls out age verification in the UK to comply with new rules
Five EU states to test age verification app to protect children
The EU approach to age verification
Commission presents guidelines and age verification app prototype for a safer online space for children
Porn age-gating is the future of the internet, thanks to the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court just upended internet law, and I have questions
Florida Sues Huge Porn Sites Including XVideos and Bang Bros Over Age Verification Law
“Over the last two and a half years, 19 states – home to more than a third of Americans – have passed laws that require pornography websites to confirm a user’s age by checking a government-issued ID or scanning their face, among other methods.”
Google is using AI age checks to lock down user accounts
Today's Supreme Court Decision on Age Verification Tramples Free Speech and Undermines Privacy
Age Verification Harms Users of All Ages
Blocking Access to Harmful Content Will Not Protect Children Online, No Matter How Many Times UK Politicians Say So
Zero Knowledge Proofs Alone Are Not a Digital ID Solution to Protecting User Privacy
Age Verification in the European Union: The Commission's Age Verification App
RFK Jr. pulls $500 million in funding for mRNA vaccine contracts
Epic just won its Google lawsuit again, and Android may never be the same
Google has just two weeks to begin cracking open Android, it admits in emergency filing
Instagram adds a reposts feed and rips off Snap Maps
OpenAI charts crime
OpenAI gets caught vibe graphing
Nintendo raises the Switch 1 price from $299 to $339
Apple says Trump’s tariffs are adding another $1 billion to its costs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Online shopping is full of copycats
Tue, 05 Aug 2025
This week on The Vergecast, guest host Mia Sato talks to YouTube fitness pioneer Cassey Ho (better known as Blogilates) about the well-oiled machine that is the dupe economy. Ho shares her experience creating her own line of athletic wear that sooner or later gets ripped off by countless copycats — and how she tries to fight back.
Then, Mia brings an audio diary from a visit to Fabscrap, a textile recycling facility in Brooklyn, that is working to save fabric and other materials from the landfill. Fashion is a wasteful industry, not unlike tech — luckily, there are people like Fabscrap staff and volunteers who are working towards solutions.
Finally, Victoria Song swings by to help answer a hotline question about how to make the high-tech Clueless closet a reality. If you have a question for us, call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com.
Further reading
How dupes turned online shopping upside down
Lululemon sues Costco over viral alleged “dupes”
The US finally acknowledges textile waste in new report
Your stuff is actually worse now
Ghana becomes dumping ground for the world’s unwanted used clothes
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Diving into Apple’s Liquid Glass
Fri, 25 Jul 2025
It’s time. The public betas for iOS 26, iPadOS 26, macOS 26, and more are finally out for everyone to try. Jake Kastrenakes, Vee Song, and Antonio G. Di Benedetto give their takes on Apple’s Liquid Glass design language after two months of living with it. Antonio shares his experiences with macOS and the upgraded Spotlight, and Vee dives into the ups and downs of watchOS’s AI fitness coach. Then, Andy Hawkins and Eater's Matthew Kang talk about Tesla’s rough quarter, the new Tesla Diner, and what Epic Bacon has to do with it all. Finally, the Thunder Round returns, and we all learn what Labubus are.
Further reading:
Apple releases public betas of its new software updates with Liquid Glass
How to install the iOS 26 public beta
The biggest changes coming to your iPhone with iOS 26
Liquid Glass is fine, I guess
Apple’s Liquid Glass redesign is shaping up to be a snoozer on Macs
You can actually multitask on an iPad now and it’s the best new feature in 15 years
watchOS 26 preview: a subtler take on AI
Apple launches $20 subscription service to protect your gadgets
Tesla’s earnings hit a new low, with largest revenue drop in years
Elon Musk finally admits the new, more affordable Tesla is just a stripped down Model Y
Undeterred by limits, Elon Musk plots a big robotaxi expansion
Everything Eater Editors Ate at the Tesla Diner in Los Angeles
The Full Tesla Diner Menu, Revealed
The Tesla Diner Will Track When Guests Are Nearby to Prepare Their Orders
Inside the New Tesla Diner in Los Angeles
Anti-Elon Musk protesters are coming for Tesla’s new diner
Faraday Future is back with another wild EV that probably will never get made
Amazon buys Bee AI
Jake: AppleCare One is a good deal, but not for everyone
Uber’s making it easier for women riders and drivers to find each other
The frenzied, gamified chase for Labubus
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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A-lister antics and Schedule A shenanigans
Tue, 22 Jul 2025
Summer blockbusters like the new Superman and Jurassic World movies may be doing great at the box office, but promoting them is more complicated than ever. The old celebrity playbook of magazine profiles, TV chat shows and press junkets isn’t enough in an era of audience fragmentation. Publicists now have to strategize which podcasts to make time for, and whether their clients will eat chicken on YouTube with Amelia Dimoldenberg or Sean Evans.
This week on The Vergecast, guest host Mia Sato talks to Vulture’s Fran Hoepfner to break down the ever-changing new media circuit, whether you’re a beloved A-lister, a formerly-beloved A-lister, or an aspiring A-lister.
Then, we take a deep dive with Sarah Fackrell into a controversial legal tactic brands are using to go after online sellers hawking everything from grumpy cat T-shirts to closet hooks.
Finally, Victoria Song joins Mia to answer a Vergecast hotline from a listener wondering whether an AI translator will be able to keep up with his partner’s Colombian mother. If you’ve got a question for us, call 866-VERGE11 or e-mail vergecast@theverge.com.
Further reading:
Box Office: ‘Superman’ Surpasses $400 Million Globally, ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ Nears $650 Million Milestone
The Celebrity Press-Tour Road Map
Fame and Frustration On the New Media Circuit
Sydney woman who sold a cartoon cat T-shirt told to pay US$100,000 in Grumpy Cat copyright case
How Does a Mom Get Slapped With a $250,000 Judgment Over $380 of Homemade Luke Combs Merch? Experts Cite ‘Cottage Industry’ of Mass Counterfeit Suits in Illinois
A SAD Scheme of Abusive Intellectual Property Litigation
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The creepy AI era is here
Fri, 18 Jul 2025
Would you like Siri more if it had a face? This week on The Vergecast, we’re talking about AI assistants getting smarter… and uncomfortably personal. The Verge’s Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins the show to talk about her early tests of Alexa Plus, which is finally AI-powered and a lot more capable. Jake shares his uncomfortable first interaction with Grok’s anime girlfriend. And Waveform cohost David Imel is here to talk about Sony’s RX1R III and other premium “compact” cameras.
Finally, the THUNDER ROUND is back. New, improved, and still loud.
Further reading:
24 hours with Alexa Plus: we cooked, we chatted, and it kinda lied to me
Alexa Plus launches to “small number” of people More than a million people now have Alexa Plus
Elon Musk’s AI bot adds a ridiculous anime companion with ‘NSFW’ mode
I spent 24 hours flirting with Elon Musk’s AI girlfriend
System prompt dump of xAI / Grok’s new AI anime girlfriend
Elon Musk teases AI anime boyfriend based on Edward Cullen
“We will, of course, have another character inspired by Mr. Darcy”
xAI has open roles for building AI “waifus.”
US government announces $200 million Grok contract a week after ‘MechaHitler’ incident
Grok will no longer call itself Hitler or base its opinions on Elon Musk’s, promises xAI
Sony’s pocket-sized RX1R camera returns with its first update in 10 years
Original RX1R
RX1R II
Google exec: ‘We’re going to be combining ChromeOS and Android’
Our biggest questions about ChromeOS and Android merging
Ikea goes all in on Matter/Thread
Eric Migicovsky
Texts.com
Google Nest subscription
The next batch of emoji includes Bigfoot
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How the low-vision community embraced AI smart glasses
Tue, 15 Jul 2025
On this episode of The Vergecast, we’re going to dive deep into why accessible design is universal design. First, guest host Victoria Song will chat with Jason Valley, a visually impaired Verge reader. Jason initially reached out to Victoria after her Live AI hands-on, challenging the notion that the feature was a “solution looking for a problem to solve.” Jason shares how the tech has helped him live a more independent life, what he’s hoping to see improve, and how the blind and low-vision community has enthusiastically embraced the technology.
After that, Victoria sits down with Be My Eyes CEO Mike Buckley. Be My Eyes is an app that pairs blind and low-vision users with sighted volunteers to help them go about their day. Buckley gives his thoughts about how accessible tech design benefits everyone, why smart glasses and AI are a natural combo, and what challenges and opportunities in this space remain.
And finally, we have features reporter Mia Sato on to answer a spicy question about smart glasses from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com). Specifically, do smart glasses belong in the bedroom?
Further reading:
Live AI on Meta’s smart glasses is a solution looking for a problem
Meta’s smart glasses can now describe what you’re seeing in more detail
The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses actually make the future look cool
Be My Eyes AI offers GPT-4-powered support for blind Microsoft customers
The principles of wearable etiquette
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All eyes on Samsung's thin new foldable
Fri, 11 Jul 2025
Summer phone season kicks off with Samsung’s latest launch. Jake, Vee, and Allison talk about Samsung’s new lineup of foldables, including the very thin new Z Fold 7 and Allison’s disdain for the Z Flip 7 FE. Vee has impressions of Samsung’s new Galaxy Watch 8 lineup and its squircle-y new redesign. Then, it’s time to talk Big Tech shakeups. Apple’s COO is leaving, Zuckerberg is buying himself an AI dream team, X’s CEO is out — and its chatbot Grok is on a rampage. Finally, big things are in store for the Lightning Round… which shall henceforth be known as the THUNDER ROUND. Lots to talk about, including Lorde’s CD problems, Apple’s Liquid Glass changes, and HBO Max finally becoming HBO Max again.
Further reading:
Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2025: Everything announced at the July event
Galaxy Z Fold 7 hands-on: Samsung finally made the foldables we’ve been asking for
Samsung cuts price of its foldables with the Z Flip 7 FE
Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 series hands-on: squircle squad
Samsung seems to have leaked its own trifold phone design
Samsung says its trifold phone should launch ‘this year’
Samsung snuck a trifold tease into (January) Unpacked
One of Tim Cook’s possible successors is leaving Apple
Sabih Khan
Apple’s design team will report to Tim Cook
A close look at who could succeed Tim Cook
Mark Zuckerberg announces his AI ‘superintelligence’ super-group
Meta is paying $14 billion to catch up in the AI race
Meta’s ‘superintelligence’ hiring spree adds an AI leader from Apple
Pay packages of up to $300 million over four years
Meta is trying to win the AI race with money — but not everyone can be bought
X CEO Linda Yaccarino is stepping down after two years
X’s CEO is out after failing at basically everything she claimed she wanted
Threads is catching up to X on mobile
X has a new head of product
Elon Musk’s xAI buys Elon Musk’s X for $33 billion on paper
xAI updated Grok to be more ‘politically incorrect’
Grok stops posting text after flood of antisemitism and Hitler praise
“In other posts it referred to itself as “MechaHitler”.
Musk makes grand promises about Grok 4 in the wake of a Nazi chatbot meltdown
Adobe’s new camera app is making me rethink phone photography
Ikea’s latest speaker lamp ditches Sonos for Spotify and inexpensive Bluetooth
Ikea ditches Zigbee for Thread going all in on Matter smart homes
Perplexity launches Comet web browser
OpenAI’s next big launch could be an AI web browser
E Ink is turning the laptop touchpad into an e-reader for AI apps
Lorde’s new CD is so transparent that stereos can’t even read it
I tried playing Lorde’s new CD
Appeals court strikes down ‘click-to-cancel’ rule
Nothing’s ‘first true flagship’ phone plays it a little safe
Adding calendar events with a screenshot is AI at its finest
The government’s Apple antitrust lawsuit is still on
Apple just added more frost to its Liquid Glass design
Apple’s second-generation Vision Pro might launch this year
Nvidia briefly became the first $4 trillion company on Wednesday
The makers of Cameo just launched... a birthday-tracking app?
Nintendo is ending its cost-saving Switch game vouchers
HBO Max is officially HBO Max again
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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A quest for the best headphone mics
Tue, 08 Jul 2025
On this episode of The Vergecast, we kick off Hot Girl Vergecast Summer with a classic Vergecast segment: the mic test. Guest host Victoria Song is joined by Vergecast producers Andru Marino and Erick Gomez to see how the Nothing Headphone 1, Sony WH-1000XM6, Apple AirPods Max, and Bose QuietComfort Ultra hold up against what’s possibly the noisiest street in Brooklyn.
After that, Victoria is joined by Ladder CEO Greg Stewart to talk about what it takes to build a successful strength training app — especially for people just starting out. As it turns out, it’s quite challenging, between curating playlists, accommodating users’ different access to equipment, skill levels, and preferences for coaching styles. (And maybe, some occasional beef with Peloton?)
Lastly, we answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com) about AI fitness summaries, whether people actually like them, what’s frustrating about them, and what scenarios they might actually be useful for.
Want to learn more about the topics in this episode? Here are some handy dandy links for your reference:
Nothing Headphone 1 review
Sony WH-1000XM6 hands-on
Apple AirPods Max review
Bose QuietComfort Ultra review
A lazy person’s guide to getting into shape
Ladder isn’t done trolling Peloton
The unbearable obviousness of AI fitness summaries
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The movie and TV tech we actually want to use
Tue, 01 Jul 2025
One way to think about the tech industry is just as a series of people trying to build stuff they saw in movies and on TV. Some of that tech is great, some of it is deeply dystopian, and most of it would make the world a very different place if it suddenly existed. In this episode, a bunch of us try to figure out which tech we actually want to use. David is joined by The Verge’s Allison Johnson, Jennifer Pattison-Tuohy, Mia Sato, and Victoria Song — aka the hosts of Hot Girl Vergecast Summer — to draft their way through the movie, show, and game tech they’d want to make real. Some of the picks you’ll expect, and some we bet has never crossed your mind. And some big-name tech goes undrafted!
Once you've finished the show, make sure you take the poll and tell us who won: https://forms.gle/Q1wFhpzCdM3B5bqj9
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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What Meta and Anthropic really won in court
Fri, 27 Jun 2025
It's already the heat of summer, and the news keeps coming. Nilay, David, and Jake start the show with a bunch of tech news, including the latest on Tesla's robotaxi launch, some updates on the Trump Phone, new devices from Fairphone and Unihertz, and Meta's shifting strategy for face computers. After that, The Verge's Adi Roberston joins the show to talk about two important AI lawsuits that were both decided this week — one involving Anthropic and the other involving Meta — and what this particular battle means for who will win the AI war. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for another round of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, some huge news in the HDMI world, and the end of the Blue Screen of Death.
Further reading:
Tesla’s robotaxis are operating in a regulatory vacuum
Here’s a running list of all of Tesla’s robotaxi mishaps so far
The Trump Phone no longer promises it’s made in America
The smaller Fairphone 6 introduces swappable accessories
The Titan 2 is a modern BlackBerry with 5G, Android, and two screens
A week in Xbox VR with Microsoft and Meta’s new $399 headset
Meta announces Oakley smart glasses that shoot 3K video
Anthropic wins a major fair use victory for AI — but it’s still in trouble for stealing books
Meta’s AI copyright win comes with a warning about fair use
Senate confirms Trump’s FCC pick, Olivia Trusty
FCC Seeks Public Comments on Changing Broadcast Ownership Rules
Trump’s FTC agrees to Omnicom merger — with a gift to X
Paramount Plus with Showtime is getting a rebrand
Paramount delays $35M settlement with Trump as media giant fears bribery backlash: sources
The Paramount Risk in Settling Trump’s Lawsuit: ‘Bribery’?
The HDMI 2.2 specification supports 16K video at 60Hz
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Tesla's robotaxi reality check
Tue, 24 Jun 2025
Tesla is famous for throwing caution to the wind in the name of rolling out cool technology, so it was somewhat surprising to see its robotaxi service launch over the weekend in somewhat muted fashion. The Verge's Andy Hawkins joins the show to explain what, exactly, Elon Musk and co. launched, and what it says about the state of the self-driving revolution. After that, The Verge's Allison Johnson takes us through the history of MVNOs, and why they might just be the best deal in wireless carriers. We talk about Trump Mobile, Ryan Reynolds, e-SIMs, and what it would mean to make it easier to switch service. Finally, we answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline about how to free up storage on your iPhone. It's harder than it should be, but hopefully easier than you think.
Further reading:
Tesla’s robotaxi is live: here are some of the first reactions
The Tesla Cybercab is a cool-looking prototype that needed to be much more than that
Waymo says it will add 2,000 more robotaxis into 2026
How Donald Trump and Ryan Reynolds can easily sell you phone plans
Trump Mobile is a bad deal
How to clear up space on your iPhone when you’re running out of storage
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Truth, lies, and the Trump Phone
Fri, 20 Jun 2025
Starting a wireless carrier is easier than you might think. So is building a half-decent Android phone! But doing all the things Trump Mobile promises, at the price and on the schedule it says, seems awfully close to impossible. While Nilay's out, David and Jake chat with The Verge's Dominic Preston about what we know about Trump Mobile and the T1 Phone, why everyone wants to be a wireless carrier, and what it would actually take for this to work out. After that, David and Jake talk through some big news in the TV world, and the streaming takeover that appears to be happening faster all the time. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for some brief FCC news, a check on the state of Siri, big questions about the ad-rich future of WhatsApp, a look at the new fediverse feed in Threads, and some thoughts on the Framework Laptop 12.
Further reading:
Trump Mobile launches $47 service and a gold phone
Who is really behind the Trump Mobile T1 phone?
Trump Mobile is a bad deal
What is the deal with the Trump Mobile T1 Phone?
What do Alabama, California, and Florida have in common?
How Donald Trump and Ryan Reynolds can easily sell you phone plans
Even Klarna is launching a mobile phone service now
SmartLess Mobile | Don't get outsmarted. Get SmartLess Mobile.
Eric trump interview
Trump is giving TikTok another ban extension
Vivo wants its new X200 Ultra smartphone to replace your camera
Streaming is eating cable and broadcast TV’s lunch. | The Verge
From Nieman Lab: For the first time, social media overtakes TV as Americans’ top news source
Max will show autoplaying video previews suggested by AI
Senate confirms Trump’s FCC pick, Olivia Trusty
Apple’s upgraded Siri might not arrive until next spring
WhatsApp is officially getting ads
WhatsApp’s rollout of ads will change the app forever
Signal says it won’t add AI or ads like WhatsApp. | The Verge
Reddit will help advertisers turn ‘positive’ posts into ads
Senate passes GENIUS stablecoin bill in a win for the crypto industry
Threads is adding fediverse content and search to its feeds
Framework Laptop 12 review: plastic fantastic | The Verge
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Life with the Nintendo Switch 2
Tue, 17 Jun 2025
It's a small miracle that a bunch of us managed to get our heads out of Mario Kart World long enough to make a show about the Switch 2. But that's what we did! First, we chat with The Verge's Andrew Webster about his review, and why it feels like the Switch 2 is both everything we wanted and somehow still a little underwhelming. (Or at least just... whelming.) After that, The Verge's Ash Parrish tells us about her adventures traveling with the Switch 2, plus her recent time with the new Asus ROG Xbox Ally, and what she's learning about the future of consoles. Finally, The Verge's Sean Hollister helps us answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline all about console prices: why they keep going up, and whether they'll continue to be worth it.
Further reading:
Nintendo Switch 2 review: exactly good enough
Nintendo says your bad Switch 2 battery life might be a bug
Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller review: pro enough for me
Mario Kart World review: the perfect Switch 2 launch game
The Verge staff on the Switch 2: what we love and what we don’t
Fortnite feels like a new game on the Switch 2
Xbox’s new handheld is a surprisingly comfortable way to play Gears of War
Steam Deck, Switch, ROG: picking the perfect portable console
Steam Deck OLED, ROG Ally and more: all the news about the handheld PC revolution
Fortnite feels like a new game on the Switch 2
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Switch, Xbox, and the portable future of games
Fri, 13 Jun 2025
There's a lot of news this week, so today's episode turned into a whole bunch of lightning rounds. Nilay, David, and The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes talk through all the vibes and news at WWDC, and why F1 seemed to outshine everything else. We also talk about the Switch 2 launch, and the news this week that Microsoft and Asus are building Xbox handhelds in both clever and confusing ways. After that, we run through for a bunch of AI news, including the ongoing decline of Google traffic to the web, the new Dia browser, and Sam Altman's ideas about how much water ChatGPT uses. Finally, it's time for another edition of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, followed by the news of Warner Bros. Discovery breaking up, some very fast flash drives, and a new Meta messaging app.
Further reading:
Craig Federighi confirms Apple’s first attempt at an AI Siri wasn’t good enough
Ars: Apple’s Craig Federighi on the long road to the iPad’s Mac-like multitasking
Nintendo’s Switch 2 is the fastest-selling game console of all time
Nintendo says your bad Switch 2 battery life might be a bug
Microsoft and Asus announce two Xbox Ally handhelds with new Xbox full-screen experience
This is how Microsoft is combining Windows and Xbox for handheld PCs
Xbox’s new handheld is a surprisingly comfortable way to play Gears of War
Microsoft just teased its next-gen Xbox console, and nobody noticed
The Nothing Phone 3 is coming to the US, and not in beta.
HP reveals $24,999 hardware created just for Google Beam
Online publishers are facing a chatbot calamity.
Disney and Universal sue Midjourney for making AI ripoffs of their biggest characters
Taboola’s clickbaity chumbox is evolving into an AI chatbot
Alexa Plus now has a million users and could be coming to you this summer
Amazon is about to be flooded with AI-generated video ads
Dia, the AI browser from the makers of Arc, is now available in beta
Sam Altman claims an average ChatGPT query uses ‘roughly one fifteenth of a teaspoon’ of water
FCC’s last Democratic commissioner doesn’t know why Trump hasn’t fired her yet
Republicans are barreling toward remaking the internet
Trump-fired FTC commissioner resigns.
Warner Bros. Discovery is splitting into two companies
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Liquid Glass, Spotlight, and the rest of WWDC 2025
Tue, 10 Jun 2025
Apple spent 90 minutes talking about the future of its software, and we're pretty sure only said the word "Siri" once. Nilay and David are joined by The Verge's Victoria Song and Allison Johnson, both of whom were with Nilay at the keynote, to talk about all the news of the day. They talk about the Liquid Glass design language, and why Apple decided to redesign all its software. They talk about Spotlight on the Mac, the new multitasking features on the iPad, the typing indicators on the iPhone, Workout Buddy on the Watch, personas on the Vision Pro, and everything else that Apple announced — or, in a few cases, pointedly didn't announce — on stage. We're just starting to try out some of this software, and it's all likely to change a lot before it hits your devices this fall. And we'll have lots of thoughts along the way.
Further reading:
Apple renames its operating systems
Apple’s new design language is Liquid Glass
Apple’s Liquid Glass redesign doesn’t look like much
Apple’s ChatGPT integration makes it easier to search for more context on images and shop for things they see.
Apple Intelligence takes on language barriers in messages and phone calls.
Apple announces macOS Tahoe 26 with new design and revamped search features
Apple’s Spotlight upgrades in macOS Tahoe have power users in mind
Apple launches iPadOS 26 with a new look and way better multitasking
Apple announces watchOS 26 with a wrist flick gesture and AI ‘Workout Buddy’
Apple’s visionOS 26 adds PSVR2 controller support and spatial widgets
Apple’s AirPods update adds camera controls and more
Apple’s new Games app lets you challenge your friends
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Previewing Apple's 2025 WWDC
Fri, 06 Jun 2025
Developer conference season is almost over, but we've got one show left to see: Apple's WWDC begins on Monday. Nilay, David, and Joanna Stern spend time going through both what they expect to see at the show, and why this year's WWDC might feel a bit different than in years past. Apple is in a tricky place with regulators, developers, and users alike, and has some genuine explaining to do. After that, they talk about the launch of the Nintendo Switch 2, and David's surprisingly easy adventure to acquire one. We also have a bit of smart glasses and AI gadgets news to discuss, so we do that too. Then it's time for Brendan Carr is a Dummy, and an update on a couple of the interesting new fediverse projects launching this week.
Further reading:
Verge subscriptions are on sale 40 percent off
American Society of Magazine Editors Announces National Magazine Awards 2025 Winners
Apple ordered to keep web links in the App Store
Payment companies team up to help developers ditch App Store billing
Apple could be adding camera controls and sleep detection to your AirPods
Switch 2 launch: where to find restocks online and in-store
Look inside the Nintendo Switch 2 with the console’s first teardown
Mario Kart World’s designers had to rethink everything to make it open world
Nintendo is updating even more games for the Switch 2 Here’s what’s inside Meta’s experimental new smart glasses
Meta’s reportedly shopping for exclusive content on its upcoming VR headset
Meta reportedly sidelined ‘Quest 4’ designs for a goggles-like mixed-reality headset
FCC investigation looms over EchoStar’s missed interest payments and a new satellite
From Ars Technica: FCC Republican resigns, leaving agency with just two commissioners
Jony Ive’s OpenAI device gets the Laurene Powell Jobs nod of approval
ChatGPT’s goal is to be a ‘super assistant’ for every part of your life
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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One company's quest for the perfect charger
Tue, 03 Jun 2025
We've talked many times on The Vergecast about the dream of the perfect charger. We call it The God Cable, and imagine it would charge everything, at full optimized speed, no matter what you plug in. Well, one company tried to make it – sort of. TwelveSouth founder Andrew Green joins the show to talk about how his company developed its newest product, the PowerCord, and why actually the God Cable might be both impossible and a bad idea. After that, The Verge's Tina Nguyen joins the show to talk about her experience at Bitcoin 2025 in Las Vegas, the rise of $TRUMP, and how crypto and the government became so intertwined. Finally, we answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline about AI agents, and the tasks we should (and shouldn't) offload to our chatbots.
Further reading:
The TwelveSouth PowerCord
The Vergecast USB-C Holiday Spec-tacular
Everything you need to know about switching to USB-C
How a crypto bro shorted $TRUMP coin — and scored a dinner with the President
Presidential seals, $100,000 watches, and a Marriott afterparty
Trump’s media company says it’s buying $2.5 billion in Bitcoin
The Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Act will soon ramp up in Congress.
Crypto funds seized by the government may go into a ‘digital Fort Knox’
Google’s future is Google googling
OpenAI’s new Operator AI agent can do things on the web for you
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Can a redesign save Apple's software?
Fri, 30 May 2025
It's a slowish news week ahead of some very busy news weeks, so of course Nilay and David start the show with a long discussion about party speakers. Eventually, they get into the news, beginning with some of the huge Apple redesigns planned for WWDC in June. For the first time in a long time, the stakes for Apple's software teams feel really high. After that, the hosts talk about Nilay's recent interview with Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and what the AI-ification of everything means for the future of the web. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for another Brendan Carr is a Dummy, plus some talk about the Nintendo Switch 2, a bit of confusing tariff news, and more.
Further reading:
Graduation and prom season in full force, Alan sends a graduation procession with a party speaker on… her head?
So so many softball and baseball games, Luis tips us to the Yankees
Incredible at a dentist office from Oktawian
Apple is reportedly going to rename all of its operating systems
Apple is ready to replace Game Center with a more Xbox-like gaming app
Get ready for Apple’s glassy operating systems overhaul.
Nick Clegg says asking artists for use permission would ‘kill’ the AI industry
The New York Times’ first generative AI deal is with Amazon
The Browser Company explains why it stopped developing Arc
The plan for nationwide fiber internet might be upended for Starlink
FCC Commissioner Labels Trump Push to Chill Speech an ‘Administration-Wide Effort’
Carr's attack on Ergen looks gross
Shut Down the Federal Communications Commission
With the Switch, technology finally caught up to Nintendo
Nintendo’s bold new era is full of safe bets
The Nintendo Switch was an indie game haven, until it was overrun with slop
The Nintendo Switch 2 sure seems to work just fine with a USB mouse
There’s a Switch 2 unboxing video already.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Portable Teleprompter
AMBITFUL Portable Teleprompter Kit - Mini Teleprompter with Remote Control for Phone and DSLR Recording
After more than a month of testimony, the Meta antirust trial is beginning to slow down. The Google search remedies trial, meanwhile, is about to heat up again, with closing arguments coming soon. The Verge’s Lauren Feiner has been in the DC courthouse for all of it, and has finally emerged to tell us about what she’s seen, and learned, from two all-important monopoly trials. After that, The Verge’s Victoria Song tells us about her latest experience with Google’s smart glasses prototypes, what Google is doing differently from Meta and Apple, and what she thinks Jony Ive and OpenAI might be building. Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline about what to do now that Mozilla is shutting down Pocket.
FTC v. Meta: The antitrust battle over WhatsApp and Instagram
Did WhatsApp really need Meta?
Why the FTC argues Meta is a closer rival to MeWe than TikTok
Instagram CEO testifies about competing with TikTok: ‘You’re either growing, or you’re slowly dying’
Android XR is getting stylish partners in Warby Parker, Gentle Monster
Xreal teases Project Aura smart glasses for Android XR
We tried on Google’s prototype AI smart glasses
Android XR and Project Moohan hands-on: Gemini is the killer app
Mozilla is shutting down Pocket
Raindrop.io
Instapaper
Matter
Wallabag
Readwise Reader
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OpenAI and Jony Ive's AI super-gadget
Fri, 23 May 2025
Bad news if you don't care about AI: this week was absolutely chock-full of AI news. First, Nilay, David, and The Verge's Alex Heath talk about the news that OpenAI and Jony Ive are teaming up to build... something. A gadget, for sure, maybe lots of gadgets. We don't know much, but we have a lot of thoughts, and a lot of questions. After that, the hosts talk through all the news at Google I/O, including what's new with Gemini, Google Search, Project Astra, Project Mariner, and the countless other ways Google is putting AI absolutely everywhere. Finally, in the lightning round, we buckle up for another round of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, talk through some late-breaking Apple gadget news, and marvel over the future of conference calls.
Further reading:
OpenAI is buying Jony Ive’s AI hardware company
From The Wall Street Journal: What Sam Altman Told OpenAI About the Secret Device He’s Making With Jony Ive
Details leak about Jony Ive’s new ‘screen-free’ OpenAI device
Jony Ive says Rabbit and Humane made bad products
The 15 biggest announcements at Google I/O 2025
Google launches AI Mode to everyone in the US, adds more features to AI Overviews
Google’s 3D video calling tech is finally going to ship this year
Project Astra 2025: Google’s universal AI assistant is now smarter and more proactive
Google has a new tool just for making AI videos
Google reveals $250 per month ‘AI Ultra’ plan
Google Meet can translate what you say into other languages
Google’s Gemini AI is coming to Chrome
Google says its new image AI can actually spell
Google will let you ‘try on’ clothes with AI
Google is bringing an ‘Agent Mode’ to the Gemini app
We tried on Google’s prototype AI smart glasses
Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott on the birth of the agentic web
Microsoft’s plan to fix the web: letting every website run AI search for cheap
Google rejected giving publishers more choice to opt out of AI Search
Google is stuffing even more ads into its AI results
Google’s Gemini AI is coming to Chrome
Google reveals $250 per month ‘AI Ultra’ plan
FCC Chairman Carr seeks to designate NBC equal time issue for hearing
FCC approves Verizon’s $20 billion merger after it commits to ‘ending’ DEI
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Razr Ultra proves flip phones are almost ready
Tue, 20 May 2025
Kids these days, you know? They love the '90s, they want everything to be colorful and bold and bouncy, and they really, truly love Snapchat. And the tech world is listening. On this episode, The Verge's Allison Johnson joins to talk about her review of the new Razr Ultra, the new-look Android 16, and why she thinks we're getting ever closer to a true flip phone resurgence. (Also: why we're not quite there yet.) After that, The Verge's Alex Heath explains what's going on with Snapchat, and how it's possible that the app is more popular than ever but still can't figure out how to cash in. It all makes us wonder: is there a business in chat at all? Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about a possible outcome for Chrome after the Google search trial ends.
Further reading:
Motorola Razr Ultra (2025) review: looking sharp
The best folding phones you can buy
Android’s youthful new design language just dropped
Snapchat scraps ‘simple’ redesign as it loses users in North America
Zuckerberg offered to buy Snapchat for $6 billion.
Evan Spiegel explains why Snap is betting on Spectacles
Breaking down the DOJ’s plan to end Google’s search monopoly
Why are companies lining up to buy Chrome?
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HBO's no good very bad rebrand
Fri, 16 May 2025
Names are hard — but they don't have to be this hard. Nilay, David, and The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes start the show with some personal news, before digging into the monumentally silly thinking behind Warner Bros. Discovery re-re-naming its streaming service HBO Max. After that, and some more streaming news, we turn our attention to the gadget news of the week, including the long-awaited release of CarPlay Ultra and the latest announcements from the Android team at Google. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for Brendan Carr is a Dummy, some debate on the future of Airbnb, and a brief party speaker update. Because the mystery continues.
Further reading:
It’s not Max, it’s HBO Max
Max was an all-time bad rebrand
How HBO’s creatives survived corporate chaos
ESPN’s standalone streaming app launches this fall for $30 a month
Fox One streaming service will arrive just in time for football season
Netflix’s ad tier is growing really fast — and that means more ads
Netflix is bringing back Star Search as a live show
YouTube will stream an opening week NFL game for free
Peacock’s NBA coverage will add an overlay with live shot stats
Apple’s CarPlay Ultra is finally here, if you have a new Aston Martin
Apple’s fancy new CarPlay will only work wirelessly
Android 16 Material Three Expressive UI coming in beta this month
Google’s splashy new Android UI is coming in beta this month.
It’s Dieter!
Warner Bros. is launching a cinematic universe for brands
Here's How NBCU Is Integrating Brand Sponsors for SNL50
FCC threatens EchoStar licenses for spectrum that SpaceX wants to use
Airbnb’s new app has all of your vacation extras in one place
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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A buggy Sonos mystery
Tue, 13 May 2025
The Verge's Will Poor recently came home from vacation and discovered he had an insect problem. More specifically, his Sonos speaker had an insect problem. Will brings us the story of what really happened there, and what he discovered about how the animal kingdom — and the electronics world — works. After that, The Verge's Andru Marino tells us about his research on all things AI podcasts. He tells us why people are so hooked on NotebookLM's Audio Overviews, where these generated shows fall short, and what all us human podcasters could learn from the bots. Finally, The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy helps us answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) all about smart lights. Which get complicated faster than you think.
Further reading:
Oh no, Google is turning everything into a podcast
Google’s NotebookLM AI podcasts add ‘interactive’ mode for some Q-and-A
Steven Johnson on Google, NotebookLM, and AI research
A guide to getting started with smart lighting: When to use smart switches and smart bulbs
Inovelli smart switches
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Why Apple is trying to save Google
Fri, 09 May 2025
Where will Meta, Apple, and Google be three years from now? It's starting to look like they might all be very different. Nilay, David, and The Verge's Richard Lawler start the show with Eddy Cue's testimony in the Google search trial, in which Cue argued that AI is taking over — and that Google should be allowed to keep paying Apple gobs of money. The hosts also chat about the latest in the Meta trials, and how the recent Apple ruling is already changing the App Store. Then, there are some gadgets to talk about: the panopticon-slash-killer-app coming for Meta's smart glasses, the new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop, and a lot of new iPhones. In the lightning round, we do another round of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, then talk about some new Netflix designs and the latest in our worldwide hunt for party speakers.
Further reading:
Eddy Cue is fighting to save Apple’s $20 billion paycheck from Google
Apple’s Eddy Cue: ‘You may not need an iPhone 10 years from now’
Google searches are falling in Safari for the first time ever — probably because of AI
Google's statement about Search traffic
Apple is looking at adding Perplexity and other AI search engines to Safari
Amazon now has a ‘Get book’ button in its iOS Kindle app
Epic will use an EU account to bring Fortnite back to the US App Store
Patreon’s iOS update allows creators to bypass in-app purchases
Apple is trying to halt the App Store ruling.
Apple files appeal to wrest back control of its App Store
A new bill would force Apple to allow third-party app storesDOJ’s proposed Google changes would ‘deeply undermine user trust,’ search chief says
Firefox could be doomed without Google search deal, says executive
DOJ asks court to split up Google’s ad tech empire
Threads was originally going to live inside the Instagram app | The Verge
Instagram doesn’t want to be a ‘lean-back experience.’ | The Verge
‘TikTok is probably the fiercest competition that we have faced.’ | The Verge
Instagram has spent up to $700 million in a year to lure creators.
Mosseri calls the first version of Reels his ‘biggest mistake.’ | The Verge
Meta’s new AI glasses could have a ‘super-sensing’ mode with facial recognition
Apple is planning smart glasses with and without AR
Apple ‘iPhone Air’ rumor suggests a bigger screen coming in 2027
Apple may stagger next year’s iPhones to make way for a foldable
Microsoft’s smaller Surface Pro has a 12-inch display and starts at $799
Microsoft shrinks its Surface Laptop down to 13 inches, priced at $899
Microsoft’s new Surface devices ditch magnetic charging port for USB-C
How Microsoft shrunk its Surface devices
Policing News, Policing DEI: The FCC’s Shifting Priorities Erode Its Credibility
OpenAI abandons plan to become a for-profit company
Netflix is getting a big TV revamp
Netflix will try a TikTok-like feed on its mobile app
I put four robot lawnmowers through a brutal backyard battle
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The AI wearables are always listening
Tue, 06 May 2025
The Verge’s Victoria Song joins the show to talk about a new genre of gadget, which both she and David have been testing a lot: the AI-powered, always-on voice recorder. Vee shares what she’s learned from devices like Bee, and why it’s going to be so hard for AI to figure out what really matters in our lives. After that, The Verge’s Nathan Edwards and keyboard maker Ryan Norbauer tell the story of the Seneca, a $3,600 keyboard that Norbauer built to his own incredibly exacting specifications. They tell David about what it really takes to make a great keyboard, and why making one is worth the effort. Finally, in the lightning round (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!), we answer a couple of questions about the future of Chrome.
Further reading:
Bee review: I outsourced my memory to AI and all I got was fanfiction
The Plaude NotePin is a great AI voice recorder, and it’s totally doomed
Friend: a new digital companion for the AI age
The Norbauer Seneca
The $3,600 keyboard that’s optimized for joy.
Why are companies lining up to buy Chrome?
Sundar Pichai says the DOJ’s antitrust plan could kill Google Search
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How Apple lost control of the App Store
Fri, 02 May 2025
Everywhere you look, antitrust fights have the potential to reshape the tech industry. Nilay, David, and The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes start by digging into the latest ruling in the Apple / Epic trial, in which a furious judge rips open the App Store in a way Apple likely never saw coming. The way we pay for apps is about to change, and fast. After that, it's time for an update on the Google and Meta trials, as Google tries to preserve its search empire and Meta tries to make the case that basically every company on the web is its vicious competitor. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for another installment of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, plus some notes on this week's Worldcoin launch and the strange new Meta AI app. Also: party speakers. Always party speakers.
Further reading:
A judge just blew up Apple’s control of the App Store
‘Cook chose poorly’: how Apple blew up its control over the App Store
The future of the App Store depends on the difference between a ‘button’ and an ‘external link’
Apple must allow other forms of in-app purchase, rules judge in Epic v. Apple
Apple exec ‘outright lied’ during Epic trial
Apple confirms it will appeal the App Store order.
Epic says Fortnite is coming back to iOS in the US
Sundar Pichai says the DOJ’s antitrust plan could kill Google Search
Google confirms it’s close to getting Gemini support on iPhones
The TikTok ban is back in court — in Meta’s antitrust trial
TikTok’s head of operations takes the stand.
Reels isn’t Instagram’s ‘core’ experience.
TikTok doesn’t compete with Meta for ‘personal social networking.’
TikTok’s legal entanglements collide.
The TikTok ban makes another cameo.
TikTok’s friends tab is not exactly a hit.
TikTok and Reels are ‘indistinguishable.’
Are YouTube and Instagram the top competitors for TikTok?
TikTok predicted Instagram would redesign its app to focus on Reels.
Meta prepared for a ‘flood in traffic’ ahead of the TikTok ban.
Facebook execs worried Google would buy WhatsApp and make it ‘a cross-platform iMessage.’
Facebook worried most about Google or Apple buying WhatsApp.
Google had a ‘long shot’ chance of becoming competitive in social with WhatsApp.
Facebook exec worried about losing the business to mobile messaging apps.
‘I was really worried that this could become the end.’
‘This shit is getting scary.’
WhatsApp showed ‘absolutely no signs of morphing’ into a social app.
Facebook floated starting from scratch on messaging.
Facebook didn’t know how it would make money from WhatsApp.
Facebook didn’t fear WhatsApp becoming a social competitor.
Meta releases AI app to compete with ChatGPT
Brendan Carr congratulates himself
Brendan Carr’s FCC is an anti-consumer, rights-trampling harassment machine
Brendan Carr’s Bizarro World FCC
Sam Altman-backed Worldcoin cryptocurrency launches in the US
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Slate Truck is a whole new kind of car
Tue, 29 Apr 2025
Sometimes you want more tech in your life — and sometimes you want a lot less. This episode is all about less. First, Tim Stevens joins the show to talk about his story about the Slate Truck, an ultra-minimal electric vehicle that has almost no features to speak of and yet still promises to reinvent the way we think about cars. After that, Casey Johnston tells us about her journey in managing her screen time. She has tips for how to get the most problematic apps of your phone, is a big proponent of a factory reset, and has seen first-hand what happens when you look at your devices just a little less. Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about whether there's a MacBook Air equivalent in the Windows world. The answer surprised us, and it might surprise you too.
Further reading:
The $20,000 American-made electric pickup with no paint, no stereo, and no touchscreen
Is this the antidote to America’s truck bloat problem?
From TechCrunch: Inside the EV startup secretly backed by Jeff Bezos
Around the Next Bend on Substack
Slate is the American truck scene's Ctrl+Alt+Del moment
From She's a Beast: The DIY Dumbphone Method
Casey's book: A Physical Education
Framework Laptop 13 (2025) review: getting better with age
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Everybody wants to buy Chrome
Fri, 25 Apr 2025
Some weeks, it just feels like everything is up in the air all at the same time. Nilay and David are joined by The Verge’s Jake Kastrenakes to talk about all the unrest, starting with the ever-changing tariff rules that are making gadgets hard to price, hard to find, and hard to bet on going forward. (Maybe that’s why it seems everyone on Earth tried to pre-order a Switch 2 this week.) After that, the hosts catch up on the Meta and Google antitrust trials happening this week, and try to figure out who might be interested in the internet’s most popular browser. Finally, in the lightning round, we talk Brendan Carr (who is a dummy), the wood-backed Motorola Razr Ultra, and the 20th anniversary of YouTube.
Further reading:
Nintendo Switch 2 preorders were a total mess — at first
Nintendo Switch 2 preorders are sold out everywhere
GameStop’s Switch 2 preorders started poorly, too
Auto industry tariffs are doing what now? 24 hours of White House confusion
Did Tim Cook finagle a special tariff deal? Senator Warren wants to know
The US hikes tariffs on solar products from Asia
DHL halts international deliveries to US consumers worth over $800
Game Boy clone maker Anbernic suspends all shipments to US
Ayn, like Anbernic, is pausing retro handheld shipments to the US.
Perplexity wants to buy Chrome if Google has to sell it
OpenAI tells judge it would buy Chrome from Google
Former DOJ antitrust chief says a Google break up will benefit the internet
Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom says Zuckerberg “saw us as a threat”
Instagram launches its CapCut clone, Edits
Threads adds more ads
Former Google exec testifies about the company’s attempt to buy WhatsApp.
Google’s antitrust trial begins with a fight over Chrome, money, and AI
Google is paying Samsung an ‘enormous sum’ to preinstall Gemini
Google reveals Gemini AI has 350 million monthly active users.
Apple and Meta hit with the EU’s first DMA antitrust fines
The EU isn’t happy with Apple’s tax on alternative app stores
Brendan Carr is a dummy
From Puck: David Ellison’s Carr Trouble
The Trump FCC’s Coercion Cartel
Motorola’s new Razr Ultra brings the wood back panel back
YouTube’s TV changes include a redesign and more multiview
YouTube is everything and everything is YouTube
20 years ago, the first videos uploaded to YouTube were short and swee
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How to keep your data safe when you travel
Tue, 22 Apr 2025
If you’re heading on vacation this summer, you’re going to want to listen to this. The Verge’s Gaby del Valle joins the show to explain how worried you need to be about your digital data when you cross borders, and what you can do to protect yourself. Even if you don’t think you have anything to hide, a little precaution goes a long way. After that, Puck’s Matt Belloni joins the show to explain why Apple, Amazon, Google, and other tech companies continue to pour money into the streaming business, when it seems so far removed from what those companies do well. (Spoiler alert: it’s fun to be friends with Ben Stiller.) Finally, we answer a hotline question about the Google Pixel’s ascent to “best Android phone for people who just want a phone.”
Oh, also: thanks to everyone who voted for us in the Webby Awards! We’ll know soon whether we won, but however it shakes out, we’re so grateful to everyone who voted for us.
Further reading:
Is it safe to travel to the United States with your phone right now?
DHS’s airport panopticon is getting people deported and detained
Trump says he wants to deport US citizens to El Salvador
Matt Belloni at Puck
The Town podcast
From Puck: How Long Can the Apple TV+ Experiment Sputter On? - Puck
Google Pixel 9A review: a midrange phone done right
Google Pixel 9 review: the phone that Android needs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Big Tech is back on trial
Fri, 18 Apr 2025
We promise, this episode is only a little bit about header bidding. Nilay and David are joined by The Verge’s Alex Heath to talk about some big news in tech regulation: Google lost its ad-tech monopoly trial, which could reshape both Google and the internet altogether. And that’s not the only monopoly news! Meta’s trial also started this week, and Alex was there to see Mark Zuckerberg and others try to defend Instagram, WhatsApp, and the company as a whole. After all that, we talk about OpenAI’s plans to build a social network, and how this company seems to never run out of ambition. Finally, in the lightning round, it’s time for another round of Brendan Carr is a Dummy, and some news about viral cameras and the Switch 2. Which we’ll be yeeting into our homes as soon as possible
Further reading:
Google loses ad tech monopoly case
FTC v. Meta live: the latest from the battle over Instagram and WhatsApp
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg defends Instagram purchase in antitrust trial
Zuckerberg defends his empire during FTC antitrust trial
Mark Zuckerberg suggested spinning off Instagram
Mark Zuckerberg tells court that Meta made WhatsApp, Instagram better
Mark Zuckerberg once suggested wiping all Facebook friends lists to boost usage
Meta reportedly offered $1 billion to settle the FTC’s antitrust lawsuit.
Zuckerberg defends his empire during FTC antitrust trial
Google, Apple, and Snap aren’t happy about Meta’s poorly-redacted slides
Meta’s antitrust trial slide redactions aren’t actually hiding anything
OpenAI is building a social network
OpenAI debuts its GPT-4.1 flagship AI model
OpenAI might finally get better model names soon.
OpenAI’s upgraded o3 model can use images when reasoning
ChatGPT will now remember your old conversations
OpenAI is reportedly considering a $3 billion deal to buy AI coding tool Windsurf.
Netflix is testing a new OpenAI-powered search
Brendan Carr on X
The Media and Democracy Project on Bluesky
Trump excludes smartphones, computers, chips from higher tariffs
Smartphone tariffs are coming back in ‘a month or two,’ says Trump admin
TSMC is unfazed by tariffs.
Microsoft’s Phil Spencer: “I want to support Switch 2.”
In pursuit of a viral, five-year-old compact camera
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The 2025 Vergecast Streaming Draft
Tue, 15 Apr 2025
It's time, once again, to see what's what in the streaming wars. For the third year in a row, our hosts — this time Nilay, David, and The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes — have to build a roster of streaming options that will win awards, show 4K content, satisfy their live TV needs, and much more. First, the hosts decide who won last year's competition, and then they pick their favorites for 2025.
Make sure you listen to the episode before you read this, but here are the results of the draft:
Jake's picks:
Cheap: Tubi
Awards: Netflix
4K: Hulu
Live: Instagram Live
Niche: PBS Passport
Content: LoFi Girl
Wild Card: Kanopy
Nilay's picks:
Cheap: TikTok
Awards: Max
4K: Disney Plus
Live: Sunday Ticket
Niche: Kaleidescape
Content: CNBC
Wild Card: F1 TV
David's picks
Cheap: Peacock
Awards: Amazon Prime
4K: YouTube Premium
Live: YouTube TV
Niche: BritBox
Content: Stranger Things season 5
Wild Card: Paramount Plus
We want to know who you think won the draft! Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, or call The Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11, and tell us all your thoughts. And if you want to catch up, you can check out our draft from 2024 and from 2023. A lot has changed, and nothing has.
The Vergecast was nominated for a Webby, which means we can win a Webby People’s Voice Award and that’s voted online by you! So we’d love your support. You can vote at the link:https://bit.ly/3DXFgpN
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How the tech world is responding to tariff chaos
Fri, 11 Apr 2025
Welcome to tech in 2025, where everything's made up and the numbers don't matter. Nilay, David, and The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes start the show by running down the latest tariff news, the uncertain future facing tech companies of all sizes, and what we're learning so far about how they're responding. After that, the hosts talk about a big week in AI news, including Meta's sketchy benchmark numbers and the latest damning reporting about the future of Siri. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for America's favorite podcast within a podcast, Brendan Carr is a Dummy, along with some news about the TikTok ban and the Pixel 9A. And then some more tariff numbers, because they just never stop.
Further reading:
The Vergecast was nominated for a Webby, which means we can win a Webby People’s Voice Award and that’s voted online by you! So we’d love your support. You can vote at the link:https://bit.ly/3DXFgpN
Sony adds three new speakers to bass-boosted ULT Power Sound lineup
Sony seemingly bakes tariff penalty into its new US TV pricing
Samsung’s The Frame Pro was never going to be cheap — and it isn’t
Trump’s tariffs are officially in effect, including 104 percent on China
China retaliates with additional 50 percent tariff on US goods
Trump announces a ‘90-day pause’ on tariffs outside of China
Trump believes iPhones can be made in the US, says White House
Get your screwdrivers ready.
Apple quickly shipped 600 tons of iPhones to ‘beat’ the new tariffs
Trump triples tariffs on low value packages from China and Hong Kong
Some Shein and Temu ‘haul video’ creators are stocking up
Shein’s supply chain uncertainties.
Amazon is already changing its ultra-cheap Temu copycat
Framework stops selling some of its cheapest laptops due to Trump tariffs
Framework delays Laptop 12 orders in the US over tariffs
Framework will open US preorders for Laptop 12 after all: tomorrow, starting at $549.
Framework raised prices and then un-raised them an hour later because of Trump
Price hikes, idled factories, layoffs: how car companies are responding to Trump’s tariffs
China will show fewer US films in response to tariffs
Trump’s new tariffs leave small creators scrambling
Arduboy creator says his tiny Game Boy won’t survive Trump’s tariff
Trump’s latest tariffs may set the smart home industry back
Nintendo boss on Switch 2 and tariffs: ‘we are actively assessing what the impact may be’
Trump’s tariffs ‘pause’ could help Nintendo ship more Switch 2s
Musk calls Trump’s trade chief ‘dumber than a sack of bricks.’
We just declared a trade war with the world
Meta gets caught gaming AI benchmarks with Llama 4
Siri in The Information
Amazon plays catch-up with new Nova AI models to generate voices and video
Shopify CEO says no new hires without proof AI can’t do the job
Most Americans don’t trust AI — or the people in charge of it
Adobe is building AI agents for Photoshop and Premiere Pro
Samsung is finally releasing Ballie, its rolling home robot
Sam Altman and Jony Ive’s AI project could involve a screenless device.
Trump Is Now Mandating His Cabinet/Loyalist Wear "Trump Golden Bust" Pins
From Ars Technica: The speech police: Chairman Brendan Carr and the FCC’s news distortion policy
From Variety: FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez Sounds Alarm Over Trump Administration’s ‘Absolute Pattern of Censorship and Control’
From the FCC: Spectrum Is Back—Again!
FCC eyes major satellite rule revamp in spectrum-sharing shakeup
Trump delays TikTok ban again
Trump’s TikTok delay is ‘against the law’ top Senate Intelligence Democrat says
The US told Apple to keep TikTok in the App Store.
Instagram might finally release an iPad app
Google Pixel 9A review: a midrange phone done right
Pixel 9A hits stores, and it’s still $499.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Switch 2: the good news and bad news
Tue, 08 Apr 2025
Last week, The Verge's Ash Parrish got to play with the new Nintendo Switch 2. We got over our outrageous jealousy long enough to ask her all about it: what it's like to hold, how the screen looks, whether the mouse-control is any good, and much more. Ash gives us the good news, and the bad news, on everything we now know about the Switch 2. (We do talk about the price, but we recorded before the Trump administration launched its massive new tariff push — so you can consider the price even worse news than we thought.) After that, The Verge's Tom Warren joins the show to talk about Microsoft's 50th anniversary celebration, how the company has stayed so resilient for so long, and whether AI is really the next five-decade project for one of the world's biggest companies. Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline (866-VERGE11, or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about how you should change your shopping habits in a tariff-filled world. It's hard to know where we'll be in a few months, but it sure doesn't look like gadgets are getting any cheaper.
Further reading:
The Vergecast was nominated for a Webby, which means we can win a Webby People’s Voice Award and that’s voted online by you! So we’d love your support. You can vote at the link:https://bit.ly/3DXFgpN
Nintendo Switch 2 hands-on: it’s all in the games
All of the Nintendo Switch 2 news, hands-ons, and trailers
Donkey Kong Bananza was best in show at the Switch 2 hands-on
I’m not sold on the Switch 2’s mouse-like controls
Microsoft turns 50
Why I’ve covered Microsoft for 25 years
How Microsoft made it through 50 years
Trump’s tariffs mean you’ll pay more for all gadgets
Trump’s tariffs put the iPhone in a tough spot
From The Wall Street Journal: Here’s the iPhone. Here’s the iPhone With Tariffs.
New Star GP, the game
The General Magic documentary
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How tariffs will change your gadgets
Fri, 04 Apr 2025
It's a Nintendo Switch 2. What could it cost, a thousand dollars? In this episode, Nilay, David, and The Verge's Richard Lawler talk through why we don't really know. But first, we talk about the Switch 2, and some of the reasons we're excited — and maybe just a little concerned — about Nintendo's new console. This is likely to be the most interesting device of the year, and we learned an awful lot more about it this week. We also talk about Microsoft's 50th anniversary, the fate of TikTok, and other gadget news. Then we get to tariffs, with the help of Tuneshine creator Tobias Butler, who explains how tariffs affect the way hardware companies do business — and how they're navigating the current uncertainty. After that, in the lightning round, it's time for a little Brendan Carr is a Dummy, followed by the latest on Tesla's sales numbers, Alexa Plus, and Coyote vs. Acme.
Further reading:
The Vergecast was nominated for a Webby, which means we can win a Webby People’s Voice Award and that’s voted online by you! So we’d love your support. You can vote at the link:https://bit.ly/3DXFgpN
The 50 best things Microsoft has ever made
The Nintendo Switch 2 arrives on June 5th for $449.99
Nintendo Switch 2 hands-on: it’s all in the games
Nvidia confirms the Nintendo Switch 2 has DLSS and real-time ray tracing
Nintendo Switch 2 specs: 1080p 120Hz display, 4K dock, mouse mode, and more
The Nintendo Switch 2 has a camera accessory for video chat
Nintendo’s Switch 2 ‘C’ button is a Discord-like GameChat feature
Verge staffers react to the Nintendo Switch 2
Here’s everything Nintendo has revealed about the Switch 2’s Joy-Cons
Nintendo’s Switch 2 preorder process has strict requirements to thwart scalpers
‘TikTok America,’ Amazon, and other rumors about who might buy TikTok
From The New York Times: Trump Set to Meet With Top Aides to Decide TikTok’s Fate
From Wired: The Founder of OnlyFans Wants to Buy TikTok
Tuneshine – Your space, your music
Donald Trump announces tariffs that could raise the price of almost everything you buy
Reciprocal Tariff Calculations | United States Trade Representative
Trump’s new tariff math looks a lot like ChatGPT’s
These are the tariffs about to hit Apple.
Chris Murphy’s Bluesky thread
Trump’s tariffs are ‘a debacle of epic proportions’ for the auto industry
T-Mobile closes Lumos deal after dropping DEI | The Verge
E&C Democrats Launch Investigation into FCC Chairman Carr’s Repeated Attacks on the First Amendment
Sony’s new Bravia lineup includes its ‘King of TV’ successor
Tesla’s sales plummet 13 percent as Musk backlash grows
Best printer 2025: just buy a Brother laser printer, the winner is clear, middle finger in the air
Alexa Plus just launched in early access, but it’s missing some features
Coyote vs. Acme is finally coming to theaters
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Searching for the perfect minimalist smartphone
Tue, 01 Apr 2025
David has a Light Phone III, and it's making him wonder a lot of things about technology. So The Verge's Allison Johnson joins the show to talk about the whole trend of minimalist smartphones, and to figure out which features a smartphone absolutely needs, and which ones we could all probably do without. After that, The Verge's Andy Hawkins takes us through a big weekend in the Tesla Takedown movement, what's happening with Elon Musk's car company, how automakers are responding to impending tariffs, and whether we're wrong to be excited about the new Nissan Leaf. Finally, The Verge's Jen Tuohy answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11, or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about all-seeing cameras in our homes. Which mostly don't exist yet. Mostly.
Further reading:
Light Phone III review: everything in moderation
There’s no perfect minimalist phone — yet
One year with the Light Phone 2
We went to 10 anti-Tesla protests — and a couple counter protests, too
‘Tesla Takedown’ protesters planning ‘biggest day of action’
How Elon Musk turned the Tesla brand so toxic
The Nissan Leaf lives on as a compact SUV with a Tesla charge port
Ring’s latest security camera is a drone that flies around inside your house
Project Astra is the future of AI at Google
Alexa Plus arrives with promise but plenty of questions
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OpenAI has a Studio Ghibli problem
Fri, 28 Mar 2025
In this episode, we do a Studio Ghibli-like rendition of The Vergecast. First, Nilay and David discuss some big news in the gadget world, from the mysteriously viral midrange Canon camera to the upgrades we're expecting out of Apple in the next few months. Plus, is it over for Amazon's Echo brand? After all that, The Verge's Kylie Robison joins the show to discuss everything happening at OpenAI: the company launched a new image generator inside of ChatGPT, and it immediately became both a huge hit and a big mess. (Par for the course with OpenAI, really.) Kylie also explains why Perplexity is probably not buying TikTok, no matter how much it might want to. Finally, in the lightning round, it's time for everyone's favorite segment, Brendan Carr Is a Dummy, followed by the latest on the Signal attack-planning chaos in the government, some news about Elon Musk pressuring Reddit CEO Steve Huffmann, and what's next for the car industry with huge tariffs looming. Oh, and a little bit of exciting e-bike news
Further reading:
From Meta: Bringing the Magic of Friends Back to Facebook
Apple’s AirPods Max with USB-C will soon support lossless audio
The Apple Watch may get cameras and Apple Intelligence
Apple’s WWDC 2025 event starts June 9th
Don’t expect an overhauled Messages app in iOS 19.
Amazon tests renaming Echo smart speakers and smart displays to just ‘Alexa’
OpenAI reshuffles leadership as Sam Altman pivots to technical focus
OpenAI upgrades image generation and rolls it out in ChatGPT and Sora
ChatGPT’s new image generator is delayed for free users
ChatGPT is turning everything into Studio Ghibli art
OpenAI says ‘our GPUs are melting’ as it limits ChatGPT image generation requests
OpenAI expects to earn $12.7 billion in revenue this year.
Nvidia Infinite Creative
Microsoft adds ‘deep reasoning’ Copilot AI for research and data analysis
Google says its new ‘reasoning’ Gemini AI models are the best ones yet
Google is rolling out Gemini’s real-time AI video features
Perplexity’s bid for TikTok continues
Trump's FCC says it will start investigating Disney, too
From Status: Sounding the Carr Alarm
Trump officials leaked a military strike in a Signal group chat
The Atlantic releases strike group chat messages
And the Most Tortured Signal-Gate Backronym Award goes to… | The Verge
Elon Musk pressured Reddit’s CEO on content moderation | The Verge
Trump’s plans to save TikTok may fail to keep it online, Democrats warn
Rivian spins out secret e-bike lab into a new company called Also
BYD beats Tesla.
Trump says he will impose a 25 percent tariff on imported vehicles
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How Roomba got stuck
Tue, 25 Mar 2025
Some products are so successful they become snynonymous with their whole category — nobody asks for a facial tissue, they ask for a Kleenex, you know? Today's episode is, at least in part, about two of those products. First, The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins the show to chart the rise and fall of the Roomba, the robot vacuum that practically invented the category and yet seems to have been left behind. Can iRobot get its robot back on its feet? After that, Kobo CEO Michael Tamblyn discusses the state of e-readers, what it's like to always be "the best non-Amazon option," and what we all want from devices that aren't our smartphone. Finally, The Verge's Chris Welch helps us answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11, or email vergecast@theverge.com!) about which TV you should buy in 2025. It's a complicated question, but there are answers.
Further reading:
From CNN: The secret military technology inside the household vacuum robot
iRobot announces eight new robot vacuums
iRobot tells investors its future is in doubt
Will iRobot’s reinvention of the Roomba be at the expense of its history of innovation?
Amazon wants to map your home, so it bought iRobot
The death of the Amazon deal could mean goodbye iRobot
iRobot’s founder is working on a new kind of home robot
Michael Tamblyn's website
Kobo announces its first color e-readers
The best ereader to buy right now
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Trump's confusing crusade against Big Tech
Fri, 21 Mar 2025
Starlink is in the White House, Siri is still bad, Pebble is back, up is down, everything is chaos. In this episode, Nilay and David start the show by running through some big gadget news, from a Siri-related shakeup at Apple to the new Google Pixel 9A. After that, The Verge's Lauren Feiner talks us through some of the latest in tech regulation: Trump's illegal firings at the FTC, the confusing state of the TikTok ban, OpenAI and Google arguing their case for free-for-all AI, and more. Finally, in the lightning round, Nilay and David talk about the latest Tesla recall, the hugely popular book about Meta, some exciting ActivityPub news, and Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos gently zinging Apple TV Plus.
Further reading:
From Bloomberg: Apple Shuffles AI Executive Ranks in Bid to Turn Around Siri
The first new Pebble smartwatches are coming later this year
Europe is trying to get non-Apple smartwatches to work better with iPhones
Google’s Pixel 9A gets a bigger screen and beefier water resistance
Google briefly delays Pixel 9A release to investigate ‘component quality issue’
Huawei’s new flip phone is weirdly wide
Nvidia says ‘the age of generalist robotics is here’
Nvidia’s cute ‘Digits’ AI desktop is coming this summer with a new name and a big brother
Nvidia announces Blackwell Ultra GB300 and Vera Rubin, its next AI ‘superchips’
Musk’s Starlink gets deployed at the White House
Federal rural broadband program loses head
Oracle is reportedly in the lead to save TikTok from US ban
A”high-level” deal to save TikTok can probably happen by the April 5th deadline, Vance says.
Democratic FTC commissioners say they were ‘illegally fired’ by Trump
Fired FTC commissioner warns of the ‘corrupting influence of billionaires’
Democratic FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks will resign this spring
WBEZ, 12 other public media stations under investigation
CTIA Announces Ajit Pai as New CEO and President
OpenAI and Google ask the government to let them train AI on content they don’t own
Hundreds of celebrities warn against letting OpenAI and Google ‘freely exploit’ Hollywood
Google Search charged with breaking EU antitrust rules
DHS’s airport panopticon is getting people deported and detained
Space science is under threat from the anti-DEI purge
DOGE stranded USAID workers with laptops full of sensitive data
They’re removing webpages about Black soldiers by adding ‘DEI’ to the URL.
‘Tesla Takedown’ protesters planning ‘biggest day of action’
Tesla recalls more than 46,000 Cybertrucks after trim starts falling off
From NYMag: Elon Musk Has Become Too Toxic for YouTube
‘Careless People’ debuts at the top of the NYT best sellers list.
Threads finally lets you set the following feed as default
Ghost connects its newsletters to the open web
Netflix’s CEO talks Apple TV, Amazon, and the NFL
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Switch 2, Steam Deck, and the next-gen console wars
Tue, 18 Mar 2025
Handheld gaming looks like the future — so why isn't it more popular? The Verge's Sean Hollister joins the show to talk about some new data about the handheld console market, what it says about the Steam Deck's dominance, whether the Switch 2 might change everything all over again, and why Sony and Microsoft don't appear to be in the game at all. After that, David reports on his trip to Florida to see TGL, the golf league aiming to bring the sport to new places and new fans, with the help of a truly enormous amount of technology. Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline about iPads — and more specifically, one particularly good reason to upgrade to the Air or the Pro.
Further reading:
Three years later, the Steam Deck has dominated handheld PC gaming shipments
Steam Deck OLED review: better, not faster
Lenovo Legion Go S review: feels good, plays bad
Asus ROG Ally X review: the best Windows gaming handheld by a mile
MSI Claw review: an embarrassment
A night at TGL, the would-be future of golf
From ESPN: Inside the making of Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy's TGL
From Wired: Robotic Putting Greens. Mixed Reality. Loud Spectators. This Is Golf?!
Apple iPad Air 2025 review: what the M3 upgrade really gets you
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The fake promise of better Siri
Fri, 14 Mar 2025
Big tech companies are forever making promises about the future. And you might (or might not) be surprised how often they don't come true. On this episode, Nilay and David start by discussing the good and bad of Apple's new iPads and Macs, before diving into the supposedly AI-powered, all-powerful Siri that is delayed indefinitely. Maybe this whole "AI will fix everything" plan wasn't such a good one. After that, The Verge's Andy Hawkins joins to discuss what's going on with Tesla: why sales are down, how the perception of the company has shifted as Elon Musk's job description has changed, and how it happened that President Trump did a Tesla sales pitch on the White House lawn. Everything's computer, you know? Finally, in the lighting round, the hosts discuss Brendan Carr's ongoing shenanigans, Jay Graber's sartorial burns, the future of Pokemon Go, and much more.
Further reading:
Apple is reportedly planning a design overhaul for iOS, iPadOS, and macOS
Apple’s plans for a smart display suffer a Siri-related setback
Apple adds Siri disclaimer to iPhone 16 pages.
Apple pulled its iPhone 16 ad showing off the good Siri.
‘HomePad’ delayed to post-WWDC to ensure iOS 19 design consistency
All this bad AI is wrecking a whole generation of gadgets
Apple MacBook Air M4 review: a little more for a little less
Apple Mac Studio (M3 Ultra) first look: a weekend with an $8,000 powerhouse
Apple iPad Air 2025 review: what the M3 upgrade really gets you
Is Tesla cooked?
Trump says he’ll label attacks on Tesla locations as domestic terrorism
The Tesla protests are getting bigger — and rowdier
Trump hosts a Tesla ad at the White House.
Everything's computer
Tesla protests continue to escalate.
Sonos has canceled its streaming video player
Home Assistant makes it official.
FCC chair asks if YouTube TV ‘discriminates against faith-based programming’
Brendan Carr on X:
FCC chairman asks the public to list every regulation he should remove
A Trump official has been moonlighting as a fashion influencer
Pokémon Go developer Niantic to sell gaming business to Saudi group
TikTok’s mood music will tell teens to ‘wind down’ after 10PM
Bluesky CEO Jay Graber has a message for Zuck.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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China has some big ideas about smartphones
Tue, 11 Mar 2025
In this episode, what's old is new again, and what's new is... AI again. The Verge's Allison Johnson and Dominic Preston join David to discuss their experience at Mobile World Congress 2025, where they saw the latest devices from Xiaomi, Samsung, Realme, and others — and found themselves confronted with some big, surprising new ideas about how our smartphones should look and work. After that, Kevin Rose and Justin Mezzell talk about the process of bringing Digg back, and how AI can improve the way social networks operate. Digg got a lot of things right two decades ago, and plans to do it all over again now. Finally, we answer a question about printers from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com!), with some help from Framework CEO Nirav Patel.
Further reading:
MWC 2025 was all about the odds and ends
What if your phone’s camera was much, much bigger?
You spin me right round, baby, right round.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra review: ugly phone, beautiful camera
Digg Reboot
How Digg helped invent the social internet
Digg is coming back, with founder Kevin Rose and Reddit’s Alexis Ohanian
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Apple's chip bumps, big and small
Fri, 07 Mar 2025
Apple's new gadgets this week were pretty minor updates, so of course we talk about them for a long time. Nilay and David are joined by The Verge's Jake Kastrenakes, and the three hosts discuss the latest iPad, iPad Air, MacBook Air, and Mac Studio. All three have... a lot of thoughts. After that, they run through some more tech news, including the Digg reboot, the end of Skype, VW's cheap new EV, and more. Finally, in the lightning round, they talk about the latest from DOGE and the Trump administration, Brendan Carr's latest assaults on free speech, and a smartphone that is mostly (but not entirely) a camera.
Further reading:
Apple iPad Air 2025: launch, price, and specs
Apple refreshes the iPad but doesn’t add Apple Intelligence
Apple announces MacBook Air with M4 chip and a price cut
Our first look at Apple’s sky blue MacBook Air
Apple launches new Mac Studios with M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips
Behold the maxed out Mac Studio.
Digg is coming back, with founder Kevin Rose and Reddit’s Alexis Ohanian
Discord is reportedly exploring an IPO.
Nothing’s Phone 3A and 3A Pro use AI to organize all your stuff
The Volkswagen ID. EVERY1 is an affordable EV for the masses
Volkswagen’s cheapest EV ever is the first to use Rivian software
Microsoft is shutting down Skype in favor of Teams
The Verge remembers Skype
Big Tech is now slightly less silent on Trump’s tariffs
Trump imposes tariffs on Mexico, Canada, and China
Car prices expected to increase by as much as $12,000 thanks to Trump’s tariffs
Best Buy and Target CEOs say prices are about to go up because of tariffs
What’s an import?
Trump to Cabinet: Musk has no authority to fire workers
FAA staff reportedly ordered to find funding for deal with Musk’s Starlink
Trump’s USCIS wants to review all prospective citizens’ social media accounts
Senate votes to strip the CFPB of its power to regulate X
MWC: FCC chair says U.S. will defend interests of its tech giants
FCC’s Carr defends broadcast probes, slams social media ‘threat’
A camera for your cameraphone: Sony Cyber-shot QX10 and QX100 review
Xiaomi 15 Ultra is a small update with a big periscope lens
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The James Bond Cinematic Universe
Tue, 04 Mar 2025
On this episode, we're diving deep into new ideas about old things. First, Framework CEO Nirav Patel joins David and The Verge's Sean Hollister to talk about Framework's new Laptop 12 and Desktop, plus the company's plan to bring its upgradeable, repairable ethos to other gadgets. After that, Daring Fireball's John Gruber joins the show to talk about the future of James Bond, now that Amazon has complete creative control over the 007 franchise. Do we want to live in the James Bond Cinematic Universe? Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline about using smart glasses to replace your computer monitor.
Further reading:
Framework wants to fix the budget laptop with its first touchscreen machine
Mint and pink: a closer look at the backflipping Framework Laptop 12
Framework’s first tiny Desktop beautifully straddles the line between cute and badass
Framework Desktop hands-on: a possible new direction for gaming desktops
‘We’re nowhere near done with Framework Laptop 16’ says Framework CEO
Amazon now has creative control over the James Bond franchise
Amazon buys MGM for $8.45 billion
From David Smith: The Talk Show Bond Anthology
From Daring Fireball: Amazon MGM Studios Takes Creative Control Over James Bond Franchise
Xreal’s new glasses are a surprisingly good TV for your face
The smart glasses era is here — I got a first look
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The high stakes for AI Alexa
Fri, 28 Feb 2025
AI will fix everything, right? In this episode, friend of The Verge (and Waveform co-host) David Imel joins Nilay and David to talk all about Alexa Plus, and the AI-powered voice assistant Amazon thinks can do everything from turn on your lights to order your friend an Uber. The hosts also talk about the other gadgets of the week, from the wild new Sigma BF camera to the boring iPhone 16E. Finally, in the lightning round, they talk about TikTok becoming YouTube and YouTube becoming TikTok and Instagram becoming YouTube and TikTok, plus the latest in Brendan Carr being a dummy and what's coming next from Automattic, DOGE, and everything.
Further reading:
Amazon Alexa Plus Event 2025: live updates and product announcements
Amazon announces AI upgrade for Alexa
Amazon’s Alexa Plus’ AI upgrades cost $19.99, but it’s free with Prime
Amazon is launching Alexa.com and new app for Alexa Plus
Alexa engagement continues to grow.
Alexa Plus leaves behind Amazon’s earliest Echo devices
Sigma’s BF is a minimalist full-frame camera with no memory card slot
iPhone 16E review: Eh, it’s alright
Framework’s first tiny Desktop beautifully straddles the line between cute and badass
More than 1 billion people are now watching podcasts on YouTube every month
Instagram’s Reels may get its own app
From TechCrunch: In challenge to YouTube, TikTok revamps its desktop platform
Someone flooded HUD HQ TVs with an AI-generated video of Trump and Musk.
Bluesky banned this video
Elon Musk claims federal employees have 48 hours to explain recent work or resign
DOGE asks federal workers to justify their recent work or resign.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk threaten to ‘semi-fire’ workers who don’t answer email
Amy Gleason officially named as DOGE administrator
Apple responds to tariff threat with a $500 billion US investment plan
Trump shed some light on his meeting with Tim Cook.
Starlink poised to take over $2.4 billion contract to overhaul air traffic control communication
FCC to brief lawmakers on George Soros investigation in closed-door meeting
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr Probes iHeartMedia Over How it Pays Musicians
FCC Chair Brendan Carr taking first steps in eroding key legal protection enjoyed by Big Tech
Automattic combines its Beeper and Texts.com messaging services
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We can’t quit electric cars — or robotaxis
Tue, 25 Feb 2025
Robotaxis: in. EVs: Out? The Verge's Andy Hawkins joins the show to talk about the goings-on in the transportation industry, including the reasons car makers are slowing down on EV production (but not giving up entirely) and why suddenly everyone's back in on robotaxis. Then, The Social Web Foundation's Evan Prodromou tells us what's new with the fediverse. We talk about Bluesky, Threads, Mastodon, and the increasingly ambitious plans for the ActivityPub protocol. Finally, we talk through some feedback on last week's episode about the pricing of the iPhone 16E, and how the way you buy your phone changes the way you feel about its price.
Further reading:
EV truck maker Nikola goes bust
Senate Republicans introduce bills to make EVs more expensive
Volkswagen claims it’s actually making that $20,000 EV and will show it next month
Ford lost $5 billion on EVs in 2024, teases new models
Lyft eyes robotaxi launch in 2026
Uber to Austin: get ready for Waymo
The fediverse, explained: Mastodon, Threads, and the open future of social networking
Flipboard’s Surf app is a feed reader for the fediverse
Tumblr’s fediverse integration might finally happen soon.
The Social Web Foundation
Apple launches the iPhone 16E
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The ups and downs of the iPhone 16E
Fri, 21 Feb 2025
Lots of gadget news this week! David, Jake Kastrenakes, and Allison Johnson start by talking about the iPhone 16E, which is both the cheapest compelling iPhone in a long time and a deeply odd addition to Apple's phone lineup. They also discuss the end of the Humane AI Pin, the latest from the Rabbit R1, and whether AI gadgets are even going to be a thing. After that, it's time for the lightning round: David and Jake talk about Amazon Chime, Mira Murati's new startup, and the future of James Bond. Then, in a special DOGE lightning round, Lauren Feiner joins the show to discuss everything happening with Trump, Musk, DOGE, and the US government. Because there's a lot of it.
Further reading:
Apple launches the iPhone 16E
8 important things to know about the iPhone 16E
The iPhone is done with home buttons — here’s why I’ll miss it
Verge staffers react to the iPhone 16E: what we love and don’t love
Apple no longer sells new iPhones with Lightning ports
How the new iPhone 16E compares to the rest of Apple’s iPhone 16 lineup
Apple’s first in-house iPhone modem is the C1
Oppo Find N5 review: the final evolution of foldables
The world’s thinnest foldable phone doesn’t come cheap
Humane is shutting down the AI Pin and selling its remnants to HP
The Humane AI Pin never had a chance
Rabbit shows off the AI agent it should have launched with
Amazon’s revamped Alexa might launch over a month after its announcement event
Microsoft announces quantum computing breakthrough with Majorana 1 chip
A death knell for Chime
Mira Murati launches rival to OpenAI called Thinking Machines Lab
The New York Times adopts AI tools in the newsroom
Amazon now has creative control over the James Bond franchise
Spotify’s HiFi streaming could finally arrive this year
Treasury inspector general will investigate DOGE payments access | The Verge
Trump threatens 25 percent ‘and higher’ tariff on chips.
Acer is the first to raise laptop prices because of Trump
Trump issues an executive order claiming more oversight of independent agencies like the FTC and FCC.
Trump administration cancels approval for NYC congestion pricing.
DOGE’s alleged cost-cutting achievements included a few extra zeroes.
A SpaceX team is being brought in to overhaul FAA’s air traffic control system
Trump admin pulls hundreds of videos from CFPB’s YouTube channel
DOGE can keep accessing government data for now, judge rules
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Can Meta still make the metaverse?
Tue, 18 Feb 2025
This episode is all about companies in flux. First, we chat with The Verge's Alex Heath about all things Meta — whether the company is still serious about the metaverse, why its AI plans seem to be going so well, what "OG Facebook" really means, and what headsets to expect this year. After that, The Verge's Chris Welch takes us through the last year at Sonos, from the disastrous app launch to the pretty good headphones that were totally derailed by the disastrous app launch. Can the company get it together in order to launch its next big swing, a set-top box codenamed Pinewood? Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline all about business cards. Because, yes, it's 2025, but sometimes you still need a place to put a business card.
Further reading:
Mark Zuckerberg tells Meta employees to ‘buckle up’ in internal meeting
Meta says this is the make or break year for the metaverse
Meta’s Ray-Bans smart glasses sold more than 1 million units last year
Meta’s AR / VR hardware roadmap through 2027
Meta CTO says the company is working to ‘catch’ leakers
Zuck wants to bring the “OG Facebook” back.
The Sonos app fiasco: how a great audio brand nearly ruined its reputation
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence steps down after disastrous app launch
Sonos’ interim CEO hits all the right notes in first letter to employees
Sonos Arc Ultra review: don’t call it a comeback (yet)
Sonos Ace review: was it worth it? | The Verge
After a bruising year, Sonos readies its next big thing: a streaming box
Adobe Scan
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Elon Musk: agent of chaos
Fri, 14 Feb 2025
On today's episode, once again, it's OpenAI and DOGE. And some other things! Nilay and David start the show by talking about Elon Musk's surprise bid to buy the nonprofit arm of OpenAI, along with the company's plans for new models and new rules for those models. After that, The Verge's Lauren Feiner joins to catch us up on what's happening with DOGE, how Musk and co. are making boring government information into something deeply fascinating and deeply confusing, and what it's like to work for the government now. Finally, in the lightning round, we talk about rumors of a new Apple Studio Display and iPhone SE, the new Powerbeats 2 Pro, Brendan Carr still being a dummy, and some surprising streaming moves from Apple and YouTube.
Further reading:
Elon Musk just offered to buy OpenAI for $97.4 billion
OpenAI apparently hasn’t actually received Elon Musk’s acquisition offer.
Altman feels bad for Elon
OpenAI lays out plans for GPT-5
OpenAI is reportedly getting closer to launching its in-house chip
OpenAI is rethinking how AI models handle controversial topics
Scarlett Johansson calls for anti deepfake laws after AI video goes viral
Thomson Reuters wins an early court battle over AI, copyright, and fair use
AI chatbots are distorting news stories, BBC finds
Waste.gov locks down after people discover it’s a WordPress template
https://doge.gov/ exists
Federal workers say they increasingly distrust platforms like Facebook
The Trump administration restores federal webpages after court order
Trump administration illegally allowed DOGE to access workers’ data, lawsuit alleges
State Dept.’s plan to buy $400 million worth of armored Teslas hastily changed to ‘armored EVs’
Constitutional crisis intensifies.
Google Maps now shows the ‘Gulf of America’
Apple Maps now shows the Gulf of America
Bing jumps on the Gulf of America bandwagon.
Trump wants news outlets to get on board with “Gulf of America” — or else. Will they?
Apple’s next Studio Display could get a much-needed Mini LED upgrade
Tim Cook teases a new Apple launch next week, and it’s probably the iPhone SE
FCC to investigate Comcast for having DEI programs
The FCC is a weapon in Trump’s war on free speech
Trump’s MAGA Media Enforcer Is Having ‘the Time of His Life’
FCC chairman Brendan Carr has vowed to target all of Donald Trump's enemies.
Jeep’s Wrangler-like Recon EV is ready to launch this year
Jeep warranty ads in the infotainment
Apple TV Plus is finally coming to Android
YouTube is now even bigger on TVs than phones
Powerbeats Pro 2 review: the workout buds to beat
Samsung Galaxy S25 and S25 Plus review: incredibly iterative
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Veken 55 Inch Large Electric Standing Desk
Elevate your workspace with this height-adjustable electric standing desk. Features include memory presets and cable management.
AI and politics, politics and AI. That's the story of 2025. On this episode, The Verge's Kylie Robison joins the show to talk about ChatGPT's big new features, Operator and deep research, both of which promise to make the chatbot more useful and more autonomous. To access either one costs $200 a month — is it worth it? After that, The Verge's Liz Lopatto catches us up on the latest from Elon Musk and Doge, including why Musk is doing this thing, this way. Liz also makes the case that this isn't going to slow down anytime soon. Finally, Nilay Patel helps us answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline, and tells us how he felt about the Super Bowl's 4K stream.
Further reading:
OpenAI’s new Operator AI agent can do things on the web for you
ChatGPT’s agent can now do deep research for you
I tested ChatGPT’s deep research with the most misunderstood law on the internet
Elon Musk’s rapid unscheduled disassembly of the US government
DOGE wreaked havoc on the government in just one week
Federal judge blocks DOGE from accessing sensitive Treasury records
How Elon Musk’s Department of Energy access could pose a nuclear threat
What we know about President Elon’s government takeover
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Elon Musk's computer coup
Fri, 07 Feb 2025
Nilay, David, and Richard Lawler take on a big week in confusing news stories. First, they talk through the latest from Elon Musk's DOGE, which is running rampant through government computer systems with little pushback. Then they explain the latest on the US government's tariff strategy, and the mass confusion it's causing across tech. Then they pivot away from politics and talk about streaming: the Super Bowl coming to Tubi, the deeply confusing forthcoming Fox streaming service, whatever Comcast is doing this year, and more. Finally, in the lightning round, they talk about Sonos's streaming box, Brendan Carr's latest assaults on free speech, OpenAI's "new" logo, and more.
Further reading:
DC is just waking up to Elon Musk’s takeover
Elon Musk is staging a takeover of the federal budget
Workers are reeling from chaos at federal agencies
Can anyone stop President Musk?
“For all practical purposes, I’d call that a coup.”
Trump imposes sweeping tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China
Canada will retaliate against Trump with tariffs on US goods
Trump agrees to a one-month pause on Mexico, Canada tariffs
Qwertykeys halts keyboard shipments to US over tariff costs and confusion
Shein and Temu depend on a 100-year-old tariff loophole that Trump wants to close
Your packages are about to get slower and more expensive
USPS backtracks, will accept parcels from China after all
China tariffs may already be hiking up import fees
China opens Google antitrust probe in retaliation to tariffs
Fox plans to launch a streaming service by the end of 2025
Super Bowl LIX will stream for free on Tubi
Comcast is adding Dolby Atmos to its ‘4K’ Super Bowl broadcast this year
Warner Bros. is streaming full movies for free on YouTube
Disney teases ESPN’s expansive sports streaming future
Disney’s streaming business posts another profit.
CBS is preparing to give Harris interview materials to the FCC.
FCC launches probe into Soros-backed radio station that revealed live locations of undercover ICE agents
After a bruising year, Sonos readies its next big thing: a streaming box
Sonos lays off 200 employees as its struggles continue
Google has ‘very good ideas’ for native ads in Gemini
ChatGPT’s agent can now do deep research for you
Here’s OpenAI’s new logo
Chairs Are Like Facebook
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Samsung’s S25 Ultra and the end of the flagship phone
Tue, 04 Feb 2025
Today on the show, it’s all about the future of phones… and your data. The Verge’s Allison Johnson joins the show to talk about the new Samsung Galaxy S25, what’s new in this high-end phone, and what it means for all the other smartphones coming this year. After that, Cooper Quintin, a senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, talks us through how to think about the privacy implications of RedNote, TikTok, DeepSeek, and all the other tech that puts us in contact with China. Finally, we enlist The Verge’s Jennifer Pattison Tuohy to help us answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline all about the Meta Portal. Remember the Meta Portal?? If you’re missing yours, we have some ideas.
Further reading:
The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra isn’t so ‘ultra’ anymore
Samsung Galaxy S25 and S25 Plus hands-on: more of the same
Samsung Galaxy S25 vs. S25 Plus vs. S25 Ultra: specs comparison
Trump signs order refusing to enforce TikTok ban for 75 days
TikTok’s service providers still risk billions in penalties for bringing it back online
TikTok is still on shaky ground in the US
Chinese social media app RedNote tops App Store chart ahead of TikTok ban
As Americans flock to RedNote, privacy advocates warn about surveillance
Will RedNote get banned in the US?
RedNote: what it’s like using the Chinese app TikTokers are flocking to
Why everyone is freaking out about DeepSeek
DeepSeek’s top-ranked AI app is restricting sign-ups due to ‘malicious attacks’
US Navy jumps the DeepSeek ship.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
Facebook’s new Portal Go is great for video calls, but not much else
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How DeepSeek crashed the AI party
Fri, 31 Jan 2025
Nilay and David dig into the week's biggest story: the new Intel-powered Surface Pro. Kidding! They talk about DeepSeek, the out-of-nowhere AI company that sent both Silicon Valley and the stock market into uproar this week. Then, after the hosts debate what the real killer app for AI is — and whether we've even found one yet — we follow up on our question from last week about how people are actually using AI. We got so many good answers, and we talk through what to make of them all. Finally, in the lightning round, we talk about Brendan Carr being a dummy, the return of the Pebble, the continued rise of Bluesky and Threads, and Meta's $25 million check to Trump.
Further reading:
Why everyone is freaking out about DeepSeek
DeepSeek says its newest AI model, Janus-Pro can outperform Stable Diffusion and DALL-E 3.
Microsoft makes DeepSeek’s R1 model available on Azure AI and GitHub
OpenAI has evidence that its models helped train China’s DeepSeek
China’s DeepSeek AI is hitting Nvidia where it hurts
DeepSeek’s AI app is restricting sign-ups due to ‘malicious attacks’
US Navy jumps the DeepSeek ship.
DeepSeek wakes up Trump.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman on DeepSeek R1: “an impressive model.”
Mark Zuckerberg tells Meta investors to not worry about DeepSeek
The Pebble smartwatch is making a comeback, with some help from Google
Oracle and Microsoft are reportedly in talks to take over TikTok
FCC chair says landlords can force bulk internet service on residents
From NYT: F.C.C. Chair Orders Investigation Into NPR and PBS Sponsorships
Meta agrees to pay $25 million to settle Trump account suspension suit
Zuckerberg wants to Make Facebook Great Again
Zuck wants to bring the “OG Facebook” back.
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A lazy person’s guide to getting in shape
Tue, 28 Jan 2025
The Verge’s Victoria Song joins the show to talk about the most popular and most-bailed-on New Year’s Resolution of all: getting in shape. She tells us about the apps that help you work out more without being rude about it, the data you really need to care about in your fitness tracker, and much more. After that, we talk to Anna Valtonen, one of the curators and researchers behind the new Nokia Design Archive. She tells us about the concepts, presentations, and overall culture that made Nokia such an important company in the history of phones. Finally, we answer another question on the Vergecast Hotline about how audio works on your phone. It’s all still too complicated.
Further reading:
Ladder
Fantasy Hike
Stompers
Runkeeper
5K Runner
Our interview with Adrian Hon about Zombies, Run
The Nokia Design Archive
Nokia’s “Morph” concept
The Nokia Communicator
The Nokia Moonraker smartwatch
From Apple: Share audio with AirPods and Beats headphones from iPhone or iPad
Also from Apple: Play audio through multiple devices at once in Audio MIDI Setup on Mac
From Samsung: Play music on two Bluetooth devices from your Galaxy phone
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Samsung's thin, big, boring AI phones
Fri, 24 Jan 2025
Nilay, David, and The Verge's Allison Johnson run down all the biggest news from the latest Samsung Unpacked. The S25 Edge had everyone excited, but the other new Galaxy S25 models feel a little familiar. Then, The Verge's Lauren Feiner updates us on the many goings-on in the first days of the new Trump administration, from the TikTok ban delay to the executive orders on citizenship and AI. Finally, in the lightning round, David and Nilay talk about Netflix's price increase, smart-home standards, and more.
Further reading:
This is the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge
Samsung Galaxy S25 and S25 Plus hands-on: more of the same
Samsung Galaxy S25 vs. S25 Plus vs. S25 Ultra: specs comparison
Here’s what Samsung’s first Android XR headset looks like in person
Samsung and Google are developing AR glasses together
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra stylus: back to boring basics
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra hands-on: smoothing out sharp edges
Samsung claims its new Galaxy S25 Ultra glass can survive head-high drops on concrete
Google Gemini now works across multiple apps in a single prompt
The Stargate Project is a $500 million AI data center plan for OpenAI
The United States Digital Service is now DOGE — here’s what it was responsible for.
Vivek Ramaswamy steps down from DOGE
Trump signs order refusing to enforce TikTok ban for 75 days
Trump says he’s open to Musk or Ellison buying TikTok
TikTok’s service providers still risk billions in penalties for bringing it back online
Bluesky and X launch new video feeds amid TikTok uncertainties
Instagram announces a blatant CapCut clone
Apple says it’s following the law by removing TikTok from the App Store
Sen. Tom Cotton warns TikTok’s service providers of “ruinous liability” for hosting the app.
Two lawmakers introduce a bill to repeal the TikTok ban.
Trump is absolutely going to make ByteDance sell TikTok or shut down again.
Netflix is raising prices again
YouTube Premium gets more experimental features that can now be tested all at once
Here’s the tech that could turn millions of Zigbee light bulbs into motion sensors with a single update
Samsung is bringing ambient sensing to SmartThings
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How the future of sports streaming died
Tue, 21 Jan 2025
First in this episode, a quick update on the TikTok ban (which didn't turn out to be much of a ban at all.) Then, Sportico's Jacob Feldman joins the show to talk about Venu, the much-hyped streaming service that planned to bring all sports into a single platform — and never even managed to launch. After that, The Verge's Kevin Nguyen tells us how to read more books this year, and how to turn all your aimless scrolling time into more productive reading time. Finally, we answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline about audio sources on your phone, and why you can't listen to a thousand things at once.
Further reading:
TikTok ban: all the news on the app’s shutdown and return in the US
TikTok is back, but where are Marvel Snap, CapCut, and Lemon8?
Trump touts his plan to save TikTok during his victory rally
TikTok isn’t back in the App Store yet
Bluesky and X launch new video feeds amid TikTok uncertainties
The new ‘Hulu for Sports’ streaming service has a name: Venu Sports
Venu Sports shuts down before it ever launches
From Sportico: YouTube TV vs. Fubo Sports Bundle Could Be Next Streaming Fight
The Boox Palma is an amazing gadget I didn’t even know I wanted
From GQ: How to Read a Whole Damn Book Every Week
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Nintendo's Switch 2 is here — sort of
Fri, 17 Jan 2025
David Pierce and Richard Lawler are joined by The Verge's Ash Parrish and Andrew Webster to talk about the Nintendo Switch 2 launch — all the things we know, and all the things we don't. (There's a lot of both.) Then The Verge's Adi Robertson joins to talk about the latest machinations in the potential TikTok ban, plus a Supreme Court hearing about adult content that might just be about the future of the internet. Finally, in the lightning round, David and Richard talk about Patrick Spence leaving Sonos, the Blue Origin launch, Drake's latest beef with Kendrick Lamar, and more.
Further reading:
Nintendo Switch 2 announcement: all the news on the next console
The Nintendo Switch 2 has officially been announced
Everything we know about the Switch 2’s Joy-Con controllers
You’ll be able to try out the Switch 2 starting in April
Nintendo announces Switch 2 Direct for April
The Nintendo Switch 2 supports original Switch cartridges
Nintendo teases a new Mario Kart for the Switch 2
The Switch 2 is boring — and that’s exactly what Nintendo needs
The Switch 2’s bigger screen is just what I wanted
TikTok reportedly plans ‘immediate’ Sunday shutdown in the US if it’s banned
TikTok ban: Sen. Markey tries to give a 270 day extension
TikTok says it’s planning for ‘various scenarios’ ahead of possible US ban
Elon Musk is reportedly trying to save TikTok
Donald Trump is reportedly considering an executive order to delay the TikTok ban.
Duolingo is the real winner in the TikTok ban.
RedNote: what it’s like using the Chinese app TikTokers are flocking to
What is RedNote? The Chinese app gaining popularity as TikTok ban approaches
The Supreme Court could decide the fate of Pornhub — and the rest of the internet
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence steps down after disastrous app launch
Sonos’ interim CEO hits all the right notes in first letter to employees
Sonos’ chief product officer is leaving the company
The iPhone Air could be coming later this year
Bezos’ Blue Origin successfully launches SpaceX rival
Super Bowl LIX will stream for free on Tubi
Drake sues his label, UMG, saying ‘Not Like Us’ is defamatory
Drake axes ‘Not Like Us’ diss track petition against UMG and Spotify
FTC sues John Deere for ‘unfairly’ raising repair costs on farm equipment
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The TikTok ban, and what comes next
Tue, 14 Jan 2025
In five days, TikTok as we know it could be finished in the US. The Verge's Lauren Feiner joins the show to discuss last week's Supreme Court arguments over the ban, why things don't look good for TikTok, and what's likely to happen in the next five days. After that, Kickstarter CEO Everette Taylor talks about the state of the gadget inventor, and what it means to be part of the creator economy in 2025. Finally, we answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline about magic-link logins, and why passwords remain such a disaster.
Further reading:
TikTok’s last stand: Supreme Court weighs ban as deadline looms
TikTok still seems headed for a ban after its Supreme Court arguments
What it will take for TikTok to survive in the US
Kickstarter is adding the ability to collect money indefinitely
Kickstarter’s CEO on why he doesn’t think the company will only do crowdfunding forever
Passkeys might really kill passwords
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CES 2025: the biggest stories and best gadgets (Live)
Fri, 10 Jan 2025
In this special live episode of The Vergecast, from the Brooklyn Bowl in Las Vegas, it's time to talk CES. Nilay and David run through some of the show's biggest stories, plus the Meta news that dominated the conversations all week in Vegas. Then Allison Johnson, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, and Victoria Song join the show to talk about all the newest, best, weirdest, and worst gadgets they've seen this year. AI is everywhere, everyone's making smart glasses, the smart home might be turning a corner, and we've seen it all this week.
Thanks to everyone who came out to the live show! And if you couldn't make it, stay tuned — this won't be the last time we all get to hang out.
Further reading:
Zuckerberg, inspired by Musk, ditches fact checking for Community Notes
Zuckerberg says he’s moving Meta moderators to Texas because California seems too ‘biased’
Meta’s fact-checking changes are just what Trump’s FCC head asked for
Meta is leaving its users to wade through hate and disinformation
Here are some of the horrible things that you can now say on Instagram and Facebook
Samsung announces The Frame Pro: could this be the perfect TV?
LG’s 2025 OLED TVs are its best yet — but they risk going overboard with AI
LG’s StanbyME sequel adds a carrying strap to the portable TV
Dell kills the XPS brand: Dell, Pro, Max / Premium, Plus, Base
Afeela has a price: 89,000, 102,000
TCL NxtPaper max ink mode
Roborock debuts a robot vacuum with a robotic arm at CES
This toaster-looking gadget boosts your phone’s battery in seconds
A SodaStream for your Hydro Flask!
Aqara launches three touchscreen smart home control panels at CES 2025
The Schlage Sense Pro smart lock is one of the first with hands-free unlocking using UWB
Bird Buddy’s new camera tracks plants and insects in your garden
Mirumi is a furry little companion bot that imitates a shy infant
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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A Vergecast holiday re-run marathon
Tue, 24 Dec 2024
Happy Holidays! The Vergecast is off this week, but we also know you might be doing a lot of traveling and / or avoiding of your family this time of year, so we figured we'd do something a little different. We compiled a bunch of our favorite Vergecast segments and moments from this year — a full six hours of them! — in case you need something to listen to. You may have heard them all before! They might all be new! Maybe it'll be a mix! This one's an easy skip if you're looking for one, but if you need some Verge in your ears this holiday season, we've got you covered. We'll be back for real in January, starting at CES. If you'll be in Vegas, come see us live on Wednesday, January 8th! https://voxmediaevents.com/vergecast And in the meantime, have a great holiday, and rock and roll.
Here are the segments we picked, in order, with timestamps (because we can't do chapters, we know, we hate it too):
The wild world of undersea cables — 00:04:32
Meet Tony Delivers — 00:42:19
The story of the Delta emulator — 00:56:29
Phones are the ultimate AI gadget — 01:37:12
The history and future of notebooks – 02:04:34
What is a photo? — 02:41:07
An existential gaming console crisis — 03:17:46
Inside the AI music lawsuits — 03:52:12
The history of podcasts — 04:40:59
Our Vision Pro score debate — 05:03:15
A road trip on the hydrogen highway — 05:35:13
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Vergecast Matter Holiday Spec-tacular
Fri, 20 Dec 2024
Happy holidays! Before we disappear into family time and catching up on our favorite shows, we have one more episode for you. And it's 90 minutes of deep nerdery about the smart home. Every year, we try to dig into one standard or spec that has impacted our lives this year, and we couldn't think of anything more potentially great and occasionally infuriating than Matter. Matter is supposed to be the protocol that makes the smart home work — so, uh, how's that going? The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins to discuss the state of the smart home, before we play a game to see how well we understand things. Then, Home Assistant creator Paulus Schoutsen tells us what it's like to try and make Matter work, and where we might be headed next year.
Further reading:
Matter: everything you need to know about the new smart home protocol
Matter’s plan to save the smart home
The Thread 1.4 spec is here, but it will be a while until we see any benefit
What is Thread and how will it help your smart home?
Every device that works with Matter (December 2024)
Home Assistant’s next era begins now
The Home Assistant Green is here to make the most powerful smart home platform more accessible
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Gemini, GTA, and the search for the next big thing
Tue, 17 Dec 2024
The Verge's Victoria Song and Kylie Robison join the show to talk about all of Google's recent AI and XR announcements, and the company's big and Gemini-powered vision for the future of computing. Then Chris Grant, the group publisher for Polygon and The Verge, explains why GTA VI and the Nintendo Switch 2 are so important to the future of gaming — plus a few predictions about how they'll turn out. Finally, The Verge's Helen Havlak answers a hotline question about how she plans her garden in Figma. Which is a real thing she really does.
Further reading:
The Vergecast at CES – come see us on January 8th!
Google launched Gemini 2.0, its new AI model for practically everything
Google’s AI enters its ‘agentic era’
I saw Google’s plan to put Android on your face
GTA VI: all the news on Rockstar’s next entry in the Grand Theft Auto series
Switch 2: all the news and rumors on Nintendo’s next console
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Tech in 2025: who's in and who's out
Sun, 15 Dec 2024
For the second episode in our two-part 2025 preview, Nilay and David are once again joined by Wall Street Journal columnist (and friend of The Verge) Joanna Stern to talk about what will, and won't, happen in tech next year. This time, David joins us after a quick jaunt to the end of next year, and relays a bunch of things that happened in tech in 2025. But some of them are lies. Joanna and Nilay have to decide which things really will happen next year, and which won't. As always, the hosts get points for good guesses and negative points for bad ones. And once we're all in late 2025, we'll declare a winner.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Searching for the first great AI app
Fri, 13 Dec 2024
Nilay, David, and The Verge's Richard Lawler talk about a big week in AI news. First, they go over all the latest on Google's Gemini 2.0 launch, and try to figure out whether Project Astra and Project Mariner will ever turn into products people use. They also discuss OpenAI's release (and un-release) of Sora, the new Reddit Answers tool, and what's new in iOS 18.2. Finally, in the lightning round, there's talk of YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Sonos, and Cruise. There also is and isn't talk of quantum computing. Because that's possible now.
Further reading:
Google’s AI enters its ‘agentic era’
Gemini 2.0: what’s new in Google’s new flagship AI model
Google’s AI-powered smart glasses are a little closer to being real
Google’s new Jules AI agent will help developers fix buggy code
Google is testing Gemini AI agents that help you in video games
Google built an AI tool that can do research for you
Android XR_Keyword
OpenAI has finally released Sora
iOS 18.2 is out now, adding ChatGPT integration and more Apple Intelligence tools
ChatGPT’s side-by-side ‘Canvas’ view is now available to everyone.
Reddit’s new AI search tool helps you find Reddit answers without Google
YouTube is still growing fast on TVs in the living room
Instagram will let creators test experimental reels on random people
It sure sounds like Trump would be okay with a TikTok sale
TikTok failed to save itself with the First Amendment
Sonos Arc Ultra review: don’t call it a comeback (yet)
Google reveals quantum computing chip with ‘breakthrough’ achievements
Amazon’s online car ‘dealership’ with Hyundai is now live
YouTube’s AI-powered dubbing is now available to many more creators
Searching for color at Pantone’s all-brown party
Adam Mosseri on introducing Trial Reels
From WSJ: iOS 18.2 Review: The AI Apple Promised Us
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Away Travel Duo: Carry-On Suitcase & Everywhere Bag Set – Jet Black
The ultimate business travel power couple. This set includes an airline-approved Carry-On with a TSA lock and patented compression system, plus the Everywhere Bag with a dedicated 16" laptop pocket and trolley sleeve to secure it to the suitcase. Look polished and stay organized on every corporate mission.
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The Vergecast Vergecast, part two
Tue, 10 Dec 2024
A week ago, The Verge launched a subscription. And you had questions! So we have answers. The Verge’s Helen Havlak and Nilay Patel join the show to talk about how we priced the subscription, why ad-free podcasts are hard to do, Apple News, what we do during ad breaks, and much more. And if we didn’t answer your question, let us know! Call the Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11, or email vergecast@theverge.com, with all your questions. Thanks to everyone who sent them in!
Further reading:
Nilay's post about The Verge subscription
Subscribe to The Verge
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Our hottest and coldest 2025 takes
Sun, 08 Dec 2024
Welcome to our two-part preview of the year to come! For the first installment, Nilay, David, and Wall Street Journal columnist Joanna Stern bring all the predictions for 2025 — their mildest, medium-est, and spiciest ideas about the year to come. Each host presents their take on TikTok bans, social platforms, smart homes, streaming services, and more, and the others get to decide whether they agree. Whoever gets the most right at the end of the year will win a big prize. (There's a points system for determining all that, but we'll figure that out later.)
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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AGI is coming and nobody cares
Fri, 06 Dec 2024
Nilay and David talk a bit about this week’s launch of the Verge subscription, plus what’s coming next. (There’s still time to send questions for next week! 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com.) Then they talk about the streaming news of the week, and the ways streaming services are continuing to act like cable companies. Then Kylie Robison joins to talk about the lowering stakes for AGI, shipmas at OpenAI, and more. Finally, in the lighting round, it’s crypto and browsers and Intel. And more crypto.
Further reading:
Here we go: The Verge now has a subscription
ESPN is coming to the Disney Plus app starting today
Max is testing always-on HBO channels
Max is finally about to start cracking down on password sharing.
Walmart bought Vizio
OpenAI’s 12 days of ‘shipmas’ include Sora and new reasoning model
Sam Altman says AGI will “matter much less” than people expect
Sam Altman on Elon Musk and OpenAI’s relationship with Microsoft.
ChatGPT’s search results for news are ‘unpredictable’ and frequently inaccurate
Stop using generative AI as a search engine
Misinformation expert admits ChatGPT added fake details to his anti-deepfake court filing
Bitcoin just hit $100,000
Dia is the The Browser Company’s AI-powered follow-up to Arc
Threads takes an important baby step toward true fediverse integration
Threads’ next update is a search feature that finds the post you’re looking for
Meta says it’s mistakenly removing too many posts
Intel’s CEO is out after only three years
What happened to Intel?
Trump picks two nominees who could decide the fate of Big Tech and crypto
Spotify Wrapped 2024 adds an AI podcast to recap your listening habits
Apple Music’s yearly recap is finally available in the app
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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A gadget lover's guide to the great outdoors
Tue, 03 Dec 2024
The Verge's Thomas Ricker joins the show with an update on his question to live the #vanlife. He shares stories about Starlink Mini, the new Peak Design backpack everyone loves, converting a Sprinter van to a mobile apartment, and more. Then, The Verge's Andru Marino takes us through his tests on a bunch of new creator- and social-friendly microphones, which plug into your phone and promise to make everything sound better. Finally, we answer a question about web browsers on the Vergecast Hotline.
(Don't forget to send us your questions about The Verge and The Vergecast for next week's episode! Call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com with all your most meta questions.)
Further reading:
Starlink Mini review: space internet goes ultraportable
Peak Design’s Outdoor Backpack is a more versatile everyday bag
Stoke Voltaics’ portable electric cookware review
This backpack solar generator can help you ignore nature
This little box provides on-demand power when off the grid
Living and working from an all-electric VW ID Buzz
DJI’s new wireless mics skip a few features to get smaller and lighter
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Our biggest stories and favorite things of 2024
Fri, 29 Nov 2024
2024 is almost over, somehow. So we gathered a bunch of our Verge colleagues and told them each to tell us three things from the year: the biggest story, their favorite new tech thing, and their favorite new non-tech thing. We got a collection of big stories, cool gadgets, great movies, and more good stuff from the year that was.
We're also planning a special episode for Tuesday, December 10th, all about The Verge and The Vergecast. So if you have questions about how we work, what we cover, why we talk about copyright law so much, or what Nilay is actually like to work with every day, tell us! Call 866-VERGE11, or email vergecast@theverge.com, and we'll answer as many as we can on the 10th. Thanks in advance!
Further reading:
Jay Peters:
Story of the year: Google is a monopoly
New thing of the year: Final Fantasy VII Rebirth
Non-tech thing of the year: XOXO Field Notes notebooks
Jake Kastrenakes:
Story of the year: All things AI
New thing of the year: The Wiim Ultra amp
Non-tech thing of the year: Chronoloy
Justine Calma
Story of the year: The US election, and the rise of nuclear power
New thing of the year: Nurse Unseen
Non-tech thing of the year: Sugarcane
Vjeran Pavic:
Story of the year: The Apple Vision Pro
New thing of the year: The Fujifilm X100VI and the Kino app
Non-tech thing of the year: Mountain Gazette
Kylie Robison:
Story of the year: Billionaire crybabies
New thing of the year: Stardew Valley
Non-tech thing of the year: Curated playlists
Barbara Krasnoff:
Story of the year: The US election
New thing of the year: The Elgato Stream Deck
Non-tech thing of the year: Googly eyes
Alex Heath:
Story of the year: The AI rat race
New thing of the year: Granola
Non-tech thing of the year: Shochu
Ash Parrish:
Story of the year: Grand Theft Auto VI and the Nintendo Switch 2, and more industry layoffs
New thing of the year: The Playstation Portal
Non-tech thing of the year: Bucephalus the puppy
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The government's plan to break up Google
Fri, 22 Nov 2024
The Verge's Lauren Feiner joins Nilay and David to talk about the US government's proposal in its search antitrust case against Google. They discuss the future of Chrome, what a white-label search engine might look like, and how a Trump administration might change the course of this case altogether. Then Nilay and David talk about the week in AI and gadget news, from the latest on Amazon's new Alexa to Google bailing on tablets all over again. Finally, in the lightning round, they discuss Comcast spinning off its cable channels and the latest in the Threads / Bluesky competition.
Further reading:
DOJ says Google must sell Chrome to crack open its search monopoly
Google responds to DOJ’s ‘extreme proposal.’
Google workers to DOJ: we need protections to make your breakup effective
Apple fights to keep DOJ antitrust suit from reaching trial
Amazon announces new Echo Show 21 and Echo Show 15 smart displays
Google may be about to reboot its laptop and tablet hardware again
Google reportedly cancels Pixel Tablet 2 and might quit the category — again
Sonos’ smart TV plans might have found an OS
Windows 365 Link is a $349 mini PC that streams Windows from the cloud
Comcast is spinning off its cable TV business
Trump names Brendan Carr as his FCC leader
Strava closes the gates to sharing fitness data with other apps
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
Threads’ custom feeds are already rolling out
Threads’ algorithm will focus more on the people you follow
Bose acquires premium audio brand McIntosh
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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If Netflix can't make live work, can anyone?
Tue, 19 Nov 2024
Richard Lawler joins the show to chat about the Tyson / Paul fight, and more importantly the fact that Netflix didn't seem to be able to keep up. As live sports — and TV in general — move toward streaming, are even the biggest names in tech ready for what's coming? After that, Roland Allen, the author of The Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper, tells us about the history of the notebook, and why we've been writing things down about our lives for centuries. Even in a digital world, Allen argues, you just can't beat the notebook. Finally, a question from the Vergecast Hotline sends producer Will Poor down a TikTok Shop rabbit hole.
Further reading:
Netflix served the Tyson vs. Paul fight to 60 million households
NFL fans worry Netflix’s bad Tyson vs. Paul stream means it can’t handle football
Netflix adds Beyoncé to live entertainment juggernaut
Netflix snagged global streaming rights for NFL Christmas Day games
Roland Allen’s website
The Notebook: a History of Thinking on Paper
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Making human music in an AI world
Sun, 17 Nov 2024
For the third episode in our series about the future of music, we talk with Ge Wang. Ge is a professor at Stanford, a co-founder of Smule, the conductor of Stanford’s laptop orchestra, and has been at the center of technology and artistry for most of his life. We talk about how humans can use AI without giving in to it, what it means to truly play with technology, and the value of art and creativity and friction when it feels like all those things are being taken away.
Further reading:
Ge Wang’s website
The future of computer music | Stanford University School of Engineering
Ge’s viral TED talk: The DIY orchestra of the future
From Wired: Behind the Scenes With the Stanford Laptop Orchestra
Ge Wang: Human Well-Being Should Be AI Creators’ Goal
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Bluesky's quest to be the next Twitter
Fri, 15 Nov 2024
Nilay and David talk about the future of social, in light of Bluesky's recent surge in growth. Threads is huge, Bluesky is ascendent, Mastodon is... around, but can any of them become the next Twitter? Is that even the goal? After that, Kylie Robison joins the show and the gang discusses Apple's smart home device (which is just an iPad), the AI scaling slowdown, and a new twist in the delivery wars. In the lightning round, it's all about disclosures, wireless carriers, and the sad end of Freevee.
Further reading:
Twitter’s succession: all the news about alternative social media platforms
One million people have joined Bluesky in the past week.
Bluesky adds 700,000 new users in a week
The Guardian is quitting X.
Remember the TikTok ban?
Apple’s rumored six-inch ‘AI wall tablet’ could control your smart home by March 2025
Apple is reportedly working on an Apple Home security camera
Anthropic co-founder Darius Amodei said we’ll have artificial general intelligence “in 2026 or 2027.”
Just Eat is selling Grubhub to Marc Lore’s Wonder for $650M
Boost Mobile says it’s a real wireless carrier now
Amazon is shutting down Freevee
Trump says Elon Musk will lead ‘DOGE’ office to cut ‘wasteful’ government spending
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Smart sleep is worth the cost
Tue, 12 Nov 2024
On today's show: sleep gadgets, AI DJs, and sneaky TVs. Victoria Song joins the show to talk about her experiences with the Eight Sleep mattress pad, the Oura Ring 4, and other sleep gadgets. Can you really measure your way to a better night of sleep? After that, Allison Johnson gives us her take on Spotify's AI DJ, and we wonder exactly how an AI tool is supposed to help us find and listen to music. Finally, Nilay Patel comes on to answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline about the Samsung Frame TVs — and how to figure out whether you need a TV at all.
Further reading:
Eight Sleep Pod 4 Ultra review: for sale, good night’s sleep, just $4,700
Ozlo Sleepbuds hands-on: resurrected and I’ve slept so good
Oura Ring 4 review: still on top — for now
Spotify’s AI is no match for a real DJ
Samsung’s Frame TV is finally getting the knockoffs it deserves
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Auto-Tune always and forever
Sun, 10 Nov 2024
For the second episode in our three-part miniseries about the future of music, Charlie Harding, a music journalist and co-host of the Switched on Pop podcast, joins the show to tell the story of Auto-Tune. He walks us through how a simple plugin became such a recognizable sound in music, why both artists and fans gravitated to the Auto-Tune sound, and why Auto-Tune has continued to grow even through backlash in the music business. Then we look ahead to AI, and try to figure out what — if any — lessons we might be able to learn about the sound and culture of the AI era to come.
Further reading:
Charlie Harding on X
Switched on Pop
From Pitchfork: How Auto-Tune Revolutionized the Sound of Popular Music
From Rick Beato: How Auto-Tune DESTROYED Popular Music
From Gabi Belle: The Problem with Autotune on TikTok
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The PS5 Pro made us sit closer to the screen
Fri, 08 Nov 2024
Nilay and David talk about the election, and how The Vergecast plans to cover and talk about the next four years of the Trump administration. But only for a minute. Then it's onto our reviews of the new Mac Mini and MacBook Pro, which reset Apple's desktop and laptop lineup in an excellent way. After that, Sean Hollister joins the show to discuss his review of the PlayStation 5 Pro, the news about backwards compatibility for the Nintendo Switch successor, and the state of Nintendo's fight against emulators. In the lightning round, we talk about really expensive domain names, oddly named smart home standards, and cloud gaming whales. Which apparently exist.
Further reading:
Donald Trump wins the 2024 presidential election
What does Trump’s election mean for EVs, Tesla, and Elon Musk?
All the Big Tech leaders congratulating Donald Trump
Google CEO says company should be ‘trusted source’ in US election
Another Trump presidency is literally toxic — his opponents are gearing up for battle
Here’s FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr sucking up to Donald Trump by threatening to take NBC off the air
Apple Mac Mini M4 review: a tiny wonder
Apple MacBook Pro 14 (2024) review: the Pro for everyone
Amazon says it’s fixing the Kindle Colorsoft’s yellow screen
Kindle Colorsoft owners complain of a yellow bar on the e-reader’s screen
PS5 Pro review: how close is your TV?
Nintendo’s next generation is off to a great start
Nintendo says the Switch successor will be compatible with Switch games
Why is Nintendo targeting this YouTuber?
Did OpenAI just spend more than $10 million on a URL?
The Matter smart home standard gains support for more devices, including heat pumps and solar panels
Nvidia to cap game streaming hours on GeForce Now instead of raising fees
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Alexa at 10: Amazon's assistant is a winner and a failure
Tue, 05 Nov 2024
November 6th marks 10 years to the day since Amazon surprise-launched a new, cylindrical device called the Echo. It introduced the world to smart speakers, and to the idea that you might be able to get stuff done just by shouting aloud in your living room. But a decade in, what has Alexa really accomplished? The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins the show to talk through the history of Alexa, Amazon's struggles to improve and extend its voice assistant, and the promise of a language model overhaul that might in theory make Alexa far more useful. There's a chance Alexa's second decade might be even more interesting than the first.
Further reading:
Amazon just surprised everyone with a crazy speaker that talks to you
Amazon Echo review: listen up
Alexa, where’s my Star Trek Computer?
Alexa, thank you for the music
The Alexa Skills revolution that wasn’t
The Amazon Echo graveyard
Amazon’s supercharged Alexa won’t arrive this year
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Your favorite musician's favorite TikTok show
Sun, 03 Nov 2024
For the first episode in our three-part miniseries on the future of music, we tell the story of Track Star, a music game show that has become a viral hit on TikTok and Instagram. Jack Coyne, the show's friendly host, tells us how Track Star came to be, why the format works so well, and why A-list celebrities like Olivia Rodrigo, Ed Sheeran, and Kamala Harris are all clamoring to be on the show. Coyne also tells us where Track Star might go next — and why the future of music content might look a lot like the past.
Further reading:
Track Star on TikTok
Jack Coyne on Instagram
The Olivia Rodrigo episode
The "Every Track Star Song" playlist
The Malcolm Todd episode
Public Opinion
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The AI garage door mystery
Fri, 01 Nov 2024
Nilay and David discuss a big week in AI news, including the new web search features in ChatGPT and the reporting that Meta is working on something very similar. They also briefly talk about this quarter's tech earnings, and what they say about the ways AI is really being used. Then, Wall Street Journal columnist Joanna Stern joins the show to talk about Apple Intelligence, Apple's week of Mac launches, and why Siri still can't open her garage. Finally, in the lightning round, the hosts talk about Netflix's gentle push into social features, Tony Fadell's AI thoughts, and our endorsement of Kamala Harris.
Further reading:
OpenAI’s search engine is now live in ChatGPT
Meta is reportedly working on its own AI-powered search engine, too
Microsoft’s gaming revenue keeps going up, even though hardware sales are down
Reddit is profitable for the first time ever, with nearly 100 million daily users
Snap Inc. - Financials - Quarterly Results
Apple’s Mac week: everything announced
Apple announces redesigned Mac Mini with M4 chip — and it’s so damn small
Watch Apple show off the M4 Mac Mini in its reveal video - The Verge
Apple’s new Magic Keyboard, Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad have USB-C
Apple put the Magic Mouse’s charging port on the bottom again
Apple updates the MacBook Pro with M4 Pro and M4 Max chips
Apple updates the iMac with new colors and an M4 chip
Apple’s first smart home display could pay homage to a classic iMac
Apple Intelligence is out
WSJ: Apple’s Craig Federighi Explains Apple Intelligence Delays, Siri’s Future and More
Netflix is making it easier to bookmark and share your favorite parts of a show
Tony Fadell calls out Sam Altman
Tim Walz and AOC are going to play Madden together on Twitch
The Verge’s guide to the 2024 presidential election
Tech leaders line up to flatter Trump’s ego
Jeff Bezos is no longer relentlessly focused on customer satisfaction
“You have a Washington Post problem.”
From The New York Times: Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk and the Billions of Ways to Influence an Election
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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Two possible futures for AI
Tue, 29 Oct 2024
Kylie Robison joins the show to talk about the recent dueling AI blog posts from OpenAI's Sam Altman and Anthropic's Dario Amodei. What do these CEOs think the future of AI looks like? Then, Will Poor tells us the story of ShakeAlert, an earthquake alert system that has huge potential and some surprising challenges. On The Vergecast Hotline, Allison Johnson joins Will to figure out whether the iPhone's new Camera Control is really as fast as advertised.
Further reading:
Sam Altman: The Intelligence Age
Dario Amodei: Machines of Loving Grace
Anthropic’s CEO thinks AI will lead to a utopia — he just needs a few billion dollars first
OpenAI plans Orion AI model release for December
ShakeAlert
If you live on the West Coast and you have an iPhone, here's how to turn on the "Local Awareness" feature that speeds up WEA messages:
Download the MyShake app on for iOS
or for Android
Ready.gov's earthquake advice:
About emergency and government alerts on iPhone
Apple iPhone 16 and 16 Plus review: all caught up
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The confusing state of Apple Intelligence
Fri, 25 Oct 2024
Nilay, David, and Richard Lawler talk about all of the coming Apple gadgets and software, from the new iPad Mini to the upcoming week of Mac announcements to the many flavors of iOS and Apple Intelligence heading to a device near you soon. Then they talk about the other news in AI, from Anthropic's new computer-using model to the growing set of lawsuits against AI companies. In the lightning round, they discuss the Boox Palma 2, T-Mobile's "lifetime" deals, and the battle over FTC's click-to-cancel rule.
Further reading:
Apple iPad Mini 2024 review: missing pieces
iOS 18.2 will let everyone set new default phone and messaging apps
Apple’s first iOS 18.2 beta adds more AI features and ChatGPT integration
Apple teases ‘week’ of Mac announcements starting Monday
Apple is preparing an M4 MacBook Air update for early next year
Tim Cook says he uses every Apple product every day — how does that work?
Tim Cook on Why Apple’s Huge Bets Will Pay Off
Anthropic’s latest AI update can use a computer on its own
Humane slashes the price of its AI Pin after weak sales
Apple is ‘concerned’ about AI turning real photos into ‘fantasy’
News Corp sues Perplexity for ripping off WSJ and New York Post
Kevin Bacon, Kate McKinnon, and other creatives warn of ‘unjust’ AI threat
Industry groups are suing the FTC to stop its click to cancel rule
The Boox Palma 2 has a faster processor and adds a fingerprint reader
Seniors are PISSED that T-Mobile won’t honor its “lifetime” price guarantee.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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AirPods are good for your (hearing) health
Tue, 22 Oct 2024
The Verge's Victoria Song joins the show to talk about her year of testing smart rings, and which of the many new options is the one you should buy. Then Chris Welch takes us through his testing of the new hearing health features for Apple's AirPods, including the surprisingly intense hearing test you can take right on your phone. Finally, Andrew Webster helps us answer a question on the Vergecast Hotline: why doesn't Apple buy Nintendo, and what would happen if it did?
Further reading:
We tested six smart rings, and there’s a clear winner
Oura Ring 4 review: still on top — for now
Apple’s AirPods Pro hearing health features are as good as they sound
Apple’s AirPods Pro 2 could forever change how people access hearing aids
Super Mario Run hands-on: like Mario, just simpler
Microsoft’s Phil Spencer says acquiring Nintendo would be ‘a career moment’
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The tech YouTuber who opened a coffee shop
Sun, 20 Oct 2024
For the last eight months, David Cogen has been living a double life. By day: a YouTuber and creator, the face of the TheUnlockr channel, reviewing phones and testing ebikes and explaining how food smokers really work. By night and morning and every single other available in-between moment: a coffee shop entrepreneur, working to get a Brooklyn spot called Coffee Check up and running. In this episode, the second in the two-part miniseries that we’re calling How To Make It In The Future, Cogen tells the story of how a YouTuber becomes a coffee shop owner — and how to bring those two things together without ruining them both.
Further reading:
TheUnlockr on YouTube
David’s Coffee Check announcement
Coffee Check’s website
Another fun YouTuber story: Me, Myself, and iJustine
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The future of the Kindle with Panos Panay
Fri, 18 Oct 2024
Nilay and David talk about the week in gadget news, after scoring their predictions on last week's Tesla event. (Spoiler alert: nobody did very well.) They talk about the new iPad Mini, the new Sonos Ace Ultra soundbar, and the new Analogue N64 emulator. Then Amazon's Panos Panay joins the show to discuss this week's big Kindle news, and where he thinks the future of e-readers is headed. Finally, Nilay and David do a lightning round, with a lot of Google org chart news and just a little bit of Trump news.
Further reading:
The Optimus robots at Tesla’s Cybercab event were humans in disguise
The Tesla Cybercab is a cool-looking prototype that needed to be much more than that
Tesla’s Robovan is the surprise of the night
Apple just announced a new, faster iPad Mini
AMD and Intel are teaming up to fend off ARM chips
Sonos announces ‘breakthrough’ Arc Ultra soundbar and Sub 4
Analogue’s 4K Nintendo 64 launches next year for $249
Amazon’s new Kindle family includes the first color Kindle
Amazon’s Kindle Colorsoft Signature Edition hands-on: color E Ink looks pretty good
Amazon Kindle Scribe 2024: a new design and AI tools for note takers
Amazon’s new Kindle and Kindle Paperwhite are faster and brighter
Amazon discontinues the last Kindle with physical buttons
Google is replacing the exec in charge of Search and ads
Here’s a bunch of bananas shit Trump said today about breaking up Google
Trump says Tim Cook called him to complain about the European Union
Anthropic’s CEO thinks AI will lead to a utopia — he just needs a few billion dollars first
The New York Times warns AI search engine Perplexity to stop using its content
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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They're called "Podcasts"
Tue, 15 Oct 2024
Before a podcast was a “podcast,” it was… well, it wasn’t really much of anything. It was in 2004, though, that many of the earliest names in on-demand audio began to smush “iPod” and “broadcast” into the word we’ve come to know as the way we all download and listen to shows now. In this episode, we go back two decades to the first days of the podcast. Then we hit the skip button to today and look at where podcasts are headed next.
Further reading:
From PodNews: The history of the word 'Podcast'
From The Guardian: Audible revolution
From Wired: The First Podcast: an Oral History
From The New York Times: An MTV Host Moves to Radio, Giving Voice to Audible Blogs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The putt-putt champions of the internet
Sun, 13 Oct 2024
Danny and Steven Sanicki are twins, competitive golfers, and suddenly the biggest names in online mini golf. They started making mini golf content on TikTok about a year ago, and it took off; since then they've been trying to ride the viral wave and also turn it into something that lasts. For this episode, the first in a miniseries we're calling How To Make It In The Future, we talk to the Sanickis about their journey to turn putt-putt into their life's work — without killing the fun in the process.
Further reading:
@dannysanicki on TikTok
Twin Tour Golf on Instagram
Twin Tour Golf on YouTube
From Golf Digest: How college golf twins and some friends with time to kill accidentally created a viral mini-golf sensation
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Google breakup is looming
Fri, 11 Oct 2024
Nilay and David make some predictions about Thursday evening’s Tesla event — which you’ve already seen, but we haven’t! Then they talk about the week’s gadget news, from Nintendo’s new Alarmo alarm clock to Apple’s upcoming iPads and Macs. Then Lauren Feiner joins to talk about the latest on all fronts in Google’s antitrust fight, and how the government might be planning to break up the company altogether. Then it’s time for a lightning round about Google Docs tabs, FEMA misinformation, and Zoom AI avatars.
Further reading:
The bill finally comes due for Elon Musk
In the past week, 4 of Elon Musk's direct reports have announced their exits from Tesla
All the buzz about Nintendo’s Alarmo clock
I totally forgot we wrote about Nintendo’s sleep tracking alarm clock 10 years ago.
Nintendo’s original alarm clock prototypes were a lot less playful
A closer look at Nintendo’s adorable Alarmo clock
Shrunken Mac Minis and a new iPad Mini might come in November
Apple’s Vision Pro leader, Dan Riccio, is retiring
A Google breakup is on the table, say DOJ lawyers
How the DOJ wants to break up Google’s search monopoly
Google must crack open Android for third-party stores, rules Epic judge
The filing: Microsoft Word - FINAL - Google Remedy Framework
Google’s response: DOJ’s radical and sweeping proposals risk hurting consumers, businesses, and developers
Google Docs is making it much easier to organize information
Zoom will let AI avatars talk to your team for you - The Verge
Hurricane Milton hits tonight, and it’s past the point of evacuation. Creators are still there.
Instagram and Threads moderation is out of control - The Verge
FEMA adds misinformation to its list of disasters to clean up
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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AI is fixing — and ruining – our photos
Tue, 08 Oct 2024
For this full-on “what is a photo” episode, we start by chatting with Halide developers Ben Sandofsky and Sebastiaan De With about what it means to build a camera app in 2024 — and what it means to try and accurately capture a photo. Then The Verge’s Allison Johnson joins the show to talk about her experiment going all-in on AI-ifying her photos. Finally, we answer a hotline about which gadgets to attach to your head when you go for a run.
Further reading:
Halide
Halide’s Process Zero feature captures photos with no AI processing
Let’s compare Apple, Google, and Samsung’s definitions of ‘a photo’
No one’s ready for this
Google’s AI tool helped us add disasters and corpses to our photos
The AI photo editing era is hare, and it’s every person for themselves
This system can sort real pictures from AI fakes — why aren’t platforms using it?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Get ready to meet your AI best friend
Fri, 04 Oct 2024
Nilay, Alex, and David discuss Microsoft's new Copilot announcements, and the friendlier face the company is trying to put on its chatbot. They also wonder: what, exactly, is an AI companion supposed to do for you, and how is it supposed to do it? They then dive into OpenAI's huge funding round, before exploring all the new gadgets of the week and some deep drama in the WordPress universe. Finally, it's time for a lightning round of news about Dish and DirecTV, Progressive Web Apps, and Nintendo's fight against emulation. We also send off Alex, our sadly departing co-host, with cake and Plex servers.
Further reading:
Microsoft gives Copilot a voice and vision in its biggest redesign yet
Read Microsoft’s optimistic memo about the future of AI companions
Shh, ChatGPT. That’s a Secret. - The Atlantic
College students used Meta’s smart glasses to dox people in real time
Sonos has a plan to earn back your trust, and here it is
Chromebooks are getting a new button dedicated to Google’s AI
Microsoft is discontinuing its HoloLens headsets
Google’s Pixel Buds are now fully supported on Windows and macOS.
Automattic demanded a cut of WP Engine’s revenue before starting WordPress battle
DirecTV and Dish are merging
Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Your front door is the key to the smart home
Tue, 01 Oct 2024
The Verge's Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins the show to discuss a bunch of updates in the smart home world, including what's new from Google Home and in iOS 18, plus some big news in the world of smart locks and video doorbells. Then, The Verge's Chris Welch comes on to test some new earbuds, and see which pair has the best sound – and the best mic. After that, a new take on the Vergecast's chaotic wearables theory.
Further reading:
Ki is bringing wireless power to kitchen appliances
The Eufy Smart Lock E30 is the company’s first Matter device
The Ultraloq Bolt Mission from U-tec is the first smart lock with UWB
Assa Abloy buys Level Lock to bolster its smart lock business
TP-Link Tapo D225 Video Doorbell Camera review
Ring’s entry-level wireless doorbell gets a head-to-toe view
iOS 18 lets you control Matter devices without a smart home hub
The Thread 1.4 spec is here, but it will be a while until we see any benefit
Google TV gets a big upgrade
Google is set to supercharge Google Home with Gemini intelligence
And on wireless earbuds:
The best wireless earbuds to buy right now
Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 2 Pro are its best earbuds yet
Google Pixel Buds Pro 2 review: big upgrade, much smaller earbuds
Bose’s new QuietComfort Earbuds offer top-tier ANC for under $200
Apple AirPods 4 review: defying expectations
Nothing’s first open-ear headphones keep you aware of your surroundings
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The future of AI might look a lot like Twitter
Sun, 29 Sep 2024
Michael Sayman, the creator of a viral new app called SocialAI, joins the show to discuss why he built a social network where you're the only human around. He tells us how he thinks about AI interfaces, what's next for ChatGPT and other chatbots, and why posting to a language model might be better than posting on a social network.
Further reading:
SocialAI
Michael Sayman on LinkedIn
SocialAI: we tried the Twitter clone where no other humans are allowed
From TechCrunch: Friendly Apps raises $3 million, pre-product, for apps that improve people’s well-being
From Wired: I Stared Into the AI Void With the SocialAI App
From New York Magazine: Does Anyone Need an AI Social Network?
From Ars Technica: “Dead Internet theory” comes to life with new AI-powered social media app
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Meta's new smart glasses look like the future
Fri, 27 Sep 2024
The Verge's Alex Heath joins Nilay, Alex, and David to talk about all the announcements coming out of Meta Connect: the impressive (and expensive) Orion glasses, the new features for the Ray-Ban Smart Glasses, and lots and lots of new AI. Then they discuss the latest executive departures at OpenAI, as the industry's foremost AI company undergoes a huge shift. In the lightning round, it's time for more AI gadgets, the PS5 Pro... and then some more AI gadgets.
Further reading:
Meta Connect 2024: biggest news and announcements
Hands-on with Orion, Meta’s first pair of AR glasses
Meta’s Ray-Bans will now ‘remember’ things for you
Why Mark Zuckerberg thinks AR glasses will replace your phone
Meta’s VR app store is about to fill up with phone-style 2D apps
Mark Zuckerberg: creators and publishers ‘overestimate the value’ of their work for training AI
Meta’s AI can now talk to you in the voices of Awkwafina, John Cena, and Judi Dench
Kristen Bell told Instagram to ‘get rid of AI’ before she became its official voice
OpenAI CTO Mira Murati is leaving
Just 5,000 people use the Rabbit R1 every day
Google Pixel Buds Pro 2 review: big upgrade, much smaller earbuds
I played the PS5 Pro, and it’s clearly better
Inside Jony Ive’s Life After Apple and His LoveFrom Design Business
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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They think they’re building God
Tue, 24 Sep 2024
Kylie Robison joins the show to talk about OpenAI’s new model, o1, and what this new “reasoning” model says about the state of the art in AI — and what AI companies are willing to put up with in the name of building God. Then, Gaby Del Valle and Adi Robertson talk through the latest on the TikTok ban, the Trump crypto chaos, and the ongoing adtech antitrust trial against Google. (All with as little politics-talk as possible.)
Further reading:
OpenAI releases new o1 reasoning model
OpenAI’s new model is better at reasoning and, occasionally, deceiving
TikTok ban: all the news on attempts to ban the video platform
TikTok oral arguments will weigh security risks against free speech
TikTok faces a skeptical panel of judges in its existential fight against the US government
Donald Trump is hawking tokens for a crypto project he still hasn’t explained
US v. Google redux: all the news from the ad tech trial
How Google got away with charging publishers more than anyone else
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The chatbot becomes the teacher
Sun, 22 Sep 2024
For the first episode in our new miniseries about the impact of AI in our everyday lives, we chat with Steven Johnson, a longtime author who has spent the last couple of years at Google working on an AI research and note-taking tool called NotebookLM. We talk about whether AI can really help us learn better, how Google has tried to make NotebookLM more accurate and helpful, and whether AI-generated podcasts are the future of learning.
Further reading:
NotebookLM
Steven Johnson’s website / newsletter
From Steven Johnson: Listening To The Algorithm
Google teases Project Tailwind — a prototype AI notebook that learns from your documents
Google’s AI-powered note-taking app is the messy beginning of something great
Google is using AI to make fake podcasts from your notes
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Portable Teleprompter
AMBITFUL Portable Teleprompter Kit - Mini Teleprompter with Remote Control for Phone and DSLR Recording
Nilay, Alex, and David are joined by Wall Street Journal columnist Joanna Stern to talk about this year’s iPhone – and Joannabot, the AI chatbot Joanna made to help you make buying decisions. They also answer some questions about the new phones as Apple gets ready to ship them. They also talk about Snap’s new Spectacles, the future of YouTube communities, Instagram teens, and AI social networks.
Further reading:
Our iPhone 16 Review, Brought To You By a Joanna Stern AI Chatbot
Snap releases new Spectacles for AR developers
Snapchat’s AI selfie feature puts your face in personalized ads — here’s how to turn it off
Snap announces “Simple Snapchat” redesign to compete with TikTok
Evan Spiegel explains why Snap is betting on Spectacles
Meta extends its Ray-Ban smart glasses deal beyond 2030
YouTube’s new Hype feature is a way to promote and discover smaller creators
YouTube integrates AI for creators through Veo and the Inspiration tab
YouTube Communities let fans and viewers chat and post with creators
YouTube confirms your pause screen is now fair game for ads
YouTube is adding ‘seasons’ to make your favorite channel more like Netflix
SocialAI: we tried the Twitter clone where no other humans are allowed
Lionsgate signs deal to train AI model on its movies and shows
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Reviewing the iPhone 16
Wed, 18 Sep 2024
We've finally finished testing, scoring, and reviewing Apple's new gear for the fall. On this episode we talk through our reviews of the iPhone 16 and 16 Pro, the Apple Watch 10, and the AirPods 4, to see whether they're real upgrades and whether they're worth your money. And then, on the Vergecast Hotline (866-VERGE11), we make the case for the Pixel in 2024.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The great Evernote reboot
Sun, 15 Sep 2024
Peak Evernote was roughly a decade ago. Since then, the product has often felt stagnant (or worse), the company churned through executives and business plans, and it seemed like Evernote was slowly turning into a zombie app. Not gone, not even forgotten, just sort of... there. For the third and final installment in our series about productivity and digital life, we sit down with Federico Simionato, the Evernote product lead at Bending Spoons. We talk about the acquisition process, how he perceives Evernote in today’s landscape, what it took to start shipping new stuff again, why Bending Spoons changed the subscription price, and much more.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The real cost of the PS5 Pro
Fri, 13 Sep 2024
Nilay, David, and Alex talk about the new PlayStation 5 Pro — why it's so expensive, why it doesn't have a disc drive, and why it made so many people feel feelings. They also talk about the fallout from this week's iPhone launch, the first days of the Google ad trial, Kamala Harris's earrings, Huawei's triple-folding phone, and much more.
Further reading:
PS5 Pro: all the news about Sony’s next console
Sony’s PS5 Pro has a larger GPU, advanced ray tracing, and AI upscaling
The $700 PS5 Pro doesn’t come with a disc drive
Sony’s new PS5 heralds the end of disc drives
Here are all the games enhanced by PS5 Pro
PlayStation 5 Pro comparison: What’s different from the regular PS5?
Sony will sell you a refurbished PS5 if you don’t want to drop $700 on a Pro
The people want disc drives.
Microsoft lays off 650 more Xbox employees
No, Kamala Harris wasn’t wearing these audio earrings
These are real earrings — and also real earbuds
Google Pixel Watch 3 review: third time’s the charm
Huawei’s new tri-fold phone costs more than a 16-inch MacBook Pro
Here’s a closer look at the Huawei Mate XT triple-screen foldable
The Meta Quest 3S leaks in Meta’s own PC app
Google and the DOJ’s ad tech fight is all about control
Google dominates online ads, says antitrust trial witness, but publishers are feeling ‘stuck’
WhatsApp will send messages to other apps soon — here’s how it will look
The US finally takes aim at truck bloat
Google is using AI to make fake podcasts from your notes
Facebook and Instagram are making AI labels less prominent on edited content
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The iPhone 16 is here — but it's not finished
Tue, 10 Sep 2024
Apple launched the iPhone 16, Apple Watch Series 10, and AirPods 4 at its annual fall event in Cupertino. The devices come with some big upgrades — a new camera control on the iPhone, a new design on the Watch — but also a lot of promises about AI. Today on the show, we discuss everything that's new, everything that's missing, and all the reasons you might or might not want to upgrade your Apple gear this year.
Further reading:
iPhone 16 event live blog: all the news from Apple’s keynote
iPhone 16 event: all the news from Apple’s keynote
Apple announces the iPhone 16 with a faster processor and Camera Control button
Apple announces the iPhone 16 Pro
iPhone 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max hands-on: don't call it a shutter button
Apple Watch Series 10 announced with bigger screen and thinner design
The AirPods Pro 2 will soon double as hearing aids
iOS 18 will launch next week with new ways to customize your homescreen
Apple announces AirPods 4 with noise cancellation and better sound
AirPods 4 hands-on: noise cancellation for people who hate ear tips
Apple has a faster MagSafe charger to go with the new iPhone 16 phones
Apple has a faster MagSafe charger to go with the new iPhone 16s
It sure looks like FineWoven is dead
Apple’s Visual Intelligence is a built-in take on Google Lens
Beats’ new iPhone 16 cases work with the Camera Control button
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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What’s in store for the iPhone 16
Fri, 06 Sep 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss previews for the Apple event, gadgets at IFA, the latest with Snap, and a whole lot more.
Further reading:
Apple’s iPhone 16 launch event is set for September
Apple’s iPhone 16 event: how to watch and what to expect
Apple’s rumored Mac Mini redesign may ditch the USB-A port
Is our long FineWoven nightmare almost over?
What Not to Expect at Apple Event on September 9: 'It's Glowtime'
A new low-end Magic Keyboard may come next year.
Apple Sports is ready for all kinds of football
Inside Apple’s theatrical U-turn on Wolfs.
Ted Lasso could come back for a fourth season
Beats’ long-awaited Powerbeats Pro 2 earbuds are coming in 2025
Microsoft and Apple are arguing over cloud gaming apps again
The Remarkable Paper Pro is as outrageous as it is luxurious
Honor’s superthin foldable is another cool phone the US won’t get
TCL’s new Nxtpaper phones have a dedicated button for maximum monochrome
Our first official look at Huawei’s tri-fold.
Acer’s first handheld gaming PC is the Nitro Blaze
DJI’s $199 Neo selfie drone is going to be everywhere
Acer’s Project DualPlay concept laptop has a pop-out controller and speakers
Acer’s 14-inch laptops claim 24 hours of battery life from Intel, Qualcomm, or AMD
Qualcomm’s new eight-core Snapdragon X Plus makes these Windows laptops cheaper
IFA 2024: hands-on (and off) with Lenovo’s Auto Twist AI PC concept
Intel strikes back against Windows on Arm
Verizon looks to expand Fios with $20 billion purchase of Frontier
Concord was worse than bad — it was forgettable
Sony is taking Concord offline on September 6th after disastrous launch
Snapchat to put ads next to chats with friends
You’ll soon be able to Sony is taking Concord offline on September 6th after disastrous launch
Sub.club is here to help the fediverse make money
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The problem with Telegram
Fri, 30 Aug 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss Telegram CEO being charged in a French criminal investigation over content moderation, Yelp suing Google for antitrust violations, a week in AI-generated nonsense, and more.
Telegram says CEO has ‘nothing to hide’ after being arrested in France
French authorities arrest Telegram’s CEO
Why the Telegram CEO’s arrest is such a big deal
Telegram CEO charged in French criminal investigation
Telegram CEO Pavel Durov faces court questioning in France.
French prosecutors explain why they arrested Telegram CEO Pavel Durov
How Pavel Durov, Telegram’s Founder, Went From Russia’s Mark Zuckerberg to Wanted Man
Can Tech Executives Be Held Responsible for What Happens on Their Platforms?
How Telegram played itself
Yelp sues Google for antitrust violations
TikTok must face a lawsuit for recommending the viral ‘blackout challenge’
California State Assembly passes sweeping AI safety bill
Mark Zuckerberg responds to GOP pressure, says Biden pushed to ‘censor’ covid post
Google Gemini will let you create AI-generated people again
xAI’s new Grok image generator floods X with controversial AI fakes
X’s Grok directs to government site after sharing false election info
Smart home company Brilliant has found a buyer
ESPN ‘Where to Watch’ feature helps find where to stream sporting events
Plaud’s NotePin is an AI wearable for summarizing meetings and taking voice notes
The maker of the Palma has a new cheaper e-reader
The Dyson Airwrap i.d. is a smarter hair curler
Snapchat finally launched an iPad app
Instagram adds what photos have always needed: words
Apple’s iPhone 16 launch event is set for September
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Can a YouTube video really fix your wet phone?
Tue, 27 Aug 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of the native resonance of your smartphone:
02:32 -The Verge’s David Pierce tries to find out if those YouTube videos promising to remove water from your phone with sounds actually work.
32:42 - Then, David chats with The Verge’s Alex Heath about some AR glasses that are reportedly set to launch from Snap and Meta this fall.
59:16 - Later, David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about competition in the AI industry.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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What’s in a productivity system?
Sun, 25 Aug 2024
You can learn a lot about somebody just by learning about how they get things done. Are they the sort of person who might have a perfectly color-coded email inbox, a flawlessly organized to-do list, and what’s that, they just sent you a calendar invite for happy hour next week? Or are they more likely to have a giant pile of sticky notes they never look at, a computer desktop with so many files you can’t even see the wallpaper, and today’s main tasks written on their arm? Neither is wrong, but they’re very different.
On this episode of The Vergecast, the second in our three-part miniseries about work and productivity and how to get more done in a digital world, we decide to get to know our colleagues in a new way: by asking them to share their own productivity systems. We didn’t give them much specific instruction or homework, other than to come ready to answer a question: how do you get stuff done? Eight Verge staffers showed up, with eight very different ideas about what being productive means and how best to pull it off. Along the way, we found some ideas to steal, a few new apps and tools to try, and a lot of new thoughts about our co-workers.
If you want to know more about the things we discuss in this episode, here are a few links to get you started:
A Googler’s guide to getting things done
TickTick
Upnote
Notion
Google Keep
Google Calendar
The Rhodia #16 spiral notepad
Papier’s productivity planners
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Pixel 9 is great – and a problem
Fri, 23 Aug 2024
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, Allison Johnson, and Richard Lawler discuss the Google Pixel 9 review and its controversial reimagine AI feature, a Chick-fil-A streaming service, Sonos app updates, and more.
Further reading:
Google Pixel 9 Pro and 9 Pro XL review: AI all over the place
Google’s AI tool helped us add disasters and corpses to our photos
This system can sort real pictures from AI fakes — why aren’t platforms using it?
The AI photo editing era is here
Donald Trump posts a fake AI-generated Taylor Swift endorsement
From Digital Trends:I tried Google's new Pixel Studio app, and it's a mess
OpenAI exec says California’s AI safety bill might slow progress
https://www.threads.net/@chriswelch/post/C-8wxAGOpyP
https://www.threads.net/@chriswelch/post/C-8LGwKOlPj?xmt=AQGzGV_vvL3vxoEhZ_nM263bP8n-Pu9Dxz5Ngmib-0wzgA
https://www.threads.net/@chriswelch/post/C-8wxAGOpyP
A new $6 billion bid to take over Paramount could undo plans to merge with Skydance.
I hope the next CEO of Disney is just Bob Iger with a fun mustache.
Paramount Plus plans are 50 percent off ahead of the 2024 NFL season
The 2024 Olympics were a big win for TV of all kinds
The Acolyte has been canceled
Chick-fil-A is reportedly launching a streaming service for some reason
Apple Podcasts now has a web app
Spotify star Alex Cooper is jumping to a new podcast network
JBL made its charging case touchscreen more useful with a size boost
Meta and Snap are about to show off their new AR glasses
Amazon cancels the Echo Show 8 Photos Edition’s main feature — focusing on photos
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A road trip on the hydrogen highway
Tue, 20 Aug 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of hydrogen futures:
The Verge’s William Poor, Andrew Marino, and Alex Parkin head to California to figure out why hydrogen fuel cell technology, once a super-promising successor to gasoline, lost out to battery electric cars. They also put the embattled tech to the test with a road trip across California’s “hydrogen highway.”
Further reading:
Check out the interactive map of our trip here, and the video version of the story here.
Read Andrew Hawkins’ story about the future of hydrogen fuel cell tech here.
Read Justine Calma’s coverage of federal green hydrogen programs here.
Go deep into California zero emission transportation policy here.
Credits:
Fact Check by Jasmine Arielle Ting
Thanks to:
Bill Elrick, Hydrogen Fuel Cell Partnership
Michael McCurdy, California State Library
Archival footage courtesy of Global ImageWorks, LLC
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A Googler’s guide to getting things done
Sun, 18 Aug 2024
Laura Mae Martin is a big believer in the settings menu. Martin is Google’s Executive Productivity Advisor, and spends much of her time working with other Googlers on improving their productivity and communication systems — and one of the things she often recommends is taking a few minutes to poke through the options. “With your phone, with your email, your Slack, all these things, the features are there but we don’t take the time to dive into them,” she says. She even thinks you should maybe have to look at settings before you can use the app. “Like, you can’t get into the app unless you spend 10 minutes figuring out what it can do.”
On this episode of The Vergecast, the first in our three-part miniseries about all things productivity and work, we talk to Martin about how she sees things changing. Four years after the pandemic forced us all to work from home, are we finally figuring out remote and hybrid work? Are managers realizing that butts-in-seats isn’t, and maybe was never, a good metric for productivity? And is the era of the hard-charging hustle bro finally giving way to a healthier, more holistic way of thinking about being productive? Martin sees all these things from so many perspectives, and has lots of thoughts on everything from communication styles to energy flows.
We also talk about the rise in digital productivity tools like Notion and Slack, and why email is still so important — and still so terrible. One of Martin’s jobs at Google is to consult with the teams building Workspace apps like Docs and Gmail, and she has lots of thoughts on how those product works and how they could be better. We also talk about whether AI stands to change the way we get things done, and whether it’ll help us do more or just give us more to do.
Along the way, Martin offers us lots of practical tips on how to manage our digital lives a little better. Charging your phone outside the bedroom, no-tech Tuesdays, and a couple of prettier email labels might actually go a long way. And if you have too many notes in too many places, it’s time to get a Main List going.
If you want to know more on everything we talk about in this episode, here are a few links to get you started:
Laura Mae Martin’s website
Her book, Uptime: A Practical Guide to Personal Productivity and Wellbeing’
The Google Workspace guide to productivity and wellbeing
The Verge’s favorite tools to stay organized
The best note-taking apps for collecting your thoughts and data
All I want is one productivity app that can handle everything
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Gemini is taking over Google
Fri, 16 Aug 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss AI tools announced at this weeks Pixel 9 event, Nilay's TV competition, tech regulatory news, and more.
Further reading:
AI overshadowed Pixel at the Pixel event
All the AI features coming to Google's Pixel 9 series
Google debuts Pixel Studio AI image-making app
Google makes your Pixel screenshots searchable with Recall-like AI feature
Every time Google dinged Apple during its Pixel 9 launch event
Google Gemini’s voice chat mode is here
Using Gemini Live was faster than Google, but also more awkward
Google Pixel 9 launch event: all the announcements and products
Google's Pixel 9 lineup is a Pro show
The Pixel 9 Pro XL showed me the future of AI photography
Google’s Zoom Enhance camera trick is finally available
Inside the competition that named the Sony A95L the best TV of 2024
Patreon adds Apple tax to avoid getting kicked out of the App Store
Apple is finally going to open up iPhone tap-to-pay
Apple relents and approves Spotify app with EU pricing
AltStore PAL drops its annual subscription thanks to a grant from Epic
Epic judge says he’ll ‘tear the barriers down’ on Google’s app store monopoly
The FTC’s fake review crackdown begins this fall
Ex-Google CEO: AI startups can steal IP, hire lawyers to “clean up the mess”
Flipboard is going to let you follow fediverse accounts right inside the app
Halide’s Process Zero feature captures photos with no AI processing
Realme’s 320W fast charging can fully charge a smartphone in four and a half minutes
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Google’s next big Pixel
Tue, 13 Aug 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of the correct height-to-width ratio of a foldable phone:
The Verge’s David Pierce, Allison Johnson, Victoria Song, and Chris Welch discuss all the new gadget announcements from Google’s Pixel event — including the Pixel 9, the Pixel Watch 3, the Pixel buds, and more.
Further reading:
Google Pixel 9 launch event live coverage: all the news
Google’s Pixel 9 lineup is a Pro show
Google’s new Pixel Buds Pro 2 seem better in every way that matters
The Pixel 9 Pro XL showed me the future of AI photography
Google Pixel Watch 3 hands-on: a big leap forward
The Google TV Streamer might be the Apple TV 4K rival we’ve been waiting for
Why Google decided now’s the time to move on from Chromecast
The Nest Learning Thermostat gets its biggest upgrade in over a decade
Google’s Pixel Fold one year later: I can’t wait for the sequel
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Google lost its first antitrust case, so what happens next?
Fri, 09 Aug 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Alex Heath, and Lauren Feiner discuss a federal judge ruling that Google violated US antitrust law, X suing a group of major advertisers over an “illegal boycott”, and the rest of this week's wild tech news.
Further reading:
Judge rules that Google ‘is a monopolist’ in US antitrust case
All the spiciest parts of the Google antitrust ruling
X files antitrust lawsuit against advertisers over ‘illegal boycott’
The Global Alliance for Responsible Media is 'discontinuing' after Elon Musk's X filed an antitrust lawsuit against it
Disney’s password-sharing crackdown starts ‘in earnest’ this September
Disney’s streaming business turned a profit for the first time
The price of Disney Plus is about to go up
Logitech’s ‘forever’ mouse isn’t happening
Google is discontinuing the Chromecast line
The Google TV Streamer might be the Apple TV 4K rival we’ve been waiting for
Humane’s daily returns are outpacing sales
Samsung’s Frame TV is finally getting the knockoffs it deserves
Microsoft says Delta ignored Satya Nadella’s offer of CrowdStrike help
Hands-on with Google’s new Nest Learning Thermostat
OpenAI won’t watermark ChatGPT text because its users could get caught
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Wireless earbuds
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? Skullcandy Method 360 ANC Wireless Earbuds
Today on the flagship podcast of what the future of Kindle turns out to be:
We’re once again trying out a couple of our favorite new show formats.
In Version History, we talk through the whole story of Quibi, from its early days as NewTV to its extremely ill-timed launch to its ultimate demise.
From Variety: Quibi Has Raised $1.75B After Closing $750M Round to Fund Launch
From Variety: Jeffrey Katzenberg’s NewTV Closes $1B, Major Studios Among Investors
Quibi’s CES 2020 launch
Quibi app review: short-form streaming in a shifting landscape
Steven Spielberg is writing a horror series you’ll only be able to at night
Quibi’s Super Bowl 2020 commercial
From The Wall Street Journal: Jeffrey Katzenberg and Meg Whitman Struggle With Their Startup—and Each Other
How Quibi imploded less than six months after launch
11 reasons why Quibi crashed and burned in less than a year
Next, we try out our as-yet-untitled debate show. The Verge’s Kevin Nguyen and Alex Cranz take on a surprisingly contentious topic: is the future of books print or digital?
The Boox Palma is an amazing gadget I didn’t even know I wanted
Kobo’s great color e-readers are held back by lock-in
From The Wall Street Journal: How the Kindle Became a Must-Have Accessory (Again)
The Playdate makes a surprisingly good e-reader
Later, producer Andru Marino answers a question from The Vergecast Hotline about a very unusual shopping situation for MP3 players.
NW-E394 Walkman Digital Music Player
Mighty’s ‘iPod shuffle for Spotify’ gets upgraded battery and Bluetooth
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Apple's Intelligence beta and more AI chaos
Fri, 02 Aug 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Allison Johnson, and Victoria Song discuss Apple iOS 18.1 beta. upcoming Pixel 9 rumors, Olympics coverage, AI deepfake regulation, and more.
Further reading:
The best way to watch the Olympics is on TikTok
Apple releases iOS 18.1 developer beta with the first ‘Apple Intelligence’ iPhone features
Apple’s iOS 18.1 developer beta adds AI call recording and transcription
A first look at Apple Intelligence and its (slightly) smarter Siri
Apple’s new AI features will reportedly miss the iOS 18 launch and wait for iOS 18.1.
Google Pixel 9 event: rumors and what to expect
Pixel 9’s ‘Add Me’ feature puts you in a group photo even when you’re not there
Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra review: if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em
Samsung hypes the Galaxy Z Flip as a great police bodycam
Logitech CEO Hanneke Faber wants your next mouse to last forever
Microsoft wants Congress to outlaw AI-generated deepfake fraud
Google tweaks Search to help hide explicit deepfakes
Lawmakers want to carve out intimate AI deepfakes from Section 230 immunity
Elon Musk posts deepfake of Kamala Harris that violates X policy
The Copyright Office calls for a new federal law regulating deepfakes.
Senators will introduce the No Fakes Act to keep AI ...
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The history of Roku and the fight over CarPlay
Tue, 30 Jul 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of dedicated streaming hardware:
We try out a couple of show formats we’ve been planning for a while.
In Version History, we tell the story of the Roku Netflix Player, debate its legacy, and try to decide whether this thing belongs in the Version History Hall of Fame.
From Fast Company: Inside Netflix’s Project Griffin: The Forgotten History Of Roku Under Reed Hastings
From CNBC: How Roku used the Netflix playbook to rule streaming video
From CNN: Netflix Player offers PC-free movie watching
From Wired: Review: Roku Netflix Set Top Box Is Just Shy of Totally Amazing
From The New York Times: Why the Roku Netflix Player Is the First Shot of the Revolution
After that, it’s time for debates. Nilay Patel and David Pierce yell at each other about who should own the screens in your car. Are CarPlay and Android Auto the answer, the solution to universally crappy automaker software?
Car companies haven’t figured out if they’ll let Apple CarPlay take over all the screens
The rest of the auto industry still loves CarPlay and Android Auto
Everybody hates GM’s decision to kill Apple CarPlay and Android Auto for its EVs
Rivian CEO says CarPlay isn’t going to happen
Apple’s fancy new CarPlay will only work wirelessly
Later, David answers a question from The Vergecast Hotline about political spam texts.
From The Washington Post: How to stop receiving spam texts
From PCMag: Stop Robotexts: How to Block Smishing and Spam Text Messages
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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In search of the perfect movie recommendation
Sun, 28 Jul 2024
On this episode of The Vergecast, we look at why TV and movie recommendations are so complicated, and whether AI might be able to make them better. If Spotify can build infinite playlists of music you’ll like, and YouTube and TikTok always seem to have the perfect thing ready to go, why can’t Netflix or Hulu or Max seem to get it right?
If you want to know more about everything we discuss in this episode, here are a few links to get you started:
Movievanders
Reelgood
The internet is a constant recommendations machine — but it needs you to make it work
Netflix’s Greg Peters on a new culture memo and where ads, AI, and games fit in
From Scientific America: How Recommendation Algorithms Work—And Why They May Miss the Mark
From Google: Multimodal prompting with a 44-minute movie
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Search as we know it is officially over
Fri, 26 Jul 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Jake Kastrenakes discuss OpenAI's new SearchGPT product, Amazon's plan to launch a paid version of Alexa, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold review, and whole lot more.
Further reading:
OpenAI announces SearchGPT, its AI-powered search engine
Bing’s AI redesign shoves the usual list of search results to the side
Reddit is now blocking major search engines and AI bots — except the ones that pay
Google had a massive quarter thanks to Search and AI
Amazon’s paid Alexa is coming to fill a $25 billion hole dug by Echo devices
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is a great phone that’s out of ideas
Asus ROG Ally X review: the best Windows gaming handheld by a mile
Samsung Galaxy Ring review: keeping you in Samsung’s orbit
Apple’s first foldable iPhone could arrive in 2026
Apple Maps launches on the web to take on Google
The Disney Plus, Hulu, and Max streaming bundle is now available
Rivian CEO says CarPlay isn’t going to happen
The NBA’s new TV deals put a lot of games on Amazon’s Prime Video starting in 2025
Reddit’s NFL, NBA deals bring more sports highlights — and ads
Spotify CEO confirms a ‘deluxe’ version with hi-fi audio is coming soon
Sonos CEO apologizes for disastrous rollout of new app
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Inside the global computer crash
Tue, 23 Jul 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of configuration changes:
The Verge's Tom Warren joins the show to to talk about the story and legacy of the CrowdStrike crash.
CrowdStrike and Microsoft: all the latest news on the global IT outage
Major Windows BSOD issue hits banks, airlines, and TV broadcasters
What is CrowdStrike, and what happened?
CrowdStrike’s faulty update crashed 8.5 million Windows devices, says Microsoft
CrowdStrike outage: Photos, videos, and tales of IT workers fixing BSODs
Then we talk with The Verge's Victoria Song and Zombies, Run creator Adrian Hon about making exercising fun without making it competitive and awful.
Zombies, Run
Adrian Hon’s Substack
Finally, the Apple Watch will let you rest
This walking app let me whack my co-workers with a baseball bat
Ignore your fitness tracker and walk to Mordor instead
Finally, we answer a hotline question about handheld gadgets for new parents — because there's a lot of time to kill when there's a baby around.
Backbone One review: the best mobile gaming controller yet
Handheld consoles are the future of gaming
Holedown
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The all-seeing AI webcam
Sun, 21 Jul 2024
On this episode of The Vergecast, senior producer Will Poor explores the AI-tinged worlds of Dries Depoorter. Depoorter has built all manner of quirky and provocative installations and online experiments. There’s a clock that tells you how much of your life you’ve already lived; a phone charger that only works when your eyes are closed; a mobile chat app that you can only use when your phone has less than 5% battery.
His most eyebrow-raising work, though, is around AI and surveillance. In his projects Depoorter takes publicly available webcam footage from around the world, and uses it to stalk celebrities, catch jaywalkers in the act, keep politicians honest, and generally make you wonder about your own privacy and anonymity.
We talked with Depoorter about how he creates his work, how he thinks about the future of AI, and how he responds to the people who see his art and want to turn it into commerce. It’s a wild conversation, so check it out above. To see all of Dries’ work, head over to his portfolio.
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Gadgets are getting weird — and so are iPhone homescreens
Fri, 19 Jul 2024
Nilay, Alex, and David talk about what's happening on social media — and around the web — in the wake of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump. Then they talk about their early impression of Apple's public betas, from the redesigned homescreens to the iPad's fancy new math abilities. After that, it's time for a bunch of gadgets all asking the same idea: is this anything? Then it's off to the lightning round, filled with 4K streams and leaky infinity pools.
Further reading:
A custom sticker printer infuriated clients with a pro-Trump mass text message
Shooting conspiracies trend on X as Musk endorses Trump
Donald Trump likes TikTok, not Zuckerberg.
The FBI said it found the Trump rally shooter’s Steam account, then took it back
The Trump rally shooter had a Discord account, company says
The Trump rally shooting is a cash cow for the dropshippers
The FBI says it has ‘gained access’ to the Trump rally shooter’s phone
J.D. Vance likes Lina Khan and crypto, hates ‘Big Tech’
Elon Musk, Joe Lonsdale, and tech elites back a pro-Trump super PAC
Apple’s public betas: all the news on iOS 18, macOS Sequoia, and more
Apple is finally embracing Android’s chaos
iOS 18 might help you rescue photos you thought were gone forever
The watchOS 11 beta slowed me down, in a good way
RCS in iOS 18: Apple’s new messaging standard almost solves the green-button problem
Testing Math Notes and the Calculator app in iPadOS 18
Phone mirroring on the Mac: a great way to use your iPhone, but it’s still very much in beta
Canon’s long-awaited EOS R1 and R5 Mark II have eye-controlled autofocus
Dyson unmasks its super customizable OnTrac headphones
A long-delayed hands-on with Essential’s skinny Android phone
This case turns your Apple Watch into a tiny iPod
Google solves its Pixel 9 Pro leaks by just showing the phone early
Leaked photos reveal Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold
Xreal Beam Pro review: an AR tablet with good ideas but not enough power
The OnePlus Pad 2’s vibrating stylus simulates writing on paper
Sling TV adds 4K streaming for free
Comcast will have high bitrate, low latency 4K feeds of the Olympics
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s $27 million mansion is a ‘lemon’ with a leaky pool, lawsuit alleges
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Picking the perfect portable console
Tue, 16 Jul 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of nose bridge microphones:
03:10 - The Verge’s David Pierce enlists help from Alex Cranz and Sean Hollister to figure out the best gadget setup for his handheld gaming needs.
The Steam Deck wasn’t born ready, but it’s ready now
Nintendo Switch OLED review: screentime
Sony PlayStation Portal review: flawed but fun
Asus ROG Ally updated review: it’s a bit better now
This amazing knockoff GBA SP comes stuffed with software piracy
42:10 - Victoria Song joins the show to test out the microphones on a bunch of smart glasses and headsets.
Razer’s new Anzu smart glasses break from the pack with truly wireless audio
The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses actually make the future look cool
Amazon’s latest Echo Frames are more style than substance
Meta Quest 3 review: almost the one we've been waiting for
Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
01:10:26 - Later, David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline.
North Focals glasses review: a $600 smartwatch for your face
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Inside the AI memory machine
Sun, 14 Jul 2024
Humans are terrible at remembering things. On this episode of The Vergecast, we talk to one of the people who has been working on this problem for a very long time: Dan Siroker, the CEO of Limitless. We talk about what it takes to build a great memory aid, how we might use them in the future, and why it’s so tricky to get right.
We also talk about the human side of it all — what does it change about our lives when we stop forgetting things? Is remembering your friend’s birthday different when it’s actually an AI model doing the remembering? And will these tools ever really work outside of work? Tools like Limitless are coming fast and improving quickly, and we’re going to have to figure out how to live with them.
Further reading:
From The New York Times: Can’t See Pictures in Your Mind? You’re Not Alone.
Limitless AI: a new wearable gadget, and app, for remembering your meetings
Recall is Microsoft’s key to unlocking the future of PCs
Microsoft’s all-knowing Recall AI feature is being delayed
The Pixel 9’s ‘Google AI’ is like Microsoft Recall but a little less creepy
Apple announces iOS 18 with new AI features and more customizable homescreen
Notion AI can automatically write your notes, agendas, and blog posts for you
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Samsung’s new folds, flips, and Apple clones
Fri, 12 Jul 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the announcements from Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event, Redbox shutting down, and more tech news from this week.
Further reading:
Samsung Galaxy Unpacked: all the news on the Galaxy Ring, Fold, Flip, Watch, and AI
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Flip 6 are pricier with minor updates
Samsung’s Galaxy Ring could be the one ring to rule an ecosystem
Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra hands-on: ultra déjà vu
Galaxy Watch 7: price, availability, and how to preorder
Samsung’s new Galaxy Buds are blatant AirPod clones in both form and function
Samsung, Google, and Qualcomm are, uh, still doing that XR thing.
Motorola’s 2024 Razr Plus is a fun and flawed flip phone
Redbox shuts down as its parent company declares Chapter 7 bankruptcy
Sling TV is the latest streamer to get those pesky pause ads
Netflix’s next live event is a Joe Rogan comedy special
Spotify is going to let you leave comments on podcast episodes
Paramount agrees to sweetened Skydance merger deal
Instagram is sticking to short videos, says Adam Mosseri
Amazon’s Echo Spot is back with better sound and no camera
Nothing’s CMF launches new supercheap earbuds and a smartwatch
Nothing’s CMF Phone 1 is proof that gadgets can still be fun
Early Apple tech bloggers are shocked to find their name and work have been AI-zombified
Microsoft and Apple ditch OpenAI board seats amid regulatory scrutiny
The developers suing over GitHub Copilot got dealt a major blow in court
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Vergecast builds a tech company
Tue, 09 Jul 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of corporate infighting:
The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz roleplay as CEOs of Vergecast Inc., tasked with creating a tech company by acquiring product lines from various industry giants. They select established products ranging from smartphones and PCs to messaging and audio solutions, sourced from companies such as Apple, Google, Amazon, Samsung, Meta, and others.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Apple’s Vision Pro: five months later
Tue, 02 Jul 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of spatial computing:
The Verge’s David Pierce chats with Victoria Song and Wes Davis about using the Vision Pro for the five months that it's been available to the public. The group details what works, what doesn’t, and what’s next for the device.
Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
Apple announces visionOS 2 with 3D photo transformations and an ultrawide Mac display
The Vision Pro isn’t destroying your eyes, but maybe get eye drops
The Vision Pro is a computer for the age of walled gardens
Apple’s Vision Pro team is reportedly focused on building a cheaper headset
The Vision Pro will get Apple Intelligence and ‘Go Deeper’ in-store demos
David chats with the folks at Sandwich Vision, who create Vision Pro apps called Television and Theater, about why they made 3D-rendered versions of CRT TVs in virtual reality.
Sandwich Vision
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The music industry’s AI fight
Fri, 28 Jun 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel and David Pierce chat with Switched on Pop's Charlie Harding about the RIAA lawsuit against AI music startups Udio and Suno. Later, Nilay and David discuss the rest of this week's tech and gadget news.
Further reading:
What the RIAA lawsuits against Udio and Suno mean for AI and copyright
Major record labels sue AI company behind ‘BBL Drizzy’
Good 4 who? How music copyright has gone too far
Samsung just announced a date for its next Unpacked
Google announces surprise Pixel 9 hardware event in August
Motorola’s 2024 Razr phones are ready to make a splash
Beats Pill review: much easier to swallow this time
Ultimate Ears announces new Everboom speaker, Boom 4 with USB-C, and more
Ludacris Performs Free Concert With JBL Speaker: Here's Where You Can Buy One for Summer
Apple will soon offer better support for third-party iPhone displays and batteries
Distance Technologies augmented reality car heads-up display hands-on
Seven things I learned about the Sony car while playing Gran Turismo inside one
Rivian teases five new vehicles, and I have no idea what they are
A group of Rabbit R1 jailbreakers found a massive security flaw
Meta is connecting Threads more deeply with the fediverse
ChatGPT’s Mac app is here, but its flirty advanced voice mode has been delayed
Verizon’s new V logo arrives as the lines blur between 5G, Fios, and streaming
Supreme Court rules Biden administration’s communications with social media companies were not illegal coercion
Tesla Cybertruck recalled again, this time over faulty wiper and trim
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New chips, new screens, new gadgets
Tue, 25 Jun 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of the many definitions of electronic paper:
03:12 -The Verge’s David Pierce takes a look at the Boox Palma, a phone-shaped e-reader that runs Android. He also compares notes with Clockwise’s Matt Martin and writer Craig Mod.
The Boox Palma is an amazing gadget I didn't even know I wanted
New Pop-up Walk, Reading Digitally in 2024 — Roden Newsletter Archive
30:06 - The Verge’s Nathan Edwards and Tom Warren join the show to discuss their experience using Microsoft’s new Surface Copilot PCs. They also answer a question from The Vergecast Hotline.
Surface Laptop 7th Edition review: Microsoft’s best MacBook Air competitor yet
With Copilot Plus, the new and improved Windows PCs are here
Microsoft’s embarrassing Recall
Microsoft makes Copilot less useful on new Copilot Plus PCs
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Away Travel Duo: Carry-On Suitcase & Everywhere Bag Set – Jet Black
The ultimate business travel power couple. This set includes an airline-approved Carry-On with a TSA lock and patented compression system, plus the Everywhere Bag with a dedicated 16" laptop pocket and trolley sleeve to secure it to the suitcase. Look polished and stay organized on every corporate mission.
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The next next thing in AI and AR
Fri, 21 Jun 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Apple's Vision Pro team reportedly refocusing on a cheaper headset, Meta launching a new "Wearables" organization, a new AI company startup from former OpenAI chief scientist, and a whole lot more tech news.
Further reading:
Apple’s new hands-free unlocking feature won’t work with existing smart locks
Apple’s fancy new CarPlay will only work wirelessly
Android’s AirTag competitors are off to a poor start.
This universal remote wants to control your smart home sans hub
The Framework Laptop 13 is about to become one of the world’s first RISC-V laptops
The Beats Solo Buds have a great look and an even better price
Xreal’s new Beam Pro is an Android tablet designed to work with your AR glasses
Apple’s Vision Pro team is reportedly focused on building a cheaper headset
Meta forms new Wearables group and lays off some employees
OpenAI’s former chief scientist is starting a new AI company
Perplexity continues to piss off publishers.
An AI video tool just launched, and it’s already copying Disney’s IP
Anthropic has a fast new AI model — and a clever new way to interact with chatbots
AIs are coming for social networks
TikTok ads may soon contain AI avatars of your favorite creators
McDonald’s will stop testing AI to take drive-thru orders, for now
Nvidia overtakes Microsoft as the world’s most valuable company
US sues Adobe for ‘deceiving’ subscriptions that are too hard to cancel
Tech CEOs are hot now, so workers are hiring $500-an-hour fashion consultants
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Tesla’s big, epic, confusing future
Tue, 18 Jun 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of super helpful humanoid helper robots:
05:07 - The Verge’s David Pierce and Andy Hawkins discuss the latest at Tesla: new products, new initiatives, and a payday for Elon Musk.
Tesla’s 2024 shareholder meeting: all the news about Elon Musk’s $50 billion payday
Let’s speculate wildly about Tesla’s three mystery vehicles
Tesla shareholders approve Elon Musk’s massive pay package — was there ever any doubt?
Whatever Elon wants, Tesla gets
40:21 - Vee Song joins the show to discuss updates to the Apple Watch, a new Samsung Galaxy Watch, and more wearable news.
Finally, the Apple Watch will let you rest - The Verge
Samsung’s Galaxy Watch FE is its new entry-level smartwatch - The Verge
The Pixel Watch 2 can now detect when you’ve been in a car crash
Apple announces watchOS 11 with new training features and Live Activities
Samsung sues Oura preemptively to block smart ring patent claims
1:02:54 - David and Liam James answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline about weather apps.
Forecast Advisor
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Apple and OpenAI make a deal
Fri, 14 Jun 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss takeaways from WWDC, this week's gadget news, and Elon Musk dropping his lawsuit against OpenAI.
Further reading:
Apple and OpenAI aren’t paying each other yet, says Bloomberg
MKBHD interviewed Tim Cook.
Tim Cook is ‘not 100 percent’ sure Apple can stop AI hallucinations
Can Apple Intelligence fix the iPhone’s broken notifications system?
The AI upgrade cycle is here
Here’s how Apple’s AI model tries to keep your data private
The best small updates Apple didn’t mention at WWDC
Apple IDs are becoming Apple Accounts
Apple skipped over the best visionOS 2 updates
iOS 18 will let you record calls — and tells everyone for their privacy
SharePlay is coming to Apple TV, HomePods, and Bluetooth speakers
Finally, offline maps with turn-by-turn guidance.
The new versions of iOS and macOS will let you rotate your Wi-Fi address to help reduce tracking.
Xbox boss: ‘I think we should have a handheld, too’
Microsoft announces a discless Xbox Series X console in white
Xbox chief confirms more games are coming to other platforms
Jabra’s earbuds are going away, but the impact they made isn’t
The best thing about Jabra’s new earbuds is the case
The Light Phone 3 adds a better screen, a camera, and new ways to replace your smartphone
The Windows on Arm chip race heats up with a challenger to Qualcomm
Did startup Flow Computing just make CPUs 100x faster? Here’s the white paper and FAQs
Google is putting more Android in ChromeOS
Elon Musk drops lawsuit against OpenAI
Elon Musk has unusual relationships with women at SpaceX, WSJ reports
Sony buys Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
Pew: A growing number of Americans are getting their news from TikTok
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Apple Intelligence, iPhones, and the rest of WWDC 2024
Tue, 11 Jun 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Allison Johnson, and David Pierce discuss all the announcements from Apple's WWDC event.
Further reading:
Apple WWDC 2024: the 13 biggest announcements
Apple Intelligence: every new AI feature coming to the iPhone and Mac
Apple is giving Siri an AI upgrade in iOS 18
Apple announces iOS 18 with new AI features and more customizable homescreen
Apple says iPhones will support RCS in 2024
Apple’s AI can make custom emoji and images
iOS 18 introduces satellite capabilities to its iMessage app
Apple announces iPadOS 18 with a built-in calculator and customizable homescreen
Apple made an iPad calculator app after 14 years
The iPhone’s new Game Mode makes it faster and more responsive
Apple announces watchOS 11 with new training features and Live Activitie
Apple announces macOS Sequoia at WWDC 2024
Apple’s standalone Passwords app syncs across iOS, iPad, Mac, and Windows
Apple’s AirPods are being upgraded with powerful accessibility features
Apple’s InSight feature for Apple TV Plus will tell you who that actor is
Apple teases new seasons of Severance and Silo
Apple announces visionOS 2 with 3D photo transformations and an ultrawide Mac display
Apple is finally launching the Vision Pro outside the US
Canon made a special lens for the Apple Vision Pro’s spatial videos
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Apple’s AI moment is coming
Fri, 07 Jun 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss what they expect to see next week at Apple's WWDC, or "dub dub" as it's more affectionately known. But first, we take you through all the gadgets previewed at Computex.
Further reading:
This is Lunar Lake — Intel’s utterly overhauled AI laptop chip that ditches memory sticks
Humane is reportedly trying to sell itself to HP for $1 billion
Humane, the startup behind the AI Pin, in talks with HP, telecoms to sell
Humane warns AI Pin owners to ‘immediately’ stop using its charging case
Even the Raspberry Pi is getting in on AI
Apple put a Thread smart home radio into its newest Macs and iPads
Apple just corrected the M2 iPad Air’s core count
Samsung leak reveals a cheaper Galaxy Watch
Meta is fixing three of the biggest Quest 3 annoyances with v66 update
Nothing’s Phone 3 will be all about AI apps
The Asus ROG Ally X is official — and I took a peek inside
Palmer Luckey is now selling pixel-perfect ultrabright magnesium Game Boys for $199
iOS 18 (and AI) will give Siri much more control over your apps
Apple’s non-AI WWDC plans include Settings and Control Center revamps
Apple might bring AI transcription to Voice Memos and Notes
Apple’s WWDC may include AI-generated emoji and an OpenAI partnership
Apple’s WWDC 2024 is set for June 10th
Think inside the box
Max raises prices across its ad-free plans
We tested Aptoide, the first free iPhone app store alternative
Google acquires Cameyo to integrate Windows app virtualization into ChromeOS
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Sonos' headphones are extremely Sonos
Tue, 04 Jun 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of audio over Wi-Fi:
03:02 - The Verge’s Chris Welch shares his review of Sonos's Ace headphones.
Sonos Ace review: was it worth it?
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence addresses the company’s divisive app redesign
28:58 - MoviePass, MovieCrash director Muta’Ali and MoviePass CEO Stacy Spikes discuss what went wrong with the MoviePass subscription service and how that story was documented in the film.
MoviePass, MovieCrash review: a damning account of corporate greed
MoviePass is using you to ruin the movies
56:47 - Jennifer Pattison Tuohy answers a question from The Vergecast Hotline about smart home gadgets for renters.
Home Assistant: Setting up the Aqara FP2 Presence Sensor - Derek Seaman's Tech Blog
Yale launches its first retrofit smart lock — the Yale Approach with Wi-Fi
The new Yale Keypad Touch brings fingerprint unlocking to August smart locks
Aqara kick-starts its first Matter-over-Thread smart lock with a promise of Home Key support
The new Yale Keypad Touch brings fingerprint unlocking to August smart locks
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Inside the Google algorithm
Fri, 31 May 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss Google's algorithm leak, OpenAI content deals, and more tech news from this week.
Further reading:
Google won’t comment on a potentially massive leak of its search algorithm documentation
Google confirms the leaked Search documents are real
An Anonymous Source Shared Thousands of Leaked Google Search API Documents with Me; Everyone in SEO Should See Them
Secrets from the Algorithm: Google Search’s Internal Engineering Documentation Has Leaked
Unpacking Google's massive Search documentation leak
How SEO moves forward with the Google Content Warehouse API leak
Google responds to leak: Documentation lacks context
Vox Media and The Atlantic sign content deals with OpenAI
Google scrambles to manually remove weird AI answers in search
Apple’s WWDC may include AI-generated emoji and an OpenAI partnership
OpenAI CEO Cements Control as He Secures Apple Deal
Custom GPTs open for free ChatGPT users
OpenAI has a new safety team — it’s run by Sam Altman
Why the OpenAI board fired Sam Altman
Elon Musk’s xAI raises $6 billion to fund its race against ChatGPT and all the rest
New Galaxy Z Flip 6 and Galaxy Ring details have leaked, courtesy of the FCC
The Fitbit Ace LTE is like a Nintendo smartwatch for kids
Discord’s turning the focus back to games with a new redesign
The business behind Unnecessary Inventions’ millions of followers
Welcome to Notepad, a newsletter on Microsoft’s era-defining bets by Tom Warren
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Why Microsoft bet on Surface
Tue, 28 May 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of open smart home standards:
03:25 - Microsoft’s Pavan Davuluri, leader for Windows and Devices, joins the show to discuss the future of the AI PC and what’s next for Microsoft’s hardware
Microsoft’s new Windows chief on the future of the OS, Surface, and those annoying ads
Microsoft’s big bet on building a new type of AI computer
Microsoft Build 2024: everything announced
30:25 - The Verge’s Jen Tuohy and David Pierce discuss the latest updates in the smart home world in a segment called “Does Matter matter yet?”
The Dyson WashG1 is the company’s first dedicated mop
Amazon’s Matter Casting is shaping up so nicely, I want to use it everywhere
Matter 1.3 arrives with new device type and features
Smart lighting company Brilliant is looking for a buyer
Google launches new Home APIs and turns Google TVs into smart home hubs
01:13:20 - David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about AI-powered search engines.
Google is redesigning its search engine — and it's AI all the way down
Google CEO Sundar Pichai on AI-powered search and the future of the web
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Seeing the real world inside a virtual one
Sun, 26 May 2024
On this episode of The Vergecast, the fourth and final installment of our series on the five senses of video games, we asked Polygon’s Charlie Hall to help us make sense of the current state of the art in flight simulation. Hall, who once spent more than four months in VR mapping the edge of the Milky Way galaxy in Elite: Dangerous, has more experience in a virtual cockpit than most. We wanted to know how the pros set up their simulators to get the most realistic experience and why it’s so complicated to make a virtual world look like the real one.
Further reading:
It’s time to build the cockpit of your dreams
Microsoft Flight Simulator’s most-needed feature is co-op
My first kill as a Star Citizen
If Microsoft Flight Simulator has you craving air combat, try this flight sim next
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ChatGPT has a Scarlett Johansson problem
Fri, 24 May 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss announcements from Microsoft Build, the OpenAI's trouble with Scarlett Johansson, new Sonos headphones, and more.
Further reading:
Microsoft’s big bet on building a new type of AI computer
Recall is Microsoft’s key to unlocking the future of PCs
https://www.theverge.com › microsoft-surface-pro-pric...
Here’s the eight-inch Snapdragon PC for your Windows on Arm experiments
How does the Microsoft Surface Laptop stack up to the MacBook Air?
Microsoft Build 2024: everything announced
Windows now has AI-powered copy and paste
Microsoft is making File Explorer more powerful with version control and 7z compression
Here’s the eight-inch Snapdragon PC for your Windows on Arm experiments
Microsoft Edge will translate and dub YouTube videos as you’re watching them
Microsoft brings out a small language model that can look at pictures
Microsoft’s new Copilot AI agents act like virtual employees to automate tasks
Microsoft outage took down Copilot, DuckDuckGo, and ChatGPT search features
OpenAI is ‘in conversations’ with Scarlett Johansson over the ChatGPT voice that sounds just like her
OpenAI pulls its Scarlett Johansson-like voice for ChatGPT
Lawyers say OpenAI could be in real trouble with Scarlett Johansson
Scarlett Johansson told OpenAI not to use her voice — and she’s not happy they might have anyway
OpenAI didn’t copy Scarlett Johansson’s voice for ChatGPT, records show
OpenAI Just Gave Away the Entire Game
OpenAI’s News Corp deal licenses content from WSJ, New York Post, and more
OpenAI strikes Reddit deal to train its AI on your posts
The US government is trying to break up Live Nation-Ticketmaster
The Sonos Ace headphones are here, and they’re damn impressive
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence addresses the company’s divisive app redesign
here’s an electric salt spoon that adds umami flavor
Apple needs to explain that bug that resurfaced deleted photos
Humane is looking for a buyer after the AI Pin’s underwhelming debut
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Microsoft is in its AI PC era
Tue, 21 May 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of Arm-based chipsets:
03:08 - The Verge’s Tom Warren and David Pierce discuss the announcements from Microsoft’s Surface event, including the new Arm-powered Surface Laptop, and Copilot Plus PCs.
Microsoft’s Surface AI event: news, rumors, and lots of Qualcomm laptops
Microsoft announces an Arm-powered Surface Laptop
Microsoft’s new Surface Pro gets an OLED display for the first time
Microsoft announces Copilot Plus PCs with built-in AI hardware
The new, faster Surface Pro is Microsoft's all-purpose AI PC
Recall is Microsoft’s key to unlocking the future of PCs
27:29 -Verge senior AI reporter Kylie Robison joins the show to chat about OpenAI’s GPT-4o demo and where we’re headed in the next few years of AI.
ChatGPT is getting a Mac app
OpenAI’s custom GPT Store is now open to all for free
OpenAI releases GPT-4o, a faster model that’s free for all ChatGPT users
ChatGPT will be able to talk to you like Scarlett Johansson in Her
OpenAI pulls its Scarlett Johansson-like voice for ChatGPT
OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever is officially leaving
OpenAI researcher resigns, claiming safety has taken ‘a backseat to shiny products’
We tried out the Project Astra demo at Google I/O which worked well un... | tech | TikTok
57:40 - Nilay Patel answers a question about iPads for this week’s Vergecast Hotline.
Apple iPad Pro (2024) review: the best tablet money can buy
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The smells and tastes of a great video game
Sun, 19 May 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of refillable scent cartridges:
Producer Andru Marino tries out a gadget called the Gamescent, an AI-powered scent machine that syncs with your gaming and movie watching experience. He walks David Pierce through the experience and whether integrating olfaction could be the future of gaming.
We also hear from Nimesha Ranasinghe, an assistant professor at the University of Maine working on taste sensations and taste simulation in virtual reality experiences, which can lead to adding another sense into the world of gaming.
Further reading:
A Brief History of Smell-O-Vision
“Scent of Mystery”, the First and Only Use of Smell-O-Vision
The sights, smells, and sprays of ‘Iron Man 3’ in 4DX
The iSmell story
Smell-O-Vision is REAL: Linus Tech Tips
VR pioneer Jaron Lanier on dystopia, empathy, and the future of the internet
The sense of taste in virtual reality
Virtual lemonade sends colour and taste to a glass of water
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AI assistants are so back
Fri, 17 May 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss announcements from Google I/O and OpenAI's GPT4o event.
Further reading:
Google and OpenAI race to build the feature of search
OpenAI releases GPT-4o, a faster model that’s free for all ChatGPT users
ChatGPT will be able to talk to you like Scarlett Johansson in Her
ChatGPT is getting a Mac app
OpenAI’s custom GPT Store is now open to all for free
OpenAI’s “ChatGPT and GPT-4” Spring Update stream starts in 20 minutes
OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever is officially leavingl
Project Astra: the future of AI at Google is fast, multi-modal assistants like Gemini Live
Google’s Gemini AI is getting a chatty new voice mode
Google will let you create personalized AI chatbots
Google’s Gemini can build an entire vacation itinerary ‘in a matter of seconds’
Google’s Circle to Search will help you with your math homework
Google’s Gemini video search makes factual error in demo
We have to stop ignoring AI’s hallucination problem
Google I/O 2024: everything announced
Google is redesigning its search engine — and it's AI all the way down
Google now offers ‘web’ search — and an AI opt-out button
Gemini is about to get better at understanding what's on your phone screen
Google is building Gemini Nano AI right into Chrome
Google makes its AI way faster with Gemini Flash
Google’s new LearnLM AI model focuses on education
Android apps will soon let you use your face to control your cursor
Android is getting an AI-powered scam call detection feature
Google targets filmmakers with Veo, its new generative AI video model
Google’s invisible AI watermark will help identify generative text and video
Google Photos is getting its own ‘Ask Photos’ assistant this summer
Blink and you missed it: Google has a new pair of prototype AR glasses
We have to stop ignoring AI’s hallucination problem
Google launches new Home APIs and turns Google TVs into smart home hubs
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The case for the iPad Pro
Tue, 14 May 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of tandem OLEDs:
The Verge’s David Pierce and Chris Welch discuss the new iPad Pros with an OLED screen, Sonos’ controversial new app, and Sonos’ leaked headphones.
Apple iPad Pro (2024) review: the best kind of overkill
The new Apple iPad Air is great — but it's not the one to get
The new Sonos app is missing a lot of features, and people aren’t happy
Sonos Ace headphones will have magnetic ear cushions and 30-hour battery life
The Verge’s Will Poor buys a bunch of broken iPhones on eBay, and pits the Apple Store against independent repair techs.
Jet City Device Repair
iFixit’s iPhone 8 charge port repair guide
Hugh Jeffreys’ iPhone 12 investigation
Apple’s plan to allow used parts in iPhone repairs
David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about why some people think the iPad should be a Macbook replacement.
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The rise of the audio-only video game
Sun, 12 May 2024
In episode two of our Five Senses of Gaming miniseries, David Pierce dives into the world of hearing with audio-only video games with Paul Bennun, who has been in this space longer than most. Years ago, Bennun and his team at Somethin’ Else made a series of games called Papa Sangre that were among the most innovative and most popular games of their kind. He explains what makes an audio game work, why the iPhone 4 was such a crucial technological achievement for these games, and more.
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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The beginning and end of the iPad
Fri, 10 May 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Apple's iPad event, the evolution of the streaming business, updates on the Wisconsin Foxconn site, and much more tech news.
Apple iPad event: all the news from Apple’s ‘Let Loose’ reveal
The 7 biggest announcements from Apple’s iPad event
Here's how the latest iPad Pro compares to the new iPad Air (and prior models)
Apple adds a 13-inch iPad Air to the mix
The iPad Air is now heavier than the iPad Pro
Apple announces new iPad Pros with OLED displays and thinnest design ever
Apple announces its M4 chip
Magic Keyboard for iPad Pro M4: bigger trackpad and a function row
Hands-on with the new iPad Pro: yeah, it's really thin
You can upgrade the iPad Pro’s processor now, too
The new Apple Pencil Pro is harder to lose and better to draw with
Apple puts more ‘Pro’ in Final Cut and Logic Pro for the iPad
Apple quietly kills the old-school iPad and its headphone jack
The new iPads are ditching physical SIM cards
Goodbye to Apple’s Smart Keyboard Folio, the best iPad Pro accessory
People sure are pressed about Apple’s crushing iPad commercial
A Disney, Hulu, and Max streaming bundle is on the way
The streaming business will look “very different” in the next couple of years.
Max nears 100 million subscribers globally.
Max price hike incoming.
Disney’s streaming business gets closer to becoming profitable
ESPN is coming to the Disney Plus app
Sony is now in play to buy Paramount.
The Office is getting a Peacock spinoff about local newspapers
The new Sonos app is missing a lot of features, and people aren’t happy
Inside Microsoft’s Xbox turmoil
Microsoft says it needs games like Hi-Fi Rush the day after killing its studio
Epic v. Apple judge seems displeased over style restrictions on iOS buttons
The new Sonos app is missing a lot of features, and people aren’t happy
President Joe Biden to announce AI data center at failed Foxconn site in Wisconsin
TikTok sues the US government over ban
The Google Pixel 8A is a midrange phone that might go the distance
Google’s Pixel Tablet relaunch at $399 makes its magnetic dock optional
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Delta's 10-year journey to the top of the App Store
Tue, 07 May 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of enterprise certificate hacks:
03:22 - The Verge’s David Pierce chats with Riley Testut, founder of AltStore and developer of the game emulator app Delta, about how his app finally made it into Apple’s App Store.
The free Delta game emulator for iPhones is live on Apple’s App Store
Third-party iPhone app store AltStore PAL is now live in Europe
Delta is the game emulator your iPhone has been missing
46:17 - David walks us through his experimentation with the many software and hardware solutions for “AI voice notes.”
Cleft Notes is an AI voice notes app that really works
1:02:02 - David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about the Rabbit R1.
Rabbit R1 review: nothing to see here
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A speedrunner’s quest to (re)build the perfect N64 controller
Sun, 05 May 2024
We’re kicking off our “Five Senses of Gaming” miniseries today, starting with “touch.” The Verge’s William Poor explores a controller crisis in the Nintendo 64 speedrunning community, and follows one speedrunner’s quest to recreate a mythical controller he lost.
Further reading/viewing:
How Sticks Are Sabotaging Speedrunners (Stick Crisis History)
abney317 on Twitch
The Quest to Beat abney317
Mariokart64.com
More on Beck Abney’s controller problems
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Rabbit, Humane, and the iPad
Fri, 03 May 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss this week's tech and gadget news.
Further reading:
Rabbit R1 review: an unfinished, unhelpful AI gadget
The Rabbit R1’s first software update addresses its dismal battery life - The Verge
Turns out the Rabbit R1 was just an Android app all along
TikTok and Universal Music Group end feud with new agreement
Microsoft’s OpenAI investment was triggered by Google fears, emails reveal
Peloton announces new round of layoffs as CEO quits
Elon Musk goes ‘absolutely hard core’ in another round of Tesla layoffs
Tesla layoffs hit Supercharger team just as it’s poised to take over EV charging
LinkedIn is the latest company to get in on gaming
Pixel 8A leak reveals $499 starting price
Beats announces Solo 4 headphones and $79.99 Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 review: playing both sides
Walmart is about to launch a 4K Chromecast that’s also a smart speaker
SwitchBot S10 review: with plumbing hookups, this robovac and mop is actually hands-free
iOS 17.5 beta lets you keep Find My on during iPhone repairs
Razer made a million dollars selling a mask with RGB, and the FTC is not pleased
Instagram’s updated algorithm prioritizes original content instead of rip-offs
Meta is “exploring” algorithm changes on Threads.
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Phones are the ultimate AI gadget
Tue, 30 Apr 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of dedicated AI hardware:
The Verge’s David Pierce and Allison Johnson debate whether the emergence of standalone AI gadgets like the Humane Pin and the Rabbit R1 are better off as apps or should exist as its own hardware.
Humane AI Pin review: not even close
The Humane AI Pin worked better than I expected — until it didn’t
A morning with the Rabbit R1: a fun, funky, unfinished AI gadget
Can Rabbit’s R1 outsmart the smartphone assistants? Let’s find out!
The future of AI gadgets is just phones
The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses actually make the future look cool
The Verge’s Alex Heath joins the show to discuss Meta’s big move into AI with its multimodal AI smart glasses and a new AI model called Llama 3.
Q&A: Mark Zuckerberg on winning the AI race
Meta wants to be the Microsoft of headsets
Zuckerberg says it will take Meta years to make money from generative AI
Nilay Patel answers a question from The Vergecast Hotline about Microsoft and antitrust.
Microsoft splits Teams from Office as antitrust pressure ramps up
Microsoft and OpenAI deal may face anti-trust investigations in the EU.
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Anyone want to buy TikTok?
Thu, 25 Apr 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss President Biden signing the TikTok ban bill, Apple's May 7th iPad event, Tesla's flop era, and more.
Further reading:
Senate passes TikTok ban bill, sending it to President Biden’s desk
Biden signs TikTok ‘ban’ bill into law, starting the clock for ByteDance to divest it
Rabbit R1 hands-on: early tests with the $199 AI gadget
Apple announces May 7th event for new iPads
What to expect at Apple’s May ‘Let Loose’ event
The Mercedes G-Wagen, the ultimate off-road status symbol, goes electric
The Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses have multimodal AI now
Kuo: Apple cuts Vision Pro shipments due to low demand
Tesla’s in its flop era
Tesla lays off ‘more than 10 percent’ of its workforce, loses top executives
Tesla recalls all 3,878 Cybertrucks over faulty accelerator pedal
Tesla reveals a new Model 3 Performance with more horsepower and faster acceleration
A cheaper Tesla is back on the menu
Sonos announces redesigned app that puts everything on your homescreen
Qualcomm announces Snapdragon X Plus and Elite processors
Apple might be the streaming home of soccer’s next big tournament
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Congress takes on TikTok, privacy, and AI
Tue, 23 Apr 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of forced app divestiture:
03:07 - The Verge’s David Pierce and Lauren Fiener discuss the latest tech policy bills floating through Congress, including a privacy bill, a generative AI bill, and the TikTok divest-or-ban bill.
TikTok ‘ban’ passes in the House again
TikTok divest-or-ban legislation could suddenly be fast-tracked in the Senate
Lawmakers unveil new bipartisan digital privacy bill after years of impasse
A real privacy law? House lawmakers are optimistic this time
New bill would create public datasets to train AI and incentivize innovation.
34:17 - David talks with Nikola Todorovic and Tye Sheridan about their company Wonder Dynamics, which is creating AI-powered production tools for filmmakers.
1:09:16 - David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about messaging apps.
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Emulators are taking over the App Store
Fri, 19 Apr 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss third-party iPhone app stores, game emulators, Google Android and hardware team restructuring, the latest TikTok news, and more.
Further reading:
Third-party iPhone app store AltStore PAL is now live in Europe
The free Delta game emulator for iPhones is live on Apple’s App Store
A new NES emulator was briefly available on the Apple App Store
The first Apple-approved emulator for the iPhone has arrived... and been pulled
Apple opens the App Store to retro game emulators
Google is combining its Android and hardware teams — and it’s all about AI
Meta’s battle with ChatGPT begins now
AI isn't useless. But is it worth it?
Facebook’s AI Told Parents Group It Has a Gifted, Disabled Child
Big Papa Joe, world's biggest TouchWiz Fan - The Vergecast (clip)
Facebook’s AI Told Parents Group It Has a Gifted, Disabled Child
Sony might have perfected Mini LED TVs with its new 2024 lineup
Broadcast TV still exists, and now it’s sort of getting a built-in DVR
TikTok Notes starts rolling out as a new rival to Instagram
TikTok gives users more in-app ways to buy event tickets.
TikTok divest-or-ban legislation could suddenly be fast-tracked in the Senate
Report: ByteDance still has access to US users’ TikTok data despite Project Texas
The president could delay a TikTok ban an extra six months under a reported House proposal.
TikTok to restrict users who repeatedly post problematic topics from ‘For You’ feed
Twitch’s new TikTok-style Discovery feed is rolling out to everyone soon
Spotify is developing a remix feature to rival sped-up TikTok tunes
Samsung shifts executives to six-day workweeks to ‘inject a sense of crisis’
Boston Dynamics’ new electric Atlas robot is swiveling nightmare fuel
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The internet really is a series of tubes
Tue, 16 Apr 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of undersea cable management:
04:10 - The Verge’s David Pierce and Josh Dzieza discuss the industry of laying and maintaining undersea cables that connect us to the internet.
The invisible seafaring industry that keeps the internet afloat
43:43 - Tom Warren and Joanna Nelius join the show to discuss the future of Arm chips on PCs and whether or not we’re about to get a huge jump in performance on most laptops.
Microsoft is confident Windows on Arm could finally beat Apple
Microsoft to hold a special Windows and Surface AI event in May
Microsoft’s first AI PCs are the Surface Pro 10 and Surface Laptop 6 for businesses
Qualcomm claims its Snapdragon X Elite processor will beat Apple, Intel, and AMD
Qualcomm says most Windows games should ‘just work’ on its unannounced Arm laptops
1:11:18 - Alex Cranz answers questions from the Vergecast Hotline about e-readers and the latest Kobo devices.
Kobo announces its first color e-readers
The best ebook reader to buy right now
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The good, the bad, and the Humane AI Pin
Fri, 12 Apr 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Piece, and Alex Cranz discuss David's review of the Humane AI Pin, Taylor Swift's music back on TikTok, a new party speaker, and much more.
Further reading:
Humane AI Pin review: the post-smartphone future isn’t here yet
Here’s What Reviewers Are Saying About the Humane Pin
We now have a better look at what’s inside the Humane AI pin
OpenAI transcribed over a million hours of YouTube videos to train GPT-4
Taylor Swift’s music is back on TikTok
Apple will open the iPhone to repair with used parts
Kobo announces its first color e-readers
Sony’s new headphones and speakers are all about skull-rattling bass
Official: here’s the DJI Avata 2, possibly one of the best sequels in years
Google Vids is the latest AI-powered app in Workspace
Meta says it’s fixing ‘HD’ photo sharing in Facebook Messenger
Marissa Mayer’s eternal Sunshine
The MPA has big plans to crack down on movie piracy again
Vote for The Vergecast in the Webbys!
Join The Verge at the 2024 Chicago Humanities Spring Festival
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The TikTok ban and the iPhone monopoly
Tue, 09 Apr 2024
The Verge’s David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz answer questions from The Vergecast Hotline all about the TikTok ban debate and the US v Apple case.
Further reading:
TikTok ban: all the news on attempts to ban the video platform
US v. Apple: everything you need to know
The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age
Vote for The Vergecast in the Webbys!
Join The Verge at the 2024 Chicago Humanities Spring Festival
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How much MacBook is enough MacBook?
Fri, 05 Apr 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz discuss the Apple Macbook Air M3 review, Jon Stewart's take on AI, and a whole lot more of this week's tech news.
Further reading:
Apple MacBook Air M3 review: small upgrades
It’s time for a hard reset on notifications
Best printer 2024, best printer for home use, office use, printing labels, printer for school, homework printer you are a printer we are all printers
Microsoft is working on an Xbox AI chatbot
Samsung says Bixby’s still not dead
The world needs more gadgets like LG’s briefcase TV
Jon Stewart on AI, Lina Khan, and the other things Apple didn’t want him to say
A first look at Europe’s alternative iPhone app stores
Will the Apple antitrust case lawsuit affect your phone’s security?
How Meta’s global head of safety approaches online age verification
Is TikTok still TikTok without the algorithm?’
The US House banned staffers from using Microsoft Copilot
FCC will vote on restoring net neutrality rules
X’s ‘complimentary’ Premium push gives people blue checks they didn’t ask for
Spotify’s price is reportedly going up again
AI George Carlin case settled as performers demand better protection
OpenAI’s voice cloning AI model only needs a 15-second sample to work
Google Podcasts is gone — and so is my faith in Google
Vote for us in the Webbys!! People’s Voice Technology Podcast
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A better keyboard than QWERTY
Tue, 02 Apr 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of alternate keyboard layouts:
03:36 - The Verge’s David Pierce talks to Jonas Hietala about his ultra-custom keyboard he built from the ground up to fit his specific needs.
Jonas Hietala: The T-34 keyboard layout
30:40 - The Verge’s Tom Warren explains the next phase of Microsoft with a new leader on the Windows and Surface team.
Microsoft has a new Windows and Surface chief
Microsoft’s first AI PCs are the Surface Pro 10 and Surface Laptop 6 for businesses
Rewind’s new feature brings ChatGPT to your personal information
57:32 - David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about tricks for Netflix recommendations.
How Planet Earth — and the Netflix homepage — get made
Vote for The Vergecast in the Webby's Technology Podcast category!
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Power User: Taylor Lorenz on the TikTok ban
Fri, 29 Mar 2024
Today we're sharing an episode of a new podcast called Power User, which explores how technology and the internet are upending our lives and the world around us, hosted by tech journalist Taylor Lorenz.
Follow Power User with Taylor Lorenz wherever you get your podcasts: https://link.chtbl.com/poweruserpod
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AI headphones and clicky phone keys
Tue, 26 Mar 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of canceled-out cricket sounds:
03:29 - David, Andru, and Will react to prototype headphones that use AI to take noise cancellation to a whole new level.
Hear how the best ANC headphones handle real world and lab tests
We sent the top ANC headphones to a lab to test their noise-canceling abilities
The University of Washington’s Semantic Hearing project
UW’s Mobile Intelligence Lab
31:30 - Michael Fisher, aka Mr. Mobile, joins the show to discuss mobile phones with physical keyboards and his latest project, “Clicks,” an iPhone case featuring an integrated keyboard.
Clicks is a BlackBerry-style iPhone keyboard case designed for creators
BlackBerry kills Ryan Seacrest's iPhone keyboard
56:30 - Andru Marino answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about the best microphone for recording your parents.
How to get great audio for podcast interviews
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Away Travel Duo: Carry-On Suitcase & Everywhere Bag Set – Jet Black
The ultimate business travel power couple. This set includes an airline-approved Carry-On with a TSA lock and patented compression system, plus the Everywhere Bag with a dedicated 16" laptop pocket and trolley sleeve to secure it to the suitcase. Look polished and stay organized on every corporate mission.
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Apple’s antitrust fight begins
Fri, 22 Mar 2024
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, Lauren Feiner and Nilay Patel discuss the breaking news about the the US Department of Justice accusing Apple of operating an illegal monopoly in the smartphone market in an expansive new antitrust lawsuit.
Further reading:
US v. Apple: everything you need to know
US sues Apple for illegal monopoly over smartphones
The US Department of Justice is suing Apple — read the full lawsuit here
The lock-in problem at the heart of the DOJ’s case against Apple
Beeper couldn’t bring iMessage to Android — but it can still make a great chat app
What else can Humane’s AI pin do?
These toddler games for iPad are actually good — and that's all too rare
YouTube TV’s multiview comes to iPhones and iPads in time for March Madness
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DoorDash, Uber Eats... and Tony
Tue, 19 Mar 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of scaled EV production:
02:50 - Verge producer Will Poor tags along with a former Uber Eats driver who ditched the delivery apps and is trying to start a one-man gig work revolution.
This Seattle Delivery Person Is Breaking Free of the Apps
https://tonydelivers.co/
18:54- The Verge's David Pierce and Andrew Hawkins discuss Rivian's new vehicles they announced last week, and what it will take for the company to compete with Tesla.
Rivian R2, R3, and R3X launch event: the EV company’s more affordable SUVs are here
Rivian’s CEO talks R2 and R3 launch, and why he has ‘complete certainty’ EVs will win
Rivian R2 revealed: a $45,000 electric off-roader for the masses
Rivian owners now have access to Tesla Superchargers
Rivian surprises with R3 and R3X electric SUVs
54:37 - David and Allison Johnson answer a question from The Vergecast Hotline about foldable phones.
Google Pixel Fold review: closing the gap
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 review: a little better is just good enough
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Are we really about to ban TikTok?
Fri, 15 Mar 2024
The Verge 's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the US House of Representatives passing a bill that could ban TikTok, the streaming news of the week, a Dyson robot, and more.
Further reading:
Lawmakers introduce bill that would punish app stores for hosting TikTok
TikTok ban: all the news on attempts to ban the video platform
House passes bill that could ban TikTok
TikTok’s fate now lies with the Senate after House advances path to a ban
There might be a “TikTok Photos” app in the works to take on Instagram.
TikTok CEO tells users to “make their voices heard” against a bill that could ban the app in the US.
Nancy Pelosi is playing TikTok-toe.
Donald Trump has even more to say about the TikTok ban.
President Biden says he’ll sign a TikTok ban, if passed.
TikTok is urging users to call Congress about a looming ban
The TikTokers are revolting.
Former Activision CEO Bobby Kotick is apparently eyeing TikTok.
YouTube is revamping its TV app to make videos feel way more interactive
Spotify now has music videos
Neil Young’s music is back on “low res Spotify” two years after Rogan protest
Neil Young says the MacBook Pro has ‘Fisher-Price’ audio quality
Elon Musk cancels Don Lemon’s show on X after a ‘tense’ interview
Linda Yaccarino on X: "X is becoming a video first platform”
Roku hackers breach 15,000 accounts and are selling them online
British monarchy rocked by bad Photoshop job
The Kate Middleton photo scandal is a rare — and consequential — flub
SpaceX successfully launches Starship in third flight test
Apple to allow iOS app downloads direct from websites in the EU
Hands-on with the Dyson 360 Vis Nav robot vacuum
Nikon is acquiring US camera manufacturer RED
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The 2024 Streaming Draft (live from SXSW)
Tue, 12 Mar 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz choose their picks for The Vergecast Streaming Draft of 2024 in front of a live audience at SXSW.
Watch video version with a scoreboard on YouTube
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Hello and goodbye to the MacBook Air
Thu, 07 Mar 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Apple's upgraded MacBook Air, the EU's Digital Markets Act deadline for tech’s biggest “gatekeepers”, and a bunch of tech news from this week.
Further reading:
Apple announces upgraded MacBook Air laptops with M3 chips
The MacBook Air’s wedge is truly gone — and I miss it already
Apple may not do a spring event this year
How the EU’s DMA is changing Big Tech: all of the news and updates
How every tech ‘gatekeeper’ is responding to the DMA
iOS 17.4 is here and ready for a whole new Europe
Apple hit with a nearly $2 billion fine following Spotify complaint
Spotify and Epic criticize Apple’s iOS changes as ‘a mockery of the DMA’
Spotify will show pricing options outside its iOS app in the EU — if Apple lets it
Apple kills Epic’s iOS game store plans over App Store criticism
Apple is bringing sideloading and alternate app stores to the iPhone
Apple unbanned Epic so it can make an iOS games store in the EU
Alternative iOS app stores won’t work (for long) outside of the EU.
Here’s the new iOS default browser nag for iPhone users in Europe.
Apple is officially dropping iPhone support for web apps in the EU
Apple’s decision to drop iPhone web apps comes under scrutiny in the EU
Now Apple says it won’t disable iPhone web apps in the EU
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AI gadgets, bendy phones, and more from MWC
Tue, 05 Mar 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of region locked phones:
The Verge’s Allison Johnson and Jon Porter report back on all the tech we saw at Mobile World Congress this past week.
MWC 2024: all the phones, wearables, and gadgets announced in Barcelona
Peering through Lenovo’s transparent laptop into a sci-fi future
What if phones actually bent to our needs?
The Phone 2A makes a guest appearance at Nothing’s MWC event.
The Humane AI Pin worked better than I expected — until it didn’t
Samsung has big ambitions for the Galaxy Ring
A short gif of Infinix’s color-changing charging E Ink phone concept.
Now there’s a 28,000mAh battery with a phone in it
Xiaomi’s new Watch S3 has a bezel you can swap as easily as a strap.
Honor’s Magic 6 Pro launches internationally with AI-powered eye tracking on the way
HMD is making a Barbie flip phone alongside a smartphone for tinkerers
Later, David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about web crawlers and AI.
With the rise of AI, web crawlers are suddenly controversial
The Vergecast and Decoder are live at SXSW this weekend, March 8th and 9th. SXSW attendees can see both shows live on the official Vox Media Podcast Stage at the JW Marriott, presented by Atlassian. Learn more at voxmedia.com/live.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How smart is the smart kitchen, really?
Sun, 03 Mar 2024
The Verge’s Jennifer Pattison Tuohy has as smart a kitchen as any reasonable person possibly could; she has smart appliances, a smart sink, a smart fridge, and more voice assistants than anyone could ever talk to. And for a few days, she tried to let her kitchen do the work: telling her what to cook, getting everything set up just right, and even taking some of the cooking and cleaning load off her shoulders. Jen kept a diary during her adventures, and then joined The Vergecast to tell the tale. The fun, frustrating, exciting, harrowing tale.
Links:
The Thermomix
The Samsung Food app
The Fresco app
The GE Profile Smart Smoker
The Smart Instapot Pro
The Traeger Smart Wood Pellet Grill
The Typhur Smart Air Fryer
Tovala Smart Countertop Oven
My favorite smart oven is toast
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The Apple Car crash
Fri, 01 Mar 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel and David Pierce talk through the weird and winding history of Apple's "secret" car project now that it's officially dead. And later, senior policy reporter Lauren Feiner makes her Vergecast debut to catch us up on the arguments made this week in the Supreme Court about online speech and the First Amendment.
Further reading:
Apple’s electric car project is dead
RIP to the Apple Car, we hardly knew ye
Behind Apple’s Doomed Car Project: False Starts and Wrong Turns
Supreme Court hears arguments on the future of online speech: all the news
The Supreme Court is about to decide the future of online speech
Why Uber and Etsy came up so much in the Supreme Court’s social media arguments
Google CEO says Gemini AI diversity errors are 'completely unacceptable'
TikTok is removing even more songs as music rights battle drags on
The Humane AI Pin worked better than I expected — until it didn’t
Ford offers EV owners free Tesla Supercharger adapters until July
Attention English majors: now you can add handwritten notes to Google Docs
The Vergecast and Decoder are live at SXSW this weekend, March 8th and 9th. SXSW attendees can see both shows live on the official Vox Media Podcast Stage at the JW Marriott, presented by Atlassian. Learn more at voxmedia.com/live.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Tales of a shopping influencer
Tue, 27 Feb 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of the economic theory of Dave and Busters:
02:50 - The Verge’s Mia Sato shares her experience on a new shopping app called Flip, which is filled with only videos that earn affiliate revenue.
Where everyone’s an influencer and everything’s for sale
35:34 - The Verge’s Vjeran Pavic and Becca Farsace chat with David Piece about the new Fuji X100VI, and why this line of cameras was a sensation on social media.
Fujifilm announces the X100VI, its follow-up to a TikTok sensation
The internet's NEW favorite camera? (Fuji X100VI)
Fujifilm X100T review
57:44 - Verge producer Will Poor answers a follow-up question about the right to repair legislation in this week’s Vergecast Hotline.
The Vergecast and Decoder are live at SXSW this weekend, March 8th and 9th. SXSW attendees can see both shows live on the official Vox Media Podcast Stage at the JW Marriott, presented by Atlassian. Learn more at voxmedia.com/live.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The smart kitchen is a great idea — and a strange reality
Sun, 25 Feb 2024
Over the next two Sundays on The Vergecast, The Verge’s Jennifer Pattison-Tuohy and David Pierce dig into the dream smart kitchen, the less-than-dreamy reality of the situation, and what it might take to make cooking, cleaning, meal-prepping, and eating more efficient and more fun.
On this episode, Jen takes us on a tour of her own smart(ish) kitchen, and explains why the kitchen often feels left behind in the overall smart home race. Then, Jen and David are joined by Ben Harris, the CEO of Fresco; and Nick Holzherr, the co-founder of Samsung Food. They tell us about the opportunities and challenges in reinventing the way we cook and eat, and explain why the AI revolution might usher in huge change.
Further reading:
This smart oven solved my work-from-home lunchtime conundrum
2023 in the smart home: Matter’s broken promises
How the smart home is finally getting out of your phone and into your home
Appliance makers are teaming up to reduce your electricity usage — and save you cash
This smart mixer did not make me a better baker
Can Samsung Food usher in a new era for the smart kitchen?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The AIs are officially out of control
Fri, 23 Feb 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss ChatGPT and Gemini updates, Walmart acquiring Vizio, Apple's Sports app, and more.
Further reading:
Google cut a deal with Reddit for AI training data
Google apologizes for ‘missing the mark’ after Gemini generated racially diverse Nazis
Google’s open-source Gemma AI models draw from the research behind Gemini
ChatGPT spat out gibberish for many users overnight before OpenAI fixed it
One month with Microsoft’s AI vision of the future: Copilot Pro
Gemini, Gemma, Goose.
OpenAI can’t register ‘GPT’ as a trademark — yet
Artificial investment
Walmart to acquire Vizio in $2.3 billion deal
Echo Hub review: a simple, customizable smart home control panel
Samsung details a host of audio upgrades coming to its phones, tablets, and TVs
Apple says the iPhone 15’s battery got better — but won’t say how
Rice is not included in Apple’s official guidance for a wet phone
One of the last small-ish Android phones looks like it's going the way of the iPhone Mini
OnePlus is getting back into the smartwatch game
The Garmin Forerunner 165 could be a great budget running watch
Sony’s PlayStation Portal hacked to run emulated PSP games
Framework is selling a cheap modular laptop
Wyze says camera breach let 13,000 customers briefly see into other people’s homes
Apple launches Apple Sports app with scores and betting odds
Apple is already defending iMessage against tomorrow’s quantum computing attacks
IBM quantum computing updates: System Two and Heron
Microsoft and Intel strike a custom chip manufacturing deal
Rivian says it is laying off 10 percent of its workforce as EV woes deepen
Ford slashes Mustang Mach-E prices again as EV price war enters its second year
The Vergecast and Decoder are live at SXSW this weekend, March 8th and 9th. SXSW attendees can see both shows live on the official Vox Media Podcast Stage at the JW Marriott, presented by Atlassian. Learn more at voxmedia.com/live.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The right to repair – and play games anywhere
Tue, 20 Feb 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of sneaky gaming strategies:
03:45 - Verge producer Will Poor reports on a right-to-repair bill in Oregon and what's next in the right-to-repair movement.
The right-to-repair movement is just getting started
Status of Right to Repair legislation state by state, via repair.org
iFixit explains parts pairing
Jessa Jones’ iPad Rehab
Apple Is Lobbying Against Right to Repair Six Months After Supporting Right to Repair
The current draft of Oregon’s Right to Repair bill
33:13 - Tom Warren breaks down the news from Microsoft’s gaming chief about Xbox games coming to PS5 and next-gen hardware.
Microsoft’s gaming chief on Xbox games coming to PS5, next-gen hardware, and more
1:00:49 - David Pierce and Alex Cranz answer a question from The Vergecast Hotline about the crackdown on password sharing for streaming services.
Netflix might ruin password sharing for everyone
Disney Plus is finally cracking down on password sharing in the US
Hulu is cracking down on password sharing, just like Disney Plus and Netflix
The Vergecast and Decoder are live at SXSW this weekend, March 8th and 9th. SXSW attendees can see both shows live on the official Vox Media Podcast Stage at the JW Marriott, presented by Atlassian. Learn more at voxmedia.com/live.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The shine comes off the Vision Pro
Fri, 16 Feb 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss Apple fans starting to return the Vision Pro, Xbox exclusive games, Super Bowl streaming troubles, and more.
Further reading:
Apple fans are starting to return their Vision Pros
Zuckerberg says Quest 3 is ‘the better product’ vs. Apple’s Vision Pro
Meta’s big vision for face computers might be better than Apple’s
Microsoft’s gaming chief on Xbox games coming to PS5, next-gen hardware, and more
Microsoft prepares to take Xbox everywhere
Gemini Advanced is most impressive when it’s working with Google
Gemini 1.5: Google’s next-gen AI model is almost ready
Google’s Gemini assistant is fantastic and frustrating
OpenAI introduces Sora, its text-to-video AI model
ChatGPT’s memory gives OpenAI’s chatbot new information about you
Can watermarks save us from deepfakes?
Automating ableism
The text file that runs the internet
Apple won’t be forced to open up iMessage by EU
FCC commissioner wants to investigate Apple over Beeper Mini shutdown
Apple appears to be breaking iPhone web apps in the EU
Walmart might buy Vizio to win the fight over cheap TVs
AI at Work
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Passkeys might really kill passwords
Tue, 13 Feb 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of video podcasts:
02:52 - The Verge's David Pierce chats with 1Password's Anna Pobletts about good password hygiene, passkeys, and the upsides of a third-party password manager.
Passkeys: all the news and updates around passwordless sign-on support
Biometrics? Bring it on: why Okta’s Jameeka Green Aaron wants passwords to go away
How to use a passkey to sign in to your Google account
1Password’s passkeys explainer
31:56 - Victoria Song joins the show to discuss the state of wearables and why this may be the year for the smart ring.
Fossil is quitting smartwatches
This might be the year of the smart ring
The best smartwatches for Android
The best fitness trackers to buy right now
58:46 -Later, David answers a question from The Vergecast Hotline.
Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
Here’s how much the Vision Pro’s accessories cost
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Disney’s big bets on sports, streaming, and Fortnite
Fri, 09 Feb 2024
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Adi Robertson discuss sports streaming, Apple Vision Pro updates, Bluesky removing its invite system, and more.
Further reading:
ESPN, Fox, and Warner Bros. are putting together a juggernaut sports streaming app
Disney Plus will start its password-sharing crackdown this summer
Disney invests $1.5 billion in Epic to create ‘persistent universe’ tied to Fortnite
Apple TV+ Became HBO Before HBO Could Become Netflix
@lucas_shaw • All these articles should be required to note that nobody watches Apple TV+. • Threads
A new Vision Pro teardown shows Apple’s incredible pixel density
Apple’s first Vision Pro beta lets you bring virtual items closer
Apple’s Vision Pro launch day photo drop captures eager customers.
The Vision Pro’s killer app: Cybertruck clout-chasing accessory
YouTube says a Vision Pro app is ‘on the roadmap’
Vision Pro’s Personas look a little crisper after latest beta update.
It’s been 10 hours.
Bluesky social network drops invite-only sign ups
The fediverse, explained: Mastodon, Threads, and the open future of social networking
X hits number one on the Apple App Store amid second celebrity image scandal
The FCC bans robocalls with AI-generated voices
Ford quietly created its own ‘skunkworks’ team to develop low-cost electric vehicles
Apple is still working on foldable iPhones and iPads
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Camera for Video Podcasting
Need a camera for video podcasting? Sony ZV-1F Vlog Camera for Content Creators and Vloggers Black
How AI will change phones — and the whole internet
Tue, 06 Feb 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of anti-glare coatings:
03:58 - Josh Miller, CEO The Browser Company, joins the show to chat about the Arc Search mobile browser.
Arc Search: a new iPhone app combining browser, search, and AI
The Arc browser is the Chrome replacement I've been waiting for
48:34 - Allison Johnson shares her review of the flagship Samsung Galaxy S24 phones.
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra review: all that and AI
Samsung Galaxy S24 and S24 Plus review: smart choices
1:18:54- David Pierce answers a question from The Vergecast Hotline about the Apple Vision Pro.
Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
Meta’s Quest headsets add spatial video and pinch controls to compete with Vision Pr
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Is this peak TikTok?
Fri, 02 Feb 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the Apple Vision Pro review rating, changes to the TikTok app, streaming news, and more.
Further reading:
Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
The Vision Pro is a computer for the age of walled gardens
Apple’s Vision Pro battery pack is hiding the final boss of Lightning cables
Even without Netflix and YouTube, Apple’s Vision Pro has over 600 apps at launch
TikTok loses Taylor Swift, Drake, and other major Universal Music artists
UMG set to remove music from TikTok amid AI and payment concerns
TikTok test automatically identifies products in videos and offers purchase links
TikTok goes full YouTube
Hulu is cracking down on password sharing, just like Disney Plus and Netflix
The death of the Amazon deal could mean goodbye iRobot
Lawmakers propose anti-nonconsensual AI porn bill after Taylor Swift controversy
All the news from Congress’ Big Tech child safety hearing
Snap is recalling and refunding every drone it ever sold
TikTok’s CEO can’t catch a break from xenophobia in Congress
Your home’s internet connection could soon be called .internal
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The Apple Vision Pro review
Tue, 30 Jan 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Nilay's review of the Apple Vision Pro, and then answer questions from our listeners.
Further reading:
Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
Apple Vision Pro review (video)
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Apple (grumpily) opens up the App Store
Fri, 26 Jan 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Apple allowing alternative browser engines in the EU, Netflix getting WWE, Pixel 9 leaks, and more.
Further reading:
Apple is bringing sideloading and alternate app stores to the iPhone
Apple is allowing alternative browser engines in iOS 17.4 — but only in the EU
Apple opens App Store to game streaming services
Netflix is turning into cable TV
Netflix is going to take away its cheapest ad-free plan
WWE Monday Night Raw is ditching cable for Netflix
The Mac turns 40 — and keeps on moving
Looking back on 40 years of Macintosh
The Pixel 9 leaks are already here
Leaked pictures show a very blue Pixel 9.
The Vision Pro’s most important app is Safari, whether Apple likes it or not
Vision Pro cover glass repairs will set you back $799 without AppleCare Plus
Apple tells artists how much more money they can make with spatial audio
Inside India’s race to cool 1.3 billion people in a warming world
Nintendo goes after the Palworld Pokémon modder
The Pokémon Company says it will ‘investigate’ Palworld
This baby is covered in old flip phones and chips — and you cannot afford it
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From the Macintosh to the Vision Pro — and beyond
Wed, 24 Jan 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of really old computers:
03:54 - Walt Mossberg, former Verge executive editor and longtime Wall Street Journal tech columnist, joins the show to discuss forty years of the Macintosh computer.
Mossberg - The Verge
The Mac turns 40 — and keeps on moving
Steve Jobs Introduces the Macintosh
Looking back on 40 years of Macintosh
40:28 - Ali Abdaal chats about his new book "Feel Good Productivity: How to Do More of What Matters To You" and why overthinking your productivity system might not be such a good idea.
Ali Abdaal - YouTube
Feel Good Productivity
1:06:53 - David Pierce answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about laptops.
The best laptops you can get
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Vision Pro, Galaxy S24: it’s gadget season again
Fri, 19 Jan 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Victoria Song, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the Apple Vision Pro demo, the Samsung Galaxy S24 announcement, and more of this week's tech news.
Watch the video here
Further reading:
Apple Vision Pro hands-on, again, for the first time
Apple Vision Pro demos will include scanning your glasses to identify your prescription
The Apple Vision Pro has a ‘guest’ mode for your friends to try it
Apple Vision Pro will launch with 3D movies from Disney Plus
Netflix’s app won’t work on the Vision Pro
Magic Leap’s CEO isn’t worried about competing with the Apple Vision Pro.
Apple Watch ban: everything you need to know
Apple Watch sales ban restarts Thursday
Apple Watches without banned blood oxygen features will go on sale Thursday morning
This smartwatch has the tech that sparked the Apple Watch ban
Samsung is making a Galaxy Ring
Samsung’s Galaxy S24 and AI event: all the news
The Galaxy S24 Ultra is smarter, pricier, and just as big as ever
Samsung’s Galaxy S24 Ultra might fend off scratches just as well as drops
Samsung’s S24 and S24 Plus put new AI smarts in a polished package
Samsung’s Galaxy S24 is first to be able to upload HDR photos to Instagram
Google’s Circle to Search makes visual searches super simple
Samsung’s Galaxy AI is coming to 100 million Galaxy phones.
Meta’s new goal is to build artificial general intelligence
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Who will win the 2024 streaming wars?
Wed, 17 Jan 2024
Today on the flagship podcast of endlessly looping sounds:
02:33 - David Pierce dives into one piece of music that has taken over "North Sea TikTok"
20:45 - Alex Cranz joins the show to preview new TV shows coming to streaming in 2024, and gives predictions about which streaming service will come out on top this year.
55:36 - This week's Vergecast Hotline question about E Ink at CES.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love to hear from you.
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Rabbit, Ballie, and the other gadgets of CES 2024
Fri, 12 Jan 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz follow up on all the rest of the gadgets and tech seen at CES 2024.
Further reading:
CES 2024: all the TVs, laptops, smart home gear, and more from the show floor
The Rabbit R1 is an AI-powered gadget that can use your apps for you
Rabbit sells out 10,000 units of its R1 pocket AI companion in one day
Samsung’s Ballie robot is now a projector that follows you around
Wi-Fi 7 quietly took off while everyone was looking at AI
Wi-Fi 7 certification is now underway for new routers and devices
Belkin made an iPhone dock that can track you around the room
Satechi’s new Qi2 charging stands are stylish and storable
Have yourself some more Thunderbolt 5.
Behold: the first Thunderbolt 5 port we’ve seen on an actual PC.
I just watched the first interactive broadcast TV channel in the US
Thread Group is finally fixing Thread border routers
The Aqara Hub M3 launches at CES 2024
Google and Samsung team up to simplify Android sharing
Intel: ‘We are bringing the AI PC to the car’
Hyundai says hydrogen will play a ‘prominent role’ in going carbon neutral
BMW turns inward for CES, announcing new gaming, streaming, AR, and AI features
VW’s software division and Bosch are testing robot parking and EV charging
Volkswagen says it’s putting ChatGPT in its cars for ‘enriching conversations’
Kia’s ‘Platform Beyond Vehicles’ is a family of modular electric minivans for businesses
Mercedes-Benz taps Will.i.am to create an ‘interactive musical experience’ for its cars
Mercedes-Benz’s best-in-class voice assistant is getting an AI boost
Honda debuts new global EV series, Honda Zero, coming in 2026
Google Chrome is coming to your car
Sony’s Afeela needs to be more than a feeling
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The TVs, monitors, and laptops at CES 2024
Wed, 10 Jan 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz are discuss all the things with screens announced at CES 2024.
Further reading:
I’ve looked through LG’s new transparent OLED TV and seen something special
Samsung’s got its own transparent display.
Samsung’s new OLED TV could make annoying glare a thing of the past
Samsung finally puts the TV at the heart of its smart home
The Frame has become such a hit that Samsung is making a speaker version
Intel’s new 14th Gen mobile processors are here for 2024’s gaming laptops
Lenovo’s latest 2-in-1 crams Windows and Android into one device
Razer gaming laptops at CES 2024: Blade spec bumps and display upgrades
Alienware’s M16 R2 trims the behind for less power and more portability
MSI Claw hands-on: the Steam Deck rival with Intel inside
MSI’s Claw is an Intel-powered Windows competitor to Valve’s Steam Deck
What if your Samsung flip phone could flip further?
Apple Vision Pro launches February 2nd
Apple Vision Pro prescription lenses will cost $149 extra
Xreal’s new AR glasses are aimed at the Apple Vision Pro
Asus targets Apple’s Vision Pro (with M2) with the AirVision M1
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It’s already the year of AI again
Fri, 05 Jan 2024
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz kick off the new year with a preview of what we're excited to see at CES 2024 next week, but not before a brief discussion on copyright, the open web, and the first movements of a battle between The New York Times and OpenAI.
Further reading:
The New York Times sues OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement
Here’s how major media companies are handling OpenAI.
Read the lawsuit!
For the second year in a row, Sony won’t have new TVs at CES
CES 2024: Dell’s XPS laptop lineup is about to look very different
Samsung’s new AI-enabled smart fridge can design recipes for you
Jony Ive imagined the Vision Pro giving you Zoom eyes and sunglasses
Alamo Drafthouse blames ‘nationwide’ theater outage on Sony projector fail
Amazon Prime Video will start showing ads on January 29th
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The USB-C Holiday Spec-tacular
Sat, 23 Dec 2023
The Verge’s Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz start the final show of 2023 with some chat about the state of USB-C: the ups and downs of charging gadgets, the ubiquity of one cable, and what the future looks like for gadgets with ports.
The crew competes in a few rounds of USB-C Price is Right, a game we completely made up to show how confusing USB-C and its specs can be. Nilay, David, and Alex each play for a Vergecast listener to win an awesome Verge swag basket from our merch store. Check out the video version of the game below.
David and Nilay end the holiday show with Noah Dentzel, the CEO and co-founder of Nomad Goods, to talk about how USB-C on the iPhone has changed his business, the challenges of building cables, and what tech accessories he’s most excited about in 2024.
Have a happy, safe, and fast-charging holiday. We’ll see you in 2024!
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2023's biggest tech stories
Fri, 22 Dec 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Richard Lawler discuss Apple pulling the Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 from its website, the potential Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount merger, and what the biggest stories were on The Verge Dot Com.
Further reading:
Apple to pull Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 this week due to ITC ban
Apple loses attempt to halt Apple Watch sales ban
Why the Apple Watch is being banned — and how Apple can avoid it
Masimo CEO thinks Apple can’t code its way out of the Watch ban.
Apple Watch ban: everything you need to know
Beeper is giving up on its iMessage dream
Apple reportedly plans Vision Pro launch by February
Apple’s immersive next-gen CarPlay will start with Porsche and Aston Martin
Bird’s goose is cooked.
Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount in discussions for a max merger
Adobe explains why it abandoned the Figma deal
Adobe won’t compromise on UK’s attempt to block Figma merger
Peloton’s oldest bike tablet will be cut off from classes in a few months
Peloton’s app now pairs with third-party treadmills for some subscribers
Inside Elon Musk’s “extremely hardcore” Twitter
Elon Musk predicts X will replace banks in 2024
Mark Zuckerberg agrees to Elon Musk cage match challenge
Apple Vision Pro is Apple’s new $3,499 AR headset
I wore the Apple Vision Pro. It’s the best headset demo ever.
Sam Bankman-Fried gambled on a trial and his parents lost
Amazon has just opened up its Sidewalk network to give any gadget free low speed data
Sony’s portable PlayStation Portal launches on November 15th for $199.99
Sam Altman fired as CEO of OpenAI
OpenAI board in discussions with Sam Altman to return as CEO
FTC v. Microsoft: all the news from the big Xbox courtroom battle
Buckle up because El Niño is almost here, and it’s going to get hot
iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max in titanium: price, features, and release date
This is Microsoft’s new disc-less Xbox Series X design with a lift-to-wake controller
Samsung caught faking zoom photos of the Moon
The Steam Deck wasn’t born ready, but it’s ready now
Inside the AI Factory: the humans that make tech seem human
SodaStream is a bad deal, and modding your own is better
Did SEO experts ruin the internet or did Google?
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Epic wins for Epic and Threads
Fri, 15 Dec 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Apple responding to Beeper's iMessage for Android and the various other text-based platform news from this week.
Sean Hollister joins the show to discuss his time covering the Epic v Google trial, and what we learned from it all.
Further reading:
The year Twitter died: a special series from The Verge
Beeper vs. iMessage is a fight about how tech works — and who's really in charge
Apple responds to Beeper’s iMessage for Android: ‘We took steps to protect our users’
Beeper says Apple is blocking some iMessages, but there’s a fix
Google Messages might let you edit texts after they’re sent
Threads is officially starting to test ActivityPub integration
Threads launches for nearly half a billion more users in Europe
Adam Mosseri’s Threads account is rocketing up the Mastodon followed lists.
An X outage broke all outgoing links, again
Epic win: Jury decides Google has illegal monopoly in app store fight
Epic CEO Tim Sweeney: the post-trial interview
20 things we learned from the Epic v. Google trial
The Apple TV app now looks more like an all-purpose streaming hub
E3 is officially over forever
Opera’s gamer browser now has a ‘panic button’ for when you’re caught in the act
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Saying goodbye to Twitter
Wed, 13 Dec 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of good tweets:
03:40 - The Verge’s William Poor goes on a vintage tech odyssey in the hopes of future-proofing his family’s heirloom Mac Classic.
28:35 - David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Nilay Patel discuss why they spent so much time on Twitter for so many years.
The year Twitter died: a special series from The Verge
How Twitter broke the news
Extremely softcore: the old Twitter was an idealist’s workplace and a naive business
The great tweet archive
Twitter was a harassment machine
It’s time for the Excel World Championships!
1:05:40 - David answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline about organizing your digital photos.
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The race to win AI — and hack iMessage
Fri, 08 Dec 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss Google Gemini's attempt to compete with ChatGPT, Beeper Mini bringing iMessage to Android, and shakeups in the podcast industry, and much more.
Further reading:
“Welcome to hell, Elon” has now been cited in a Supreme Court brief.
Google launches Gemini, the AI model it hopes will take down GPT-4
Google’s Gemini AI model now powers the Bard chatbot
Google’s Gemini AI model is coming to the Pixel 8 Pro — and eventually to Android
Apple joins AI fray with release of model framework
Bing’s GPT-4-powered Deep Search takes its time with AI questions
Getty lawsuit against Stability AI to go to trial in the UK
Beeper Mini brings iMessage to Android
EU officials think iMessage isn’t ‘popular enough’ with businesses to warrant regulation.
Spotify cancels industry-favorite podcast Heavyweight
Spotify’s not going for Pulitzers anymore
Spotify’s CFO and general counsel sold millions of dollars worth of stock the day after the layoff.
Tidal is laying off more than 10 percent of its staff.
Seems like Apple’s iTunes Movies and TV Shows apps for Apple TV really are going away.
Here’s how a bridal photo captured a single person in three poses at once
Federal judge vows to investigate Google for intentionally destroying chats
Microsoft is investigating a Windows issue that’s renaming printers to HP LaserJet
Motorola Razr 2023 review: not enough of a good thing
Disney Plus and Hulu’s one-app experience is launching in beta
The race to 5G is over — now it’s time to pay the bill
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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The Verge guide to holiday shopping
Wed, 06 Dec 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Victoria Song, Dan Seifert, and Jennifer Pattison Tuohy answer questions from the Vergecast Hotline about what to buy for your loved ones this holiday season.
Keep emailing us at vergecast@theverge.com or leave a voicemail at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Cybertruck lives, and so does OpenAI
Fri, 01 Dec 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss the Tesla Cybertruck event, the latest with OpenAI leadership, and what Elon Musk and Bob Iger said at Dealbook Summit 2023.
Getting close — but not too close — to the Tesla Cybertruck
Tesla Cybertruck delivery event: Elon Musk hands over the first trucks to customers
Elon Musk tells advertisers: ‘Go fuck yourself’
Sam Altman is back, so what’s next for OpenAI and ChatGPT?
Interview: Sam Altman on being fired and rehired by OpenAI
ChatGPT is winning the future — but what future is that?
Ikea debuts a trio of affordable smart home sensors
DealBook Summit 2023: Elon Musk, Bob Iger, and more
How to find your 2023 Spotify Wrapped
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How Planet Earth — and the Netflix homepage — get made
Wed, 29 Nov 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of multi-drone camera setups:
03:19 - The Verge's David Pierce chats with Planet Earth III producer Alex Walters and director Theo Webb about the gear used to make the latest nature documentary series.
30:13 - Netflix's Pat Flemming joins the show to discuss how Netflix figures out what to show when you open the app, and how to keep you coming back.
1:20:29 -The Verge's publisher Helen Havlak and editor-in-chief Nilay Patel join the show to answer this week's hotline question.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Emergency podcast: chaos at OpenAI
Mon, 20 Nov 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel and Alex Heath join David Pierce after a long, winding weekend reporting on the dramatic shakeup at OpenAI, still in progress.
Further reading:
Turmoil at OpenAI: after firing Sam Altman, what's next for the creators of ChatGPT?
Sam Altman fired as CEO of OpenAI
OpenAI’s new CEO is Twitch co-founder Emmett Shear
OpenAI board in discussions with Sam Altman to return as CEO
Emmett Shear named new CEO of OpenAI by board
Hundreds of OpenAI employees threaten to resign and join Microsoft
Microsoft hires former OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
How ChatGPT Fractured OpenAI - The Atlantic
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Fortnite, GTA VI, and the fate of AAA games
Mon, 20 Nov 2023
In episode three of our video game miniseries, The Verge's David Pierce and Polygon's Russ Frushtick and Chris Plante discuss the state of the industry's blockbuster games like Grand Theft Auto, Call of Duty, Overwatch, Fortnite, and others — and what they signal for the future of gaming.
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Apple’s in on RCS — and everybody’s out on Bing
Fri, 17 Nov 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Apple announcing it will support RCS next year, AI news that came out of Microsoft Ignite, YouTube's new policy on deepfakes, and much more.
Further reading:
Apple says iPhones will support RCS in 2024
Google turns to regulators to make Apple open up iMessage
Meta will fight the EU over regulating Messenger
Microsoft Ignite 2023: all the AI news from Microsoft’s IT pro event
Microsoft rebrands Bing Chat to Copilot, to better compete with ChatGPT
Windows is now an app for iPhones, iPads, Macs, and PCs
Microsoft Copilot Studio lets anyone build custom AI copilots
Microsoft is finally making custom chips — and they’re all about AI
YouTube is going to start cracking down on AI clones of musicians
Google is embedding inaudible watermarks right into its AI generated music
Nothing is bringing iMessage to its Android phone
On 'Chinese knockoffs' and why Leica works with Xiaomi
Taylor Swift fans used record amounts of data during the Eras Tour in North America
PlayStation Portal impressions: hands-on with Sony’s remote play handheld for PS5
Opal's second camera is the Tadpole, a tiny webcam for laptops
The first OLED Roku TV is here after a long, long wait
Sonos teases a major new product coming next year
Sonos fixes its Dolby Atmos loud pop issue after years of complaints
Taylor Swift fans used record amounts of data during the Eras Tour in North America
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Spotify and Disney have everything-app dreams
Wed, 15 Nov 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of machine learning-based recommendation systems:
03:31 - The Verge’s David Pierce chats with Spotify’s co-president and chief product officer Gustav Söderström about recommendations, audiobooks, app design, what Spotify wants to be, and whether it’s possible to do it all well.
Spotify - The Verge
44:08 - Alex Cranz joins the show to discuss a bunch of recent streaming news, including the plan to combine Disney Plus and Hulu.
Streaming - The Verge
1:10:28 - Chris Welch joins the show to help answer this week’s Vergecast Hotline question about mp3 players.
The Mighty — an iPod shuffle for Spotify — finally arrives for $85
bemighty.com
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The fight to save old games
Mon, 13 Nov 2023
In episode two of our gaming mini series, The Verge's David Pierce chats with Polygon's Russ Frushtick and Chris Plante about the obstacles around both preserving and emulating video games from discontinued hardware.
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Humane Pins and your own ChatGPT
Fri, 10 Nov 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss the debut of Humane's AI Pin, OpenAI's DevDay, GPT-4 updates, and more.
Further reading:
Exclusive leak: all the details about Humane's AI Pin, which costs $699 and has OpenAI integration
Humane officially launches the AI Pin, its OpenAI-powered wearable
All the news from OpenAI’s DevDay conference
OpenAI is letting anyone create their own version of ChatGPT
OpenAI wants to be the App Store of AI
ChatGPT subscribers may get a ‘GPT builder’ option soon
OpenAI turbocharges GPT-4 and makes it cheaper
OpenAI’s GPT builder interface is dead simple to use.
Valve reveals the Steam Deck OLED: $549 buys better screen, battery, and more
Steam Deck OLED review: better, not faster
This smart garage door controller is no longer very smart
YouTube pages are getting a TikTok-like For You feed
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The tech trials keep coming
Wed, 08 Nov 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of anti-steering provisions:
02:57 - The Verge's David Pierce and Makena Kelly discuss Epic v. Google, a trial about the future of app stores.
The Epic v. Google trial may come down to simple v. complicated
Epic v. Google: a battle over Fortnite fees goes to court
28:49 - Liz Lopatto joins the show to detail her experience covering the Sam Bankman-Fried trial from start to finish.
FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried is guilty of fraud
Sam Bankman-Fried gambled on a trial and his parents lost
58:27 - Richard Lawler helps answer this week's Vergecast Hotline question.
Disney’s new vision for ESPN might include part ownership by the NBA, NFL
Disney finally revealed how many billions ESPN pulls in.
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Handheld gaming is the future — again
Mon, 06 Nov 2023
In the first episode of our series about the future of gaming, The Verge's David Pierce chats with Polygon's Chris Plante and Russ Frushtick about handheld game consoles. Is this portable, all-in-one form factor where all of gaming is headed?
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Apple events, SEO, and other fights
Fri, 03 Nov 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the takeaways from Apple's Mac event, the problem with SEO on the internet, streaming news, and much more.
Further reading:
Apple ‘Scary Fast’ Mac launch event: the 4 biggest announcements
Goodbye, Touch Bar, you held incredible promise
Here’s what Apple means when it says its event was ‘shot on iPhone’
Amanda Chicago Lewis’ excellent piece about the web SEO built
Some thoughts about The Verge article on SEO
Sundar Pichai argues in court that Google isn’t evil, it’s just a business
Disney is about to own all of Hulu
Joe Rogan’s big Spotify decision
HBO Bosses Used ‘Secret’ Fake Accounts to Troll TV Critics
Max is taking 4K away from its legacy ad-free subscribers
Netflix’s ad-supported plan will reward binge watchers with ad-free episodes
Streaming is more expensive than ever — and it’s only going up from here
YouTube is getting serious about blocking ad blockers
There's a surprising new top-five player in the smartphone market
Excuse me, it’s “really an aftermarket sound solution.”
The best robot vacuum for me is the one I hacked
Chrome on iOS now lets you move the address bar to the bottom
Google is officially trying to make .ing domains a th.ing
The EV transition trips over its own cord
Closing time for Sam Bankman-Fried
What stalking a delivery robot taught us about AI’s limits
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Macs and M3s, shot on iPhones
Wed, 01 Nov 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of spec bumps:
02:21 - The Verge’s David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss the announcements from Apple’s “Scary Fast” Mac event.
Apple’s ‘Scary Fast’ Mac event: all the news from Apple’s online keynote
27:56 - Becca Farsace joins the show to share her thoughts on smartphone photography in 2023, and if the “Pro” branding can live up to its name.
iPhone 15 Pro Max camera: 1000 photos later, it’s still missing something
1,000 photos with the Pixel 8 Pro: AI, UI, and Pro stuff
52:06 - Adi Robertson answers a question from the Vergecast Hotline.
Xreal’s Air 2 AR glasses ship in November in the US
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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An impossible journey into self-hosting
Mon, 30 Oct 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of network-attached storage:
This is the fourth in our four-part series all about connectivity. This week we're talking about software: how software connects us, how we connect to software, and how software connects to other software.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The next Macs and the next Twitter
Fri, 27 Oct 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the next Apple event, a Twitter successor, and Windows Phone regrets.
Further reading:
Apple plans ‘Scary Fast’ product event just before Halloween
Apple’s future AirPods roadmap just leaked, and big changes are coming
Apple TV Plus is getting a price hike — and other Apple subscriptions are, too
The Apple Watch’s double tap points at a new way to use wearables
iOS 17.2 Beta Introduces Journal App - MacRumors
Meta’s Threads app has almost 100 million users, says Mark Zuckerberg
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella admits giving up on Windows Phone and mobile was a mistake
Here’s your first look at Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater gameplay
Humane's AI Pin is Here’s your first look at Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater gameplay
Google reportedly pays $18 billion a year to be Apple’s default search engine
Is my co-worker AI? Bizarre product reviews leave Gannett staff wondering
In the end, the FTX trial was about the friends screwed along the way
The obsessive tormentor who made professors’ lives miserable
The restaurant nearest Google
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Everything you’ve always wondered about The Vergecast
Wed, 25 Oct 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz dedicate the show to talk about their feelings. The crew answer a bunch of questions from listeners about The Vergecast, The Verge website, and the future of it all.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The poster’s guide to the new internet
Mon, 23 Oct 2023
In episode three of our connectivity mini series, The Verge's David Pierce explores the idea of POSSE and PESOS, two syndication models for posting on the internet that don't rely on a single platform.
Buckle in, it gets nerdy.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Into the iPad Confusion Zone
Fri, 20 Oct 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss a whole bunch of tech news from this week — a new Apple Pencil, the latest Cybertruck confusion, streaming updates, and more.
Further reading:
Apple Pencil joins the iPad confusion zone
Apple announces entry-level Apple Pencil with USB-C charging
Elgato’s new $279.99 Prompter is an all-in-one teleprompter and extra monitor
Analogue is making a 4K Nintendo 64
OnePlus Open review: right size, wrong price
Elon Musk says ‘we dug our own grave with Cybertruck,’ offers new delivery date
Elon Musk answers Tesla pricing question with anti work-from-home rant
https://www.theverge.com/2023/10/18/23923256/musk-dodges-question-about-accepting-legal-liability-for-tesla-full-self-driving-cars
Tesla profits dip as it invests in factory upgrades and AI development
https://www.threads.net/@keubikooriginal/post/CyjavWouN0w
X will start charging new users in two countries $1 per year
ChargePoint is bringing Tesla’s NACS plug to its vast network of EV chargers
These space-saving public EV chargers are ridiculously fast and rolling out now
FCC kicks off fight to restore net neutrality
https://www.theverge.com/2023/10/19/23923617/nokia-announces-14000-job-cuts-amid-5g-downturn
Here comes another Netflix price hike
Netflix’s first live sports broadcast pairs up F1 drivers with pro golfers
Spotify launches hub for artists’ merch
YouTube might make an official way to create AI Drake fakes
Get ready to see a lot more product ads in YouTube videos
YouTube wants to get you watching more news from ‘authoritative sources’
There’s no way you’ll miss YouTube’s like and subscribe buttons now
There's no way you'll miss YouTube's like and subscribe buttons now
How Ecobee is becoming the smart home company Nest should have been
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The smart glasses era is (kind of) here
Wed, 18 Oct 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of glassholes:
The Verge’s David Pierce chats with Victoria Song about her experience using the new Ray-Ban smart glasses from Meta.
Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses hands-on: in pursuit of content
The Verge’s Sean Hollister and iFixit’s Kyle Wiens join the show to discuss the latest legislation in the right to repair and what’s next for the future of fixing your own gadgets.
Right-to-repair is now the law in California
The Verge’s Nathan Edwards answers this week’s Vergecast Hotline question.
The iPhone 15 and 15 Pro launch with ‘future Qi2 wireless charging.’ Here’s why.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The better, smarter future of messaging
Mon, 16 Oct 2023
In episode two of our connectivity mini series, The Verge's David Pierce chats with Eric Migicovsky co-founder of Beeper. Beeper is a universal messaging app trying to take all your messages from all your apps and put them in one place. Is this the future of chat?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Sonos loses to Google, and Threads takes on Twitter
Fri, 13 Oct 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the Meta Quest 3 review, Google gadgets, and Threads continuing to compete with X.
Chris Welch joins the show to discuss the result of Sonos' legal battle with Google.
Further reading:
Google Pixel Watch 2 review: better battery, better watch
Pixel 8 and 8 Pro review: in Google we trust?
WordPress now offers official support for ActivityPub
Threads is getting an edit button — and you don’t have to pay for it
@mosseri • We’re not anti-news
At US v. Google antitrust trial, the Apple search deal takes center stage
Judge blasts Sonos for abusing patent system and throws out $32.5 million win against Google
Google is already bringing back the software features it removed because of Sonos’ lawsuit
Sonos vows to keep fighting Google for the benefit of smaller companies – and its own revenue
Ruling pdf: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/legaldocs/znpnznkjgpl/GOOGLE%20SONOS%20TRIAL%20ruling.pdf
Google has fixed its recent history of terrible speakers with the Pixel 8 Pro
Alameda’s paper trail leads straight to Sam Bankman-Fried
Samsung joins Google in RCS shaming Apple
Sony’s new PS5 with a removable disc drive launches in November
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Good Pixels, better Watches, great Chromebooks
Wed, 11 Oct 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of AI-generated wallpapers:
03:22 - The Verge's David Pierce chats with Allison Johnson about her review of the Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro.
Pixel 8 and 8 Pro review: in Google we trust?
29:18 - Victoria Song joins the show to discuss her review of the updated Pixel Watch 2.
Google Pixel Watch 2 review: better battery, better watch
56:02 - Monica Chin stops by to explain the new "Chromebook Plus" certification on higher-end Chromebooks.
Chromebook Plus is Google’s new certification for premium Chromebooks
1:22:42 - Keep listening for the Vergecast Hotline question all about music playlists.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The TV of the future costs zero dollars
Mon, 09 Oct 2023
In episode one of our miniseries all about connectivity, The Verge’s David Pierce talks with Ilya Pozin, founder and CEO of Telly, a new startup promising to give you a free 55-inch TV with an additional second screen for ads and apps.
Before founding Telly, Ilya Pozin also founded PlutoTV, one of the first and most successful ad-based streaming services. There are many similarities between these two companies, and Ilya has a grander vision for how he sees the world and how he thinks he can revolutionize the TV hardware and TV show business.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The great Pixel 8 camera debate
Fri, 06 Oct 2023
The Verge’s Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the announcement of Google’s Pixel 8 phone, along with the new AI tools that raise lots of questions.
Further reading:
Google Pixel 8 launch event: the 7 biggest announcements
Google Pixel 8 hands-on: a little bit smaller and a little bit smarter
The Pixel 8 Pro hands-on: better cameras, a brighter screen, and new AI
Google Pixel 8 will get seven years of Android updates
Google Photos’ new AI tools for Pixel 8 raise messy questions
Google releases Android 14 for Pixel phones
Android 14 gets AI-generated wallpapers on Google’s latest Pixels
Google Pixel Watch 2 hands-on: new sensors, longer battery, better accuracy
Google announces new colors and features for its Pixel Buds Pro earbuds
Netflix is planning to raise prices... again
Streaming service price increases: the latest on Netflix, Disney Plus, Max, Hulu, and more
Paramount uploads Mean Girls to TikTok across 23 video clips
The Humane Ai Pin makes its debut on the runway at Paris Fashion Week
https://www.threads.net/@mosseri/post/Cx8M6xqAWeC/
Apple addresses iPhone 15 overheating with a new iOS 17 update
Paris Hilton gets special deal to post on X
LG is dropping ATSC 3.0 from its TVs next year
The Verge and dbrand have partnered on new skins for the Pixel 8, iPhone 15, and more
iPhone 15 Pro Max camera: 1000 photos later, it’s still missing something
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Amazon, Google, and crypto are on trial
Wed, 04 Oct 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890:
01:43 - The Verge’s David Pierce chats with policy editor Adi Robertson and reporter Makena Kelly about US v. Google, and what we’ve learned so far. They also talk about the FTC’s lawsuit against Amazon, which could be the next big tech trial.
US v. Google antitrust trial: updates
Amazon reportedly used a secret algorithm to jack up prices
Satya Nadella tells a court that Bing is worse than Google — and Apple could fix it
Why the US is suing Amazon
28:46 - Later, senior correspondent Liz Lopatto joins the show to preview the trial of Sam Bankman-Fried, the former CEO of FTX.
FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried is on trial for fraud and conspiracy
52:36 - Keep listening for this week’s Vergecast hotline question with Alex Cranz.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Meta's AI headset future — and that X interview at Code
Fri, 29 Sep 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz break down an awkward interview out of the Code Conference from X (formerly Twitter) CEO Linda Yaccarino. Then, the crew gets into all the big news from Meta's Connect event where the Quest 3 and Meta Smart Glasses were announced.
Further reading:
The Code Conference 2023: news, interviews, and more
Linda Yaccarino defends Elon Musk, X, and herself at Code 2023 [FULL INTERVIEW]
AMD CEO Lisa Su on the GPU shortage, the AI revolution, and Nvidia | Decoder
Yoel Roth warns new X CEO about Elon and company status [FULL INTERVIEW]
Artifact is becoming Twitter, too, thanks to new posts feature
The Quest 3 is Meta’s last chance to win the headset war before it truly begins
The Meta Quest 3 is sharper, more powerful, and still trying to make mixed reality happen
Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg on Threads, the future of AI, and Quest 3
Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses: livestreaming, headphone-replacing eyewear
Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses hands-on: in pursuit of content
The new WGA contract will change how Hollywood works
Summary of the 2023 WGA MBA
Streaming giants have banded together for lobbying power
Apple and Google are changing how you listen to podcasts
Google Podcasts shut down in 2024 as podcasts debut globally for YouTube Music
Logitech now sells a $299 folding chair
Former Amazon hardware boss Dave Limp will take over as CEO of Blue Origin
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RIP DVDs
Wed, 27 Sep 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of the laserdisc resurgence:
While Netflix’s DVD.com service shuts down later this week, The Verge's David Pierce chats with Bill Rouhana, the CEO of Chicken Soup for The Soul Entertainment, about the potential of Redbox and physical media in 2023.
Netflix’s DVD service shuts down: here’s the complex tech behind it
Later, David and Alex Cranz talk with New York Magazine’s John Herrman about his recent story on social media metrics and what they actually mean.
Lies, Damned Lies, and Social-Media Metrics
Keep listening for this week’s Vergecast hotline question.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The 50-year quest for AI virtual assistants
Mon, 25 Sep 2023
In part three of our AI mini series, David Pierce dives into the decades-long endeavor to build a virtual assistant. What can a virtual assistant do? What do we want it to do?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Amazon and Microsoft's AI parades
Fri, 22 Sep 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss all the announcements from Amazon's fall product launch event and Microsoft's Surface and AI event.
Further reading:
Amazon’s fall 2023 product launch event: live news, announcements, and more
Amazon is set to supercharge Alexa with generative AI
The Fire TV should be at the heart of Amazon's smart home
The new $269.99 Echo Frames look a whole lot more like glasses.
Alexa Eye Gaze offers a new way to control Alexa on a Fire tablet
In the new Echo Show 8, Alexa will be 40 percent faster.
Finally some hardware...for kids.
YouTube is going all in on AI with background and video topic suggestions
YouTube made a video editing app — just like TikTok
Microsoft Surface event: the 6 biggest announcements
Microsoft’s new Xbox controller borrows great ideas from Stadia, Steam, and Sony
This is Microsoft’s new disc-less Xbox Series X design with a lift-to-wake controller
Microsoft’s next Xbox, coming 2028, envisions hybrid computing
Microsoft addresses the huge Xbox leaks: here’s Phil Spencer’s full memo
Microsoft’s Phil Spencer says acquiring Nintendo would be ‘a career moment’
Microsoft announces the Surface Laptop Studio 2 with upgraded chips and ports
A first look at Microsoft’s upgraded Surface Laptop Studio 2
Microsoft announces the new Surface Laptop Go 3
Hands-on with the Surface Laptop Go 3
The Surface Go 4 comes with a much-needed performance boost
Microsoft 365 Copilot launches in November
Windows 11’s next big update arrives on September 26th with Copilot, RAR support, and more
Microsoft announces Surface Hub 3 with portrait mode
The cable bundle of the future is officially here
Google’s Bard chatbot can now find answers in your Gmail, Docs, Drive
The Home Assistant Green is here to make the most powerful smart home platform more accessible
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iPhone and watches and wallpapers, oh my
Wed, 20 Sep 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of the Action Button:
03:34 - The Verge's David Pierce chats with Allison Johnson and Dan Seifert about their reviews of the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro.
41:02 - Victoria Song joins the show to talk about her review of the Apple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2.
1:07:58 - David chats with Isaac Mosna and Widgetsmith's David Smith about customizing your iPhone wallpaper and widgets.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Camera for Video Podcasting
Need a camera for video podcasting? Sony ZV-1F Vlog Camera for Content Creators and Vloggers Black
In episode two of The Vergecast's AI mini series, David Pierce sits down with Switched on Pop's Charlie Harding and music producer Ian Kimmel to share how they made an entire song from scratch using a bunch of AI tools.
Later, Nilay Patel joins the discussion to talk about the future of AI in the music industry.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Apple mysteries and Google trials
Fri, 15 Sep 2023
It's been a week! The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz rejoin the studio to process all the tech news and announcements. Apple had its annual hardware event where the iPhone 15 and new Apple Watch lineup were shown off.
Later, senior tech and policy reporter Adi Robertson joins the show to walk us through the US v Google antitrust trial that kicked off earlier in the week.
Further reading:
iPhone 15 event: all the news on Apple's new phones
Here's why Apple put a Thread radio in the iPhone 15 Pro
Rumors of Lightning’s death are just slightly exaggerated
The iPhone Mini is officially gone, long live the iPhone Mini
USB-C Backbone One controllers will be ‘upgraded’ to work with the iPhone 15 lineup.
The iPhone is getting new ringtones with iOS 17
Apple announces more iOS 17 features coming later this year: Apple Music updates
How Google plans to win its antitrust trial
What to expect from the Google Search antitrust trial
US v. Google antitrust trial: updates
Developers respond to Unity’s new pricing scheme
Unity cancels town hall over reported death threats
What happens when Google Search doesn't have the answers?
Google AMP: how Google tried to fix the web by taking it over
A storefront for robots
The little search engine that couldn't
Who killed Google Reader?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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iPhone 15: the good, the bad, and the titanium
Wed, 13 Sep 2023
After attending Apple's fall hardware event, The Verge's Nilay Patel, Allison Johnson, Dan Seifert and Victoria Song break down the biggest announcements: the iPhone 15, 15 Pro, the new Apple Watch Series 9 and the Ultra 2.
Further Reading:
All the big conferences and events in tech, entertainment, and automotive coming this fall
iPhone 15 event live blog: all the news from Apple's keynote
Apple iPhone 15 event: the seven biggest announcements
Apple announces iPhone 15 with USB-C, a camera upgrade, and the Dynamic Island
Apple iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max announced with titanium bodies and an Action Button
iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max hands-on
A first look at the new iPhone 15 with USB-C and a big camera upgrade
Apple's cheapest iPhone 15 Pro Max now costs more — but also has double the storage
Apple is releasing iOS 17 and iPadOS 17 on September 18th
Apple announces Apple Watch Series 9, and it has a handy double-tap feature
Apple Watch Ultra 2: price, release date, and features
Apple is switching the AirPods Pro charging case to USB-C
Apple’s USB-C AirPods Pro will support lossless audio with the Vision Pro
Apple's Lightning connector was the first great port — and USB-C might be the last
Post-process: why the smartphone camera changed photography forever
The iPhone 7 Plus vs. the original iPhone: a camera showdown
The iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max are the first smartphones with Thread
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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AI voices are taking over the internet
Mon, 11 Sep 2023
In part one of The Vergecast's AI mini series, David Pierce dives into the boom of voice synthesis and artificially generated speech. The process is a lot more accessible for everyone, but how realistic can it sound?
Further reading:
AI voices are taking over the internet
Everyone will be able to clone their voice in the future
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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How the iPhone 15 could still surprise us
Fri, 08 Sep 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, and Dan Seifert discuss what to expect at Apple's iPhone 15 event, the drama behind the scenes with Disney's CEOs, and some more gadget news.
Further reading:
iPhone and iPad apps will be available in the Vision Pro App Store by default
Sonos announces Move 2 speaker with stereo sound and 24-hour battery life
Google leaks Pixel 8 Pro again with a 360-degree preview
GoPro’s new Hero 12 Black will let you film continuously for longer
A GoPro Max successor is coming
What goes into designing a solar-powered Bluetooth speaker
Bob Iger and Bob Chapek's CEO battle made Disney the pettiest place on Earth
YouTube is experimenting with longer but less frequent ad breaks on TV
Roku turns to layoffs (again) and removes streaming content to cut costs
Chrome is about to look a bit different
Google’s cookie-replacing Privacy Sandbox reaches major milestone
How to disable Chrome’s new targeted ad tracking
Clubhouse reinvents itself as an audio messaging app
MrBeast just dropped a new YouTube face
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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It's gadget season again
Fri, 01 Sep 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler discuss all the gadgets announced at IFA 2023, the next flagship phone events from Apple and Google, and a whole lot more.
Also: Nilay Patel breaks news about the 5G banana surgery.
Further reading:
No, they did not do surgery on a banana over 5G
Apple’s September iPhone event: how to watch and what to expect
Google leaked Google’s flagship Pixel 8 Pro, again
Google sets its Pixel 8 launch event for October 4th
Google kills Pixel Pass without ever upgrading subscriber’s phones
Taylor Swift Eras Tour is coming to theaters this October
Starfield review: a stellar sci-fi refresh of the Bethesda RPG formula
Sony is raising PlayStation Plus prices up to $40 per year
Dolby might have found a way to make built-in TV speakers sound much better
Instagram may be making Reels longer to compete with TikTok
Google’s Duet AI now available in Docs, Gmail, and other Workspace apps
IFA 2023: the biggest announcements from Europe’s big tech show
Alexa and Google Assistant play together nicely, but not perfectly, on JBL’s new speakers
Anker's new MagGo wireless chargers might charge iPhones just as fast as MagSafe
Philips Hue has three new smart security cameras
Jlab’s $39.99 Jbuds Mini are the smallest yet.
How Google made the world go viral
We sent the top ANC headphones to a lab to test their noise-canceling abilities
This USB button helps Jeopardy! contestants get their buzz on
The future of Tesla is in China
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Who built the internet? And who will save it?
Wed, 30 Aug 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of social media monetization strategies:
04:05 -The Verge''s David Pierce and Nilay Patel chat with Taylor Lorenz about her new book Extremely Online: The Untold Story of Fame, Influence, and Power on the Internet
55:26 - Adi Robertson joins the show to explains why publishers, and the music industry, would have a bone to pick with the Internet Archive.
1:23:13 -Vjeran Pavic helps out with this week's Vergecast Hotline question.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Threads' big moment, and Sony's big controller
Fri, 25 Aug 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Richard Lawler discuss Threads' new web app, Sony's Playstation handheld, NFL 4K streaming, AI music copyright, and a whole lot more.
Further reading:
Elon Musk says (yet again) that X will stop letting you block users
X glitch wipes out most pictures and links tweeted before December 2014
X fixed the ‘bug’ that broke images attached to tweets from before 2014
X tests removing headlines from links to news articles
Elon Musk says news organizations can get a share of X’s advertising revenue, too.
Threads on the web is here
NFL Sunday Ticket has arrived on the Google TV homescreen
Amazon is bringing a whole lot of AI to Thursday Night Football this season
Sony’s portable PlayStation Portal launches later this year for $199.99
Sony’s PlayStation wireless earbuds will cost a whopping $199.99
Sony’s PlayStation division is acquiring headphone maker Audeze
This batarang houses Qualcomm’s next big bet on gaming
Somebody already unboxed the Quest 3
Microsoft kills Kinect again
Corsair’s first standing desk is designed for gaming, streaming, and more
Google and YouTube are trying to have it both ways with AI and copyright
Microsoft is bringing Python to Excel
Netflix is going to let DVD subscribers keep unreturned discs for free
White Noise Podcasters Are Costing Spotify $38 Million a Year - Bloomberg
Sonic Spectrum: a journey into noise white, pink, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple & violet
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Mythical computers and super apps
Wed, 23 Aug 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of payment processing fees:
04:36 - The Verge's David Pierce travels to meet Keegan McNamara, an artisan who is making unique computers for more purposeful use cases.
A visit to the one-man computer factory
27:11 - Liz Lopatto and Alex Heath join the show to discuss the future of "super apps" in the United States — notably the one Elon Musk is trying to build with X, formerly known as Twitter.
Everything Elon Musk told Twitter employees in his first company meeting
Can Elon Musk turn Twitter into an ‘everything app’?
Here’s what Elon Musk wants to do with X, his ‘everything app’
1:09:54 - Keep listening for this week's Vergecast Hotline question.
What is a custom feed and how do I make one? – Reddit Help
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we love hearing from you.
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Big screens, bigger screens, suitcase screens
Fri, 18 Aug 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss the iMac's 25th anniversary, the state of streaming, a TV in a suitcase, and a whole lot more.
Further reading:
Linus Tech Tips pauses production as controversy swirls
They Review Movies on TikTok, but Don’t Call Them Critics
YouTube is adding chat, highlights, and Shorts to NFL Sunday Ticket
It’s official, people aren’t watching TV as much as they used to
iMac at 25: a visual history of Apple's iconic all-in-one computer
How the iMac saved Apple
For a generation of students, the iMac was a gateway to the future
In a world full of laptops, is there a place for the iMac?
Apple moved the end call button again in iOS 17
These iOS 17 Features Won't Be Available at Launch - MacRumors
Everything New in iOS 17 Beta 6 - MacRumors
DisplayPort: A Better Video Interface | Hackaday
LG now sells this bizarre TV in a suitcase, and I must have it
Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 family review: easier choices
Google Chrome will summarize entire articles for you with built-in generative AI
OpenAI wants GPT-4 to solve the content moderation dilemma
An Iowa school district is using ChatGPT to decide which books to ban
The Biden administration urges the Supreme Court to take up content moderation cases
Special counsel obtained ‘some volume’ of DMs from Donald Trump’s Twitter account
Microsoft to hold ‘special event’ in New York City on September 21st
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How YouTube and ESPN control the future of everything
Wed, 16 Aug 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of non-exclusive distribution deals:
02:15 - The Verge’s David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Richard Lawler discuss how the future of sports streaming will have a lot to say about the future of entertainment.
41:57 - David chats with director Alex Winter about his new documentary The YouTube Effect.
1:12:00 - Keep listening for this week’s hotline question about Windows 11.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Streaming goes up, Zoom comes down
Fri, 11 Aug 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz break down the chaotic and increasingly more expensive state of streaming video. Are we just recreating cable TV? And afterwards, the crew explores the wild world enterprise software.
Further reading:
Disney Plus and Hulu are about to get even more expensive
The Emmy Awards are officially delayed because of the writers and actors strikes
Disney is ‘actively exploring’ ways to crack down on password sharing
What does Bob Iger think about selling Disney to Apple?
Paramount says it has a plan to weather the Hollywood strikes.
Barbie earns $1 billion at the box office worldwide
Verizon will soon raise prices on certain unlimited plans — yes, again
Slack’s redesign: new DM and Activity sections and more features in the messaging app
Verizon is shutting down BlueJeans, which it bought for $400 million
Zoom says its new AI tools aren’t stealing ownership of your content
The LK-99 ‘superconductor’ went viral — here’s what the experts think
Cadillac’s Escalade IQ is the next GM vehicle to lack Apple CarPlay
MrBeast’s burger company is suing him for $100 million
You can now verify your Threads profile on Mastodon
Sign up for Installer, our weekly guide to all the best and Verge-iest stuff on the internet
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How Tesla became the Elon Musk Co. from Land of the Giants
Wed, 09 Aug 2023
Today we're sharing an episode of Land of the Giants: The Tesla Shock Wave
Not many people can name the original founders of Tesla. So how did two guys who wanted to build an electric car create a company synonymous with Elon Musk?
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Samsung fans and video apps: they’re everywhere
Fri, 04 Aug 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss YouTube adding a slew of new TikTok-like features to Shorts, Elon Musk's extravagant 'X' sign, and much more.
We also go through this week's emails. The Samsung fans have spoken.
Further reading:
Elon Musk wants a second chance to fail at X
Elon Musk capitulates: Twitter will default to dark mode but still offer a light option
Twitter Blue subscribers can now hide their blue checks
Elon Musk's extravagant 'X' sign atop the former Twitter HQ has been dismantled
Elon Musk’s X sues anti-hate researchers for allegedly scraping data from Twitter
Do you want to buy stocks on X?
YouTube is adding a slew of new TikTok-like features to Shorts
BBC launches an ‘experimental’ Mastodon server
LG 27GR95QE-B review: ushering in a new age for gaming monitors
Some details on what Apple needs to ship the Apple Vision Pro developer kits.
Apple’s Vision Pro platform joins Pixar’s bid to standardize 3D content
The Excel World Championship esport is coming back to ESPN this week
Exclusive: the Sonos Move 2 is coming in September with stereo sound and 24-hour battery life
MrBeast is suing his ghost kitchen partner over ‘inedible’ MrBeast Burgers
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Samsung foldable software, eye-scanning orbs, and the future of the arcade
Wed, 02 Aug 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of texting on the outside screen:
03:28 - The Verge’s David Pierce chats with Allison Johnson and Dan Seifert about the software design of Samsung’s new Galaxy Z Flip 5 and Galaxy Z Fold 5.
32:54 - David takes a trip to the Dave & Busters to find out why the games on your phone ended up in your local arcade.
49:48 - Alex Heath joins the show to discuss his experience getting his eye scanned by an orb from Worldcoin, a crypto startup co-founded by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
1:14:45 - Our hotline question of the week about wearables without screens.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Away Travel Duo: Carry-On Suitcase & Everywhere Bag Set – Jet Black
The ultimate business travel power couple. This set includes an airline-approved Carry-On with a TSA lock and patented compression system, plus the Everywhere Bag with a dedicated 16" laptop pocket and trolley sleeve to secure it to the suitcase. Look polished and stay organized on every corporate mission.
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Twitter rebrands as X, and Samsung's Galaxy Flip 5 and Fold 5 event
Fri, 28 Jul 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler discuss Twitter being rebranded as X.
Allison Johnson joins the show to discuss everything announced at Samsung’s Galaxy Flip 5 and Fold 5 Unpacked event.
Also: we read your emails!
Further reading:
Twitter is being rebranded as X
Elon Musk just changed Twitter’s logo again — sort of
Can Elon Musk really use that X logo for Twitter?
For Elon Musk, X equals everything
Twitter Blue’s former lead talks about Elon Musk, X, and sleeping on the floor
Twitter Japan will be called simply, Japan
Threads is rolling out its Following feed
You can’t just leave Threads in the Following feed
The Galaxy Z Fold 5 is last year’s phone with a new hinge
The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 gets a big little screen upgrade
Samsung goes OLED all the way with the Galaxy Tab S9 tablets
The Samsung Galaxy Watch 6 series is all about the bezels
DJI Air 3 review: old ideas, new package
OpenAI can’t tell if something was written by AI after all
Seven major automakers are teaming up on a North American EV charging network
T-Mobile says its ultrafast 5G capable of up to 3.3Gbps is rolling out now
Boost Infinite’s $25 unlimited wireless plan is now on Amazon Prime
T-Mobile’s charging a $5 fee for in-store bill payments
My first MP3 player had everything I needed
Looking back at the original Chromecast, which just turned 10 years old
Japan’s indie game scene is growing up
How to build a better search engine than Google
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Gadget tips for your next upgrade | Vergecast Hotline
Wed, 26 Jul 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of answering machines:
We answer your questions from The Vergecast Hotline!
01:51 - LDAC and other audio codecs
06:21 - Samsung TV
07:58 - Smartwatches for marathons
16:38 - iPhone upgrades
23:09 - Threads
29:52 - Security cameras
40:46 - Laptops
39:13 - Google Pixel
50:54 - Android phones
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The future of EV charging and Hollywood on strike
Fri, 21 Jul 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss all the gadget news from this week, the state of EV charging for non-Tesla owners, the unions of Hollywood on strike, and much more.
Further reading:
Beats Studio Pro headphones review: leaning on a legacy
The future of EV charging for non-Tesla owners may not be as bad as it looks
HP Spectre x360 13.5 vs. Dell XPS 13: which flagship should you buy?
Motorola G Stylus 5G (2023) review: a good phone spoiled by bloatware
Framework Laptop 16: our exclusive hands-on
OnePlus 12 leaks show a bigger battery and faster charging
Logitech buys Stream Deck rival Loupedeck
Tesla reveals Cybertruck size specs as it builds release candidates
Meta is giving away its AI tech to try to beat ChatGPT
Apple is testing an AI chatbot but has no idea what to do with it
The unions of Hollywood are trying to save it from itself
Bob Iger’s big ideas for Disney involve cost-cutting at Marvel
A real-time reaction to the actors’ strike.
TREE LAW
Vox Media drops its own CMS
Netflix reportedly has around 1.5 million subscribers on its ad tier in the US.
The Biden administration is tackling smart devices with a new cybersecurity label
Here’s why 70mm IMAX movies like Oppenheimer need a Palm Pilot to work
Your Starbucks order is not ready
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Nothing’s gadget renaissance, and our favorite TV remotes
Wed, 19 Jul 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of sustainable supply chain economics:
03:27 - CEO of Nothing Carl Pei sits down with The Verge’s David Pierce to discuss the new Phone 2, Carl’s vision for the company, his thoughts on AI, foldables, VR, and much more.
Nothing Phone 2 review: the vibes abide
Nothing CEO Carl Pei on the Phone 2, AI, and the future of gadgets (video version of interview here)
50:02 - Later, Vergecast producers Andru Marino and Liam James debate with David the best and worst TV remotes, and what makes a good remote design. Watch the YouTube version to see all the remotes we talk about.
3 Kinds of Simplicity :: UXmatters
Philips Design - Simplifying TV remote (UX Case Study)
1:25:19 - Keep listening for the Vergecast Hotline question of the week.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Microsoft beat the FTC, and the Nothing Phone 2 is here
Fri, 14 Jul 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Microsoft winning the case against the FTC for its Activision Blizzard deal. Also: the Nothing Phone 2 and more gadgets.
Further reading:
Meta-provided Facebook chats led a woman to plead guilty to abortion-related charges
Microsoft wins FTC fight to buy Activision Blizzard
Read Xbox chief Phil Spencer’s memo to Microsoft employees about the FTC win
FTC appeals its loss to Microsoft in Activision Blizzard case
Nothing Phone 2 review: the vibes abide
Is the Nothing Phone (2)’s camera better than these?
Apple iMac rumor suggests a 32-inch version is being considered
Sarah Silverman is suing OpenAI and Meta for copyright infringement
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Apple OS betas, how to talk about AI, and our video game picks
Wed, 12 Jul 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of transformers (both the movie and the AI thing):
03:46 - The Verge’s Victoria Song, Chris Welch, Allison Johnson, and David Pierce discuss using the new features and tools in beta versions of Apple’s watchOS 10, tvOS 17, iOS 17, and iPadOS 17.
28:36 - The Verge’s James Vincent joins the show to discuss how we should think about using the popular vocabulary terms in AI like GPT, LLM, transformers, hallucinations, etc. Are we using them the right way? Does it matter how we use them?
54:20 - David is joined by The Verge’s Ash Parrish and Polygon’s Chris Plante to share the video games they are most excited about after a string of announcements from Nintendo, Sony, Microsoft, Ubisoft, Summer Game Fest, and others.
1:25:46 - We answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Instagram Threads is here to crush Twitter
Fri, 07 Jul 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Meta's launch of Threads, a new competitor to Twitter. Later, Nilay Patel calls in to give his take.
Further reading:
Instagram Threads: why Meta is competing with Twitter
Meta unspools Threads
Instagram’s Threads: everything you need to know about the new Twitter competitor
Instagram’s Twitter competitor, Threads, briefly went live on the web
Instagram Threads won’t be available in the EU at launch.
People are posting a lot on Threads.
Here’s how Twitter’s leadership is responding to Instagram Threads.
Mastodon CEO Eugen Rochko on what Threads means for the fediverse.
Instagram flooded Threads with celebrities and brands at launch
So what’s next for Threads? DMs “maybe...”
Mark Zuckerberg on when Instagram Threads will get ads
Spielberg, Scorsese, and Anderson have swooped in to save Turner Classic Movies
Google confirms it’s training AI using scraped web data
The TSA will use facial recognition in over 400 airports
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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AI might break the internet
Fri, 30 Jun 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz discuss results from our AI survey, this week's AI news, our Apple Mac Pro review, and more.
Later, Adi Robertson and Tom Warren join the show to discuss the latest in the FTC v. Microsoft trial, including what Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella had to say on the stand.
Hope, fear, and AI
AI is killing the old web, and the new web struggles to be born
ChatGPT on iOS now comes with Bing built-in
Ads for major brands are appearing on AI-generated spam sites
House restricts congressional use of ChatGPT
AI-generated tweets might be more convincing than real people, research finds
Apple Mac Pro M2 Ultra review: a powerful computer in search of an audience
The AirPods Max are getting left behind, so are new Apple headphones coming this year?
Reddit mods are calling for an ‘affordable return’ for third-party apps
Plex lays off more than 20 percent of its staff
Ford’s F-150 Lightning price hikes are costing it customers
TikTok’s new feature asks creators to make branded videos for a chance at ad money
FTC v. Microsoft: all the news from the big Xbox courtroom battle
The FTC’s case against Microsoft could turn into Xbox vs. PlayStation
Has Xbox really lost the console wars?
Microsoft exec was ready to ‘go spend Sony out of business’ to strengthen Xbox
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Google Pixel Fold review, Microsoft vs FTC, and Congress’ child safety bills
Wed, 28 Jun 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of the console wars:
02:42 - David Pierce chats with Verge senior editor Tom Warren about the five-day trial between Microsoft and the FTC that will determine the future of its $68.7 billion proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard.
FTC v. Microsoft: all the news from the big Xbox courtroom battle
Has Xbox really lost the console wars?
Microsoft exec was ready to ‘go spend Sony out of business’ to strengthen Xbox
35:00 - Policy reporter Makena Kelly joins the show to explain what Congress is trying to do to address child safety online.
Texas bans kids from social media without parental consent
New bill would add mandatory age verification to social networks
1:03:07 - The Verge’s Allison Johnson and Dan Seifert discuss our Google Pixel Fold review, and how it stacks up against other foldables and flippables.
Google Pixel Fold review: closing the gap
The Pixel Fold shows how far ahead Samsung’s folding phones are
Motorola Razr Plus review: the right moves
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Meta and Reddit prove the social web is over
Fri, 23 Jun 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss the vibe shift that is happening on social media and the communal internet.
Further reading:
Instagram’s upcoming Twitter competitor shown in leaked screenshots
Facebook, Fosstodon & The Fediverse
Daring Fireball: Not That Kind of 'Open'
Daring Fireball: More on Preemptively Blocking Facebook’s Imminent ActivityPub Entry
It's September, Forever
Mark Zuckerberg agrees to Elon Musk cage match challenge
Reddit removed moderators behind the latest protests before restoring a few of them
Reddit says it’s ‘not acceptable’ for communities to go NSFW in protest
Google Pixel Tablet review: the dock makes all the difference
Apple reportedly has fitness features for the Vision Pro we haven’t seen yet
Easily replaceable phone batteries might be back, and I’m here for it
Gary Vaynerchuk is 'petrified' of Slack
TikTok COO V. Pappas has reportedly quit
Microsoft is hiking the price of Xbox Series X and Xbox Game Pass
DPReview will live, actually — under new ownership
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How AI really works, and how the smart home broke
Wed, 21 Jun 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of open-source lightbulbs:
David Pierce chats with Verge investigations editor Josh Dzieza about his story detailing how humans matter far more to AI development than we may have thought.
Inside the AI Factory: the humans that make tech seem human
Later, smart home reviewer Jennifer Pattison Tuohy explains why we're probably getting the idea of a “smart home” all wrong.
Smart homes for smart people
How microgrids and smart homes are shaping our energy-independent future
Every device that works with Matter
What is a smart home, and do you need one?
How to pick a smart home platform
From brilliant to basic, here are our smart home setups
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Reddit vs. Reddit: the latest on the fight for the platform
Fri, 16 Jun 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Jay Peters discuss all the news about the API changes infuriating Redditors, as well as takeaways from Jay's interview with Reddit CEO Steve Huffman.
Later on the show: will the Apple Vision Pro replace the TV?
Further reading:
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman isn’t backing down: our full interview
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman: Reddit ‘was never designed to support third-party apps’
Reddit crashed because of the growing subreddit blackout
Reddit CEO tells employees that subreddit blackout ‘will pass’
How Reddit set itself up for a fall
Google is getting a lot worse because of the Reddit blackouts
The Apple Vision Pro might be a TV, but it won’t replace the TV
Steve Jobs Showing off Macintosh to Andy Warhol, Keith Haring and Kenny Scharf in 1984 ~ Vintage Everyday
In the bid to grow at all costs, Instant Pot is cooking itself and has filed for bankruptcy
Live Nation-Ticketmaster to disclose full ticket prices upfront
Twitter sued for $250 million by music publishers over ‘massive’ copyright infringement
The Meater smart meat thermometer now supports the iPhone Dynamic Island and Live Activities.
Instagram’s status update now includes what song you’re listening to
It’s not just you: Steam suddenly looks nice
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The war for Reddit, new MacBook Air, and Meta's Twitter competitor
Wed, 14 Jun 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of suddenly private subreddits:
01:45 - David Pierce and Nilay Patel call up Christian Selig, who runs the popular Reddit app Apollo, to talk about the changes to the platform that have infuriated Redditors, and what it means for the future of Reddit.
Reddit’s API updates: all the news about changes that have infuriated Redditors
More than 6,000 subreddits have gone dark to protest Reddit’s API changes
Apollo’s developer on Reddit’s new API changes, and why users revolted
46:15 - Then, David talks with deputy editor Alex Heath about Meta’s reaction to the new Apple Vision Pro headset, and that new Twitter competitor the company is launching.
Here’s what Mark Zuckerberg thinks about Apple’s Vision Pro
Instagram’s upcoming Twitter competitor shown in leaked screenshots
1:09:54 - After that, senior reviewer Monica Chin joins the show to discuss her review of Apple’s new 15-inch Macbook Air.
Apple MacBook Air 15-inch review: exactly what was asked for
1:33:24 - Keep listening for this week’s Vergecast hotline question.
www.babylist.com
https://www.youtube.com/c/DadVerb
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Widgets are back, and everything else from WWDC
Fri, 09 Jun 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss all the updates to Apple's iOS, macOS, watchOS, and iPadOS announced at WWDC this week.
Later, Verge senior correspondent Liz Lopatto joins the show to explain the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) suing crypto exchanges Binance and Coinbase, and what it means for the future of crypto.
Further reading:
Apple WWDC 10 biggest announcements: Vision Pro, MacBook Air, iOS 17, and more
watchOS 10 is bringing back widgets in a big way
Apple’s iPadOS 17 adds personalized lock screen and interactive widgets
Apple’s Siri will soon handle multiple smart home commands
Apple’s iPadOS 17 adds personalized lock screen and interactive widgets
Apple announces iOS 17 with StandBy charging mode and better autocorrect
Standby is a new iOS 17 feature for your iPhone that could be great for Apple Home users
Online age verification is coming, and privacy is on the chopping block
Hands-on with the new 15-inch MacBook Air
Apple announces macOS Sonoma with game mode and support for desktop widgets
Mac Pro with M2 Ultra first look: boy, that’s a big chip
All the features Apple didn’t mention in its WWDC 2023 keynote
The SEC is suing crypto giant Binance, here’s all the details
The SEC is trying to freeze Binance’s assets
The SEC sues crypto exchange Coinbase for breaking US securities laws
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Vergecast vs WVFRM trivia!
Wed, 07 Jun 2023
The Vergecast's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Dan Seifert are challenged to a game of tech trivia by Waveform's Marques Brownlee, Andrew Manganelli, and David Imel.
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Wireless earbuds
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? Skullcandy Method 360 ANC Wireless Earbuds
On Apple's campus, The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss the long-rumored Apple Vision Pro that was announced this week at WWDC.
Later, Marques Brownlee, Andrew Manganelli, and David Imel of the Waveform podcast join the show for a lightning round of everyone's favorite WWDC announcements.
Coming soon: the Vergecast and Waveform team challenge each other to trivia!
Further reading:
Apple WWDC 10 biggest announcements: Vision Pro, MacBook Air, iOS 17, and more
Apple Vision Pro is Apple’s new $3,499 AR headset
Apple announces visionOS, the operating system for its Vision Pro headset
Apple Vision Pro first look: the mixed reality future is (almost) here
I wore the Apple Vision Pro. It’s the best headset demo ever.
Optic ID will unlock Apple’s new Vision Pro headset
Apple’s Vision Pro headset will turn you into a digital avatar when FaceTiming
Everywhere Apple imagines you’ll use its $3,500 Vision Pro headset
Apple’s new VR headset will feature over 100 Apple Arcade games at launch
Disney Plus and VR sports games are coming to Apple Vision Pro
Microsoft Word, Excel, and Teams are all coming to Apple’s new Vision Pro headset
What’s so ‘pro’ about Apple’s Vision Pro headset?
The Vision Pro headset is really Apple’s first TV
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Meta’s Quest 3 revealed and a WWDC preview
Fri, 02 Jun 2023
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Adi Robertson discuss Meta's new Quest 3 VR headset that was announced ahead of Apple's WWDC event, which is widely believed to showcase an Apple headset.
Deputy editor Dan Seifert joins the show to discuss the rest of the WWDC rumors and theories.
Further reading:
Meta announces its Quest 3 VR headset, which will cost $499.99
The biggest announcements from Meta's Quest Gaming Showcase
Apple’s mixed reality headset: all the reports about the rumored AR / VR headset
Apple’s VR headset might run tweaked versions of iPad apps
WWDC 2023: what to expect at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference
Apple might announce ‘several’ Macs at WWDC
The Motorola Razr Plus' new cover screen is a big deal
Amazon Echo Pop review: Alexa for less
Hot foldable summer is here, and there are good reasons to get excited
Range Rover’s next luxury add-on: A car seat that vibrates to music
The ultimate “what is a photo?” gadget.
Lisa's Final Act: how Apple invented its future by burying its past
Kid Cop Returns (Again and Again)
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The two computers that made Apple
Wed, 31 May 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of third-party operating systems:
The Verge's David Pierce chats with Laine Nooney, author of The Apple II Age: How The Computer Became Personal.
Later, lead video producer Will Poor chats with David about The Verge's new documentary Lisa’s Final Act: How Apple invented its future by burying its past.
To end the show: a hotline question.
How to transfer playlists from Spotify to Apple Music, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, or Tidal
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you. We'll be answering a question every Wednesday!
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Microsoft’s big AI Build and Max’s messy streaming launch
Fri, 26 May 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Tom Warren discuss the biggest announcements from Microsoft Build 2023.
Later, the crew discuss the launch of Warner Bros. Discovery’s combined streaming service Max.
Further reading:
Elon Musk fails to launch Ron DeSantis in disastrous Twitter Space
Microsoft Build 2023: The 5 biggest announcements
Microsoft’s Copilot and Bing AI plug-ins will be interoperable with ChatGPT
Bing is now the default search for ChatGPT
Microsoft 365 Copilot is getting plug-ins
Microsoft’s Edge browser is getting the 365 Copilot AI assistant
Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott thinks Sydney might make a comeback
Microsoft announces Windows Copilot, an AI ‘personal assistant’ for Windows 11
Max has arrived, and it’ll feel very familiar to HBO Max customers
Max will stream over 1,000 movies and TV episodes in 4K at launch
Warner Bros. Discovery apologizes for crediting writers and directors as ‘creators’ on Max
HBO Max remote button killed in Max rebrand — 9to5Mac
HBO Max now Max: lacks native video player features; 'Up Next' support bugs - 9to5Mac
Sony’s new Q handheld is official: 8-inch screen, streams PS5 games
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Why AM radio and Ethernet still matter, and why Zelda keeps winning
Wed, 24 May 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of the Purah Pad:
02:19 - Senator Ed Markey chats with Nilay Patel about the importance of keeping AM radio in cars after many EV manufacturers have started to remove it from new models.
Cars would be required to keep AM radio under new bipartisan bill
The shift to EVs is slowly killing off AM radio — and that’s bad for emergency broadcasts
22:09 - Alex Cranz and Sean Hollister talk with SVP of networking at Nvidia Kevin Deierling live at the Computer History Museum for the 50th anniversary of ethernet about the future of connectivity.
Wired: 50 years of ethernet
CHM Live | Ethernet@50
52:51 - David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Ash Parrish discuss why The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom works so well and what the rest of the gaming world should do about it.
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom review: new powers, new places, but less wonder
A conversation with The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom’s creative leads
Tears of the Kingdom’s dungeons were designed with seamlessness in mind
Tips and tricks to get you through Tears of the Kingdom
Zelda players turned Tears of the Kingdom into a Korok torture chamber
The wildest Tears of the Kingdom builds we’ve seen
Tears of the Kingdom’s puzzle designers are fantastic trolls
Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom walkthrough and guides - Polygon
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Montana bans TikTok. Also, FREE TV
Fri, 19 May 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Adi Robertson discuss Montana being the first state to ban TikTok, the Supreme Court ruling against reexamining Section 230, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman testifying before the Senate.
Then, David interviews vlogger Hank Green about the TikTok ban in Montana.
Later, Verge senior news editor Richard Lawler joins the show to discuss this week in gadgets, from the free Telly TV to the Beats Studio Buds Plus.
TikTok is now banned in Montana: here’s what you need to know
Montana bans Telegram, WeChat, and Temu from government devices
Full Hank Green interview here
TikTok ban: all the news on attempts to ban the video platform
Supreme Court puts off showdown over Texas and Florida social media laws
Supreme Court rules against reexamining Section 230
Congress hates Big Tech — but it still seems optimistic about AI
This free TV comes with two screens
The free TV company briefly wasn’t sure what it should do with data from kids
Amazon’s latest Echo Buds have an all-new design and much cheaper price
Amazon’s new Echo Pop is a $40 smart speaker
Beats Studio Buds Plus review: it’s cool to be clear
CueCat
YouTube is bringing unskippable 30-second ads to TV
Max promises shorter ad breaks than other streamers when it launches May 23rd
Netflix’s ad tier has attracted almost 5 million users
Apparently, they were all losers in the race to 5G.
Tesla’s humanoid robot can pick things up and put them down
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Into It: The Conversation We’re NOT Having About AI
Wed, 17 May 2023
Today we're sharing an episode of Into It: A Vulture Podcast with Sam Sanders
AI is making fake Drake/The Weeknd songs, weird images, and there’s a worry that TV and movie scripts could be written by ChatGPT. But it’s also about to dramatically change the way we consume, share, and obsess over pop culture. Nilay Patel, Editor-in-Chief of The Verge, explains to Sam how pretty much everything we search on the internet is mediated by Google… and how AI is about to disrupt it all.
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Google I/O recap: AI is taking over Search
Fri, 12 May 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the big announcements and takeaways from Google I/O 2023.
Further reading:
The nine biggest announcements from Google I/O 2023
The AI takeover of Google Search starts now
Google Perspectives: the new search feature helps you find human information online
Google rebrands AI tools for Docs and Gmail as Duet AI — its answer to Microsoft’s Copilot
Google’s new Magic Editor uses AI to totally transform your photos
Google drops waitlist for AI chatbot Bard and announces oodles of new features
Google announces PaLM 2 AI language model, already powering 25 Google services
Google teases Project Tailwind — a prototype AI notebook that learns from your documents
Android’s new generative AI can reply to your texts and design its own wallpaper
Google’s Find My Device will soon use billions of Android devices to locate your stuff
Google is bringing YouTube, Waze, and Zoom to cars with native Android software
The Pixel Fold is Google’s $1,800 entry into folding phones
Google’s new Pixel Tablet is a $500 slate for the home
Google Pixel 7A review: a better deal
Google’s new Project Starline prototype isn’t a giant booth
Disney is finally combining Hulu and Disney Plus into the same app
Apple launches Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro on iPad with new subscription pricing
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Google AI and foldable phones
Wed, 10 May 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of unfolded aspect ratios:
01:03 -The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz discuss the present and future state of Google — it’s this big, complicated, massively successful company that suddenly feels like it’s under threat in a huge number of ways. The crew lay out the stakes and try to figure out where Google is headed. Hot takes included.
38:55 - David, Allison Johnson, and Dan Seifert talk about the hardware revealed at Google I/O: the Pixel 7A, the Pixel Tablet, and the Pixel Fold.
Further reading:
Google I/O 2023: news, rumors, and announcements
What happens when Google Search doesn't have the answers?
The Pixel Fold is Google’s $1,800 entry into folding phones
Google’s new Pixel Tablet is a $500 slate for the home
Google Pixel 7A review: a better deal
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Bluesky's rise and AI's fall
Fri, 05 May 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Sarah Jeong discuss Bluesky gaining popularity and why it may be Twitter's most chaotic successor.
Also: is AI going too far too soon?
Further reading:
shop.theverge.com
Google announces the Pixel Fold
Everything happening on Bluesky, Twitter’s most chaotic successor
Bluesky is starting to feel like Twitter
Mozilla’s new Mozilla.Social Mastodon instance is an attempt to reinvent content moderation
‘Godfather of AI’ quits Google with regrets and fears about his life’s work
White House rolls out plan to promote ethical AI
Snapchat is already testing sponsored links in its My AI chatbot
New ChatGPT Zillow plug-in rolls out to select users today
AI is being used to generate whole spam sites
AI offers new tools for making games, but developers worry about their jobs
Writers are striking and AI rights are on the table.
Microsoft is forcing Outlook and Teams to open links in Edge, and IT admins are angry
Microsoft’s Bing chatbot gets smarter with restaurant bookings, image results, and more
Andreessen Horowitz saw the future — but did the future leave it behind?
Now Gmail has blue verified checkmark icons too
Google accounts now support passkeys for password-free sign-in
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The director’s episode: how tech makes movies
Wed, 03 May 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of questionable .mkv files:
02:46 - The Verge's David Pierce chats with Matt Johnson, director of the upcoming movie BlackBerry about what tech movies get wrong, why the BlackBerry really died, and how to portray the rise and fall of a top-of-the-world gadget.
BlackBerry director Matt Johnson on why the iPhone won and why most tech movies suck
30:38 - David and Vergecast producer Andru Marino try to find out why it's so hard to find director's commentary on streaming services and the obstacles movie fans go through to listen to them.
Where’s the director’s commentary on streaming?
57:25 - David talks with the directors and producer of the movie Missing about a new genre of movies that take place entirely on a computer screen, and how they get made.
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Apple’s headset, Humane’s weird demo, and the pretty Prius
Fri, 28 Apr 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Andrew Hawkins discuss what's happening in the world of EVs and where that industry is headed.
Also: more Apple headset rumors and whatever the heck that Humane demo was last week.
Further reading:
Apple’s AR/VR Headset Plans: iPad Apps, Fitness+, Sports Viewing, Gaming, Music - Bloomberg
Apple’s mixed reality headset could connect to a battery pack that looks like the iPhone’s
Humane’s wearable screenless AI assistant leaks in first demo clips
Apple is reportedly building a paid AI health coach
Should we trust Apple with mental health data?
2023 Toyota Prius review: EV reality check
GM is ending Chevy Bolt EV and EUV production at the end of the year
GM killed the Chevy Bolt — and the dream of a small, affordable EV
GM, Hyundai announce EV battery plants for the US
Honda’s making a bigger electric SUV to follow the Prologue — due 2025
Tesla’s carbon footprint is finally coming into focus, and it’s bigger than the company let on in the past
Cruise continues to burn GM’s cash as robotaxis expand to daylight hours
Amazon shuts down Halo division and discontinues all devices
Disney sues Florida for ‘government retaliation’ in escalating feud y
Apple is reportedly developing its own journaling app for the iPhone
Dyson Zone review: an absurd pair of air purifying ANC headphones
Come see a screening of Blackberry with us!
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you!
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ActivityPub is the next big thing in social
Wed, 26 Apr 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of overthinking thermometers:
The Verge's David Pierce and Dan Seifert discuss what’s happening in the weather app world, and hear from the developers of Carrot Weather and Hello Weather.
Apple’s Weather chaos is restarting the weather app market
A Eulogy for Dark Sky, a Data Visualization Masterpiece
forecastadvisor.com
Carrot Weather
Hello Weather
Flipboard CEO Mike McCue joins David and Nilay Patel to discuss the potential of ActivityPub, a new standard for social networking that is more open, more user-centric, and potentially more powerful than Twitter and Facebook.
Can ActivityPub save the internet?
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AI Drake, AI friends, AI everything
Fri, 21 Apr 2023
Today, things got a little loose in the studio of The Vergecast. Switched on Pop's Charlie Harding joins Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce to make their own version of Drake's AI summer classic. We're not saying a laser bong was involved, but we're not not saying that either.
Then deputy editor Alex Heath stops by to tell us about Snaps latest announcements and give us an update on the latest round of layoffs at Meta.
Finally, a lightning round with all the big headlines in tech from this week.
Further reading:
AI Drake just set an impossible legal trap for Google
Google employees label AI chatbot Bard ‘worse than useless’ and ‘a pathological liar’: report
What’s really going on with ‘Ghostwriter’ and the AI Drake song?
Family of F1 legend Michael Schumacher plans legal action over fake AI interview
Snapchat releases My AI chatbot to all users for free
Google’s big AI push will combine Brain and DeepMind into one team
Netflix is shutting down its original DVD business after 25 years
Netflix is out of the DVD business because streaming won – now, can Netflix still win?
Twitter begins removing blue checkmarks from all legacy users
It’s a laser bong
SpaceX’s Starship successfully takes off before bursting into flames
BuzzFeed News is being shut down
Social media is doomed to die
Google Fi has a new name and expanded connectivity support for smartwatches
Leak: Google will announce the Pixel Fold at I/O and beat Samsung on battery
Everything spy movies get right (and wrong) about smart glasses
Microsoft is reportedly working on a smaller Surface Pro and Arm-powered Surface Go 4
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How a TikTok ban could actually work
Wed, 19 Apr 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of quantum dots:
02:33 - Makena Kelly explains the various attempts from the US government to ban TikTok, and how that could actually work.
TikTok ban: all the news on attempts to ban the video platform
Inside the US government’s fight to ban TikTok
25:06 - Allison Johnson explains the state of the Android phone market, and where it’s headed next this year.
The best Android phone to buy in 2023
51:28 - Chris Welch explains why this may be the best time to buy an OLED TV.
This is the best time in a decade to splurge on a premium OLED TV
Making sense of new TV features in 2022
Vote for us in the People’s Voice Webby Awards for Best Technology Podcast: http://bit.ly/3moCTDs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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MP3 player to listen to podcasts
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? HiBy R4 android based mp3 and mp4 player
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Warner Bros. Discovery's new streaming service, Sony's mobile gaming move, and Twitter's feud with Substack.
Further reading:
HBO and Discovery’s ‘Max’ streaming service is here
Max is charging more money for 4K, and that means it can't suck this time
What we’ve learned about Sony PlayStation’s new smartphone games team
Sony is gearing up for a new cloud gaming push amid rumors of a PlayStation handheld
NFL Sunday Ticket on YouTube starts at $249 for the 2023 season
Google TV’s live guide is getting crammed full of over 800 free channels
Microsoft is experimenting with a Windows gaming handheld mode for Steam Deck-like devices
NPR becomes first major news organization to leave Twitter
PBS also stops tweeting after being hit with ‘government-funded media’ label
Is Substack Notes a ‘Twitter clone’? We asked CEO Chris Best
Mini’s cars are getting an ‘intelligent personal assistant’ named Spike
You can now talk to Microsoft’s Bing chatbot from your keyboard in iOS with SwiftKey
Nvidia RTX 4070 review: a $599 RTX 3080 — kind of
Vote for us in the People’s Voice Webby Awards for Best Technology Podcast
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The best streaming services in 2023
Wed, 12 Apr 2023
What are the best streaming services in 2023? Nilay, Alex, and David decide in the most chaotic way possible: with draft-style picks. The crew debates the best roster for the future of entertainment — from Netflix to Hulu to HBO Max to a few surprises. Who is the MVP, and who gets snubbed? Find out in our inaugural Vergecast streaming draft.
Read more: theverge.com/streaming-wars
Vote for us in the People’s Voice Webby Awards for Best Technology Podcast: http://bit.ly/3moCTDs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Twitter blue check chaos and CarPlay squabbles
Fri, 07 Apr 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the end of Twitter and the future of infotainment.
Links:
The color quiz
Twitter tried to hide who pays for their checkmark, but life finds a way.
https://twitter.com/AlexBlechman/status/1641905502043926530
Substack is getting a Twitter-like ‘Notes’ feed
Elon Musk’s obsession with blue checks is a verified problem
Twitter yanks the New York Times’ checkmark in verification overhaul
Today in Twitter: where are the retweet labels, and why did Doge replace the bird?
Spotify shuts down its Clubhouse competitor
Spotify shows how the live audio boom has gone bust
Everybody hates GM’s decision to kill Apple CarPlay and Android Auto for its EVs
The rest of the auto industry still loves CarPlay and Android Auto
GM is cutting off access to Apple CarPlay and Android Auto for its future EVs
Could a new PlayStation handheld be built for Remote Play? I like the idea
Asus ROG Ally handheld gaming PC is no April Fools’ joke
Walmart’s redesigned website looks better than Amazon
Donald Trump was arrested, please like and subscribe
The Home Assistant SkyConnect is a combination Zigbee and Thread dongle for better smart home control
Vote for us in the People’s Voice Webby Awards for Best Technology Podcast!
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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How to use Microsoft’s AI Copilot, laptop microphones, and Amazon Sidewalk
Wed, 05 Apr 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of peer-to-peer wireless networking:
02:31 - David Pierce talks with smart home reviewer Jennifer Pattison Tuohy about Amazon’s network of smart home devices called Sidewalk and the state of Matter, the promised smart home standard.
Amazon just opened up its Sidewalk network for anyone to build connected gadgets on
32:16- Monica Chin brings six laptops to Times Square in New York City to test out the microphones.
48:47 - Tom Warren joins the show to explain how AI is being integrated into Microsoft’s products, which may be more promising than Bing’s chatbot.
Microsoft’s new Copilot will change Office documents forever
Microsoft Security Copilot is a new GPT-4 AI assistant for cybersecurity
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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The swaggy AI Pope and Apple headset rumors
Fri, 31 Mar 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss AI image generators getting better, Apple WWDC 2023 rumors, and the other big stories in tech this week.
Further reading:
The swagged-out pope is an AI fake — and an early glimpse of a new reality
Another hurdle for AI image generators: unicycles
It’s so hard to be worried about AI when the shit is so funny.
AI-generated video is still in its “demonic phase.”
Elon Musk and top AI researchers call for pause on ‘giant AI experiments’
UK rejects idea of dedicated AI regulator.
The US government is gearing up for an AI antitrust fight
FTC should stop OpenAI from launching new GPT models, says AI policy group
Apple’s WWDC 2023 kicks off on June 5th
Apple staff reportedly express doubts about mixed-reality headset months ahead of launch
Apple Pay Later is finally launching
The ugly economics behind Apple’s new Pay Later system
Apple Music Classical is now available from the App Store
Disney just laid off the guy it bought Marvel from... but that’s probably a good thing
Elon Musk is now the most-followed person on Twitter
Twitter is secretly boosting Elon Musk, Dril, and MrBeast for some reason
Google’s ADT partnership finally has a new home security product to show for it
Sony’s new ZV-E1 camera is designed to help your vlogs suck less
The TikTok ban is a betrayal of the open internet
Can Mastodon seize the moment from Twitter?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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The best laptops for school, tablets for reading, and routers for home
Wed, 29 Mar 2023
The Verge answers questions from The Vergecast Hotline.
We hear from David Pierce on balancing privacy and modern conveniences for digital journaling, Alex Cranz on tablets for reading, Dan Seifert and Allison Johnson on tech reviews at The Verge, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy on smart home routers and doorbells, and Monica Chin on laptops for college.
Further reading:
My impossible search for the best, most powerful, most private journaling app ever
The best iPad to buy in 2023
Ethics Statement - The Verge
Nest Wifi Pro review: better, faster, shinier
Eero Pro 6E review: faster Wi-Fi but flakier performance
Aqara Video Doorbell G4 review: this battery-powered buzzer needs to go back to basics
The FTC wants to ban those tough-to-cancel gym and cable subscriptions
Best laptop 2023: 15 best laptops you can buy
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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TikTok goes to Washington
Fri, 24 Mar 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce are joined by policy reporter Makena Kelly, who is on the ground in Washington for the House Energy and Commerce Committee's hearing on TikTok. Later, we dive into all the other news from this week, from Google's release of Bard to OpenAI's rapid expansion of ChatGPT. It was a big week.
Further reading:
TikTok ban hearing: all the news on the US’s crackdown on the video platform
TikTok bans deepfakes of nonpublic figures and fake endorsements in rule refresh
Google opens early access to its ChatGPT rival Bard — here are our first impressions
Google says its Bard chatbot isn't a search engine — so what is it?
Testing Google Bard: the chatbot doesn’t love me, but it’s still pretty weird
Google and Microsoft’s chatbots are already citing one another in a misinformation shitshow
Sundar Pichai expects that ‘things will go wrong’ with Bard
Can AI generate a way to pay for itself?
GitHub Copilot gets a new ChatGPT-like assistant to help developers write and fix code
Mozilla.ai is a new startup created to build more open and trustworthy AI
OpenAI is massively expanding ChatGPT’s capabilities to let it browse the web and more
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How to buy an iPad, hike 2,600 miles, and watch free TV
Wed, 22 Mar 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of over-the-air interactive television:
David Pierce is joined by Alex Cranz and Janko Roettgers to talk about ATSC 3.0, the new standard for over-the-air broadcasting.
The future of TV is up in the air
Mitchell Clark joins the show to discuss his next endeavor.
Mitchell's gear list
Dan Seifert explains which iPad you should buy and how to make the iPad work better for writing by hand.
The best iPad to buy in 2023
Yes, paper-feel screen protectors for the iPad are good
This Apple Pencil clone provides 80 percent of the experience for a quarter of the price
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Solo Acts: Marco Arment and his podcast app Overcast
Mon, 20 Mar 2023
For the final episode of our Solo Acts mini series, Ashley Esqueda talks with Marco Arment about being a solo app developer, going from Tumblr to Instapaper to his own podcast app Overcast.
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GPT-4 is coming for your work tools — and your job
Fri, 17 Mar 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, David Pierce, and James Vincent discuss OpenAI announcing GPT-4, the next generation of its AI language model.
Further reading:
The night sky is always getting faked
Samsung responds to fake Moon controversy
Samsung’s fake Moon photos aren’t a giant leap for mobile photography
OpenAI announces GPT-4 — the next generation of its AI language model
The Bing AI bot has been secretly running GPT-4
OpenAI co-founder on company’s past approach to openly sharing research: ‘We were wrong’
What’s new with GPT-4 — from processing pictures to acing tests
Microsoft Business Chat is like the Bing AI bot but as a personal assistant
Microsoft spent hundreds of millions of dollars on a ChatGPT supercomputer
Google announces AI features in Gmail, Docs, and more to rival Microsoft
Google opens up its AI language model PaLM to challenge OpenAI and GPT-3
Google-backed Anthropic launches Claude, an AI chatbot that’s easier to talk to
How Siri, Alexa and Google Assistant Lost the A.I. Race
The BlackBerry trailer shows the rise and fall of the keyboard phone
Biden administration reportedly demanding that TikTok sell or face a ban
T-Mobile is buying Ryan Reynolds’ Mint Mobile for up to $1.35 billion
Belkin’s smart home brand Wemo is backing away from Matter
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Samsung's fake moon photos and Silicon Valley Bank's collapse
Wed, 15 Mar 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Samsung faking photos of the moon on its phones, what happened with Silicon Valley Bank, and hottest topic of the season: ChatGPT and AI.
This episode was recorded live at SXSW 2023.
Further reading:
Samsung caught faking zoom photos of the Moon
Silicon Valley Bank has failed
The tech industry moved fast and broke its most prestigious bank
Bing, Bard, and ChatGPT: AI chatbots are rewriting the internet
Email us at vergeast@theverge.com or call us on the Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11.
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Solo Acts: Tinymakesthings' custom keycaps
Mon, 13 Mar 2023
On today's episode of our Solo Acts mini series, Ashley Esqueda talks with Tiny of tinymakesthings, who makes artisan keycaps for mechanical keyboards. Tiny explains how she got started making her projects on Twitch, the process for designing the keycaps, and the community she built with her art.
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Spotify's redesign, streaming boxes suck, and Gigi Sohn withdraws from FCC nomination
Fri, 10 Mar 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler discuss Spotify's changes within its app, what happening this week at Twitter, Gigi Sohn withdrawing her nomination for FCC commissioner, and a whole lot more.
Further reading:
The Cybertruck wiper does not appear to extend
Spotify’s new design is part TikTok, part Instagram, and part YouTube
Spotify is going big on video podcasts
After layoffs, SiriusXM looks to star-studded podcasts
Apple will launch its standalone classical music app on March 28th
All the streaming boxes suck now
How a single engineer brought down Twitter
Twitter just let its privacy- and security-protecting Tor service expire
The FTC’s Twitter privacy investigations have ramped up since Elon Musk’s takeover
Hey, where’s the Twitter Blue revenue sharing Elon Musk promised a month ago?
Tesla under investigation after Model Y steering wheels fall off
Congress rolls out new bill allowing nationwide TikTok ban
Gigi Sohn withdraws her nomination for President Joe Biden’s FCC
Now the Florida GOP wants political bloggers to register with the government
Dish CEO says data was stolen in cyberattack that’s kept systems down for days
Dish Network’s internal systems are so broken some employees haven’t worked in over a day
Microsoft Bing hits 100 million active users in bid to grab share from Googlet
Is buzzy startup Humane’s big idea a wearable camera?
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Giles Martin and Sonos CEO Patrick Spence on the new Era 100 and Era 300 speakers
Tue, 07 Mar 2023
Today, Sonos announced a new line of speakers — the Era 100 and the Era 300 — with the latter finally taking on this format that has been a hit-or-miss experience for music lovers, supporting Amazon Music and Apple Music’s spatial audio. Though spatial format Dolby Atmos has been supported on the Sonos Arc soundbar, the Era 300 signals a music-first approach to its speakers supporting 3D soundscapes. Sonos CEO Patrick Spence believes this is the right time to do it. “We didn’t know that, in 2022, 85 of the top Billboard 100 artists would actually release Atmos tracks, but they did,” Spence says. “We feel like we’re at an inflection point.”
On board with Sonos for this shift in music listening is record producer Giles Martin, who mixed the first-ever spatial audio album (a remix of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, The Beatles album that his father, George Martin, originally produced) and several albums and live experiences in Dolby Atmos since. Martin is also the senior vice president of sound experience at Sonos and was involved in the development of the speaker. “When you’re building a product which has multi sort of use and orientations, you do prioritize ... in a way of, what’s the wow factor?” Martin explains. “The wow factor, which I think is truly extraordinary out of the 300, is the fact that it does spatial out of a single box. And it’s really compelling.”
Both Patrick and Giles joined Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel for The Vergecast to talk about the new speakers, supporting spatial audio, and why this is the time to do it.
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Solo Acts: Madison Karrh on her adventure puzzle game 'Birth'
Mon, 06 Mar 2023
On episode three of our Solo Acts miniseries, Ashley Esqueda chats with Madison Karrh, an indie game developer who launched her most recent game Birth a few weeks ago. Birth is an adventure puzzle game about constructing a creature from spare bones & organs found around the city in order to quell your loneliness. Madison explains the challenges of making an entire game on your own and why that path is so important to her.
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Away Travel Duo: Carry-On Suitcase & Everywhere Bag Set – Jet Black
The ultimate business travel power couple. This set includes an airline-approved Carry-On with a TSA lock and patented compression system, plus the Everywhere Bag with a dedicated 16" laptop pocket and trolley sleeve to secure it to the suitcase. Look polished and stay organized on every corporate mission.
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MWC 2023 gadgets, Meta's AR / VR roadmap, and TikTok's Bold Glamour filter
Fri, 03 Mar 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler discuss the phones and laptops announced at Mobile World Congress, Meta's AR and VR hardware roadmap for the next few years, Tesla's "Master Plan", and more of this week's tech news.
Further reading:
MWC 2023 was a preview of what future phones could (and should) look like
HMD's latest Nokia phone is designed to be repaired in minutes
The Xiaomi 13 Pro is going global
Realme’s ridiculous 240W fast-charging phone is getting an international release
Motorola’s new Razr foldable is arriving this year
Lenovo’s rollable laptop and smartphone are a compelling, unfinished pitch for the future
This is Meta’s AR / VR hardware roadmap for the next four years
Elon Musk says Twitter employees will receive ‘very significant’ stock awards on March 24th
Twitter shut off its internal Slack, and now ‘everyone is barely working’
Twitter Blue head Esther Crawford is out at Twitter
Elon Musk's 'lab leak' tweets could be an issue for Tesla's plans in China
Tesla’s new ‘Master Plan’ is coming — let’s grade the first two
Elon Musk unveils a new Master Plan, a path to sustainable energy future, no new cars
Why won’t TikTok confirm the Bold Glamour filter is AI?
OpenAI announces an API for ChatGPT and its Whisper speech-to-text tech
Microsoft now lets you change Bing’s chatbot personality to be more entertaining
Microsoft’s Phone Link app now lets you use iMessage from your PC
Sony announces 2023 TV lineup: better late than never
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call our Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Apple glucose monitor rumors, Marvel fatigue, and podcast misinformation
Wed, 01 Mar 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of hyper specific wearable sensors:
01:19 - Victoria Song joins Alex Cranz to talk about the latest rumors around Apple’s big progress in blood glucose monitoring.
Apple Makes Major Progress on No-Prick Blood Glucose Tracking for Its Watch
Continuous glucose monitor startups still have to prove their worth
Apple is looking at opportunities to do great things in health in India: Sumbul Desai
17:14 - Ariel Shapiro talks with Valerie Wirtschafter, a data analyst at the Brookings Institution, about how often podcasts spread political misinformation, and what that means for the medium.
Audible reckoning: How top political podcasters spread unsubstantiated and false claims
Policy recommendations for addressing content moderation in podcasts
43:57 - Alex and Charles Pulliam-Moore chat about the latest episode of The Last of Us and all the Marvel movie fatigue that has cropped up since Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania came out. [Warning: Spoiler alert]
HBO’s The Last of Us is pushing all the right buttons by telling new stories
HBO’s The Last of Us is wisely skipping to the cutscenes
Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania review: this is your brain on Kangs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, or call the Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11
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Solo Acts: McRib Locator's Alan Klein
Mon, 27 Feb 2023
In this next episode of our Vergecast Solo Acts mini series, Ashley Esqueda talks with Alan Klein, the creator of the McRib Locator, a website that helps people track and submit where McDonald's BBQ pork sandwich is available in stores.
Alan shares what drove him to make this free tool for people back in 2009, what he does with the data he's collected, what's next for the site after the McRib's "farewell tour" this past fall, and more.
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The Supreme Court hears Section 230 arguments, Sam Bankman-Fried's latest woes
Fri, 24 Feb 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, T.C. Sottek, and Adi Robertson discuss the Supreme Court cases that could reshape the future of the internet.
Later, Verge policy reporter Makena Kelly joins the show to discuss new charges against FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried.
Further reading:
The Supreme Court hears arguments for two cases that could reshape the future of the internet
Thomas starts talking about pagers for some reason
Google: it’s not helpful when states make their own decisions that affect us
A Signal group is at the center of Bankman-Fried’s latest woes
Spotify’s new AI-powered DJ builds and commentates on custom playlists
Microsoft recruited Nintendo and Nvidia to help fight Sony over the Activision deal
Tesla announces new engineering headquarters in California
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PSVR 2 review, and the best multiroom audio gadgets
Wed, 22 Feb 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of not-yet-announced Sonos speakers:
Adi Robertson and Sean Hollister discuss their review of the PSVR2, and how it ranks among the other VR options today, along with its predecessor.
PSVR 2 review: love on a leash
We plugged the PSVR2 into a PC, and here’s what it does
Meta is improving Quest hand tracking so you can touch buttons and type on virtual keyboards
Alex Cranz, Chris Welch, Chris Person, and Jennifer Pattison Tuohy discuss the world of multi-room audio devices to play music. How do smart speakers like Sonos, Amazon Echo, and Google Home compare to audiophile gadgets like the WiiM Mini and the Raspberry Pi?
WiiM’s Mini and Pro are the Chromecast Audio’s real replacement
Exclusive: these are the new Sonos Era speakers
Amazon’s Alexa app gets more Sonos-y with new multiroom audio controls
How to set up multiroom music playback with Google Home speakers
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, or call the Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Solo Acts: Raluca Pop, founder of Hive Social
Mon, 20 Feb 2023
This is episode one of our Vergecast mini-series "Solo Acts", which features people who are working independently to create great things on the internet, hosted by Ashley Esqueda.
Today, Ashley talks with Raluca Pop, founder of the social media app Hive Social, which was created when Raluca was only 19. Ashley and Raluca discuss the challenges of building a social media app from scratch in the world of Big Tech, what happens when you need to address problem like a mass influx of users and security issues, and working with such a small team.
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Bing is a liar, Elon's tweets are everywhere, and YouTube CEO steps down
Fri, 17 Feb 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of wanting to smooch your laptop:
01:23 - The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, Adi Robertson, and James Vincent discuss the flaws with Microsoft's Bing AI, and why it can be an "emotionally manipulative liar."
34:56 - Platformer managing editor Zoë Schiffer joins to explain why Twitter is showing everyone all of Elon Musk's tweets.
50:33 - The crew discuss YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki stepping down after nine years at the helm.
Further reading:
Microsoft’s Bing is an emotionally manipulative liar, and people love it
AI search engines are not your friends
These are Microsoft’s Bing AI secret rules and why it says it’s named Sydney
Microsoft says talking to Bing for too long can cause it to go off the rails
The Supreme Court could be about to decide the legal fate of AI search
Microsoft’s Bing AI, like Google’s, also made dumb mistakes during first demo
From Bing to Sydney (Stratechery)
A Conversation With Bing’s Chatbot Left Me Deeply Unsettled (The New York Times)
Seeing other people’s AI art is like hearing other people’s dreams
Yes, Elon Musk created a special system for showing you all his tweets first
Elon Musk’s reach on Twitter is dropping — he just fired a top engineer over it
Twitter is just showing everyone all of Elon Musk’s tweets now
Elon Musk says Twitter should be ready for new CEO by end of year
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki steps down after nine years at the helm
The maze is in the mouse (Praveen Seshadri)
Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra review: practically peerless
Razer Blade 18 review: the price is going up
Tesla recalls 362,758 vehicles equipped with Full Self-Driving beta for ‘crash risk’
Mazda MX-30 electric SUV review: a perfect storm of range anxiety
Hyundai and Kia forced to update software on millions of vehicles because of viral TikTok challenge
Less money and more fear: what’s going on with tech
Erase browser history: can AI reset the browser battle?
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call our Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Fixing your own gadgets, from HomePods to Harmony remotes
Wed, 15 Feb 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of home theater remotes: repairing broken gadgets and why you should do it.
01:55 - David Pierce talks with Nic of Nic’s Fix, a repair service specializing in Apple’s original HomePod.
Nicsfix.com
New Apple HomePod 2023 Comparison and Teardown; Is it better? Is it fixed??
28:15 - Alex Cranz talks with Quin at Harmony Remote Repair, who offers fixes for the discontinued universal remote from Logitech.
harmonyremoterepair.com
Logitech officially discontinues its Harmony remote
47:07 - iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens joins the show to talk about the state of fixing your own stuff and what’s next in the fight for the right to repair.
Rebble with a Cause: How Pebble Watches Were Granted an Amazing Afterlife | iFixit News
New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call the Vergecast hotline at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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We tried Bing powered by ChatGPT AI and things got dark
Fri, 10 Feb 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, and James Vincent discuss Microsoft's upgraded Bing search engine with ChatGPT AI. Can Microsoft beat Google at search? Is it actually an upgrade? Also: Disney layoffs, Elon's Twitter reach is dropping, and more of this week's tech news.
Further reading:
Microsoft and Google are about to Open an AI battle
Microsoft announces new Bing and Edge browser powered by upgraded ChatGPT AI
Microsoft’s ChatGPT-powered Bing is open for everyone to try starting today
Microsoft thinks AI can beat Google at search — CEO Satya Nadella explains why
Google announces ChatGPT rival Bard, with wider availability in ‘coming weeks’
Google shows off new AI search features, but a ChatGPT rival is still weeks away
Google is still drip-feeding AI into search, Maps, and Translate
Google’s AI chatbot Bard makes factual error in first demo
Elon Musk’s reach on Twitter is dropping — he just fired a top engineer over it
Disney’s laying off 7,000 as streaming boom comes to an end
Bob Iger wants more Zootopia, Frozen, and Toy Story sequels from Disney
Nintendo Direct February 2023: the biggest news and trailers
Fox's Super Bowl LVII ads won't include any crypto companies
Email at vergecast@theverge.com, we love to hear from you. Or call our hotline at 866-VERGE11.
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“The Hidden Hand Behind Your Swipes” from Land of the Giants
Wed, 08 Feb 2023
We are sharing an episode of Land of the Giants: Dating. Big tech is transforming every aspect of our world. But how? And at what cost? In this season of Land of the Giants: Dating Games, The Verge and New York Magazine's The Cut trace the evolution of the multi-billion dollar dating app industry. Hosts Sangeeta Singh Kurtz and Lakshmi Rengarajan explore the modern dating landscape forged by companies like Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge, and their impact on our hopes for connection. They answer the question – are the business goals of dating app companies aligned with users' romantic aspirations?
Follow Land of the Giants to hear new episodes every Wednesday.
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Samsung announces the Galaxy S23 and the Galaxy Book3 Ultra
Fri, 03 Feb 2023
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Richard Lawler, Allison Johnson, and Monica Chin discuss the announcements from Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event.
Further reading:
Samsung’s S23 and S23 Plus look a little more Ultra
The Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra is a minor update to a spec monster
Where’s the Galaxy S23’s satellite connectivity, Samsung?
Samsung Galaxy S23 vs. S23 Plus vs. S23 Ultra: spec comparison
The Galaxy Book3 Ultra is Samsung’s shot at the MacBook Pro
Samsung’s Galaxy Book3 gets new chips and a big display upgrade
Anker launches cheaper USB-C fast charging options for Samsung Galaxy phones
Where’s the Galaxy S23’s satellite connectivity, Samsung?
Apple’s iPhone 14 Pro supply problems sank its holiday revenues
Apple won’t name a new head of hardware design
Anker finally comes clean about its Eufy security cameras
Mark Zuckerberg says Meta is making this the ‘year of efficiency’
White House goes after app store ‘gatekeepers’ Apple and Google
Apple and Google face mounting pressure to remove TikTok from app stores
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HomePod (2023) review, the Steam Deck one year later, and faking your death online
Wed, 01 Feb 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of removable power cords:
02:14 - The Verge’s Alex Cranz, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, Chris Welch, and Nilay Patel discuss the updated version of the Apple HomePod.
Apple’s new HomePod plays it safe
How to use the Apple HomePod’s temperature and humidity sensors
43:23 - Katharine Trendacosta joins the show to discuss why and how faking your death has been a common practice in online communities.
A Fake Death in Romancelandia
She created a fake Twitter persona — then she killed it with COVID-19
1:05:19 - Verge senior editor Sean Hollister gives an updated review of Valve’s Steam Deck, which had a buggy start in 2022.
The Steam Deck wasn’t born ready, but it’s ready now
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Apple M2 reviews, DOJ sues Google, and this week in Elon
Fri, 27 Jan 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of staring directly down the barrel of a camera, The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, and Monica Chin start the show with an inside look at our M2 MacBook Pro and Mac Mini reviews. After that, the crew breaks down the case the US Department of Justice has filed against Google's ad business and of course we try to make sense of the latest Elon Musk shenanigans.
Further reading:
The Vergecast - YouTube
Apple Mac Mini (2023) review: Mac Studio junior
Apple MacBook Pro 16 (2023) review: the core count grows
Google is being sued by the US government and eight states over online advertising
Google plans to demo AI chatbot search as it panics about ChatGPT
More details come out on which departments saw layoffs at Google, Microsoft, and Amazon
Tesla made more money in 2022 than ever before, but its future still looks rocky
Elon Musk is theoretically sad that Tesla investors lost money because of his tweets
Elon Musk thinks Twitter is real life
Elon Musk’s Twitter is caving to government censorship, just like he promised
Elon Musk gets serious about 420 at securities fraud trial - The Verge
Tesla’s new $3.6 billion Nevada investment includes a ‘high-volume’ Semi factory
Tesla Cybertruck mass production won't start until 2024
Microsoft Q2 2023: Windows, devices, and Xbox down as cloud holds strong
Senators and Swifties take on Ticketmaster in Washington
GoldenEye 007 is coming to Nintendo Switch and Xbox on January 27th
TikTok confirms that its own employees can decide what goes viral
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The Last of Us recap, lessons learned from Silicon Valley, and Vergecast Hotline
Wed, 25 Jan 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of zombie kisses:
02:02 - The Verge’s managing editor Alex Cranz chats with film & TV reporter Charles Pulliam-Moore about HBO’s The Last of Us and how it handles the video game adaptation. [Spoilers for episode 1 + 2]
22:40 - Historian and author of the book The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America Margaret O'Mara talks about how the lack of non-compete clauses shaped Silicon Valley.
38:30 - We answer your questions left on our Vergecast Hotline! Thunderbolt docks, end-to-end encryption, and smart assistants.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Apple announces M2 MacBook Pros, a Mac Mini, and a new HomePod
Fri, 20 Jan 2023
Today on the flagship podcast of automated content creation:
02:23 - The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, and Alex Heath start the show with an overview of what we've learned from Elon Musk running Twitter over the past few months.
24:50 - Inside CNET’s AI-powered SEO money machine
48:34 - Apple's Mac and HomePod announcements from this week
Further reading:
Inside Elon Musk’s “extremely hardcore” Twitter
Twitter Blue arrives on Android for $11 a month
Inside CNET’s AI-powered SEO money machine
Apple announces MacBook Pros with M2 Pro and M2 Max chips
Apple announces a Mac Mini with the M2 and M2 Pro
How the new MacBook Pros compare to the rest of Apple's MacBook lineup
Apple is reportedly working on an iPad-like smart display
Apple announces revamped full-size HomePod two years after discontinuing original
Apple’s new HomePod unsurprisingly sounds close to the original
Apple reportedly shelved its plans to release AR glasses any time soon
Reed Hastings is stepping down as Netflix’s co-CEO
Microsoft announces big layoffs that will affect 10,000 employees
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call the hotline at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Camera for Video Podcasting
Need a camera for video podcasting? Sony Alpha ZV-E10 II Mirrorless Camera
2023's laptops and wearables we may (or may not) see
Wed, 18 Jan 2023
The Verge’s Alex Cranz talks with senior reviewer Monica Chin about the laptops she saw at CES this year and what it means for 2023’s computer trends. Verge reviewer Victoria Song joins the show to discuss the FDA regulations behind health tech, and whether the stuff we saw at CES will ever be available in the United States.
Further reading:
The Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 3i is the CES 2023 gadget I’m most excited for
Lenovo Yoga Book 9i hands-on: the dual-screen future
OLED plus E Ink: Lenovo’s ThinkBook Twist is halfway to my dream laptop
Lenovo ThinkPhone by Motorola hands-on: a ThinkPad’s best friend
The new Asus ZenBook Pro 14 leads a line of impressively refreshed OLED laptops
Acer’s new Predator Helios laptops can pack a bright 250Hz Mini LED screen
The LG Gram Style might be the prettiest laptop of 2023
With PC sales down, laptop makers turn to services
The HP Dragonfly Pro Chromebook is neat, but what's with the RGB?
The regulatory maze behind health tech vaporware
Withings wants you to pee on its latest device
How do you sell over-the-counter hearing aids when nobody knows who you are?
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Apple might make a touchscreen Mac / Samsung S23 images leak
Fri, 13 Jan 2023
The Verge's Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, and Dan Seifert discuss the numerous Apple rumors we heard about this week, a Samsung Unpacked preview, and the latest gadget news.
Further reading:
Apple might finally make a touchscreen Mac
Apple is reportedly making an all-in-one cellular, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth chip
iPhone 16 Pro models could feature under-display Face ID
Apple's next custom hardware trick might be its own Micro LED screens
Apple’s MicroLED dream: what it means for the Apple Watch and beyond
$99 AirPods could ship as early as next year alongside next-gen AirPods Max
Official Samsung Galaxy S23 images leak early
Samsung confirms February 1st Unpacked, its first in-person event in three years
Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 2 Pro can now record lifelike 3D audio
HBO Max’s first price hike raises the monthly rate by $1
John Deere commits to letting farmers repair their own tractors (kind of)
At CES one company was showing off...an E-Ink headset?
The Pinecil is the best soldering iron for most people
Six smart home finds from CES 2023 you may have missed
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The smart TVs, Matter gadgets, and concept cars from CES
Wed, 11 Jan 2023
The Verge’s Alex Cranz, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, Chris Welch, and Andrew Hawkins discuss the best TVs, cars, and smart home gadgets they saw at CES 2023 — from a color-changing car to a vacuum suction system on an OLED TV.
Further reading:
CES 2023: Verge Video’s best of
Why Matter mattered at CES
The $3,000 totally wireless Displace TV is the definition of CES absurdity
Roku does the obvious thing and announces its own TV line
TCL’s 2023 TVs have new branding and are gaming powerhouses
Samsung’s 2023 TV lineup bets everything on picture upgrades and AI tricks
LG’s latest Signature OLED TV receives all of its audio and video wirelessly
LG’s 2023 OLED TVs are brighter (again) and make webOS smarter
LG wants to reinvent how you think of TV picture modes
Sony breaks from tradition and won’t announce new TVs at CES 2023
Sony and Honda just announced their new electric car brand, Afeela
The Peugeot Inception concept is an EV knife aimed straight at the future
The BMW i Vision Dee is a future EV sports sedan that can talk back to you
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CES is back! Sony announces a car, everything has Matter, and Lenovo puts screens on top of screens
Fri, 06 Jan 2023
CES 2023 is in full swing! The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler parse the vapor ware from the cool new tech we hope to see ship this year.
Further reading:
Sony and Honda just announced their new electric car brand, Afeela
The BMW i Vision Dee is a future EV sports sedan that can talk back to you
Check out BMW’s color-changing concept car in action
Mercedes-Benz and ChargePoint are going to install thousands of EV fast chargers in the US
The Ring Car Cam is now available to order for $200
Google’s new high-definition maps are arriving first on Volvo and Polestar electric vehicles
Google’s new split-screen look for Android Auto is rolling out to everyone
LG’s latest Signature OLED TV receives all of its audio and video wirelessly
LG wants to reinvent how you think of TV picture modes
Sony breaks from tradition and won’t announce new TVs at CES 2023
Samsung takes on Apple and LG with its own 5K display for creative pros
Dell’s new 32-inch 6K monitor gives Apple’s ProDisplay XDR some competition
Samsung's latest Flex Hybrid is a prototype display
LG’s 2023 OLED TVs are brighter (again) and make webOS smarter
Samsung’s 2023 TV lineup bets everything on picture upgrades and AI tricks
Roku does the obvious thing and announces its own TV line
TCL’s 2023 TVs have new branding and are gaming powerhouses
Razer made a soundbar that tracks your head to optimize sound
AMD’s new Ryzen 7000 mobile processors include a massive 16-core chip
AMD promises RTX 3060 desktop graphics performance with new RDNA 3 laptop GPUs
Lenovo’s new Yoga Book 9i laptop has a second screen above its screen
Lenovo’s new ThinkBook has modular accessories that add LTE, a webcam light, and more
Lenovo’s new all-in-one is all screen
Lenovo made a Kindle Scribe
The HP Dragonfly Pro Chromebook is neat, but what’s with the RGB?
Razer's Edge 5G handheld is coming to Verizon this month for $359.99
Delta and T-Mobile are making in-flight Wi-Fi free for all SkyMiles members
Qi2: How Apple might finally harness MagSafe by giving it away
Philips Hue is getting a $130 app for TVs
Samsung’s SmartThings Station is a smart home hub hidden in a wireless charger
Kohler shower pods are here to turn your bathroom into a spa
Withings wants you to pee on its latest device
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The Bluetooth Holiday Spec-tacular
Wed, 21 Dec 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Chris Welch, and Sean Hollister celebrate the holiday season with a full show dedicated to Bluetooth.
03:57 - We play Bluetooth Jeopardy! Play along here
30:38 - The crew discuss the many codecs layered onto the Bluetooth spec, and where the standard is headed.
46:56 - Former Bluetooth SIG executive director Dr. Mike Foley joins the show to discuss his time in charge of Bluetooth.
Happy Holidays!
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Apple could open up iOS, Elon gets booed, and the golden age of streaming is coming to an end
Fri, 16 Dec 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler break down all the news from this week.
Further reading:
FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried arrested in the Bahamas
Apple is reportedly preparing to allow third-party app stores on the iPhone
Twitter Blue is back, letting you buy a blue checkmark again
Elon Musk sells yet another $3.58 billion of Tesla shares - The Verge
Twitter suspends @ElonJet after Musk promises not to ban it - The Verge
Elon Musk booed at Dave Chappelle show, claims it was only like ‘10 percent boos’
Jack Dorsey on Musk’s Twitter files: ‘There’s nothing to hide’ - The Verge
https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/15/23511260/everything-ok-in-there-mr-musk-sincerely-the-ftc
Twitter’s newsletter tool is shutting down on January 12th
The golden age of the streaming wars has ended
Apple is expanding Mythic Quest with a new spinoff series
Westworld is leaving HBO Max
Director Patty Jenkins says there was ‘nothing’ she could do to move Wonder Woman 3 forward
Where are all the new Macs?
iOS 16.2 arrives with improved always-on display and iCloud end-to-end encryption
Google won’t launch ChatGPT rival because of ‘reputational risk’
The Echo Show 15 with Fire TV: a major upgrade with a major flaw
Google is beta testing digital state ID cards in its Android Wallet app
How to use Instagram’s new Notes feature
TikTok starts testing a horizontal full-screen mode
Google Nest and Android devices are now Matter compatible — yes, right now
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Streaming winners & losers of 2022: Netflix, HBO Max, Disney Plus, and more
Wed, 14 Dec 2022
The Verge's Alex Cranz, Nilay Patel, and Charles Pulliam-Moore focus on the big streaming services — Netflix, HBO Max, Hulu, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime, Peacock, Paramount Plus — and discuss which are the winners and losers are for this year.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call the hotline at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Livestreaming is back!
Mon, 12 Dec 2022
In the final episode on our series about creator economies, David Pierce is joined by producer Hadley Robinson to explore the world of livestreaming and its recent popularity across every social platform. Livestreaming is certainly not a new thing though, so why does it seem to be having a moment?
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ChatGPT explained, the FTC suing Microsoft, and Apple adding encryption to iCloud backups
Fri, 09 Dec 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, and James Vincent discuss the popularity of ChatGPT.
Also: the FTC sues Microsoft to block its Activision Blizzard purchase, Apple is adding end-to-end encryption to iCloud backups, and some gadget news.
Further reading:
ChatGPT proves AI is finally mainstream — and things are only going to get weirder
The FTC is suing Microsoft to block its Activision Blizzard purchase
Microsoft reaches 10-year deal with Nintendo for Call of Duty
EU sets December 28th, 2024, deadline for all new phones to use USB-C for wired charging
The race to build a better Twitter
Twitter Blue will reportedly cost more from iPhones to offset ‘hidden 30 percent tax’
Apple is adding end-to-end encryption to iCloud backups
Apple claims a new iMessage can alert you if state-sponsored spies are eavesdropping
Tim Cook and Joe Biden came to Arizona to announce plans for American-made chips
Huawei’s latest smartwatch has hidden earbuds inside
The $949 price for Dyson’s air-purifying headphones is more absurd than the device itself
Coros Apex 2 and Apex 2 Pro review: slightly short of great
Amazon Echo Auto (2nd gen) review: smaller but not smarter
How CoinDesk’s FTX scoop left a hole in its corporate overlord
Sonos and Ikea made a floor lamp speaker that could be perfect for surround sound
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Kindle 15th anniversary and the problem with US broadband
Wed, 07 Dec 2022
This week on the flagship podcast of mounting TVs way too high in the hospital room:
The Verge's David Pierce chats with Russell Brandom about the state of US broadband, and what we learned from 22,000 people’s internet bills.
David also talks with Verge managing editor Alex Cranz about the Amazon Kindle's 15th anniversary, why the Kindle has been so successful, and maybe also why it hasn’t done more. Keep listening for Alex's review of the Kindle Scribe.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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The dark, uncertain world of creator funds
Mon, 05 Dec 2022
Producer Hadley Robinson reports on the often uncertain world digital creators find themselves in trying to make a living on platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook. Should platforms pay creators directly? Are creator funds even good? Creators and experts tell us what they have found behind the curtain and what it's like to chase the dream of making a living as a digital creator.
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Elon Musk meets with Tim Cook, Neuralink's show and tell, and FTX's collapse
Fri, 02 Dec 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss this week in Elon Musk, everything that went wrong with FTX, and the latest gadget news.
Further reading:
Why some tech CEOs are rooting for Elon Musk
A Twitter executive got a court injunction to prevent Elon Musk from firing her
Another major ad agency recommends pausing Twitter ad campaigns
Elon Musk is delaying Twitter’s paid verification to avoid Apple’s 30 percent cut
Elon Musk says Apple has ‘threatened to withhold Twitter’ from the App Store
Elon Musk says Tim Cook told him Apple ‘never considered’ removing Twitter
Elon Musk is dragging Apple into the culture wars
Elon Musk claims Neuralink is about ‘six months’ away from first human trial
Here’s everything that went wrong with FTX
Sam Bankman-Fried Interview: Read the Transcript - The New York Times
Kensington made a new wireless version of its SlimBlade trackball mouse
The Genki Covert Dock Mini lets me put an entire gaming system in my purse
Now the Apple Watch Ultra can actually be your diving computer
Anker’s Eufy lied to us about the security of its security cameras
Canoo repurposed its bubbly electric pickup truck for the US Army
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The creator of the future is smart, attractive... and animated
Mon, 28 Nov 2022
As we spend more time in digital spaces, our avatars are becoming part of our personality. And digital creators and influencers are becoming part of our culture. Producer Gina Pollack join's The Verge's David Pierce with stories about why advertisers love digital creators, why a dancing hot dog will never leave your brain, and what the creator industry is learning from mascots. Next time you’re scrolling through your Instagram feed, keep your eyes peeled — not everyone’s as human as they look.
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A very smart Vergecast Thanksgiving
Wed, 23 Nov 2022
Today on the flagship podcast of connected meat thermometers:
It’s Thanksgiving week, so we’re going to do something a little different. We’re going to make Thanksgiving dinner! Jen Pattison Tuohy, The Verge’s smart home reviewer and reporter, is also an excellent cook. So she’s at home in South Carolina, and she’s going to make us a meal and tell us all about the state and future of the smart home and kitchen gadgets. This episode, fair warning, will make you very hungry. I’m sorry in advance.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Meta Quest Pro review, Taylor Swift crashed Ticketmaster, and more
Fri, 18 Nov 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Piece, Alex Cranz, and Adi Robertson discuss the Meta Quest Pro review.
Later, the crew discuss Ticketmaster crashing after Taylor Swift fans try to buy concert tickets. Also: Elon Musk's Twitter saga continues and some weekly gadget news.
Further reading:
Meta Quest Pro review: get me out of here
Taylor Swift crashed Ticketmaster following 'historically unprecedented demand' for tickets
Elon Musk ignored Twitter’s internal warnings about paid verification
Elon Musk says he fired engineer who corrected him on Twitter
Elon Musk is firing Twitter employees even when they criticize him in private
Elon Musk says he doesn’t want to be CEO of Twitter, or any company
Elon Musk demands Twitter employees commit to ‘extremely hardcore’ culture or leave
Amazon’s Alexa Voice Remote Pro is the best streaming clicker of them all
Elgato’s new Stream Deck Plus joins the knob mob
Sonos plans to enter four new product categories — and the first is coming next year
Apple and Major League Soccer will launch MLS Season Pass on February 1st
Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 leans into AI
Razer is upgrading the 2022 Blade 14’s two USB-C ports to USB 4
Canon’s new ‘Pro’ webcam software subscription charges $50 annually
The 20-year boondoggle
The unbearable lightness of BuzzFeed
The scary truth about AI copyright is nobody knows what will happen next
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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MP3 player to listen to podcasts
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? HiBy R4 android based mp3 and mp4 player
Today on the flagship podcast of the difference between CMYK and RGB colors:
02:19 - David talks about the future of Photoshop with Adobe's Chief Product Officer Scott Belsky.
13:37 - Verge senior reporter James Vincent joins the show to discuss generative AI art and all its possibilities and complications.
43:05 - The Verge's Kristen Radtke and Jess Weatherbed chat with David about Pantone's new subscription service and what it means for artists and designers.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Meta announces job cuts and Twitter prepares for difficult times
Fri, 11 Nov 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss week two of Elon Musk as CEO of Twitter and Meta announcing job cuts.
Later in the show: What's next for Binance and FTX, a stretchable screen by LG Display, and the Surface Pro 9 review.
Further reading:
Elon Musk tells Twitter staff to prepare for ‘difficult times ahead’ and ends remote work
Read Elon Musk’s first email to Twitter employees
Elon Musk offloads another $3.9 billion in Tesla shares
Elon is putting Twitter at risk for billions in fines, says internal letter
Elon Musk’s Twitter Blue with verification is now live
Elon Musk's response to fake verified Elon Twitter accounts: a new permanent ban policy for impersonation
Everyone knows you paid to be verified on Twitter
Mario flipped off Twitter for nearly two hours with the blessing of Musk's 'verification'
Twitter rolls back gray ‘official’ checks that popped up on high-profile accounts
Twitter’s new double-check verification disappears, Elon Musk says he ‘killed it’
Meta announces huge job cuts affecting 11,000 employees
Binance won't bail out FTX, cites reports of 'mishandled customer funds'
‘I fucked up,’ says FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried in public apology
Microsoft Surface Pro 9 (Intel) review: this is the one to buy
LG Display's 'stretchable' prototype display could attach to skin, clothing, and furniture
HP Pavilion Plus 14 review: a powerful, confusing OLED machine
The Pixel Watch calorie bug is a reminder of why 'accuracy' isn't everything
Razer made a customizable PS5 controller that — you guessed it — is very expensive
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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The politics and laws changing tech in the US
Wed, 09 Nov 2022
This week on
02:10 - The Verge's David Pierce tries out Neeva's Bias Buster, an attempt to get people out of their echo chambers and show them new information in its search engine.
20:25 - Senior reporter Adi Robertson talks about her story How America turned against the First Amendment
42:27 - Policy reporter Makena Kelly explains the CHIPS and Science Act, and how it could reshape the tech industry in America.
Further reading:
Biden signs $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act
Micron launches $15 billion Idaho project amid federal push for US tech manufacturing
President Joe Biden speaks after groundbreaking for Intel’s $20 billion semiconductor plant
Micron’s investing up to $100 billion to bring the country’s ‘largest semiconductor’ facility to New York
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Elon Musk's first week at Twitter / Matter's newest smart home devices
Fri, 04 Nov 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss what has happened with Twitter since Elon Musk has taken over the company.
Then, Nilay, David and Alex discuss the first Matter-compatible devices since the launch of the smart home standard.
Further reading:
Elon Musk wastes no time changing Twitter
Why Elon Musk is so desperate for Twitter to make money
Elon Musk could enable Twitter's edit button for everyone
Elon Musk could cut half of Twitter’s workforce
Over 190 smart home devices are now Matter certified and here’s what’s coming next
We’re getting our first look at Matter devices today, and here’s what’s coming next
Level locks had a secret Thread radio this whole time
Amazon announces a phased rollout of Matter to its Alexa smart home platform
Eve’s sensors and smart plugs will be among the first Matter-compatible devices
Nanoleaf announces the first Matter-over-Thread light bulbs
Philips Hue Bridge is getting updated to Matter early next year
Aqara’s Matter transition begins in December with free hub update
Amazon Music’s library of songs and podcasts is now free for Prime subscribers
Apple TV 4K (2022) review: unmatched power, unrealized potential
Netflix’s new cheaper plan with ads doesn’t work on Apple TV at launch
Netflix’s $6.99 per month ad tier is now live
PlayStation VR2 launches on February 22nd for $549.99
Comcast’s big rival to Roku and the smart TV is called… Xumo
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Why Signal won’t compromise on encryption, with president Meredith Whittaker
Wed, 02 Nov 2022
Today we're sharing an episode of Decoder with Nilay Patel featuring an interview with Meredith Whittaker, president of Signal.
Signal is the popular messaging app that offers encrypted communication. You might recognize Meredith’s name from 2018 when she was an AI researcher at Google and one of the organizers of the Google walkout. Now she’s at Signal, which is a little different than the usual tech company: it’s operated by a nonprofit foundation and prides itself on collecting as little data as possible.
Listen to more of Decoder with Nilay Patel anywhere you get your podcasts.
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Twitter is now an Elon Musk company
Fri, 28 Oct 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Liz Lopatto, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Elon Musk officially becoming the owner of Twitter, and what that means for the future of the company.
Further reading:
Twitter is now an Elon Musk company
How weak leadership cratered Twitter’s morale
The Twitter deal is all downside risk for Elon Musk
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Apple's new App Store tax, Microsoft Surface reviews, and Meta's earnings
Fri, 28 Oct 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Tom Warren discuss Microsoft Surface reviews, Apple's new App Store tax, and Meta earnings.
Further reading:
Microsoft Surface Pro 9 (SQ3) review: Windows on Arm is not ready
Microsoft Surface Laptop 5 (13.5-inch) review
Surface defined 10 years of Windows PCs — can Microsoft nail the next 10, too?
Microsoft says more than 20 million people have used Xbox Cloud Gaming
Zuckerberg is all in on the metaverse whether you like it or not
Xbox’s Phil Spencer says the metaverse is a ‘poorly built video game’
Microsoft: Xbox game streaming console is ‘years away’
Apple macOS 13 Ventura review: a bunch of good updates you can mostly ignore
Apple’s new App Store tax on ads is a direct shot at Meta
Spotify pulls audiobook purchases from iOS app after Apple blocks updates
Apple confirms the iPhone is getting USB-C
Apple could release a 16-inch iPad next year
The Twitter deal is all downside risk for Elon Musk
This tablet pairs an E Ink display with a... 16-megapixel rear camera?
Power struggle: Puerto Rico’s battle to fix the electric grid
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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The two cryptos and the future of the iPad
Wed, 26 Oct 2022
Today on the flagship podcast of all-screen designs:
02:38 -Verge senior audio director Andru Marino dives into the world of a different type of crypto community.
17:51 - David Pierce examines iPadOS 16, Stage Manager, and Apple's attempt at task managers.
iPadOS 16's Stage Manager is not the future of multitasking you were hoping for
34:05 - Dan Seifert and Monica Chin join David to discuss and explain Apple's confusing iPad lineup.
Apple iPad (10th gen) review: stuck in the middle
The new iPad makes no sense
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Cybersecurity Hotline Special
Mon, 24 Oct 2022
We asked listeners to send in all their questions related to cybersecurity for this special Vergecast Hotline episode. David Pierce talks to Nilay Patel and Russell Brandom to get you the best advice for staying safe online.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Confusing new Apple products, Netflix password sharing, and NFT cults
Fri, 21 Oct 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler discuss the announcements from Apple this week, HDR video standards, and all the news out of Netflix and Tesla.
Apple launches redesigned iPad with a bigger screen and USB-C
Logitech updates Crayon stylus with the USB-C port missing from the Apple
The new Apple TV 4K has a remote with USB-C and a lower starting price
Apple’s new iPad only supports the old Apple Pencil–and need an adapter to do so
Apple’s Magic Keyboard Folio for the new iPad has a 14-key function row
The new iPad makes no sense
Apple announces new iPad Pro with M2 chip and Wi-Fi 6E
Netflix password-sharing crackdown will roll out globally in ‘early 2023’ – and here’s how it could work
Netflix announces Profile Transfers – for when it forces you to finally pay up
Netflix is all-in on binge-watching
Netflix is ‘seriously exploring’ a cloud gaming service
Can Netflix reclaim the ‘Netflix for games’ crown from Xbox Game Pass?
Elon Musk is “excited about the Twitter situation”
Tesla is “smoothing is vehicle process to avoid bottlenecks”
Elon Musk’s frisky earnings call touched on the Cybertruck, Twitter, and teh future of Tesla
Elon Musk says Starlink will keep funding Ukraine’s government ‘for free’ despite losing money
Help, Foxconn has gone from AI 8K+5G to ‘3+3=∞’
Google adds replies and stars to Messages — and is taking the RCS fight to iPhones
Lightroom is (finally) all I need for photo editing
I went all in on eSIM and I have regrets
The next generation of Thunderbolt seems nice but less necessary than ever
Adobe’s latest AI prototype gives even the worst dancers some impressive moves
GMC Sierra EV Denali revealed: plug-in-powered pickup goes premium
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Kanye wants Parler, smartwatch showdown, and the Vergecast Hotline returns
Wed, 19 Oct 2022
Today on the flagship podcast of slightly inaccurate fitness trackers:
02:15 - David Pierce and Makena Kelly chat about Ye buying Parler, as well as the other new set of apps and app owners entering the space.
Kanye West is buying ‘free speech platform’ Parler
The ugly business logic behind Kanye West’s Parler acquisition
24:44 - Victoria Song and Dan Seifert return to the show for a smartwatch showdown between the Pixel Watch, the Apple Watch Series 8, and the Samsung Galaxy Watch.
Google Pixel Watch review: it’s a smarter Fitbit
Apple Watch Series 7 review: time and time again
Samsung Galaxy Watch 5 review: if it only had a better battery
We could all use a ‘This is Fine’ Focus mode
1:02:07 - Lastly, we return to the Vergecast Hotline to answer your burning tech questions.
Fitbit Sense 2 review: it doesn’t make much sense
1:14:55 - We explain why we still don't have chapters on The Vergecast
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Microsoft's Surface event, Pixel 7 and Pixel Watch reviews, and Meta Connect 2022
Fri, 14 Oct 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss the announcements at Meta Connect, the new products from Microsoft's Surface event, and reviews for Google's Pixel 7 and Pixel Watch.
Meta Connect 2022: all the news on the Quest Pro
The Meta Quest Pro is a cutting-edge headset looking for an audience
Meta figured out legs for its Horizon avatars
What does Mark Zuckerberg think ‘open’ means?
Mark Zuckerberg takes a shot at Apple’s closed ecosystem
FTC files to block Meta from buying VR fitness studio Within
Google Pixel Watch review: it’s a smarter Fitbit
Google Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro review: better and better
Smartwatches, not phones, are where the action is at this year
The biggest announcements from Microsoft’s Surface event
Microsoft Office will become Microsoft 365 in major brand overhaul
Microsoft’s Surface Studio 2 Plus ships with an RTX 3060 for $4,299
Microsoft’s Surface Pro 9 is the latest major gadget to ditch the headphone jack
The Surface Laptop 5 arrives with Thunderbolt 4 but no AMD options
Surface Pro 9 lets you pick between Intel or Arm 5G and new color options
Microsoft partners with Meta to bring Teams, Office, Windows, and Xbox to VR
Apple shows Windows some love with new Music, TV, and iCloud photos integration
AI-generated imagery is the new clip art as Microsoft adds DALL-E to its Office suite
New York’s weed laws mean marijuana is legal but the stores selling it aren’t yet
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Zuckerberg on the Quest Pro, our impressions, and the state of VR games
Tue, 11 Oct 2022
Today on the flagship podcast of low-latency head tracking:
02:35 - Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg chats with deputy editor Alex Heath about Meta's new headset, the Quest Pro.
22:00 - Alex Heath and senior reporter Adi Robertson chat with David Pierce about their first impressions using the Quest Pro.
47:45 - Group Publisher for The Verge Chris Grant chats with David about what's happening in VR for video games.
You can listen to the rest of the chat with Mark Zuckerberg on Decoder with Nilay Patel, watch it on The Verge's YouTube channel for the video version, or read it on our site.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Google's Pixel 7 and Pixel Watch event / Elon Musk vs. Twitter trial update
Fri, 07 Oct 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss all the announcements from Google's Pixel 7 event.
Senior correspondant Liz Lopatto joins the show to explain the latest in the Elon Musk/Twitter trial saga.
The Super Mario Bros. Movie trailer is here (and so is Chris Pratt)
Hands-on with the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro: something familiar
The Pixel 7 and 7 Pro double down on Tensor-fueled features
Google’s Pixel 7 and 7 Pro will fix your old blurry photos
Google once again calls out Apple for not adopting RCS
Google’s including its VPN service with the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro
Pixel Watch hands-on: Google's taking a page from Apple
Google thinks smartwatches are the future again — are you buying it?
Google’s Pixel Watch marks a new chapter for Wear OS
Google shows off wireless charging dock that turns the Pixel Tablet into a smart display
Google overhauls Home app as it prepares for Matter
Everything we think we know about Elon Musk’s plan for Twitter
The Elon Musk vs. Twitter trial is on hold until October 28th
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Amazon’s Kindle Scribe, printer problems, and earbuds on a bike
Wed, 05 Oct 2022
Today on the flagship podcast of hardcopy peripherals:
02:27 - David Pierce and Alex Cranz chat with Dave Limp, SVP of devices and services at Amazon.
Amazon’s Kindle Scribe is an E Ink tablet for reading and writing
24:04 - David also tries to answer a listener question about why it feels like printers haven't improved in years.
Best Printer Buying Guide (Consumer Reports)
39:55 - Lastly, Becca Farsace tests out which earbuds sound the best when calling from a bike ride.
Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II review: noise cancellation domination
Apple AirPods Pro (second-gen) review: same look, better everything else
Google Pixel Buds Pro review: the sweet sound of redemption
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Camera for Video Podcasting
Need a camera for video podcasting? Sony ZV-1F Vlog Camera for Content Creators and Vloggers Black
The Verge's David Pierce dives into the world of virtual concerts in digital spaces like Roblox and Fortnite. Is this the future of live music?
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Google is shutting down Stadia / Amazon's hardware launch event
Fri, 30 Sep 2022
The Verge's David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Jay Peters discuss Google deciding to shut down its game streaming service Stadia. Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins the show to chat about all the products Amazon announced at its hardware launch event this week, including the new E Ink tablet for reading and writing.
Google is shutting down Stadia
Google is trying to reinvent search — by being more than a search engine
Google’s trying to become a one-stop shopping destination
Google will help you find better results without tagging ‘Reddit’ onto every search
The 11 biggest announcements at Amazon's hardware launch event
Amazon’s Kindle Scribe is an E Ink tablet for reading and writing
Amazon fifth-generation Echo Dot smart speakers get a host of new features
Echo speakers can now be Eero mesh Wi-Fi extenders
Amazon’s new Echo Auto is smaller and easier to mount in your car
Amazon’s latest 4K TVs improve picture quality and borrow ideas from The Frame
The new Amazon Fire TV Cube has an HDMI input for controlling cable boxes
Alexa is getting some much-needed smart home upgrades
Amazon’s Halo Rise is a bedside light to track your sleep and wake you up
Blink's new Mini Pan Tilt adds robotics to its compact home security camera
Ring's new Spotlight Cam Pro mashes its most advanced features into a wireless design
Sonos Sub Mini review: low end for a lower price
Intel and Samsung are getting ready for ‘slidable’ PCs
Leaked Galaxy S23 renders suggest Samsung could ditch the camera bump
A smart lock with long-range wireless power is finally a reality
Asus launches massive 17-inch Zenbook with Ryzen 6000
Intel’s 13th Gen processors arrive October 20th with $589 flagship Core i9-13900K
Wacom announces the Cintiq Pro 27, its latest display graphics tablet
Logitech announces its first mechanical keyboard specifically for the Mac
Stage Manager isn’t just for M1 iPads anymore
Hands-on with aptX Lossless, the new tech promising CD-quality audio over Bluetooth
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Handheld gaming, scooter subscriptions, and a Techtober preview
Wed, 28 Sep 2022
Today on the flagship podcast of low-latency controller input:
02:12 - David Pierce talks with Tom Warren about the trend of handheld gaming devices like Valve's Steam Deck and the Logitech's G Cloud Gaming Handheld.
21:20 - David tries subscribing to a scooter rental service and starts to rethink the concept of ownership.
33:40 - David chats with Nilay Patel and Alex Cranz about the ten big tech events happening this October.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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The complicated relationship between musicians and platforms
Mon, 26 Sep 2022
Today’s Future of Music episode comes from Ariel Shapiro, The Verge’s lead reporter of HotPod, our weekly newsletter about the audio industry. Last week on the show we talked about old music… specifically how the back catalog is a big part of what makes “new” music. This week Ariel picks up right where we left off, with the revival of stars from the past on platforms like TikTok. But what about new… undiscovered talent? Is that even a thing anymore? Can a budding artist find their place in the world of viral video? Ariel explores the complicated relationship between musicians and platforms.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Apple Watch Ultra review: an aspirational debut
Fri, 23 Sep 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, David Pierce, and Victoria Song discuss using the new Apple Watch Ultra, the next-gen GPUs, and a bunch of gadget news.
Future reading:
Apple Watch Ultra review
Apple AirPods Pro (second-gen) review: same look, better everything else
This RTX 4090 is so ridiculous it needs a ‘Dark Obelisk’ RGB support stick
Nvidia announces next-gen RTX 4090 and RTX 4080 GPUs
Nvidia says it built too many GPUs — expect sales while it works on something `new`
DJI's new smartphone gimbal aims to get you filming quicker than ever
Logitech’s G Cloud Gaming Handheld arrives in October for $349.99
ByteDance’s Pico 4 VR headset is a Meta Quest 2 competitor
Framework’s new Chromebook is upgradable and customizable
This new turntable can play music directly to a Sonos system
The PS Vita’s time is now, again
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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GTA leaks, TikTok search, and Apple reviews hotline
Wed, 21 Sep 2022
Welcome to the flagship podcast of measuring changes in gravitational force.
02:13 - David Pierce chats with video game reporter Ash Parrish about how footage of Grand Theft Auto VI has leaked online.
GTA 6 gameplay leaks online in 90 videos
Rockstar confirms hack, says work on GTA VI will ‘continue as planned’
19:40 - David tries to use TikTok's search feature as a replacement for Google.
31:40 - Nilay Patel, Allison Johnson, and Victoria Song answer listener questions about the new iPhones and Apple Watch.
Apple iPhone 14 Pro review: early adopter island
Apple iPhone 14 review: meet the iPhone 13S
Apple Watch Series 8 review: if it ain’t broke
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we'd love to hear from you.
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Will the future of music sound a lot like the past?
Mon, 19 Sep 2022
In part 1 of our Vergecast: Future of Music series, Alex Cranz talks with Switched on Pop's Charlie Harding about the trends in music today that make new songs out of old material, and whether it's foreshadowing the future of pop.
Further reading:
Selena Quintanilla Will Sound Older on Her New Posthumous Album
Michael Jackson songs removed from streaming services to 'move beyond' fake vocals controversy
Shred with Green Day, with some help from AudioShake
Invasion of the Vibe Snatchers
Music played in this episode:
Como Te Quiero Yo A Ti - Selena
My Way - Frank Sinatra
I'll Be Seeing You - Billie Holiday
We Can't Stop - Miley Cyrus
bad guy - Billie Eilish
Through The Wire - Kanye West
Breaking News - Michael Jackson
Real Love - The Beatles
Free As A Bird - The Beatles
2000 Light Years Away - Green Day
Betty (Get Money) - Yung Gravy
Genius of Love - Tom Tom Club
Fantasy - Mariah Carey
Big Energy - Latto
I'm Good (Blue) - David Guetta, Bebe Rexha
Bang Bang - Rita Ora, Imanbek
Higher Love - Kygo, Whitney Houston
Don't Start Now - Dua Lipa
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Reviews of the iPhone 14 Pro, Apple Watch Series 8, and more
Fri, 16 Sep 2022
Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss The Verge's reviews of the iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 14, and Apple Watch Series 8.
Further reading:
Apple iPhone 14 Pro review: early adopter island
Apple iPhone 14 review: meet the iPhone 13S
It’s time to bring contrast back to our smartphone photos
Apple Watch Series 8 review: if it ain’t broke
iOS 16.1 beta adds Apple’s ugly new battery percentage indicator to the iPhone Mini
iOS 16 review: unlocking the lock screen
We finally got our hands and eyes on the PlayStation VR2
Google canceled its next Pixelbook and shut down the team building it
We didn’t need another Pixelbook
Adobe to acquire Figma in a deal worth $20 billion
Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II review: noise cancellation domination
Disney’s CEO teases a ‘hard bundle’ of Disney Plus and Hulu
Sonos announces long-awaited Sub Mini for $429
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Websites are back: inside The Verge's redesign
Wed, 14 Sep 2022
David Pierce and Nilay Patel discuss the ideas behind The Verge's brand new redesigned website, which officially launched on September 13th.
David also chats with senior product manager Tara Kalmanson and senior engineer Matt Crider, who worked on the redesign, about what went into implementing those ideas.
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Apple’s iPhone 14 event: the biggest announcements and our first impressions
Fri, 09 Sep 2022
Apple held their annual hardware event on their campus, debuting new iPhones, new Watches, and new AirPods. Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss everything that happened at the "Far Out" event, first impressions of the products, and their expectations for Apple in the next year.
Further reading:
Apple’s iPhone 14 event: the 9 biggest announcements
Apple Watch Series 8, SE, and Ultra hands-on: triple the fun
Apple Watch Series 8 gets souped-up period and ovulation tracking
New Apple Watch SE announced: price, features, release date
Apple Watch Ultra: price, specs, release date
Apple watchOS 9 will add low-power mode to Series 4 and later devices
Apple finally stops selling the Series 3 watch
It’s time for the Apple Watch to become Apple’s next big thing
iPhone 14 and 14 Plus hands-on impressions: the big phone is big
The iPhone 14 doesn’t have Apple’s latest processor
The iPhone 14 and 14 Plus are official with satellite-based Emergency SOS
iPhone 14 Pro: a first look at the new moving notch, camera, and more
Apple might have fixed the notch by putting it on an island
The iPhone 14 lineup won’t have physical SIM support
Apple’s new AirPods Pro hands-on: sticking close to a winning formula
Apple’s new AirPods Pro can cancel twice as much noise
Apple’s Lightning-only charging case for the third-gen AirPods doesn’t make sense
Klutzes rejoice: AppleCare Plus now covers unlimited repairs
Everything Apple didn’t announce at its iPhone 14 event
Tim Cook would rather sell you an iPhone than add RCS to iMessage
Jony Ive doesn’t think your car should rely on multitouch
Steve Jobs’ friends and family launched an archive celebrating his life
Tens of thousands of viewers watched a fake Apple crypto scam on YouTube
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The future of Apple: our biggest questions and hottest takes
Tue, 06 Sep 2022
The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Alex Cranz each discuss the big open questions they have about the future of Apple, and the hottest takes about the company.
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Snap laying off 20 percent of employees, Twitter starts testing edit button, and Logitech’s cloud gaming handheld leaks
Fri, 02 Sep 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss this week's gadget news.
Casey Newton joins the show to discuss Twitter finally adding the edit button for tweets.
Further reading:
An iPhone 14 satellite link could depend on Apple cutting a deal with wireless carriers
Everything Apple Watch Pro needs to beat Garmin and Samsung
Apple’s Lightning cable turns 10, but its time is over
Satellite connectivity on the Apple Watch Pro could be a game-changer
Logitech’s cloud gaming handheld leaks with Android apps and Switch-like UI
JBL’s new earbud charging case has a touchscreen so you can ditch the phone
Motorola Edge (2022) review: a passing grade
LG’s first bendable OLED TV lets you pick between flat or curved modes
Samsung’s first OLED gaming monitor doesn’t need a PC or console attached
Bang & Olufsen’s Beosound Theatre TV stand will turn your TV around, too
Zenbook 17 Fold OLED review: the best foldable yet
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Fold (2nd-Gen) hands-on
HMD claims its latest Nokia smartphone is its most ‘eco-friendly’ yet
The new Ring Intercom will help make your apartment intercom smart
Twitter starts testing an edit button, but you have to pay for it
Snap is canceling several projects and laying off 20 percent of employees
Truth Social is strapped for cash and struggling to find new users
Elon Musk says whistleblower’s testimony gives him more reasons to dump Twitter deal
Starlink suffered a global outage overnight
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Land of the Giants: It's a WhatsApp world
Wed, 31 Aug 2022
We're sharing an episode of Land of the Giants: The Facebook / Meta disruption, a collaboration between Recode and The Verge.
Meta’s most expensive acquisition ever and one of the most used communication apps in the world: WhatsApp. With over 2 billion users, WhatsApp is embedded in the social, economic, and political infrastructure of countries across the globe. For better and worse. The story of WhatsApp’s incredible power, as told through its largest market: India.
NOTE: There are descriptions of graphic acts of violence in this episode. If you want to skip these descriptions, the section begins at 20:45 and ends at 22:05.
Hosted by Shirin Ghaffary (@shiringhaffary) and Alex Heath (@alexeheath)
Subscribe for free. Be the first to hear next week's episode by hitting the plus sign in your favorite podcast app
Follow @recode and @verge for more coverage of Meta and Big Tech
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Twitter is a mess, Apple 'Far out' rumors, and this week in streaming
Fri, 26 Aug 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss this week in tech news.
Further reading:
Apple’s ‘Far out’ iPhone 14 event is happening September 7th
What to expect from Apple's iPhone 14 event
Next-day streaming of NBC shows like Law & Order and SNL jumps from Hulu to Peacock next month
YouTube TV update will reportedly let you watch four channels at once
HBO calls House of the Dragon its biggest premiere ever, with nearly 10 million US viewers
Twitter’s former security chief says company lied about bots and safety
Twitter whistleblower to testify in Congress over damning security revelations
Elon Musk vs Twitter: the weird number at the heart of the drama
The SEC asked Twitter to explain its user metrics after Elon Musk complained
Twitter CEO calls Mudge Zatko’s whistleblower report a ‘false narrative’
Twitter is a mess — but in the Elon Musk trial, it might not matter
Exclusive: Sonos’ next flagship speaker will play sound in nearly all directions
Ford hikes the price for the 2023 Mustang Mach-E by as much as $8,000
Peloton CEO thinks losing $1.2 billion is ‘substantial progress’
EV prices are going in the wrong direction
Starlink lowers monthly internet prices by 50 percent for some
Sony’s new DualSense Edge Wireless Controller takes on the Xbox Elite
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The Elgato Stream Deck's endless buttons
Wed, 24 Aug 2022
Today’s whole episode is about buttons. We’re talking about the Stream Deck from Elgato, a desk accessory that is basically just a bunch of buttons. We hear how people use their Stream Deck, how to hack it to do even more, and how to turn your old devices into something like it.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
Call our Vergecast Hotline! 866-VERGE11 (866-837-4311)
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Wireless earbuds
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? Skullcandy Method 360 ANC Wireless Earbuds
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss the Android 13 update, the battle between the vertical video apps, and a bunch of gadget news.
Further reading:
Android 13 arrives for Pixel phones starting today
How to get the Android 13 update on your Pixel right away
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 review: incremental innovation
Samsung Galaxy Watch 5 review: if it only had a better battery
All the YouTube Shorts you repost to TikTok will now tell on you
Instagram gets mean about sending video clips to TikTok
The auto industry lost its spectrum fight with the FCC because V2V was always a fantasy
Electric vehicle owners are fed up with broken EV chargers and janky software
Yes, the new electric vehicle tax credits are really confusing, but we can help
The auto industry lost its spectrum fight with the FCC because V2V was always a fantasy
The Dodge Charger EV’s fake exhaust sound is sure to divide muscle car fans
Snap is giving up on its Pixy drone after just four months
Timbaland and Swizz Beatz sold Verzuz to Triller — and now they say Triller didn’t pay
Yes — monitors can in fact get weirder
The Big Ten’s new deal makes sports streaming rights more confusing than ever
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Ford F-150 Lightning review, stress-testing earbuds, and a Galaxy foldable Q&A
Wed, 17 Aug 2022
02:33 - The Verge's David Pierce brings in deputy editor Dan Seifert, reviewer Allison Johnson, and managing editor Alex Cranz to answer Vergecast Hotline questions about Samsung's new Galaxy Z Fold 4 and Z Flip 4.
24:18 - Chris Welch returns to the show for more earbuds voice call testing, this time on the NYC ferry with the new Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 Pro and the Google Pixel Buds Pro.
41:18 - Nilay Patel shares his experience reviewing the Ford F-150 Lightning, and the troubles with its touchscreen control panel.
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Samsung’s Galaxy Unpacked August 2022 biggest announcements
Fri, 12 Aug 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Richard Lawler to discuss all the announcement from Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event this past week.
Further reading:
HBO Max will be replaced next year by a new service combined with Discovery Plus
Samsung’s Galaxy Unpacked August 2022: the five biggest announcements
The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 gets a little extra polish, but it’s still $999
The new Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 is a little better and still too expensive
Here’s how the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 compares to last year’s Z Fold 3
Samsung’s Galaxy Unpacked is a foldable party of one
Samsung still hasn’t given us a good reason to buy a foldable phone
Samsung goes big on battery with the Galaxy Watch 5 series
Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 2 Pro: more comfortable design and hi-fi audio
Google tries publicly shaming Apple into adopting RCS
Disney Plus’ Premium streaming price is rising to $10.99 per month
Disney Plus’ ad-supported plan will launch in December
Disney Plus and Hulu are getting steep price hikes
Gmail is now officially allowed to spam-proof politicians’ emails
Ethereum’s big proof-of-stake blockchain switch could happen on September 15th
Apple’s next iPhone might be more expensive
AirPods cases with USB-C could be in the cards for 2023
Battery percentage finally returns to iOS 16 and it’s hideous
Sonos has delayed the release of its next product — likely the Sub Mini
LG Display’s 97-inch OLED panel vibrates to create ‘cinematic’ 5.1 sound
Call 866-VERGE11 (866-837-4311) to ask The Verge about this week's Samsung announcements. We may answer them on Wednesday!
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Amazon buys Roomba, non-watch wearables, and the best cheap(er) phones
Wed, 10 Aug 2022
David Pierce taps into The Verge's reviews team to explore where we're headed with smart home gadgets, wearables, and midrange phones.
01:56 - Verge smart home reviewer Jennifer Pattison Tuohy comes back to the show to break down the news of Amazon acquiring iRobot, maker of the ever popular Roomba robot vacuum.
24:46 - Verge wearable tech reviewer Victoria Song joins David to explore the fascinating world of non-watch wearables: rings, earbuds, sports bras, and sleep trackers. Afterward, we hear from Whoop CEO Will Ahmed about his approach to wearable technology.
53:40 - Verge mobile reviewer Allison Johnson and David discuss the ideal version of a mid-range smartphone, and what are the best trade-offs for the price.
Further reading:
Amazon to acquire Roomba robot vacuum maker iRobot for $1.7 billion
Amazon bought iRobot to see inside your home
The best sleep tech you can buy right now
Whoop 4.0 Review
Oura Ring Gen 3 Review
Google Pixel 6a review: midrange parts, Tensor smarts
Apple's new iPhone SE is a modern phone stuck in yesterday's design
Apple should have followed Google’s Pixel 6A playbook with the iPhone SE
OnePlus 10T review: call it a comeback
Nothing Phone 1 review: something else
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HBO Max might get maimed, Apple might remove the headphone jack from the iPad
Fri, 05 Aug 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce discuss this week in tech news — including what's happening with HBO Max, Apple iPad rumors, some handheld gaming updates, and this week in EVs.
Further reading:
Apple might remove the headphone jack from its next entry-level iPad
Apple might delay iPadOS 16 launch
Apple says Mac sales are getting hit hard by supply constraints
OnePlus 10T review: call it a comeback
OnePlus’ 10T launch was a weird return to in-person events
The Pixel 6A is getting an immediate update to make sure it’s moddable
Logitech announces a new dedicated cloud gaming handheld device
Nintendo reports Switch sales dip as chip shortage continues to bite
The Orion looks like if Kirby swallowed your Switch
The megamerger killed Batgirl
HBO Max might get maimed
A TikTok Music app could challenge Spotify and Apple
Roku has a problem — its buttons aren’t printing enough money
Lucid Motors will barely make any EVs this year as it slashes production goals again
Tesla is the latest company to be drawn into the Elon Musk-Twitter legal mess
Forget those Tesla crashes: GM says you can trust its autonomous vehicles
GM’s Super Cruise will cover 400,000 miles of roads in North America, doubling coverage
Twitter v. Elon Musk trial date set to start October 17th
Google Meet meets Duo Meet, with Meet in Duo but Duo isn’t going into Meet
A mysterious battery-powered Google device appears in FCC filings
Sony InZone M9 review: impressive but flawed
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Work from anywhere: sailboats, solar generators, and Starlink
Wed, 03 Aug 2022
David Pierce hosts a special "work from anywhere" episode of The Vergecast while he is on vacation.
02:33 - CEO of Rove Jonah Hanig chats about his approach work-friendly travel. Reflect's Alex MacCaw shares his experience working from a sailboat in the middle of the ocean.
17:12 - Verge deputy editor Thomas Ricker talks about his review of the Jackery Solar Generator 2000 Pro, as well as his experience of working remotely in Europe.
36:28 - Verge policy editor Russell Brandom and senior reporter Loren Grush discuss the state of using satellites like Starlink to access the internet in rural areas.
Further reading:
Starlink’s Dishy McFlatface internet now available for Boaty McBoatfaces — just $5,000 per month
Jackery Solar Generator 2000 Pro review: letting flex-workers flex
Starlink RV review: the dawn of space internet to go
Ventje VW Campervan review: 'work from home' from anywhere
How Starlink and other satellite services are changing the shape of the internet
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Microsoft Q4 earnings, Spotify’s subscribers rise, and Instagram walks back its changes
Fri, 29 Jul 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce. and Alex Cranz discuss the quarterly tech earnings from Apple, Microsoft, Spotify, and more.
Further reading:
Meta and Apple in ‘deep’ competition to build the metaverse, Zuckerberg tells staff
Yes, it’s weird for the two-year-old Meta Quest 2 to go up in price
Meta might let anti-vax posts back onto Facebook and Instagram
Instagram walks back its changes
Microsoft Q4 2022 earnings: Windows and Xbox fall in $51.9 billion quarter
Meta reports revenue decline for the first time in Q2 earnings
Here’s where to buy the Meta Quest 2 before it costs $100 more
Alphabet Q2 2022 earnings show profits dropped compared to last year
Comcast’s broadband business stopped growing for the first time ever
Spotify’s subscribers rise to 188M amid podcasting setbacks
Spotify amps up fiction podcasts with new leader of scripted content
Spotify paid $123 million for audiobook company Findaway
Spotify has stopped making its Car Thing dashboard accessory
Apple’s latest iOS 16 beta ensures you can’t hide your mistakes with an edit
Apple’s new Home app in iOS 16 is better but still half-baked
SpaceX says Dish’s 5G plan would be ‘detrimental’ to millions of Starlink users
You can re-watch Game of Thrones in 4K on HBO Max next month
President Biden’s awesome video conferencing setup starts with a $7,000 Zoom gadget
Asus’ compact Zenfone 9 comes with incredible gimbal-like camera stabilization
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
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Instagram is TikTok now, BeReal is everywhere, and the Vergecast Hotline is back
Wed, 27 Jul 2022
02:30 - The Verge's David Pierce talks with deputy editor Alex Heath about how Meta is pivoting Facebook and Instagram away from your friends and more towards short form video from creators.
Mark Zuckerberg braces Meta employees for 'intense period'
Facebook is changing its algorithm to take on TikTok, leaked memo reveals
Adam Mosseri confirms it: Instagram is over
Instagram is making almost all videos Reels and will show them to way more people
Facebook doubles down on algorithms in the main feed
Facebook puts news on the back burner as it continues to push video and creators
Listen to Land of the Giants: The Facebook / Meta Disruption
24:04 - Casey Newton chats with David about the social media app BeReal, and whether it's able to succeed among social media titans.
Why BeReal is breaking out
40:55 - The Vergecast Hotline is back! Experts at The Verge answer your tech questions.
Call our Vergecast Hotline at 866-VERGE11 (866-837-4311).
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
Find us on Twitter:
Alex Heath is @alexeheath
Casey Newton is @caseynewton
Monica Chin is @mcsquared96
Dan Seifert is @dcseifert
Becca Farsace is @BeccaFarsace
David Pierce is @pierce
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Netflix wants linear TV to die, Thread border routers are Matter-ready, and Tesla sold most of its Bitcoin
Fri, 22 Jul 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz run discuss Tesla earnings, Netflix's next move, and an upgrade to smart home standard Thread.
Further reading:
Tesla’s run of record quarterly deliveries comes to an end thanks to China’s COVID shutdowns
Elon Musk now says Tesla could start Cybertruck deliveries in mid-2023
Tesla sold 75 percent of its Bitcoin
BMW starts selling heated seat subscriptions for $18 a month
The First-Ever Blazer EV: Electric SUV | Chevrolet
BMW Wants to Charge for Heated Seats. These Grey Market Hackers Will Fix That.
75 Percent of Car Buyers Don't Want Features Locked Behind Subscriptions
Netflix’s CEO is ready for TV to die
Netflix subscriber count in the US and Canada dropped by 1.3 million over the last three months
Netflix's ad-supported tier won't have everything at launch
Netflix is partnering with Microsoft for its new ad-supported tier
Netflix's latest anti-password sharing test lets users 'buy' additional homes
Amazon is giving Prime Video its biggest redesign in years
Eve’s new motion sensor is the first with Thread
Amazon says Matter will make Alexa smarter
If you have one of these Thread border routers, your smart home will be Matter-ready
Samsung’s August 10th Unpacked will definitely feature at least one foldable
Samsung confirms August 10th Unpacked event date with ‘cryptic’ puzzle
Google Pixel 6A review: midrange parts, Tensor smarts
Google’s prototype augmented reality glasses are going outside
Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover trial set to start in October
Apple will settle butterfly keyboard lawsuit for $50 million
Internal documents show Facebook and Google discussing platform strategies
The new Google Wallet is now available to all users
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Project Gene5is adventures, Congress takes on VPNs, and Nothing Phone 1 review
Wed, 20 Jul 2022
02:30 - The Verge's David Pierce talks with tech reporter Mitchell Clark about what it took to get service from Project Genesis and they conclude a FOIA may be the only way to get the facts.
I became a Dish influencer to get a 5G NFT
20:21- David talks with senior policy reporter Makena Kelly about US lawmakers suddenly discovering that VPNs are a thing that exists and that they aren't very honest about their business practices.
Lawmakers push FTC to clean up the VPN industry
41:50 - And finally, reviews editor Allison Johnson and news reporter Jon Porter go deep on Nothing Phone — our review, the hype leading up to its launch, and the reality of it now that we got our hands on it.
Nothing Phone 1 Review
Hot and Hyped: Inside the strange launch of the Nothing Phone 1
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
Call our Vergecast Hotline! 866-VERGE11 (866-837-4311)
Find us on Twitter:
Mitchell Clark is @strawberrywell
Alex Cranz is @alexhcranz
Makena Kelly is @kellymakena
Jon Porter is @JonPorty
Allison Johnson is @allisonjo1
David Pierce is @pierce
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MacBook Air M2 review, Elon Musk tries to bail on buying Twitter, and Apple beta software preview
Fri, 15 Jul 2022
06:32 - The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and David Pierce chat with deputy editor Dan Seifert about his review of Apple's M2 Macbook Air.
34:45 - Verge senior correspondent Liz Lopatto joins the show to discuss the latest in the Elon Musk's Twitter battle.
59:27 - The crew preview the beta software for macOS Ventura, iPadOS 16, and iOS 16.
Further reading:
Apple MacBook Air M2 (2022) review: a whole new Air-a
Elon Musk officially tries to bail on buying Twitter
Twitter says it’s going to sue Elon Musk for trying to back out of the deal
Twitter tells employees not to tweet about Elon Musk deal
Elon Musk proves he’s the wrong man to save the world
iPadOS 16 preview: jack of all trades, master of some
watchOS 9 preview: all about fitness and personalization
Hear me out: the new iOS 16 lock screens rule
macOS Ventura preview: the march to continuity continues
Nothing officially announces flashy Phone 1, starting at £399
There’s something familiar about the Nothing Phone 1
The Verge's Accessibility Week
I became a Dish influencer to get a 5G NFT
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The JWST's first space images, YouTube TV's bundle bet, and the Vergecast Hotline Q&A
Wed, 13 Jul 2022
Last week, we put a call out to people on Twitter about our new Vergecast Hotline, a phone line we set up for anyone to leave a message about a tech-related question they may have — whether it’s how to find your next router, when Spotify HiFi is actually coming, how to track when all of your favorite shows have new episodes, or whatever — so we can answer them on The Vergecast.
We plan to do this about once a month, so if you missed it, that number is 866-VERGE11 (866-837-4311). It’s still open, and you can call at any time.
We have a ton of great questions already, so we picked out a few voicemails we liked for today’s episode. Our colleagues — Verge reviewer Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, Hot Pod reporter Ariel Shapiro, Verge writer Cameron Faulkner, and managing editor Alex Cranz — help answer these questions on the show. You can hear that segment at around 31:00 in the episode.
There’s a lot more in today’s episode as well. David starts the show with senior science reporter Loren Grush to chat about what it took to get those beautiful images from the James Webb Space Telescope we saw this week.
In the middle of all of this, David spends some time on the show talking about YouTube TV — the video platform that is trying to make the cable bundle model work for streaming. Christian Oestlien, VP of product management at YouTube, talks about the goals for YouTube TV and its approach to bundling packages. You can listen to that segment around 20:44 in the episode.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
Call our Vergecast Hotline! 866-VERGE11 (866-837-4311)
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Land of the Giants: The Facebook / Meta Disruption
Fri, 08 Jul 2022
We’re sharing the trailer for the new season of Land of the Giants: The Facebook/ Meta Disruption.
Our friends over a Recode along with The Verge explore how the social media juggernaut has arrived at this unprecedented moment of transition. Senior reporters Shirin Ghaffary of Recode and Alex Heath of The Verge speak with top Meta executives and some of its biggest critics and ask how the company has shaped our lives, and what lies ahead.
Subscribe to Land of the Giants to get new episodes starting Wednesday, July 13th.
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This week in EVs, Starlink's wireless battle with Dish, and Sony announces gaming monitors
Fri, 01 Jul 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz chat with transportation editor Andrew Hawkins about EVs, trucks, Tesla, and Starlink.
Segment 1 - 02:07
Hyundai gives first look at Ioniq 6 EV as market share surges
Electric vehicle companies have a serious quality problem
Segment 2 - 23:44
Tesla reportedly doesn't have enough desks after Musk threatens to fire remote employees
Tesla lays off nearly 200 Autopilot employees who help train the company's AI
Uber drivers are liking the Teslas
Tesla reportedly doesn’t have enough desks after Musk threatens to fire remote employees
Starlink RV review: the dawn of space internet to go
SpaceX asks Starlink customers for support in wireless battle with Dish
Segment 3 - 46:27
Google's worst hardware flop was introduced 10 years ago today
Sony announces InZone gaming monitors and headsets for PC and PS5
Samsung M8 Smart Monitor review: the good enough of both worlds
Arm's Immortalis GPU is its first with hardware ray tracing for Android gaming
Apple says iPads will keep working as home hubs in iPadOS 16, but there's a catch
The Future Of trailer: The Verge’s first Netflix show about the future of everything
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
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Privacy risks in post-Roe USA, the internet's recommendation problem, and our Asus gaming laptop guide
Wed, 29 Jun 2022
The Verge's David Pierce and Alex Cranz chat with health technology reporter Nicole Wetsman and senior privacy and cybersecurity reporter Corin Faife about the privacy vulnerabilities for people seeking abortions in a post-Roe United States, and how people can protect their information.
29:28 - David reports on why the internet is so bad at recommendations, with insights from executives at Yelp, Pocket, Pinterest, and Likewise.
46:27 - Senior reviewer Monica Chin explains the confusing names behind Asus' ROG gaming laptop line, and which laptop may be the right for you.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
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Wireless earbuds
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? Skullcandy Method 360 ANC Wireless Earbuds
Microsoft Surface Duo 2 updated review, Solana's Saga phone, and the M2 MacBook Pro review
Fri, 24 Jun 2022
Nilay Patel and Alex Cranz chat with Verge senior reviewer Monica Chin about her review of Apple's Macbook Pro 13" with the M2 chip.
Alex, David Pierce, and Dan Seifert continue the show, focusing on this week's tech stories from The Verge: Nothing's Phone 1, Solana's Saga phone, and a second look at Microsoft's Surface Duo 2.
Further reading:
Apple MacBook Pro 13 (2022) review: new chip, old threads
There has to be a better way to binge
Netflix cuts around 300 jobs after losing subscribers
Microsoft’s weird Surface Duo 2 has surprisingly become my favorite device of the year
Here’s what the Nothing Phone 1’s rear lights can actually do
Nothing’s Phone 1 isn’t coming to the US
Nothing Phone will be invite only like original OnePlus phones
Solana is making a crypto phone with help from former Essential engineers
Juul’s e-cigarettes can’t be sold in the US, FDA says
Twitter confirms it’s working on a built-in Notes feature
Amazon shows off Alexa feature that mimics the voices of your dead relatives
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
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Meta's VR prototypes, the best earbuds for phone calls, and our dream E Ink device
Wed, 22 Jun 2022
The Vergecast is now the flagship podcast of twice-a-week podcasts. Our new Wednesday episode digs even deeper into The Verge’s reporting and the products you care about. And it launches today!
03:00 - David Pierce talks with Adi Robertson about Meta's VR prototypes she previewed.
19:44 - Chris Welch tests a bunch of wireless earbuds to find out which has the best phone call quality.
40:44 - Alex Cranz and David discuss what their dream E Ink device is, and why it still doesn't exist.
We’re going to do a lot of experimenting on this show, so I hope you’ll tell us what you like and don’t like.
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, we'd love to hear from you.
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Dish says their 5G network is available , Apple will stream every MLS match, and Google suspends engineer who claims its AI is sentient
Thu, 16 Jun 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss Dish Network's 5G network (@11:07), Google's LaMDA AI (@ 32:32), Apple streaming Major League Soccer (@47:38), and more.
Stories mentioned on this show:
Watch the trailer for The Verge’s first Netflix show, The Future Of
Dish Network’s Project Genesis 5G service is live in more cities
Dish says Project Genesis 5G is available in 100 cities, so we tried to sign up
T-Mobile can now use three-channel aggregation for even faster 5G
The Google engineer who thinks the company’s AI has come to life - Washington Post
Google suspends engineer who claims its AI is sentient
Apple will stream every Major League Soccer match for 10 years starting in 2023
Apple reportedly wants in on NFL Sunday Ticket
Apple TV Plus’ Friday Night Baseball debut wasn’t the homerun fans expected
Amazon and WNBA strike multi-year streaming deal
Don’t wait to install the June Windows update — it fixes a major security bug
Ford recalls nearly 49,000 Mustang Mach-Es over battery safety issues
Nothing reveals Phone 1 design a month early
Internet Explorer, star of Windows, dies at 26
Microsoft starts automatically redirecting Internet Explorer users to Edge
Sonos Voice Control review: a speedy, private, music-focused assistant
Microsoft Teams now uses AI to improve echo, interruptions, and acoustics
WhatsApp now lets you transfer your chat history from Android to iPhone
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WWDC 2022: Apple's iOS 16, new M2 processor, macOS Ventura, and more
Fri, 10 Jun 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss all the important announcements from Apple's WWDC.
Also: USB-C will be mandatory for phones sold in the EU ‘by autumn 2024 and the Xbox game streaming TV app feels almost like the real thing
All stories discussed this week:
Apple announces new flagship M2 processor
Apple announces redesigned MacBook Air with M2 chip and MagSafe
MacBook Air and Pro (2022) versus MacBook Pros (2021): spec comparison
Apple CarPlay is expanding with new features that can integrate deeper into the car
Apple iOS 16 brings massive improvements to lock screen and messages
Live Activities is a new iOS 16 feature meant to improve notifications
Apple will let you edit and even unsend texts in Messages in iOS 16
Apple announces all-new Home app at WWDC
iPadOS 16 takes a step closer to laptop-level multitasking
Apple’s macOS 13 Ventura with new Stage Manager tool announced at WWDC
You'll soon be able to use an iPhone as a Mac webcam
Continuity Camera: Apple explains how your iPhone will become a Mac webcam
watchOS 9 introduces new running metrics and medication reminders
Apple's medication feature is a step in the right direction
Apple's tvOS looks destined for a slow year after little WWDC attention
Apple Pay Later is the company's take on a buy now, pay later service
USB-C will be mandatory for phones sold in the EU ‘by autumn 2024’
What the EU’s new USB-C rules mean for the iPhone
The Xbox game streaming TV app feels almost like the real thing
Taco Bell opens its first ‘Defy’ restaurant that prioritizes ordering via app
The year of the NFT
What unions could mean for Apple with Zoe Schiffer
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Sheryl Sandberg leaving Meta, Volvo using Unreal Engine in its cars, and a WWDC '22 preview
Fri, 03 Jun 2022
Nilay Patel, David Pierce, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg stepping down after 14 years.
29:45 - Transportation editor Andrew Hawkins joins the show to discuss that latest car news, including Volvo using Epic's Unreal Engine to create 'photorealistic' graphics in its cars.
1:00:04 - Segment three covers what to expect at Apple's WWDC next week.
Sheryl Sandberg on leaving Meta
Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg is stepping down after 14 years
Meta’s head of AI to depart in group reorg
Volvo will use Epic's Unreal Engine to create 'photorealistic' graphics in its electric cars
GM is slashing prices for the Chevy Bolt amid high demand for electric vehicles
Ford announces new Mustang, Ranger, and commercial EV in major Midwest expansion
DeLorean offers a first look at its gull-winged Alpha 5 EV revival
Buick is rebranding as an electric-only automaker
Polestar's experimental EV, nicknamed 'Beast,' is getting a limited production run
Porsche strengthens ties with electric supercar startup Rimac in new funding round
iOS 16, notifications, and Macs: what to expect at WWDC 2022
The Murena One shows exactly how hard it is to de-Google your smartphone
Google is combining Meet and Duo into a single app for voice and video calls
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Computex 2022 laptops, Elon vs Twitter bots, and Apple ‘testing’ foldable E Ink display
Fri, 20 May 2022
Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Alex Cranz discuss the most interesting laptops announced this week at Computex 2022.
33:03 - Senior reporter Liz Lopatto returns to update us on Elon Musk's deal to buy to Twitter.
1:00:30 - Gadget rumors continue in segment three.
Stories discussed in this episode:
Asus’ ROG Flow X16 is a big, powerful 2-in-1 gaming laptop
With new Acer Swift 3, OLED marches toward the mainstream
Acer’s new Spin 714 could be 2022’s best Chromebook
The new Framework Laptop is another step toward a truly modular gadget
HP’s new Spectre x360 16 laptop is all-in on Intel
Acer’s new Chromebook Tab 510 puts LTE into a super tough, super bulky tablet
Acer’s new Predator Helios 300 supports glasses-free 3D content
How an Excel TikToker manifested her way to making six figures a day
Elon Musk says Twitter deal ‘cannot move forward’ until it proves bot numbers
Elon Musk’s latest stunt: calling on the SEC to investigate Twitter’s user numbers
Elon Musk’s silence on how he’d moderate the Buffalo shooting livestream is deafening
Twitter CEO defends bot estimates that put Elon Musk’s acquisition on hold
Twitter shares plummet as Musk raises new doubts about acquisition
Twitter (TWTR) Deal Is Proceeding, Not 'On Hold,' Executives Tell Staff - Bloomberg
Elon Musk told us he was sending a car to space, then said he totally made it up
Apple ‘testing’ foldable with secondary E Ink display, says analyst
Apple will bring Live Captions to the iPhone, iPad, and Mac and more gesture control on Apple Watch
iOS 15.5 arrives ahead of Apple’s annual developer conference
Sony LinkBuds S review: supreme comfort doesn’t come cheap
This is the design of Sonos’ upcoming Sub Mini
Samsung SmartThings begins testing Matter devices on its platform
Pebble founder: it’s your ‘last chance’ to make a small Android phone happen - The Verge
Amazon’s new Fire 7 tablet finally has a USB-C port
The defunct LG Wing is getting Verizon C-band because 5G in this country is silly
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How video game controllers got a lot more accessible
Tue, 17 May 2022
In the final chapter of our Vergecast “creators series,” Alex Cranz talks with Ben Heck, who has been modding game systems and controllers since the early 2000s, which led to his project creating single-handed video game controllers.
Alex also talks with Bryce Johnson, who is one of the inventors of the Xbox Adaptive Controller, the game controller designed for gamers with limited mobility.
Relevant links:
BenHeck.com
One-handed DualSense (video)
Design A 3D Printed Controller Modification For accessibility! (video)
One Handed PS4 Controller - Accessible Controller by Evil (video)
Microsoft announces Xbox Adaptive Controller for players with disabilities
Microsoft’s Adaptive Accessories are designed to be customizable inputs
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Google CEO Sundar Pichai on Google I/O 2022 📲 Stablecoins struggling to survive the crypto crash, and Apple discontinues the iPod
Fri, 13 May 2022
Nilay Patel and David Pierce interview Google and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai after Google announcing a bunch of products at their I/O conference.
34:25 - Dan Seifert joins the show to discuss the hardware previewed at Google I/O 2022.
55:38 - Liz Lopatto explains "the crypto crash" in this week's Crypto Corner.
1:07:19 - Alex Cranz hops in to run through this week's gadget rumors, reviews, and announcements.
Further reading:
Google is making an Android-based Pixel tablet and plans to start selling it in 2023
Google finally announces the Pixel Watch
The Pixel 6A includes Google’s Tensor chipset and costs $449
Here’s an early look at the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro coming this fall
Google’s vision for Android 13 is to offer a little more of everything
Google’s new Pixel Buds Pro come with noise cancellation and long battery life
Google thinks the time is right to bring back Wallet
Google Chrome is getting built-in virtual credit cards
Apple will drop iPhone Lightning port in favor of USB-C in 2023, claims analyst
Apple discontinues the iPod after 20 years
Sony WH-1000XM5 review: new design, new sound, new price - The Verge
Mark Zuckerberg’s Project Cambria demo shows off its full-color passthrough - The Verge
Samsung’s next flagship foldable allegedly leaks
Samsung and LG preview the future of weird phone displays
DJI officially announces Mini 3 Pro
Aura Strap 2 review: context — you love to see it
Ford F-150 Lightning first drive: quiet storm
Dish’s upcoming wireless plan might let you buy an iPhone with crypto
Josh Hawley wants to punish Disney by taking copyright law back to 1909 and that sucks
UiPath CEO Daniel Dines thinks automation can fight the great resignation
Ploopy and the promise of an open-source trackball
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How Google is trying to make ambient computing work
Wed, 11 May 2022
Google has big visions for the future of computing. It’s working on building what it calls an ambient computer: a virtual helper that can accomplish anything, anywhere, any way you want. But that vision won’t come easy. Ahead of Google’s I/O developer conference, The Verge sat down with some of Google’s most important executives to talk about the company’s vision, its new hardware and software, and how the company is changing to build the future it imagines.
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3D printing and trackballs: the future of gadgets?
Tue, 10 May 2022
In episode two of our Vergecast "creators series," Alex Cranz talks with the creators of Ploopy, the open source trackball that has a dedicated fanbase on Reddit.
Alex also talks with Chris Person, who recently wrote about Ploopy for The Verge, about how 3D printing and online communities are creating opportunities for gadget enthusiasts.
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"After Steve" author Tripp Mickle / Fortnite’s back on iOS / Sonos’s voice assistant
Fri, 06 May 2022
Nilay Patel and David Pierce chat with Tripp Mickle, a New York Times reporter and the author of a new book titled After Steve: How Apple Became a Trillion-Dollar Company and Lost its Soul. They talk about the rise of Jony Ive and Tim Cook, the power struggle between the two, and how Apple is grappling with everything from building a car to managing its relationship with the Chinese government.
After that, Verge managing editor Alex Cranz joins the show to talk about Starlink’s new Portability mode, HP’s super high-end new Chromebook, Fortnite coming back to iOS courtesy of Xbox Cloud Gaming, Sonos’s upcoming soundbar and voice assistant, and why Siri can’t seem to successfully close Nilay’s garage.
After Steve: How Apple Became a Trillion-Dollar Company and Lost Its Soul
Starlink’s new Portability feature brings internet to vanlifers
Now you can play Fortnite on iPhone or Android for free with Xbox Cloud Gaming
Exclusive: Sonos’ next soundbar will be called the Sonos Ray
Exclusive: Sonos is about to introduce its own voice assistant
The HP Elite Dragonfly Chromebook will start at $1,149 - The Verge
Leak confirms Sony flagship headphone design, casts doubt on improved battery life
Sennheiser’s Momentum True Wireless 3 earbuds have a fresh design and better ANC
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How the mechanical keyboard went mainstream again
Tue, 03 May 2022
For the next three weeks on Tuesdays, Verge managing editor Alex Cranz hosts some shows focused on the creator space and, in Vergecast fashion, the nerdiest part of the creator space we can think of.
In this episode, Alex talks with Jacob Alexander, a member of Input Club, one of the first groups to start making their own mechanical keyboards, and Julie Muncy, a writer and consultant who runs a service called Keyboard Concierge, which helps customers navigate the keyboard space for personalized customization.
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Twitter accepts Elon Musks' buyout / Snap Pixy drone hands-on / Apple releases fix for Studio Display
Fri, 29 Apr 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Liz Lopatto discuss Elon Musk buying Twitter and what's next for the social media company.
Senior reporter Alex Heath joins the show to discuss his experience with Snap's selfie drone.
Managing editor Alex Cranz refreshes the crew on the latest in E Ink tech.
Twitter accepts buyout, giving Elon Musk total control of the company
Elon Musk’s Twitter plans are a huge can of worms
Twitter CEO tells employees no layoffs planned ‘at this time’ following Elon Musk buyout
What Twitter employees are saying about Elon Musk
Jack Dorsey says ‘Elon is the singular solution I trust’ for Twitter’s future
How Elon Musk and Twitter can really fix free speech: act like a messaging app
Jeff Bezos is already testing Elon Musk’s commitment to free speech by trolling
Twitter policy chief faces wave of harassment amid Musk criticism
Crypto is winning, and Bitcoin diehards are furious about it
Snap Pixy: hands-on with Snapchat's selfie drone
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel thinks the metaverse is ‘ambiguous and hypothetical’
The Black Shark 4 Pro is all-in on gamer stereotypes
Apple releases fix for Studio Display webcam in latest macOS beta
Apple’s DIY repair service is now available in the US
E Ink Gallery 3 tech brings us closer to the perfect tablet
Sonos joins Matter but hasn’t committed to supporting the new standard
The F-150 Lightning is finally shipping — is Ford ready?
Government surveillance, Elon Musk, and free speech, with EFF executive director Cindy Cohn
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Sonos' new budget soundbar / CNN Plus is shutting down / Netflix loses subscribers for the first time in over a decade
Fri, 22 Apr 2022
David Pierce rejoins The Vergecast with Nilay Patel and Alex Cranz. The crew discuss Netflix losing subscribers for the first time in over a decade, CNN Plus shutting down only a month after it launched, and a whole lot more.
Verge editor Chris Welch joins the show to discuss Sonos' new budget soundbar that is set to release in June.
Relevant links:
gone90.biz
Netflix just lost subscribers for the first time in over a decade
The writing may be on the wall for sharing Netflix accounts
CNN Plus is shutting down only a month after it launched
The Obamas are leaving Spotify for a new multiplatform podcast deal
Spotify opens up video podcasting to everyone in the US and select markets
Exclusive: this is the new budget soundbar from Sonos
A year after LG left the smartphone business, Samsung is the big winner
The latest leak of Google’s upcoming Pixel Watch shows off a familiar design
Playdate review: all it’s cranked up to be
A camera battery with a USB-C port is a gadget whose time has come
Elon Musk lays out funding for ambitious Twitter takeover
Delta confirms ‘exploratory’ Starlink tests
Tesla earned over $3 billion in profit in the first quarter
California net neutrality law to remain intact after appeals court says it won’t reconsider earlier decision
Instagram is begging you to stop reposting TikToks to Reels
This firm made Republicans go viral — now it’s falling apart
Booming warehouse growth clashes with rural life in California’s Inland Empire
Inside the pandemic’s PPE supply chain nightmare
A former Foxconn executive tries to explain what went wrong in Wisconsin
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Mark Zuckerberg’s big plans for AR glasses / Elon Musk offers to buy Twitter in takeover attempt
Fri, 15 Apr 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Liz Lopatto, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Elon Musk's offer to buy 100 percent of Twitter and what it could mean for the company.
Senior reporter Adi Robertson joins the show to discuss Elon's limited thoughts on content moderation and Alex Heath's scoop on Meta's plans for their AR glasses.
Further reading:
Elon Musk offers to buy Twitter in takeover attempt
Elon Musk’s new troll is buying Twitter — will it work?
What else could Elon Musk buy for $43 billion?
Twitter CEO tells employees the board is still evaluating an Elon Musk takeover
The Twitter board is reportedly not interested in Elon’s takeover offer
What Elon Musk’s Twitter ‘free speech’ promises miss
Behind Mark Zuckerberg’s big plans for AR glasses
Explaining crypto’s billion-dollar bridge problem
Chris Dixon thinks web3 is the future of the internet — is it?
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Camera for Video Podcasting
Need a camera for video podcasting? Sony Alpha ZV-E10 II Mirrorless Camera
Elon Musk buys 9.2 percent of Twitter / OnePlus 10 Pro review / QD-OLED monitors and TVs
Fri, 08 Apr 2022
Verge managing editor Alex Cranz leads this week's show with Dan Seifert, Liz Lopatto, and Allison Johnson to discuss Elon Musk buying stock in Twitter, Allison's review of the OnePlus 10 Pro, and the newest monitors and televisions in 2022.
Further reading:
Elon Musk buys 9.2 percent of Twitter amid complaints about free speech
Twitter will appoint Elon Musk to its board of directors
Twitter is adding an edit button
Elon Musk tweeted his way onto Twitter’s board — now what?
What Elon Musk could mean for Twitter
OnePlus 10 Pro review: settling in
The OnePlus 10 Pro is the best phone I won’t recommend to most people
Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 and S8 Plus review: welcome to the S ecosystem
Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra review: when bigger isn't better
Alienware’s QD-OLED monitor sets a new standard for gaming displays
It’s hard to believe Samsung’s new matte The Frame is actually a TV
I saw Samsung’s first-ever QD-OLED TV, and it’s impressive
The real Magic Mouse is made by Logitech, not Apple
Great Scott! DeLorean sets a date for its electric resurrection (again)
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Steve Aoki on why he’s a ‘crypto believer’
Fri, 01 Apr 2022
Vergecast is on spring break this week! In the meantime, check out Nilay's discussion with Steve Aoki from this week's episode of Decoder with Nilay Patel.
Steve Aoki is a superstar DJ, producer, record label owner, and prolific entrepreneur. He has been part of the music industry since 1996, so he’s been through a lot of these big tech transitions, and now he’s heavily invested in another, with Web3, the Aokiverse. It involves selling tokens and NFTs and, over time, is meant to be part of the metaverse. Because, of course.
Subscribe the Decoder in your favorite podcast app.
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Asus’ ROG flow Z13 / Samsung’s Freestyle Projector / Apple's iPhone subscription service plan
Fri, 25 Mar 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss the tech headlines from this site this week — including Google's deal with Spotify over app fees, Nothing's first smartphone, and the struggle with TV projectors.
Google will test letting Android developers use their own billing systems, starting with Spotify
Nothing’s first smartphone is aimed at Apple, not OnePlus
OnePlus 10 Pro gets its global launch on March 31st
Dell’s XPS 15 and XPS 17 get 12th Gen chips
Intel looks on track to fix its core problems
Asus’ ROG flow Z13 is a Surface Pro that’s got game
Apple has resolved the outage affecting iMessage, Apple Music, the App Store, and other services
Apple’s Studio Display has 64GB of storage in addition to its iPhone 11-caliber processor
The Mac Studio’s removable SSD is reportedly blocked by Apple on a software level
Apple service centers can reportedly replace the Studio Display’s ‘built-in’ stands
How Microsoft built its smart Surface camera
iFixit teardown offers a detailed look inside the Mac Studio and Studio Display
Apple will reportedly sell the iPhone as a subscription service
Google won’t give old Pixels the best 5G, even though it admits it could
Eero’s new Wi-Fi 6E mesh router supports over gigabit speeds and costs under $500
Matter’s delays mean fewer new smart home products today
Google tidies up its smart home app
Apple TV app on Android TV no longer allows rentals, purchases, or subscriptions
YouTube is taking on over-the-air TV with nearly 4,000 free episodes of TV
Sonos might make your next TV streaming OS
Yes, Netflix just got even more expensive
HBO Max adds a shuffle button to help you find something to watch
Google won’t let you buy movies and TV shows from the Play app starting in May
Samsung’s Freestyle Projector doesn’t live up to it’s $900 price
Spider-Man: No Way Home’s VFX wizards couldn’t see the Doc Ock memes coming
How SiriusXM bought and bungled a beloved podcast network
Inside the fight to save video game history
How Robinhood’s Aparna Chennapragada is building the future of investing
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We reviewed the Mac Studio, the Studio Display, the iPhone SE, and the iPad Air
Fri, 18 Mar 2022
Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Monica Chin, Allison Johnson, and Dan Seifert discuss The Verge's reviews of the Apple products announced last week: the new iPhone SE, iPad Air, Mac Studio, and Studio Display.
Further reading:
Apple’s new iPhone SE is a modern phone stuck in yesterday’s design
Samsung’s really good midrange phone just got a bigger battery and a price cut
Apple Mac Studio review: finally
Apple Studio Display review: nothing to see here
‘Pro’ has lost all meaning, and Apple knows it
Apple’s chips are on the table
Apple’s charts set the M1 Ultra up for an RTX 3090 fight it could never win
Apple iPad Air (2022) review: it’s the nice one
Universal Control is Apple’s most impressive new feature in years
The Mac Studio is myth fulfillment
Vimeo is telling creators to suddenly pay thousands of dollars — or leave the platform
Ukrainian influencers ring the frontlines to TikTok
How Wordpress and Tumblr are keeping the internet weird
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Apple announces new iPhone SE, Mac Studio, M1 Ultra, and more
Fri, 11 Mar 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss all the announcements from Apple's Peek Performance event this week.
Further reading:
The 7 biggest announcements from Apple’s Peek Performance event
Apple iPhone SE gains 5G, A15 processor, and a higher $429 price tag
The 5G iPhone SE will be for carriers, not customers
5G’s false start is over and the iPhone SE proves it
The iPhone 13 and 13 Pro each get green finishes
The iPhone SE’s $30 price bump looks like a pure 5G tax
Give me a bigger iPhone SE
Apple announces updated iPad Air with M1 processor and 5G
How the M1-powered iPad Air compares to other iPad models
Apple announces new flagship M1 Ultra desktop processor for its most powerful computers
Apple’s new M1 Ultra aims to beat Nvidia’s RTX 3090
The redesigned MacBook Air might have an M1, not an M2
Apple’s Mac Studio is a new desktop for creative professionals
Apple explains why the M1 Ultra-equipped Mac Studio is two pounds heavier
A fully specced-out Mac Studio will cost $8,000
Apple’s new strategy is to give — not tell — users what they want
Screw it, the rectangles are back
The Mac Studio’s ports are a step back in all the right ways
The 27-inch iMac has been discontinued
Apple announces 27-inch 5K Studio Display for $1,599
Apple’s Studio Display actually comes with a stand
Here’s why Apple put a powerful iPhone chip in its new Studio Display
Apple’s Studio Display should work with Windows — including the webcam
The future of makeup is lipstick you can print
The Steam Deck now runs Windows
Hands-on with Alienware’s new, curved QD-OLED gaming monitor
Nothing can’t stop smartphone leaks
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Goodbye to Dieter Bohn, with special guest Walt Mossberg
Fri, 04 Mar 2022
This was a tough one. The Verge co-founder and Executive Editor Dieter Bohn is leaving us. Nilay Patel, Walt Mossberg and Dieter Bohn walk down memory lane and discuss their first meeting, founding The Verge, CES memories, and what Dieter is doing once he leaves.
Behringer's iNuke Boom is the essence of Vegas
And now, a brief definition of the web
Dieter on Twitter
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Russia starts a star war / Ford splits itself in two / Apple “Peek Performance” event preview
Fri, 04 Mar 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Dan Seifert discuss what could possibly be announced by Apple next week.
Senior reporter Loren Grush explains what's going on with Russia and space. And Andrew Hawkins talks about Ford splitting itself into two companies.
Further reading:
Elon Musk’s promised Starlink terminals have reached Ukraine
Ukraine engineer talks testing SpaceX’s new Starlink service
Russian space director’s wild threats could have real implications for the ISS
European Space Agency claims joint Russian Mars rover probably won’t launch this year
Russia holds OneWeb rocket launch hostage, issues conditional demands
Russia says it will no longer sell rocket engines to the United StatesFord’s ‘radical’ move to split the company won’t come easy
Elon Musk dares autoworkers union: hold a vote at Tesla’s California factory
Rivian has altered the deal, and now its EVs will cost buyers up to $20K more
Rivian apologizes for ‘broken trust’ and axes preorder price increases that hit as much as $20K
The Arc One is an electric boat with a battery pack three times the size of Tesla’s
Apple officially announces ‘Peek Performance’ March 8th event
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Senior news editor Sean Hollister joins Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Cranz to discuss his review of the Steam Deck, the latest portable gaming system.
Verge reviewer Allison Johnson continues the gadget talk with her review of Samsung’s Galaxy S22 Ultra.
Further reading:
Ukraine internet outages spark concerns of broader blackout
US and Russia still tethered by International Space Station during Ukraine conflict
Twitter accounts sharing video from Ukraine are being suspended when they’re needed most
Steam Deck review: it’s not ready
The official Steam Deck dock won’t be available at launch
Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra review: notably unique
Dish says its 5G buildout is going great, thanks for asking, how are you?
Apple will reportedly debut an M2 chip with four new Macs this year
Spotify’s Car Thing goes on general sale for $90
Sony finally reveals the PlayStation VR2’s design
Tesla CEO Elon Musk accuses the SEC of ‘leaking’ information
Inside Pornhub
Why Trump’s Truth Social may not survive the hype
Inside Galactic Starcruiser, Disney's hotel where everyone becomes a Star Wars character
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Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 review / Spotify is acquiring two major podcast tech platforms / The LinkBuds are Sony’s strangest earbuds yet
Fri, 18 Feb 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Monica Chin discuss phones, laptops, and chips announced and reviewed this week.
Senior reporter Ashley Carman joins the show to discuss the latest podcast industry news.
Further reading:
Samsung’s Galaxy S22 phones are the safe bet
OnePlus Nord CE 2 review: a great Oppo-tunity
Realme 9 Pro and Pro Plus announced with color-changing new design
Oppo releases official images of new Find X5 flagship phonet
Apple reportedly plans to reveal the first iPhone SE with 5G in March
AMD’s new Ryzen 6000 H-series processors are launching in laptops starting today
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 review: the price is no longer right
The Asus ROG Strix Flare II Animate: feature-packed, but overpriced
Cooler Master’s Sneaker X PC case has a lot of sole
Intel's first discrete Arc desktop GPUs are coming in Q2 2022
This DIY ultracompact computer has a mechanical keyboard
Samsung teases new Galaxy Book and more at February 27th event
Spotify’s COVID problems are bigger than Joe Rogan
Spotify is acquiring two major podcast tech platforms
Spotify wants to beat YouTube at audio
Spotify reportedly paid $200 million for Joe Rogan’s podcast
Hot Pod Summit is back at On Air Fest 2022!
The LinkBuds are Sony’s strangest earbuds in years — and surprisingly good
Audio-Technica’s new $200 earbuds promise an impressive 20 hours of battery life
Garmin’s Epix 2 multisport watch made me a touchscreen convert
Garmin's Fenix 7S Sapphire Solar makes the case for smaller fitness watches
iFixit has a Steam Deck teardown — and will officially sell replacement parts from Valve
Disney is developing planned communities for fans who never want to leave its clutches
Google is bringing Chrome OS to PCs and Macs
Facebook rebrands News Feed after more than 15 years
Elon Musk tells a judge the SEC’s ‘endless’ investigation is stifling his free speech
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Samsung announces Galaxy S22 Ultra / Microsoft announces open app store rules / Peloton fired 2,800 employees and gave them free Peloton memberships
Fri, 11 Feb 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Chris Welch discuss all the announcements from Samsung's Galaxy S22 Unpacked event.
Senior reporter Adi Robertson explains Microsoft's Open App Store Principles and the other tech policy news from the week.
Wearables reporter Victoria Song joins the show to discuss Peloton's business troubles.
Further reading:
Everything announced at Samsung’s Galaxy S22 Unpacked event
Samsung’s Galaxy S22 Ultra is a Note successor with a built-in stylus
Samsung’s Galaxy S22 and S22 Plus put improved cameras and performance in a samey design
Samsung phones will get an extra year of Android updates versus Google’s Pixel
Samsung’s new tablets go bigger than ever
Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 4 will track your sleep with cartoon animals
Microsoft announces open app store rules to prove it’s okay with new laws
Microsoft hints it will open up Xbox store, changing its entire business model
Microsoft says it will keep Call of Duty on PlayStation ‘beyond the existing agreement’
Everything you need to know about the bill that could blow up the app store
Nvidia’s huge Arm deal has just been scrapped
WarnerMedia and Discovery get US government approval to create their new media giant
Anti-exploitation bill advances in Senate despite free speech concerns
What on Earth is going on with Peloton?
Peloton fired 2,800 employees and gave them free Peloton memberships
Fired Peloton employees crash new CEO’s first all-hands
Mazda head units are getting bricked by a local NPR station in Seattle
Twitter finally agrees that 1x is not the only speed for watching a video
Is ‘realityOS’ Apple’s newest operating system?
Sports streaming is busted — the Super Bowl likely won’t be any different
Apple’s Tap to Pay feature lets newer iPhones accept contactless payments
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YouTube chief product officer Neal Mohan on new features for creators in 2022
Thu, 10 Feb 2022
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and streaming reporter Catie Keck talk with YouTube Chief Product Officer Neal Mohan about new features coming to YouTube: more tools for Shorts, interactive live streaming, a new YouTube TV interface, and more.
Further reading:
YouTube is adding new ways for creators to make money with Shorts and shopping
YouTube TV to finally add picture-in-picture on iOS
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Facebook lost daily users for the first time ever / Spotify CEO defends Joe Rogan deal
Fri, 04 Feb 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, Ashley Carman, and Alex Heath discuss Meta's rough week: Facebook reported its first-ever quarterly decline of daily users globally, along with lower-than-expected ad growth that sent its stock plunging roughly 20 percent.
The crew also discuss Spotify's response to the Joe Rogan controversy and how it will be handling moderation going forward.
Further reading:
Facebook lost daily users for the first time ever last quarter
Meta’s stock price plunges 25 percent overnight
Google parent company Alphabet broke $200 billion in annual revenue for the first time
Epic largely lost to Apple, but 35 states are now backing its fight in a higher court
Spotify CEO defends Joe Rogan deal in tense company town hall
Spotify says it’s a creator company now
Here is the Spotify COVID content policy that lets Joe Rogan slide
Spotify finally responds to Joe Rogan controversy with a plan to label podcasts that discuss COVID-19
Joe Rogan defends podcast and apologizes to Spotify for backlash
The Joe Rogan controversy is what happens when you put podcasts behind a wall
Sony is buying Bungie, the developer of Destiny and original creator of Halo
Big video game companies just can’t stop buying studios
Wordle has been bought by The New York Times, will ‘initially’ remain free for everyone to play
Peloton’s latest gadget is a $90 heart rate monitor for your arm
Echelon persuades USPTO that Peloton’s streaming tech is unpatentable
Appeals court upholds California’s net neutrality law
Google leaks Pixel 6A name in, of all things, a coloring book
Tesla has a new feature that will disable your seat controls if you keep messing with them
Public accountants are deducting themselves from their jobs
What’s the difference between 5G, 5G Plus, 5G UW, and 5G UC?
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Spotify picks Joe Rogan over Neil Young / Intel’s $20 billion bet on Ohio / Q4 earnings for Big Tech
Fri, 28 Jan 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Tom Warren discuss Q4 earnings for the big tech companies like Microsoft, Samsung, Intel, and Tesla.
Casey Newton joins the show to discuss Spotify's controversy regarding Joe Rogan's podcast, leading to musician Neil Young removing his music from the platform.
Further reading:
Windows 11 is getting Android apps, taskbar improvements, and more next month
Microsoft got a whole lot of people to play Halo and Forza
Call of Duty’s next three games will hit PlayStation despite Microsoft’s Activision deal
It’s 2022, and the Surface Duo is finally getting Android 11
Microsoft is making its Xbox subscriptions more flexible after UK regulator steps in
Samsung sets revenue records with stronger product sales
What to expect from Samsung’s February Unpacked
Samsung’s next Unpacked event is set for February 9th
What we know about Intel’s $20 billion bet on Ohio
The chip shortage didn’t stop Intel from having its ‘best year ever’
Tesla hails its second profitable year as a ‘breakthrough’
Elon Musk says ‘don’t forget about my robots’ as Roadster, Semi, Cybertruck deadlines slip
Tesla Cybertruck delayed until at least next year, Elon Musk confirms
Tesla Cybertruck walkaround video shows the absurdly huge windshield wiper in detail
The self-driving car industry is abandoning the term ‘self-driving’ and leaving it to Tesla
Spotify picks Joe Rogan over Neil Young
Why Spotify can’t afford to lose Joe Rogan
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Microsoft to acquire Activision for $68.7 billion / Google is building an AR headset / The 5G battle between the FAA, AT&T, Verizon, and airlines
Fri, 21 Jan 2022
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks with games reporter Ash Parrish and senior reporter Alex Heath about Microsoft acquiring Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion and Google building a new AR headset.
Policy editor Russell Brandom joins the show to discuss the battle between the FAA, AT&T, Verizon, and airlines over 5G and the antitrust bills in Congress this week.
Further reading:
The US’s free COVID test website has more visitors than all other .gov sites combined
Microsoft to acquire Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion
Read Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick’s email to employees about the Microsoft acquisition
Read Microsoft Gaming CEO’s email to staff about the Activision Blizzard acquisition
Microsoft’s Xbox Game Pass service grows to 25 million subscribers
Microsoft’s Activision acquisition would instantly make it a force in mobile gaming
A guide to Microsoft’s Xbox game studios empire
Is Microsoft building a gaming monopoly?
Sony expects Microsoft to ‘continue to ensure’ Activision games stay multiplatform
Google is building an AR headset
AT&T and Verizon are limiting C-band 5G expansion around airports even more
AT&T begins 5G C-band rollout in limited number of metro areas
Verizon’s faster C-band 5G is live and off to a promising start
Apple and Google split with startups over antitrust bill
Tim Cook and Sundar Pichai are personally lobbying senators against antitrust legislation: report
Lawmakers approve Big Tech antitrust overhaul, but with strings attached
US competition enforcers launch overhaul of merger approval process
Democrats unveil bill to ban online ‘surveillance advertising’
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Wordle and the App Store clones / FTC’s Meta antitrust lawsuit moves forward / PCs big year
Fri, 14 Jan 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Alex Cranz, and Russell Brandom discuss the FTC proceeding with an antitrust lawsuit against Meta, the success of Wordle and its app clones, and more RCS drama.
Verge deputy editor Dan Seifert stops by to chat about this week's gadget news and the state of the PC market.
Stories discussed:
White House to launch COVID test-ordering site ‘by this weekend,’ reports say
White House hosts tech summit to discuss open-source security after Log4j
Google calls for new government action to protect open-source software projects
Judge says the FTC’s Meta monopoly lawsuit can go forward
Meta’s real antitrust problems are only beginning
Want the ‘TLDR’ on a site’s terms of service? There’s a bill for that
Apple says App Store developers have earned more than $260 billion
The App Store clones are here to profit off Wordle’s success
The Wordle clones have disappeared from the App Store
Wordle copycat creator apologizes for ripping off the popular free word game
The real beauty of Wordle is how its emoji results tell a story
Alleged Apple App Store scammer AmpMe lowers prices and says it’ll investigate its ‘consultants’
Google exec says Apple is ‘holding back’ customers who text
Google says Apple ‘should not benefit from bullying’ created by iMessage lock-in
It fills me with glee that Canon printers now think Canon’s own toner is fake
Apple’s $19 polishing cloth is back in stock online
Ford doesn’t want the F-150 Lightning’s launch to be plagued by scalpers
Tesla removes 2022 production date from Cybertruck website
The PC market just had another big year thanks to pandemic demand
TSMC earmarks record $44 billion for chip manufacturing expansion in 2022
The pandemic has blurred the lines between laptop categories
Sony Xperia 5 III now shipping in the US, almost nine months after initial announcement
The Nvidia Shield is getting Android 11 and other upgrades
Sony says it’s still making new PS4s, but most stores aren’t selling them
Google’s Android 12 update has been the rockiest one in years
Ford doesn’t want the F-150 Lightning’s launch to be plagued by scalpers
Wear OS will work better for lefties... eventually
Tesla removes 2022 production date from Cybertruck website
GM is creating an online used car marketplace
Buy Nothing exploded on Facebook — now it wants a platform on its own
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Great mic for podcasters
Logitech for Creators Blue Yeti Nano USB Microphone.
CES 2022: all the TVs, concept cars, laptops, and gadgets announced this week
Fri, 07 Jan 2022
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Cranz run through the huge amount of products announced at the Consumer Electronics Show 2022 this week — from QD-OLED TVs, to EVs, to a hair-coloring gadget.
All the stories discussed:
CES 2022 will close a day early because of COVID concerns
CES 2022 will introduce HDMI 2.1a, another confusing new spec
Sony announces the world’s first QD-OLED 4K TV, coming later this year
Sony is joining the Mini LED TV bandwagon in 2022
Samsung promises ‘groundbreaking’ new TV feature: NFT support
Samsung’s latest Frame TVs have a matte screen that looks and feels more like real art
Samsung’s new 2022 TVs bring Nvidia GeForce Now and Google Stadia gaming
Samsung’s new TV remote uses radio waves from your router to stay charged
LG announces its largest and smallest OLED TVs ever as part of 2022 lineup
LG TVs now have a built-in health platform
The Samsung Odyssey Ark is its largest curved monitor yet
Chevy Silverado EV revealed: GM’s best-selling truck goes electric
General Motors announces electric versions of the Chevy Equinox and Blazer SUVs
BMW’s IX M60 is a dual-motor performance EV with 280 miles of range
BMW debuts its new color-changing paint technology at CES: E Ink
Sony pivots into cars with Sony Mobility and a Vision-S SUV prototype at CES 2022
Dell XPS 13 Plus hands-on: is that... a touch bar?
Asus will release a 17-inch foldable OLED laptop this year
Lenovo’s new ThinkBook Plus Gen 3 has an eight-inch secondary screen
Intel’s 12th Gen Alder Lake chips arrive at CES 2022 for its most powerful laptops ever
Intel’s upcoming Arc GPUs inch closer to their debut with latest OEM update
Intel announces 5.5GHz capable 12th Gen CPU
Nvidia still has no idea how to pronounce the name of its best gaming GPU
Google will spend 2022 trying to match Apple’s ecosystem integrations
The OnePlus 10 Pro’s official specs are not the least bit surprising
The Galaxy S21 FE officially joins Samsung's crowded mirage lineup
Why AT&T and Verizon are feuding with the US Government over a last-minute delay to 5G
L’Oreal’s newest gadget takes the mess out of coloring your hair
Sony confirms PlayStation VR2 name and Horizon game
Samsung’s tiny Freestyle projector is fun so get over it
Anker’s new Nano II 100W USB-C charger is the smallest 100W GaN charger yet
The Motorola MA1 is a dongle for wireless Android Auto
Razer’s new Zephyr Pro mask has the voice amp feature we wanted all along
Black + Decker’s $300 Bev vacuums up a Keurig-shaped hole in the robot bartender space
Are we ready for the smart front door? Masonite thinks so
This breathing PC case looks like it’s alive
Podcasters are letting software pick their ads — it’s already going awry
Pete Buttigieg is racing to keep up with self-driving cars
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James Webb Space Telescope to launch next week / cool gadgets announced this week
Fri, 17 Dec 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Loren Grush discuss NASA's plan for launching the James Webb Space Telescope, the successor to NASA’s Hubble telescope.
Second half of the show, the crew go through all the gadgets and software updates announced this past week.
Stories discussed this week:
NASA’s massive next-generation space telescope arrives in South America ahead of launch
NASA sets new date for James Webb Space Telescope launch
Five former SpaceX employees speak out about harassment at the company
Sony Glass Sound Speaker review: it’s not what it looks like
Analogue Pocket review: Game Boy games have never looked so good
Opal’s C1 offers DSLR-rivaling video quality in a small form factor
Dell’s Concept Stanza converts your chicken scratch to digital text
Amazon Echo Show 15 review: Alexa’s on your wall
Oppo’s Find N is an impressive first folding phone
Huawei’s P50 Pocket is a stylish clamshell foldable launching this month
Samsung’s working on a rollable smartwatch with a camera
Apple releases iOS 15.2 with App Privacy Report, Digital Legacy, and more
Apple scrubs controversial CSAM detection feature from webpage but says plans haven’t changed
Universal Control won’t be coming to macOS Monterey until sometime this spring
Adobe launches Creative Cloud Express, a new app that simplifies its powerful editing tools
Snap launches Story Studio, a standalone video editing app for mobile
Log4j is patched, but the exploits are just getting started
‘No easy solution’ for Tesla Cybertruck’s comically large windshield wiper, Elon Musk says
Chrome OS tablets are getting fancier but not better
Former FCC officials are worried about air safety fears delaying 5G rollout
Toyota is going to make you pay to start your car with your key fob
Delivery failed
How to sneak into a Bored Ape Yacht Club party
Matter’s plan to save the smart home
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Can Matter save the smart home?
Tue, 14 Dec 2021
In our final Vergecast Spec-tacular of the year, Dieter Bohn dives into Matter, the new tech standard that smart home gadgets will use to communicate with each other, making compatibility between gadgets significantly easier.
Guests include:
Verge smart home reviewer Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Michelle Mindala-Freeman, Head of Marketing for the Connectivity Standards Alliance.
Tim Both, brand manager and product manager for Eve
Samantha Fein, VP of Marketing and Business Development at Samsung SmartThings
Further reading:
Matter's plan to save the smart home
What matters about Matter, the new smart home standard
Matter could bring universal casting that actual works
Smart home company Eve plans to use Matter to move beyond Apple’s HomeKit
Amazon confirms its support for Matter
Google shares its commitment to Matter, promises future interoperability between smart home platforms
Samsung promises Matter support for SmartThings hubs, Galaxy devices, TVs, and fridges
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Matrix Awakens Unreal Engine 5 demo / Snap’s first AR Spectacles / Android games come to Windows in 2022
Fri, 10 Dec 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Heath discuss Epic Games' Matrix experience in Unreal Engine 5, Snap’s first AR Spectacles, streaming news, and more.
Stories discussed:
Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss on making The Matrix Awakens with Epic Games
Snap’s first AR Spectacles are an ambitious, impractical start
How Snap is sidestepping the metaverse
The Matrix Awakens is an interactive tech demo for PS5 and Xbox Series X / S
Google is bringing Android games to Windows in 2022
Meta opens up access to its VR social platform Horizon Worlds
Apple’s AR headset reportedly uses 3D sensors for hand tracking
Your LG TV can now play Google Stadia if it’s running webOS 5.0 or later
Matter could bring universal casting that actually works
Roku settles YouTube dispute and locks down apps in ‘multi-year’ deal
Spotify removes popular comedians’ content over royalties dispute
Apple Music’s voice plan likely to launch with iOS 15.2
Sonos now supports Amazon Music’s Ultra HD and Dolby Atmos tracks
Google Pixel’s lock screen Snapchat shortcut is here
Google releases first Android 12L beta for large-screen devices
Google Pixel mail-in repairs have allegedly twice resulted in leaked pics and a privacy nightmare
5G now means some flights won’t be able to land when pilots can’t see the runway
Jessica Rosenworcel confirmed by Senate to lead the FCC
Verizon might be collecting your browsing history and here’s how to stop it
Sonos announces plans to make its products more efficient and repairable
Instagram head says it’s bringing back the chronological feed
The vice president should not be using Bluetooth headphones
Kickstarter says it’s switching to crowdfunding via the blockchain
Epic v. Apple ruling put on hold after appeals court grants a stay
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Behind the scenes of our Treo documentary, Springboard
Tue, 07 Dec 2021
Live at On The Verge in New York City, Nilay and Dieter discuss The Verge's documentary Springboard: the secret history of the first real smartphone and conduct at Q&A with the audience.
Springboard is now streaming worldwide. You can watch it on The Verge’s new app on Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Roku, or Apple TV. It is now also available to watch on our YouTube channel.
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Jack Dorsey steps down from Twitter / The future of the blockchain / FTC is suing to block Nvidia’s purchase of Arm
Fri, 03 Dec 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn chat with Alex Heath and Casey Newton about Jack Dorsey stepping down as CEO of Twitter and what's going in the world of crypto.
Managing editor Alex Cranz stops by to share news that the FTC is suing to block Nvidia's $40 billion purchase of Arm.
Stories referenced:
Jack Dorsey steps down as Twitter CEO
Twitter CTO Parag Agrawal replaces Jack Dorsey as CEO
Jack steps back
An introduction to Parag Agrawal, Twitter’s new CEO
Big tech’s first generation of founders starts to step aside
As tech founders resign, Congress loses its favorite targets
Jack Dorsey’s Square is changing its name to Block
The leader of Facebook’s stalled cryptocurrency project is leaving the company
Macy’s is auctioning off Thanksgiving Day Parade NFTs, including this creepy elf
Almost buying a copy of the Constitution is easy, but giving the money back is hard
ConstitutionDAO will shut down after losing bid for Constitution
Is the music industry’s future on the blockchain?
US banking regulators are looking to clarify crypto rules in 2022
The FTC is suing to block Nvidia’s $40 billion purchase of Arm
Qualcomm is updating its Snapdragon branding to try and simplify its chip names
Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip is here to power the Android flagships of 2022
Qualcomm’s new always-on smartphone camera is a privacy nightmare
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 is its latest attempt to hit a Windows on Arm home run
Microsoft’s Qualcomm exclusivity deal for Windows on Arm reportedly ending soon
Qualcomm’s new G3x platform could usher in a new wave of Nintendo Switch-alikes
Razer’s Qualcomm-powered handheld console leaks
Meta ordered to sell Giphy by UK regulator
Barnes & Noble announces new Nook GlowLight 4, says it cares for real this time
Alex's tablet
Tile is selling its Bluetooth tracking business to Life360 for $205 million
Elizabeth Holmes admits that she was CEO of Theranos, the company she founded
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Eero CEO Nick Weaver on 5G, Thread, and the future of the smart home
Tue, 23 Nov 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn interview CEO of Eero Nick Weaver live at On The Verge in New York City.
The discussion includes how the Ring Alarm Pro came together, Eero supporting Thread and Matter, integration of 5G, and what's next for the smart home.
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Apple will make repair manuals and parts available to public / Russia blows up a satellite / Biden signs infrastructure package
Fri, 19 Nov 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn chat with policy reporter Makena Kelly about Pres. Biden's $1 trillion infrastructure package and what it will do to improve broadband access in the US.
Senior science reporter Loren Grush joins the show to talk about Russia destroying one of its own satellites with a ground-based missile.
Managing editor Alex Cranz stops by to chat about Apple opening up iPhones and Macs to DIY repairs.
Stories referenced:
Biden signs $1 trillion infrastructure package into law
Biden’s FCC is still deadlocked, and net neutrality hangs in the balance
Biden’s pick for FDA chief works at Google
Russia blows up a satellite, creating a dangerous debris cloud in space
NASA delays ambitious human lunar landing to 2025
NASA’s Moon landing will likely be delayed ‘several years’ beyond 2024, auditors say
Blue Origin loses lawsuit against federal government over NASA’s human lunar lander contracts
SpaceX’s Starlink reveals new smaller, rectangular user dish to connect to satellites
Apple will sell you iPhone parts to fix your own phone at home
The shareholder fight that forced Apple’s hand on repair rights
Apple reportedly wants to launch a self-driving EV in 2025 with a custom chip
The Balmuda Phone is a compact Android phone from a high-end toaster company
Meta’s sci-fi haptic glove prototype lets you feel VR objects using air pockets
Sonos finally adds DTS audio support to its home theater lineup
Hyundai’s restomod Grandeur is the perfect EV for a supervillain
Google explains the tradeoffs that led to Pixel 6’s slow charging complaints
A look under the hood of the most successful streaming service on the planet
Meta goes into lockdown
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Let's Chat about RCS
Tue, 16 Nov 2021
The Verge's Dieter Bohn dives into the messy past and uncertain future of Rich Communication Services, or RCS, a new texting standard that Google had been pushing for Android users.
Guests include:
Sanaz Ahari, Senior Director of Communications Products at Google
Ron Amadeo, reviews editor at Ars Technica
Relevant links:
RCS: What it is and why you might want it
AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile have finally agreed to replace SMS with a new RCS standard
A decade and a half of instability: The history of Google messaging apps
Google is rolling out end-to-end encryption for RCS in Android Messages beta
SVP of Android offers open invitation to help Apple put RCS texting on the iPhone
Produced by Andru Marino, Liam James, and Dieter Bohn
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EV startup Rivian goes public / Judge orders Apple to allow external payment options / Microsoft announces Windows 11 SE
Fri, 12 Nov 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Sean O'Kane discuss electric vehicle startup Rivian becoming a publicly traded company after executing one of the biggest initial public offerings in history.
The crew also cover multiple stories about Apple from this week, Microsoft's Windows 11 SE release, and a new Surface Laptop for schools.
Further reading:
Rivian goes public in one of the biggest IPOs ever
Rivian’s mega IPO is a good test of the meme stock craze
Judge orders Apple to allow external payment options for App Store by December 9th, denying stay
Apple must allow other forms of in-app purchase, rules judge in Epic v. Apple
Apple backs off of breaking Face ID after DIY iPhone 13 screen replacements
Tim Cook says he owns cryptocurrency
Apple hires Tesla’s former Autopilot software director
Johnson & Johnson’s CEO joins Apple’s board
iPhone 13 Pro vs. Pixel 6 Pro: what 2,000 photos tell us
Microsoft announces Windows 11 SE, a new Chrome OS competitor
Microsoft’s new $249 Surface Laptop SE is its first true Chromebook competitor
Microsoft partners with Meta to integrate Teams into its Facebook-like Workplace
Microsoft fixes Windows 11 features failing due to an expired certificate
Updating The Verge’s background policy
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What’s next for USB-C
Tue, 09 Nov 2021
The Verge's Dieter Bohn dedicates this week's Tuesday episode to the fractious history and fraught future of USB-C.
Guests include:
CTO of ASTC Rod Whitby, who has worked with USB-C standards since its infancy
Verge senior reporter Chaim Gartenberg, who explains the many variations of USB-C cables
Ken Pillonel, a hacker in Switzerland who figured out how to replace his iPhone's lightning port with USB-C
Relevant links:
USB-C cables are getting new, confusing logos for faster 240W charging standard
You can now, technically, build your own USB-C iPhone
EU proposes mandatory USB-C on all devices, including iPhones
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Microsoft enters the metaverse race / Beats Fit Pro review / Apple’s software chief speaks out against sideloading
Fri, 05 Nov 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Tom Warren discuss Microsoft's take on the metaverse at their Ignite event this past week.
Verge editor Chris Welch joins to chat about his review of the Beats Fit Pro and Apple's third-gen AirPods.
Stories from this week:
Microsoft Teams enters the metaverse race with 3D avatars and immersive meetings
Microsoft is planning 3D metaverse apps for Xbox and gaming
Microsoft Loop is a new Office app for the hybrid work era
Microsoft’s GitHub CEO steps down
Beats Fit Pro review: sporty AirPod Pros with better sound
Beats announces Fit Pro earbuds with wing tip design and $200 price
Apple AirPods (third-gen) review: new design, same appeal
The best wireless earbuds to buy right now
‘Sideloading is a cyber criminal’s best friend,’ according to Apple’s software chief
Verizon and AT&T delay crucial 5G expansion over aircraft interference concerns
Facebook is shutting down its Face Recognition tagging program
Instagram and Twitter finally make link previews work again
Zillow reportedly needs to sell 7,000 houses after it bought too many
Ford’s selling electric crate motors based on the one in the Mach-E
The 2022 Volkswagen ID 5 is a sporty electric SUV with over 300 miles of range
Gobble, gobble: GE Appliances wants you to trust its smart oven to cook the perfect turkey
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Vergecast Live @ On The Verge 2021
Mon, 01 Nov 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn are joined by Verge alums Joanna Stern and David Pierce live on stage at The Verge's 10th anniversary party.
Stories discussed from "Episode 69"
Tim Cook must testify in ebook price fixing case
FCC approves T-Mo/MetroPCS merger
Google Reader shuts down
Intel in discussions to make Apple chips
Wii U sales slump
Release date announced for first BB10 phones
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Facebook becomes Meta / Pixel 6 review / Macbook Pro review
Fri, 29 Oct 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Facebook's new name. Dan Seifert joins to discuss the reviews for Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro as well as MacBook Pro.
Mark Zuckerberg on why Facebook is rebranding to Meta
Facebook’s new name is Meta
What is the metaverse, and do I have to care?
Facebook’s Oculus Quest will soon be called the Meta Quest
Oculus users are getting a new metaverse home
Facebook is adding a mixed reality platform to Oculus Quest
Facebook teases ‘Project Cambria’ high-end VR / AR headset
Amid the fluff, Meta showed an impressive demo of its Codec Avatars
Eight things we learned from the Facebook Papers
Facebook’s lost generation
Facebook says it’s refocusing company on ‘serving young adults’
Google Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro review: finally, more than just good cameras
The Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro will arrive with a day-one update
Intel's 12th Gen Alder Lake chips usher in a new generation of …
Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (2021) review: a bigger and better ...
Apple AirPods (third-gen) review: new design, same appeal
Adobe brings a simplified Photoshop to the web
Sony Xperia Pro-I: A camera first, phone second
Samsung announces cloud gaming for Tizen TVs, offers no further details
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Inside our MacBook Pro 2021 review
Tue, 26 Oct 2021
Dieter Bohn hosts a discussion with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and Verge reviewer Monica Chin about The Verge's approach to reviewing gadgets, focusing specifically on Apple's 2021 MacBook Pro.
The crew are still in the process of reviewing the laptop, so the conversation also leads to topics like how battery testing has evolved the past decade, how The Verge scores reviews, and how to find the right angle for writing a review.
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Apple’s Unleashed event / Facebook is planning to rebrand the company / Google holds Pixel 6 event
Fri, 22 Oct 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Facebook's plan to rebrand the company with a new name, the products announced at Apple's Unleashed event, and what happened at Google's Pixel 6 event.
On The Verge is happening October 22nd and 23rd, and you’re invited
Facebook is planning to rebrand the company with a new name
The 8 biggest announcements from Apple’s Unleashed event
Apple announces 16-inch MacBook Pro with new M1 Pro and M1 Max processors
Apple announces new 14-inch MacBook Pro with a notch
Apple’s new MacBook Pro has a notch
Apple is ready to admit it was wrong about the future of laptops
Apple’s new M1 Pro and M1 Max processors take its in-house Arm-based chips to new heights
The new MacBook Pros have one big question mark: battery life
PSA: the MacBook Pro 14-inch’s $20 power brick upsell is probably worth it
Apple brings MagSafe 3 to the new MacBook Pro
Apple’s new 140W charger can fast charge a lot more than just your MacBook Pro
macOS Monterey is officially launching on October 25th
Apple’s HomePod Mini gets three new color options
Apple announces third-generation AirPods for $179
Apple quietly added a MagSafe charging case to its AirPods Pro, too
A piece of cloth to clean your Apple devices will cost you $19
Apple Music’s new voice-only plan costs $4.99 per month
The biggest announcements from Google’s Pixel 6 event
Sundar Pichai and Rick Osterloh think the Pixel 6 is Google’s breakout phone
Google Pixel 6 and 6 Pro have big screens, big ambitions, and small prices
Google’s Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro finally bring new camera hardware in addition to software
The Pixel 6’s Tensor processor promises to put Google’s machine learning smarts in your pocket
Snapchat says the Pixel 6 is ‘the fastest phone to make a Snap’
The Google Store is open again, and Pixel 6 delivery dates are all over the place
Samsung is adding new watchfaces to the Galaxy Watch 4
Samsung will now let you design your own Galaxy Z Flip 3
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Google’s Pixel 6 with Sundar Pichai and Rick Osterloh
Tue, 19 Oct 2021
Dieter Bohn sits down with Google CEO Sundar Pichai and SVP of Devices and Services at Google Rick Osterloh to discuss the launch of the Pixel 6 — including its tensor processing chip, the Android ecosystem, and what makes this Pixel launch different from the rest.
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HTC Vive Flow announced / Apple Watch Series 7 review / Apple's Oct 18th event preview
Fri, 15 Oct 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Adi Robertson discuss HTC's new VR headset the Vive Flow.
Also: Apple, Google, and Samsung all have events next week. The crew discuss what to expect.
Further reading:
The $499 HTC Vive Flow is VR for people who don’t like VR
I have a hard time believing your wearable is good if you had to Photoshop it onto a model
Magic Leap somehow raised $500 million to make another AR headset
Facebook execs tease VR prototype hardware with new photos
Apple Watch Series 7 review: time and time again
Apple announces October 18th event after months of Mac rumors
Apple exploring AirPods that take your temperature and monitor posture: report
Google announced its Pixel 6 event on October 19th
Watch the Pixel 6 Pro get put together and taken apart in leaked videos
Google Pixel 6 leak teases Magic Eraser feature, plus five years of Android security updates
Google says it’s dropping Material Design components on iOS in favor of Apple’s UIKit
‘Pixel Pass’ is Google’s rumored response to Apple One
Samsung announces Unpacked 2 event for Wednesday Oct 20th, right after Apple and Google
Samsung tries to prove its foldable phones are tough in a new test video
VanMoof’s new V e-bike is its fastest ever
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Surface extravaganza: a review of Windows 11 and Microsoft’s new Surface lineup
Tue, 12 Oct 2021
Dieter Bohn hosts a discussion on reviews for the newest Microsoft products launched this fall — Windows 11, Surface Pro 8, Surface Laptop Studio, and Surface Go 3 — with The Verge's Monica Chin, Dan Seifert, and Tom Warren.
Further reading:
Windows 11 review: a familiar home that’s still being renovated
Surface Pro 8 review: the best of both worlds
Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio review: back to the drawing board
Microsoft Surface Go 3 review: left behind
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Land of the Giants: This Changes Everything
Mon, 11 Oct 2021
In Land of the Giants: The Apple Revolution, Recode’s Peter Kafka explores the company that changed what a computer is — and then changed what a phone is. From its beginnings as a niche personal computer company, Apple became the preeminent maker of consumer tech products, a cultural trendsetter, and the most valuable company in the world. And along the way, it changed the way we live.
Listen to Land of the Giants on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Facebook's bad week: a 60 Minutes interview, a six-hour outage, and a Senate whistleblower hearing
Fri, 08 Oct 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Russell Brandom discuss Facebook's bad week: from a 60 Minutes interview, to a 6-hour outage, to a Facebook whistleblower hearing.
The crew also get into Android 12, Pixel 6 rumors, iOS 15.1, and more.
Further reading:
Verge Tech Survey 2021
Facebook encourages hate speech for profit, says whistleblower
Locked out and totally down: Facebook’s scramble to fix a massive outage
Facebook is coming back after a six-hour outage
Facebook is back online after a massive outage that also took down Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger, and Oculus
Facebook explains the backbone shutdown behind its global outage on Monday
What is BGP, and what role did it play in Facebook’s massive outage
Everything you need to know from the Facebook whistleblower hearing
The whistleblower hearing hits Facebook where the company is weakest
The Facebook whistleblower hearing unearthed the danger of engagement algorithms
Facebook’s whistleblower report confirms what researchers have known for years
Facebook runs the coward’s playbook to smear the whistleblower
What’s good, bad, and missing in the Facebook whistleblower’s testimony
Mark Zuckerberg breaks silence to say the Facebook whistleblower’s claims ‘don’t make any sense
Facebook reportedly slows feature development for ‘reputational reviews’
Google just announced its Pixel 6 event on October 19th
Android 12 review: it’s mostly about the looks
Android 12 will be coming to Pixel phones in the ‘next few weeks’
Pixel 6’s rumored 23W wireless charging stand and more details leak early
iPhone 13 Mini and 13 Pro Max battery life: better, and a beast
The latest iOS 15.1 beta includes iPhone 13 Pro camera features
Halide’s latest update brings the iPhone 13 Pro’s Macro Mode to older iPhones
After Epic v. Apple, a small developer is challenging Apple’s in-app payment system
Apple is making it easier to delete accounts attached to third-party apps
Apple’s healthcare division leaned on misleading data, report alleges
Nintendo Switch OLED review: screentime
Google’s latest Next doorbell and camera are not obvious upgrades
Amazon is reportedly working on a smart fridge
Twitch confirms major data breach after its source code and secrets leak out
Taylor Swift fans are getting caught up in the Virginia gubernatorial race
The Verge is now on your smart TV
Announcing Springboard: The Verge’s documentary on the forgotten history of the Treo
Vergecast - A Tech Podcast by Derek Rhoads bit.ly/cutthroughthenight
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Teaching AI to taste and smell could help the future of product design
Tue, 05 Oct 2021
For the next four Tuesdays, Verge senior reporter Ashley Carman will explore how artificial intelligence and machine learning are shaping the future of a variety of industries.
In this episode, Ashley explores how AI can be used for product design, but more specifically, for creating fragrances and flavors.
Guests include founder of ScentTronix Fredrick Duerinck, computer scientist at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Saket Navalkha, and Michael Spranger from Sony AI
This podcast was made by producer Liam James, senior audio director Andru Marino, senior reporter James Vincent, and senior reporter Ashley Carman.
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Amazon’s fall hardware event / Google’s Search On / Code Conference 2021
Fri, 01 Oct 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Cranz discuss all the product announced at Amazon's fall devices event, as well as Google's Search On fall event.
Verge senior reporter Alex Heath joins the show to discuss news that came out of the interviews at Code Conference.
Further reading:
Amazon’s fall hardware event 2021: rumors, news, and announcements
Amazon’s race to create the disappearing computer
Here’s the deluge of announcements from Amazon’s fall devices event
Say hello to Astro, Alexa on wheels
Amazon’s Astro cannot fetch your beer
Amazon Astro is ‘terrible’ and will ‘throw itself down’ stairs, developers reportedly claim
Amazon’s automotive efforts appear to be taking a pit stop
Don’t be fooled — Amazon’s Astro isn’t a home robot, it’s a camera on wheels
Remember when beta testing was free?
Amazon’s new Echo Show 15 is meant to hang on your wall
Amazon’s AZ2 CPU knows your face
Amazon Glow is a video chat gadget with built-in games to keep kids engaged
Amazon announces new wearable and services to try to make you fitter
Amazon’s new Ring Alarm Pro combines a security system with an Eero router
Blink’s first doorbell is finally released, four years later
Ring Video Doorbells are finally getting package alerts
Amazon takes on Nest with a $59.99 smart thermostat
Google’s Search On fall 2021 event: news and announcements
Google Search’s next phase: context is king
Google expands shopping searches with Lens and in-store inventory checks
Google Maps is making it easier to see wildfires and tree coverage
Google Lens will soon search for words and images combined
Google is using AI to help users explore the topics they’re searching for — here’s how
Elon Musk to Jeff Bezos: ‘you cannot sue your way to the Moon
Elon Musk: ‘we probably don’t need’ NDAs for Tesla’s ‘Full Self-Driving’ beta
USB-C cables are getting new, confusing logos for faster 240W charging standard
Nintendo categorically denies that a 4K Switch Pro is in development
‘Rife with sexism’: employees of Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin describe ‘toxic’ workplace culture
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AI can be your writing buddy, your blogger, or your Dungeon Master
Tue, 28 Sep 2021
For the next four Tuesdays, Verge senior reporter Ashley Carman will explore how artificial intelligence and machine learning are shaping the future of a variety of industries.
In this episode, Ashley explores the wild world of AI writing and storytelling to find out if her job is in jeopardy. Is AI ready to replace seasoned writers or experienced reporters?
Guests include Nick Walton (co-founder and CEO of Latitude), Samanyou Garg (founder of Writesonic), and artist K Allado-McDowell.
This podcast was made by producer Liam James, senior audio director Andru Marino, senior reporter James Vincent, and senior reporter Ashley Carman.
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The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Tom Warren discuss the reviews of the iPhone 13/iPhone 13 Pro and the many new devices Microsoft announced at their Surface event this week.
Further reading:
iPhone 13 review: yep, bigger batteries are better
iPhone 13 Pro review: a better display, the best camera, and incredible battery life
iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 review: foundational fixes
iOS 15 is here, but we’re still waiting on a few new features
Apple updates macOS Safari with a new look, but you can turn off the big changes
EU proposes mandatory USB-C on all devices, including iPhones
Apple won’t let Fortnite back on iOS until the Epic v. Apple verdict is final
Tim Cook says employees who leak memos do not belong at Apple, according to leaked memo
Microsoft’s fall Surface event: the 7 biggest announcements
Microsoft announces Surface Pro 8 with bigger 13-inch 120Hz display and Thunderbolt
Surface Laptop Studio is Microsoft’s new powerful flagship laptop
Microsoft’s new Surface Duo 2 has all the features that were missing the first time around
Microsoft’s new Slim Pen 2 uses haptics to mimic the feeling of using a real pen
The Surface Pro X gets a Wi-Fi-only version
The Surface Go 3 gets new Intel processors
Microsoft’s new mouse has a shell that’s 20 percent recycled ocean plastic
Surface Adaptive Kit makes Microsoft’s laptops more accessible
Microsoft Surface Pro 8 hands-on: the one we’ve waited for
Microsoft Surface Duo 2 hands-on: once more, with cameras
Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio hands-on: one weird, powerful computer
The Surface Laptop Studio isn’t as original as Microsoft would have you believe
Kids who grew up with search engines could change STEM education forever
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AI might help edit the next generation of blockbusters
Tue, 21 Sep 2021
For the next four Tuesdays, Verge senior reporter Ashley Carman will explore how artificial intelligence and machine learning are shaping the future of a variety of industries.
In this episode, Ashley explores how AI is being used to streamline video creation.
Guests include VP of Adobe Sensei Scott Prevost, co-founder and co-CEO of Flawless Scott Mann, and Verge senior reporter James Vincent.
This podcast was made by producer Liam James, senior audio director Andru Marino, senior reporter James Vincent, and senior reporter Ashley Carman.
Read more here
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Apple’s iPhone 13 event: the biggest announcements
Fri, 17 Sep 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Cranz discuss all the products announced at Apple's hardware event this week: iPhones, iPads, the Apple Watch, and more. Keep listening for some gadget news, including Nintendo finally adding Bluetooth audio to the Switch.
Further reading:
Apple’s iPhone 13 event: the 8 biggest announcements
The iPhone 13 may finally get features Android has had for years
The iPhone 13 event was a case study in Tim Cook-era product refinement
iPhone 13 and 13 Mini announced with redesigned camera array and smaller notch
iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max announced with high refresh rate 120Hz displays
The iPhone 13 is a pitch-perfect iPhone 12S
Goodbye and good riddance to Apple’s 64GB iPhones
Apple announces new entry-level iPad with A13 Bionic chip
The iPhone 13’s new camera tricks include cinematic video and macro photography
Apple says it every year, but the iPhone 13 cameras do seem much improved
Apple’s iPhone 13 Pro is the first iPhone with 1TB of storage
Apple drops the iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone XR from its lineup
Apple’s updated leather MagSafe wallet supports Find My location tracking
How the iPhone 13, Mini, Pro and Max compare to Android rivals — and vs. iPhone 12
All-new iPad Mini announced with 5G, USB-C, and larger 8.3-inch display
Apple is releasing iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 on September 20th
Apple announces new entry-level iPad with A13 Bionic chip
The Apple Watch Series 7 has a brand-new look
Apple is releasing watchOS 8 on September 20th
Should you wait for the Apple Watch Series 7?
Apple Fitness Plus is getting Group Workouts and Pilates
The Apple rumors were wrong
Where are Apple’s new Macs? Here’s what we’re still expecting Apple to announce this year
Nintendo finally adds Bluetooth audio to the Switch in new software update
Google’s rumored Pixel 6 Tensor processor sounds extremely weird
Razer made gamer thimbles
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Everyone will be able to clone their voice in the future
Tue, 14 Sep 2021
For the next four Tuesdays, Verge senior reporter Ashley Carman will explore how artificial intelligence and machine learning are shaping the future of a variety of industries.
In this episode, Ashley talks to AI companies that are working with voice synthesis to see why they are targeting the field of voice talent and podcasting and what cloning your voice can be used for in the future.
Read more
This podcast was made by producer Liam James, senior audio director Andru Marino, senior reporter James Vincent, and senior reporter Ashley Carman.
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Epic v. Apple judge rules that Apple must allow other forms of in-app purchases
Sat, 11 Sep 2021
In an emergency Vergecast, The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Adi Robertson, and Russell Brandom discuss the ruling today in the Epic v. Apple trial.
Further reading:
Apple must allow other forms of in-app purchases, rules judge in Epic v. Apple
Epic v. Apple judge rules Fortnite’s Peely can appear naked in court
Epic will appeal the Epic v. Apple decision
Will Fortnite return to iOS? Probably not any time soon
The future of the App Store depends on the difference between a ‘button’ and an ‘external link’
The Apple App Store: A brief history of major policy changes
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Facebook debuts Ray-Ban smart glasses / Apple’s iPhone 13 event will take place on September 14th / Amazon announces its first-ever lineup of smart TVs
Fri, 10 Sep 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Alex Heath discuss Facebook's newest endeavor into sunglasses with cameras on them, predictions for next week's Apple event, and of course some new gadgets announced this week.
Further reading:
Activists push to delay most high-profile climate summit since Paris agreement
Microsoft gives up predicting when its US offices will fully reopen
Facebook on your face
Snapchat’s new AR features can identify the world around you
Apple’s rumored AR/VR headset might rely on a nearby iPhone or Mac for processing
Whoop’s new fitness tracker is better thanks to a battery breakthrough
Apple’s iPhone 13 event will take place on September 14th
New Apple MagSafe charger spotted in FCC alongside four new phones
Apple’s car chief is heading to Ford
Apple Watch exec takes over secretive car project
Apple delays controversial child protection features after privacy outcry
Amazon announces its first-ever lineup of smart TVs
Amazon announces Fire TV Stick 4K Max — and yes that’s really the name
Amazon Luna is expanding to Fire tablets and Chromebooks, and retro games are on the way
Twitter takes on Facebook Groups with invite-only Communities
How Twitter’s communities could bring context back
The Gmail app takes calls now, too, because Google wants it to do everything
The Series One Desk 27 is a $2,000 Google Meet machine that doubles as a laptop monitor
Microsoft Start is a personalized news feed designed for Windows 11, mobile, and more
Theranos’ greatest invention was Elizabeth Holmes
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Camera for Video Podcasting
Need a camera for video podcasting? Sony Alpha ZV-E10 II Mirrorless Camera
Microsoft announces Surface event for Sept. 22nd / Apple concedes to let apps link to the web sign up / iPhone 13 could have satellite connectivity
Fri, 03 Sep 2021
The Verge's Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Chaim Gartenberg discuss a bunch of new Apple App Store policies, the upcoming Microsoft Surface event, and some fun strange new gadgets from this week.
Further reading:
Reddit bans anti-vaccine subreddit r/NoNewNormal after site-wide protest
Ivermectin misinformation has poisoned Amazon’s platform, with few fixes planned
Apple’s $100 million settlement agreement “clarifies” App Store rules for developers, but doesn’t change much
Apple concedes to let apps like Netflix, Spotify, and Kindle link to the web to sign up
Apple and Google must allow developers to use other payment systems, new Korean law declares
Apple will ask before it targets you with its ads in iOS 15
Apple says Arizona and Georgia will be first to add state IDs to iPhones
Microsoft announces Surface event for September 22nd
Microsoft will release Windows 11 on October 5th
Windows 11 won’t include Android app support at launch
The Windows 11 upgrade situation just got less and more confusing
Microsoft won’t stop you installing Windows 11 on older PCs
Microsoft is threatening to withhold Windows 11 updates if your CPU is old
Microsoft is kicking unsupported PCs out of Windows 11 testing
The iPhone 13 could have satellite connectivity
The iPhone 13’s rumored satellite link sounds like it’s just for emergencies
The next Apple Watch may be delayed due to manufacturing issues
Apple reportedly wants a Watch with more health tracking and could ship one next year
Apple buys classical music streaming service Primephonic
Midrange Samsung Galaxy S21 FE appears again in leaked manual
Samsung adds new foldable features to its older Z Fold and Z Flip phones with One UI 3.1.1
Fashion follows function: what’s next for the phone industry
TV streaming service Locast suspends service after court ruling
This chainless drive system could revolutionize e-bike designs
Sony’s new PS5 model weighs less because it has a smaller heatsink
Bose announces QuietComfort 45 noise-canceling headphones with 24-hour battery life
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OnlyFans' back and forth on adult content ban / Tim Cook’s Apple, ten years later
Fri, 27 Aug 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex, Cranz, and Adi Robertson discuss why OnlyFans planned to prohibit sexually explicit content on their platform and why it reversed its position days later.
Second half of the show, the crew discuss Tim Cook's ten years as Apple CEO, iPhone 13 rumors, and the whole bunch of tech news you may have missed.
Further reading:
Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine gets full FDA approval
US COVID-19 data has never been good enough
VidCon cancels its 2021 event, says next one will be in June 2022
The Pfizer vaccine will be officially called Comirnaty, for some reason
OnlyFans to prohibit sexually explicit content beginning
Sex workers made OnlyFans valuable — then it sold them out
OnlyFans pushes SFW app on iOS and Android as it tries
OnlyFans' inexplicable ban on porn might be explained
OnlyFans CEO on why it banned adult content
OnlyFans says never mind, it actually won’t ban porn on October 1st
Joe Biden reportedly hosting cybersecurity meeting with Tim Cook, Satya Nadella, and Andy Jassy attending
Google and Microsoft promise billions to help bolster US cybersecurity
Facebook is reportedly forming an election commission that it will announce in the fall
Tim Cook’s Apple, ten years later
Apple will take a smaller cut of publishers’ sales if they join Apple News
S.Korea parliament committee votes to curb Google, Apple …,
Higher-end Mac Mini reportedly landing ‘in the next several months’
'iPhone 13' Name Emerges on Alleged Packaging Stickers
Apple Watch Series 7: Leaked images show 41mm and 45mm bands
TSMC is raising chip prices as supply shortages continue
Apple to Release iOS 15 iCloud Private Relay as a Public Beta
iCloud+'s New Custom Email Domain Feature Now Available in Beta
Kanye West’s new Donda Stem Player will apparently let you ‘customize any song’
Snapchat’s new AR features can identify the world around you
The manual for Facebook’s Project Aria AR glasses shows what it’s like to wear them
Fitbit’s new Charge 5 has a rounded design and a color screen
Microsoft’s Panos Panay now directly advises CEO Satya Nadella
Microsoft announces $549 Halo-themed Xbox Series X console
Xbox consoles are getting xCloud this holiday so you can stream before you download
Elon Musk says Tesla is working on humanoid robots
Don’t overthink it: Elon Musk’s Tesla Bot is a joke
Alaska Airlines evacuated a plane after a phone burst into flame
Samsung will let you unlock your Z Fold 3’s bootloader, but at the cost of your cameras
Joe Rogan, confined to Spotify, is losing influence
Making it work 2021
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Google Pixel 5a review / Facebook's metaverse for work / Apple, Epic, and Google emails
Fri, 20 Aug 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, Allison Johnson, and Dan Seifert discuss reviews for the Google Pixel 5a, Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 3 and Z Fold 3, and the T-Mobile data breach that exposed personal info of more than 47 million people.
Second half of the show, the crew discuss Facebook's new metaverse conference software, the emails from the Apple vs Epic trial, and Intel's new PC gaming GPUs.
Further reading:
COVID-19 booster shots will be offered to Americans in September, Biden administration says
Immunocompromised people should get a third COVID-19 vaccine dose, CDC committee says
Go read this deep dive on why US public health data systems couldn’t handle COVID-19
Google Pixel 5a review: boring, but better than ever
Google Pixel 5A comes with a bigger battery and screen, smaller price tag
The Google Pixel 6 won’t ship with a charger
Galaxy Watch 4 review: welcome to Samsung’s garden
Samsung's Galaxy Z Flip 3 is the first folding phone for normal people
There’s still a place for the Note in Samsung’s Galaxy
Samsung confirms it’s removing ads from its stock apps later this year
How the latest and greatest Samsung and Apple earbuds lock you into their world
T-Mobile data breach exposed the personal info of more than 47 million people
Microsoft is making it harder to switch default browsers in Windows 11
Apple’s been playing it too MagSafe
Apple’s attempt at podcast subscriptions is off to a messy start
FTC says Facebook has been a monopoly ‘since at least 2011’ in amended antitrust complaint
Inside Facebook’s metaverse for work
Google’s ‘Project Hug’ paid out huge sums to keep game devs in the Play Store, Epic filing claims
Google gave phone makers extra money to ditch third-party app stores
Google secretly had a giant gaming vision that includes bringing games to Mac
Sweetheart deals and plastic knives: all the best emails from the Apple vs. Epic trial
Steve Jobs email confirms Apple was working on an ‘iPhone nano’
Intel enters the PC gaming GPU battle with Arc
Intel shows off its answer to Nvidia’s DLSS, coming to Arc GPUs in 2022
Intel previews its Alder Lake chip, promises hybrid CPUs for desktops and laptops
Water shortages loom over future semiconductor fabs in Arizona
Why Intel and TSMC are building water-dependent chip factories in one of the driest U.S. states
GM and AT&T are teaming up to bring 5G to Chevy, Cadillac, and GMC cars by 2024
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Samsung announces Galaxy Z Flip 3, Z Fold 3, Watch 4 and Buds 2 / Apple’s controversial new child protection features, explained
Fri, 13 Aug 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Chris Welch discuss what was announced at Samsung's August Unpacked event, including new foldables.
Senior reporter Adi Robertson explains the important changes coming to Apple's Messages and iCloud.
Further reading:
COVID-19 misinformation is increasing amid US virus surge
Kidney transplant patients will test a COVID-19 booster shot in new trial
Here’s why Apple’s new child safety features are so controversial
Join us for On The Verge: our exciting 10-year birthday party in New York City
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 3 announced with much bigger, more useful cover display
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 announced with S Pen support and water resistance
How Samsung beefed up its new folding phones: metal, tape, and a dab of goo
Forget the Note — Samsung’s foldables are coming for the Galaxy S as well
Google is bringing Samsung to the Apple Watch fight
The Galaxy Watch 4 injects Samsung’s capable hardware with Google software
Samsung details new smartwatch chip ahead of Galaxy Watch 4 launch
Samsung announces Galaxy Buds 2 with active noise cancellation
Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 review: nailing the basics with style
Apple’s controversial new child protection features, explained
Apple pushes back against child abuse scanning concerns in new FAQ
Interview: Apple's head of Privacy details child abuse detection and Messages safety features
Senators target Apple’s App Store exclusivity in new bill
Senate approves $1 trillion infrastructure package as crypto worries loom
Senate cryptocurrency tax reporting deal fails
TCL announces new 6-series and 5-series TVs that come with Google TV instead of Roku
Valve Steam Deck hands-on: the Nintendo Switch of PC gaming
Apple’s 2021 iPhones will reportedly have a video portrait mode
HP’s new Chromebase AiO has a screen that rotates from portrait to landscape
DOJ letter tells Dish and T-Mobile to figure out CDMA customer migration, or else
Dish says it will launch wireless 5G service in beta at the end of September
The race to build Africa’s 5G networks is entangled in a U.S. push to cut Huawei’s dominance
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Pixel 6 preview / Apple reveals new efforts to fight child abuse imagery
Fri, 06 Aug 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Cranz discuss Google's preview of the Pixel 6 and its Tensor chip.
Verge policy editor Russell Brandom explains how Apple will reportedly scan photos on iPhones and iCloud for child abuse imagery.
Vaccine carrots only got us so far — now, it’s time for sticks
New York Auto Show canceled as delta variant spreads
NYC’s Key vaccination requirement for indoor dining can be met with an app
Yelp will let businesses list their vaccination policies
Moderna says a third shot of its COVID-19 vaccine may be needed to protect against variants
This is the Pixel 6, Google’s take on an ‘ultra high end’ phone
Google’s Tensor chip is only the first step toward truly great Pixel phones
Apple will reportedly scan photos stored on iPhones and iCloud for child abuse imagery
Apple reveals new efforts to fight child abuse imagery
Google’s new Nest cameras and doorbell have lower prices and more smarts
Oppo announces ‘next-generation’ under-display selfie camera
Here’s a closer look at Apple’s canceled AirPower wireless charger
Apple updates Mac Pro GPUs with new AMD Radeon options
You can get a Touch ID-equipped Magic Keyboard without buying a whole iMac now
Elon Musk and Apple deny wild story that he tried to replace Tim Cook
Facebook can project your eyes onto a VR headset, and it’s exactly as uncanny as it sounds
NYT crossword puzzle no longer works in third-party apps, crosses puzzle solvers
HBO Max is getting its own exclusive podcasts, starting with Batman
AT&T has officially spun off DirecTV, which is now its own business
T-Mobile confirms it will shut down Sprint’s LTE network next year
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The summer Intel fell behind / earnings for Apple, Google, Samsung / Nothing's Ear 1 earbuds
Fri, 30 Jul 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Chaim Gartenberg discuss this week in tech news: quarterly earnings for the big tech companies, the state of Intel, and the Nothing's Ear 1 earbuds.
Further reading:
CDC reinstitutes mask recommendations for some vaccinated people
Apple will require masks again in most of its US stores
Communication around masks is still terrible
Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine’s protection against severe disease holds steady over six months
The pandemic made it even harder to check on the ocean’s vital signs
Next Gen - the future belongs to young people
The iPhone 12’s strong momentum helps Apple to another huge quarter
Google sets all-time records as search and YouTube profits ...
Microsoft reports weaker Surface and Windows revenue amid ...
Samsung boosts profits and pledges to 'mainstream' foldables ...
Amazon’s earnings show why Andy Jassy is now in charge
The summer Intel fell behind
Huawei’s P50 announced with Snapdragon 888 and HarmonyOS
Leaked Surface Duo 2 photos reveal new triple camera system
The Oppo Watch 2 launches in China with a promise of 16 days of battery life
Nothing officially reveals its $99 Ear (1) true wireless earbuds
Nothing Ear 1 earbuds review: almost something
LG’s new true wireless earbuds have a privacy-conscious ‘Whispering Mode’
New Samsung Flip and Fold leaks show water resistance, renders, and an S Pen case
White House says infrastructure deal includes $65 billion for broadband
T-Mobile’s new prepaid offer is a direct play for the Boost customers it sold to Dish
It’s not just you, streaming the Olympics is a mess
Activision Blizzard employees walk out of work to protest rampant sexism and discrimination
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Verizon switches to Android Messages as default RCS / Jeff Bezos goes to space / Biden and Big Tech
Fri, 23 Jul 2021
The Verge's Dieter Bohn and Alex Cranz discuss Verizon switching to Android Messages as default for RCS, as well as the many gadgets from this week.
Verge policy editor Russell Brandom joins to talk about President Biden's criticism of Facebook's handling of misinformation on their platform and the nomination of Google critic Jonathan Kanter to lead the Department of Justice's antitrust division.
The Verge's Liz Lopatto and Joey Roulette talk with Dieter about Jeff Bezos' space flight this week.
Further reading:
Biden says platforms like Facebook are ‘killing people’ with COVID-19 misinformation
Facebook pushes back against Biden remarks on COVID-19 misinformation
Joe Biden says Facebook isn’t ‘killing people,’ but misinformation causes harm
The Biden administration should take the First Amendment as seriously as Facebook misinformation
FTC pledges to fight unlawful right to repair restrictions
Biden to nominate Google critic Jonathan Kanter to lead DOJ antitrust division
The space tourism industry is stuck in its billionaire phase
Blue Origin successfully sends Jeff Bezos and three others to space and back
An on-the-ground look at Blue Origin’s motley crew
Jeff Bezos appreciates your efforts to get Jeff Bezos to space
Verizon is also switching to Android Messages as default for RCS
Pegasus spyware used to target phones of journalists and activists, investigation finds
Dish cuts a 10-year, $5 billion deal to make AT&T the primary service provider for its MVNO
The Dish ‘fix’ for the T-Mobile-Sprint merger seems more shortsighted than ever
Playdate hands-on: a Game Boy from a different dimension
Apple AirPods update to arrive later this year with iPhone SE refresh coming 2022: report
Apple releases iOS 14.7 just as MagSafe Battery Pack appears on shelves
The first real photos of Apple’s MagSafe Battery Pack are here
Apple MagSafe Battery Pack review: convenience over capacity
OnePlus Buds Pro announced, coming September 1st for $150
OnePlus Nord 2 review: focused on the essentials
OnePlus is merging OxygenOS with Oppo's ColorOS
Leaked memo confirms OnePlus will become an Oppo sub-brand
Amazon will let devs compete for your Echo Show’s screen and everything else Alexa just added
Alexa finally gets a masculine-sounding voice option
Amazon promises most Echo speakers will get upgraded to Matter
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Interview: Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook’s metaverse
Thu, 22 Jul 2021
Casey Newton talks with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg about his vision for an embodied internet (or "the metaverse), the challenges of governing it, and gender imbalance in virtual reality today. They also discuss President Biden’s fierce criticism of Facebook’s failures in removing anti-vaccine content in the headlines.
Transcript: https://www.theverge.com/e/22352063
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The Steam Deck is Valve's new handheld / iPhone 13 rumors grow / Virgin Galactic sends Richard Branson to the edge of space
Fri, 16 Jul 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Alex Cranz discuss this week in tech news — the new Valve Steam Deck, Netflix potentially getting into gaming, a lot of Apple news, and some billionaires going into space.
Further reading:
The COVID-19 vaccines weren’t hacked — this task force is one reason why
Foxconn and TSMC strike deal to buy 10 million COVID vaccines for Taiwan
Valve’s gaming handheld is called the Steam Deck and it’s shipping in December
Netflix snags former EA, Oculus exec to lead its video game efforts
Apple’s latest iOS and macOS betas undo some of Safari’s controversial new design
iPhone 13 rumors grow more certain ahead of September launch
Redesigned iPad mini reportedly on track to launch this fall
Apple just launched an official $99 MagSafe battery pack for the iPhone 12 lineup
iPhone 12 reverse wireless charging can power up Apple’s new MagSafe battery pack
Apple is working on Apple Pay Later to help you buy things without paying for them yet
Apple reportedly wants in on NFL Sunday Ticket
Apple’s weather app won’t say it’s 69 degrees
Facebook says FTC chair shouldn’t help decide the future of its antitrust case
Biden’s executive order puts net neutrality back in the spotlight
President Joe Biden’s latest executive order is a huge win for right to repair
Space tourism rivalry gets extremely petty ahead of Branson’s spaceflight
Virgin Galactic has opened a sweepstakes offering a trip to space
Virgin Galactic successfully sends Richard Branson to the edge of space
Samsung’s next Galaxy Unpacked device lineup may have been entirely spoiled in huge new leak
The Galaxy Z Fold 3 will support the S Pen Pro, according to FCC filings
Ikea and Sonos picture frame speaker review: wall of sound
TVA TemPad review: who needs TikTok when you can control time and space?
We want to see your internet bill
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Google faces antitrust lawsuit over Google Play Store fees / Nintendo announced OLED Switch / 'EV Day' event held for Stellantis
Fri, 09 Jul 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Adi Robertson discuss the new antitrust lawsuit Google faces from 36 states, the new hardware Nintendo announced this week, and what happened at Stellantis' ‘EV Day’.
Further reading:
Who needs COVID-19 boosters?
Moderna starts human trials of an mRNA-based flu shot
Full approval could make the difference for the US COVID-19 vaccine campaign
Exposure notification apps could be more effective if they’re better at assessing risk
Google faces new antitrust lawsuit over Google Play Store fees
Google feared Samsung Galaxy Store and tried to quash it, lawsuit alleges
Apple and Google crowd out the competition with default apps
Donald Trump files sweeping, nonsensical lawsuits against Facebook, Twitter, and Google
Twitter has lost legal immunity for users’ posts in India, government argue
Nintendo’s OLED Switch: all of the news about the console upgrade
Don’t count out the Nintendo Switch Pro
A bigger, better Switch screen is exactly what I wanted
Stellantis, parent company of Dodge and Jeep, had an ‘EV Day’ and it was extremely weird
Verizon has its own version of spatial audio and it’s already pushing it on phones
AT&T joins T-Mobile in switching all Android phones to Google’s Messages app for RCS
Elon Musk just now realizing that self-driving cars are a ‘hard problem’
iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 preview: a first look at Apple’s latest software
Maine passes the strongest state facial recognition ban yet
Welcome to Simulation City, the virtual world where Waymo tests its autonomous vehicles
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Microsoft announces Windows 11, with a new design, Start menu, and more
Fri, 25 Jun 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Tom Warren discuss the official reveal of Windows 11 at Microsoft's event on Thursday.
Further reading:
The slow transitions of a lingering pandemic
The pandemic made Navajo Nation’s radio stations even more vital
India’s healthcare workers are busting misinformation on WhatsApp
Microsoft’s own Windows 11 livestream runs into technical difficulties
Microsoft announces Windows 11, with a new design, Start menu, and more
Microsoft reveals the new Microsoft Store for Windows 11, and it has Android apps too
Microsoft is bringing Android apps to Windows 11 with Amazon’s app store
Here are the visual changes Microsoft showed off in Windows 11
Microsoft teases new File Explorer for Windows 11
Here’s everything Microsoft is removing from Windows 11
Microsoft is changing the Windows 11 minimum requirements
Microsoft Teams will be directly integrated as part of Windows 11
Windows 11 is a free upgrade
Windows 11’s news feed has built-in tipping to support local content creators
Microsoft will let devs keep every penny their Windows app makes — unless it’s a game
Satya Nadella’s closing Windows 11 remarks were a direct shot across Apple’s bow
Apple argues against sideloading iPhone apps as regulatory pressure mounts
Google will now consider letting your video, music or book app evade its 30 percent cut
Google delays blocking third-party cookies in Chrome until 2023
Samsung’s Watch Active 4 leaks in new renders
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 3 and Z Flip 3 revealed in new leak
Apple may be looking to make a less expensive big phone in 2022
Tim Cook called Nancy Pelosi to warn her against disrupting the iPhone with impending antitrust bills
Why the tech antitrust reform bills are struggling to move forward
Big Tech edges closer to break up after deeply unhinged markup
We regret to inform you that T-Mobile is selling a 5G-branded gin
Ransomware funds more ransomware
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Google adds RCS encryption to Messages / Congress gearing up to fight big tech / Windows 11 leaks
Fri, 18 Jun 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk to Verge senior editor Tom Warren about leaks of Microsoft's Windows 11 UI and announcements from E3 2021.
Verge politics reporter Makena Kelly explains how Republicans and Democrats are gearing up to fight tech monopolies.
Verge managing editor Alex Cranz joins the show to talk about Google's updates to Messages and a bunch of gadget news from this week.
Further reading:
Amazon’s COVID-19 test is now available to consumers
Novavax says its COVID-19 vaccine is 90 percent effective
Pharma is winning the big business popularity contest
Windows 11 leak reveals new UI, Start menu, and more
Microsoft Teams’ new front row layout arrives later this year
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella now doubles as the company’s chairman
Microsoft announces Xbox TV app and its own xCloud ...
Microsoft is bringing next-gen Xbox games to the Xbox One with xCloud
Even the Xbox app has stories now
The Xbox Series X mini fridge will be available this holiday season
Microsoft Flight Simulator is landing on Xbox Series X / S consoles on July 27th
The best trailers of E3 2021
Tech antitrust pioneer Lina Khan will officially lead the FTC
How Republicans and Democrats are gearing up to fight tech monopolies
House lawmakers introduce five bipartisan bills to unwind tech monopolies
Senate bill would make it easier to cancel a subscription online after a free trial
Google’s first retail store opens this week
Google adds E2E RCS encryption to Messages, emoji mashup suggests, and more for Android
Google Workspace and Google Chat are officially available to everybody
Honor confirms Google’s apps will return to its phones with new 50 series
Beats Studio Buds review: big ambition, imperfect execution
Ikea and Sonos announce picture frame speaker, coming July 15th for $199
Watch the debut of Tesla Model S Plaid, the ‘quickest production car ever made’
The Realme GT lays claim to OnePlus’ ‘flagship killer’ mantle
Oppo’s rollable concept phone is pure potential lacking polish
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WWDC 2021: Apple's iOS 15, spatial audio, macOS Monterey, and more
Fri, 11 Jun 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Alex Cranz, and Chris Welch discuss all the announcements from Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference that took place this week.
All the links:
COVID-19 hospitalization rates in adolescents went up during March and April
Where did the COVID microchip conspiracy theory come from anyway?
The pandemic might cut down e-waste but widen the digital divide
Apple WWDC 2021: the 15 biggest announcements
Apple previews iOS 15 at WWDC 2021
The best features of iOS, iPadOS, and macOS that Apple didn’t announce onstage
Apple’s Siri will finally work without an internet connection with on-device speech recognition
Watch Apple’s Siri blaze through requests with on-device processing
You’ll soon be able to use your iPhone as ID at the airport
Apple adds welcome privacy features to Mail, Safari
Apple’s iCloud Plus bundles a VPN, private email, and HomeKit camera storage
With iCloud Plus, Apple’s privacy promise is paired with an upsell
Apple’s privacy-focused Private Relay feature isn’t coming to China
Apple Music’s spatial audio is sometimes amazing but mostly inconsistent
macOS and tvOS are getting spatial audio support with the AirPods Pro and Max
Apple Music begins rolling out lossless streaming and Dolby Atmos spatial audio
Apple introduces Siri for third-party devices
macOS Monterey lets you run Shortcuts and share files between Macs and iPads
Apple may have done the coolest drag and drop demo ever
How Universal Control on macOS Monterey works
FaceTime is coming to Android and Windows via the web
Apple is building video and music sharing into FaceTime
Apple announces watchOS 8 with new health features
Apple’s new health features bring new focus to elder care technology
Apple lets users see family members’ Health data
Apple announces iPadOS 15 with homescreen and multitasking improvements
Microsoft announces Xbox TV app and its own xCloud streaming stick
Facebook plans first smartwatch for next summer with two cameras, heart rate monitor
Sony WF-1000XM4 earbuds announced / review
Google’s first folding Pixel is apparently still on track for a 2021 reveal
Clubhouse and its clones have an accessibility problem
Biden revokes Trump bans on TikTok and WeChat
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Huawei’s HarmonyOS arrives / Microsoft's next gen Windows / Apple's WWDC preview
Fri, 04 Jun 2021
Co-hosts Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk with Verge senior editor Tom Warren and managing editor Alex Cranz about operating systems — what's coming up at Apple's developer conference next week, where Microsoft will take Windows next, and the debut of some new systems like HarmonyOS and Fuchsia OS.
Further reading:
The pandemic showed that big tech isn’t a public health savior
The future of COVID-19 immunity looks good
We have bigger problems than COVID-19’s origins
Apple TV 4K (2021) review: much better remote, slightly faster box
Of course repairing the new Apple TV remote is harder than simply unscrewing it
Apple TV app comes to Nvidia Shield
For Apple TV Plus to succeed, it has to be everywhere — even Android TV
Microsoft looks ready to launch Windows 11
Microsoft to reveal its next generation of Windows on June 24th
Huawei announces HarmonyOS update for its smartphones
Huawei teases its upcoming P50 flagship phone
Huawei’s HarmonyOS arrives on tablets with the new MatePad Pro
Huawei’s Watch 3 is its first HarmonyOS smartwatch
Google’s new Fuchsia OS arrives first on old Nest Hub
AMD announces the Radeon RX 6000M series with RDNA 2 architecture
Nvidia announces new RTX 3080 Ti, priced at $1,199 and launching June 3rd
Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti review: more 4K for more of your wallet
Nvidia’s RTX 3080 Ti is available online right now
Amazon buys MGM for $8.45 billion
Why on Earth did Amazon spend $8 billion on a zombie studio?
Discovery announces new name of WarnerMedia merger: Warner Bros. Discovery
The Great Wings Rush
Why Spotify’s Horacio Gutierrez thinks Apple behaves like a monopolist
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Tim Cook's bad day in Epic vs Apple
Sat, 22 May 2021
In part 2 of this week's episode, Nilay talks with Adi Robertson about the judge's harsh questioning of Tim Cook on the last day of testimony in Epic vs Apple.
Further reading:
Apple said Roblox developers don’t make games, and now Roblox agrees
Apple’s Phil Schiller gives Epic iPhone testimony
At the Epic trial, Phil Schiller got away clean
The level of Mac malware is not acceptable, says Apple’s Craig Federighi at Epic trial
Apple wants users to trust iOS, but it doesn’t trust iOS users
Tim Cook faces harsh questions about the App Store from judge in Fortnite trial
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Google I/O announcements and iPad Pro M1 review
Fri, 21 May 2021
In part 1 of this week’s episode, Nilay and Dieter talk with deputy editor Dan Seifert about Google I/O and reviews for the M1 iMac and iPad Pro.
Further reading:
Google I/O 2021: the 14 biggest announcements
Android 12 preview: first look at Google’s radical new design
Android 12 public beta is now available: here’s how to install it
Google showed off its next-generation AI by talking to Pluto and a paper airplane
Apple iMac M1 review: the all-in-one for almost everyone
iPad Pro (2021) review: Mini LED, major improvement
Apple’s redesigned MacBook Pros with next-gen in-house chips could arrive early this summer
Apple’s $549 AirPods Max can’t play lossless Apple Music — even when plugged in
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Starlink, Epic v. Apple, and laptops laptops laptops
Fri, 14 May 2021
The Epic v. Apple trial continues with big drama about naked bananas and weird game definitions. Nilay tries to get Starlink space internet working, and there's new Intel chips. Adi Robertson and Monica Chin join this week.
Epic and Apple are now fighting over a naked banana
Roku removes YouTube TV from channel store as dispute with Google escalates
Apple employees circulate petition demanding investigation into ‘misogynistic’ new hire
A Big Map of America’s Broadband problem
Secretary Pete Butitgieg on the future of transportation
Intel’s flagship Tiger Lake-H mobile chips are here to take on Ryzen 5000
Razer claims its new Blade 15 is the ‘thinnest’ 15-inch RTX gaming laptop
Asus’ new Zephyrus M16 has a 16:10 screen and Intel Tiger Lake H processor
How a university got itself banned from the Linux kernel
University of Minnesota banned from contributing to Linux kernel
Watch Elon Musk play Wario, parody SpaceX, and hype dogecoin on Saturday Night Live
Tesla stops taking Bitcoin for vehicle purchases, citing environmental harm
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Apple v Epic week 1 roundtable
Fri, 07 May 2021
Nilay and Dieter talk with Verge senior reporter Adi Robertson and senior editor Tom Warren about the first week of the Epic Games v Apple trial.
Why Epic is burning its own cash to cook Apple
Apple antitrust trial kicks off with Tim Sweeney’s metaverse dreams
The Epic Games v. Apple trial kicks off with kids screaming ‘free Fortnite’
Here are Apple’s and Epic’s full slideshows arguing why they should win at trial
I watched the Epic v. Apple trial on Discord
Tim Sweeney emailed Tim Cook personally to call for open app sales after WWDC in 2015
Apple exec suggested cutting App Store commission to 20 percent as early as 2011
Epic v. Apple turns into Windows v. Xbox
Why the bad iPhone web app experience keeps coming up in Epic v. Apple
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iOS 14.5 update features / Apple sales skyrocket / Podcast platforms amp up their product
Fri, 30 Apr 2021
Nilay Patel is joined by Verge deputy editor Dan Seifert and news editor Chaim Gartenberg to discuss i0S14.5, Apple's earnings, Epic vs. Apple, chip shortages, and Samsung's new laptops.
Senior reporter Ashley Carman joins the show to talk about the wave of action in the podcast industry this past week.
Further reading:
People who are vaccinated don’t need to wear masks during many outdoor activities, CDC says
Social media platforms become triage centers as India struggles with a COVID-19 surge
The first problem was vaccine supply. Now, it’s demand.
Officials lift pause on Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine
iOS 14.5 is out now with new Face ID mask features and Apple’s App Tracking Transparency
Why Apple’s new privacy feature is such a big deal
Apple’s iPhone 12 and Mac sales skyrocket despite ongoing pandemic
Here’s who Apple and Epic are calling to testify in next week’s trial
Eddy Cue wanted to bring iMessage to Android in 2013
Apple fined $12M by Russian regulator over App Store monopoly abuse
Can Apple get you to pay for podcasts?
Spotify launches podcast subscriptions, but you can’t subscribe in-app
Spotify’s miniplayer for Facebook launches today
Facebook is building its own in-app podcast player
Clubhouse is partnering with the NFL for draft week programming
SiriusXM acquires Roman Mars’ 99% Invisible and a bigger stake in the podcasting world
Spotify is raising prices for lots of its plans
Spotify premium subscriber count increases 21 percent to 158 million
Spotify is okay with Joe Rogan telling 21-year-olds not to get vaccinated
Samsung’s new Galaxy Book Pro and Galaxy Book Pro 360 are lightweight laptops with OLED screens
Samsung announces a cheaper entry-level Galaxy Book with no OLED
Samsung’s Galaxy Book Odyssey introduces Nvidia’s new RTX 3050 Ti
Elon Musk says Tesla made ‘significant mistakes’ with solar roof project
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Apple announces new iMacs, AirTags, and iPad Pro / Congress is diving into the App Store fight
Fri, 23 Apr 2021
Vergecast hosts Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn discuss all the product announcements from Apple's Spring Loaded event this week with Verge news editor Chaim Gartenberg.
Verge politics reporter Makena Kelly details what happened at Wednesday's congressional hearing focusing on competition in Apple's App Store.
Further reading:
What we’re learning from the rare cases of COVID-19 in vaccinated people
Alexa can now tell you where to find a COVID-19 vaccine
Doctors are testing a prescription video game for COVID-19 ‘brain fog’
Wisconsin amends Foxconn’s contract to reflect radically smaller project
Apple’s Spring Loaded event: the 8 biggest announcements
Apple Podcasts launches in-app subscriptions
Can Apple get you to pay for podcasts?
Apple AirTag hands-on
Apple’s AirTags don’t have a built-in keychain loop, and we have some thoughts
Apple announces new Apple TV 4K
Apple unveils an improved remote for its Apple TV
Yes, older Apple TVs can also be calibrated with your iPhone
Apple announces thinner iMac with M1 chip and bright colors
New Touch ID Magic Keyboards work with all M1 Macs, not just the iMac
Apple launches new iPad Pro with M1 processor
How the M1-powered iPad Pro compares to other iPad models
Any video conferencing app can use the iPad Pro’s fancy zoom and pan camera
Big iPad, Mini LED: why Apple’s new iPad Pro display is better and brighter
Put macOS on the iPad, you cowards
Congress is diving into the App Store fight
Lina Kahn on Amazon’s antitrust paradox
Apple’s $64 billion-a-year app store isn’t catching the most egregious scams
Sen. Tammy Duckworth on hate crimes, racism, and environmental justice
Asian Activists are tracking the surge in hate crimes as police reporting falls short
Inside the glass fibers connecting our wireless world
Subscribe to The Hill Report newsletter
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LG quits the smartphone business / Sonos Roam review / Apple "Spring Loaded" event preview
Fri, 16 Apr 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Chris Welch dive into the tech and gadget news from this week — including theories on what will be announced at Apple's spring event next week, LG quitting the smartphone business, and Sonos' next speakers.
Further reading:
US recommends pause on Johnson & Johnson vaccine use over extremely rare blood clots
How the Johnson & Johnson pause could move the needle on vaccine fears
For many, COVID-19 vaccines come with a side of side effects
How CO2 sensors might help us return to ‘normal’
Airbnb is trying to preemptively cancel post-pandemic bacchanals
Celebrate your COVID vaccination with these off-the-wall tchotchkes
Expedia launches a new tool to check coronavirus travel restrictions
Apple officially announces Spring Loaded event for April 20th
New iPad Pro still coming soon but supply could be short, says Bloomberg
Apple officially starts letting your iPhone help find lost third-party products
Samsung’s Galaxy SmartTag Plus with UWB to track items with AR is out April 16th
Logitech officially discontinues its Harmony remotes
Apple gets its own button on Roku’s latest remotes
Roku announces Express 4K Plus streaming player and rechargeable Voice Remote Pro
Roku OS 10 adds instant resume for streaming apps, brings AirPlay 2 to more devices
Apple reportedly developing an Apple TV with a built-in camera and speaker
LG is quitting the smartphone business
LG had a few smartphone hits, but it’ll still be missed
LG leaves behind more than a flip phone-shaped hole in our hearts
Google announces Pixel 5A 5G by denying rumors it’s canceled
TCL aims to build a better budget phone with the 20 Pro 5G
TCL’s Fold ‘n Roll concept transforms a 6.87-inch phone into a 10-inch tablet
Sony announces the Xperia 1 III and Xperia 5 III with variable telephoto lenses
US carriers have thankfully abandoned at least one bad plan for RCS
Apple says iMessage on Android ‘will hurt us more than help us’
Sonos Roam review: portable potential
Ikea is working with Sonos on a hidden speaker built into art you hang on the wall
Spotify’s Car Thing debuts as a limited release for selected US users
Amazon announces new Echo Buds with more powerful ANC and better comfort
ONEPLUS WATCH REVIEW: BIG, BASIC, AND BORING
Microsoft announces Surface Laptop 4 with choice of Intel or AMD processor
Can Clubhouse keep the party going?
Apple trusts Phobio for its trade-ins, but maybe you should think twice
Google is poisoning its reputation with AI researchers
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Land of the Giants: The Google Empire
Fri, 09 Apr 2021
Vergecast is on vacation this week, so instead we'll share an episode of Land of the Giants from our friends at Recode.
Land of the Giants is a podcast that explores the five biggest tech companies and their impact on our world, and this season is all about Google.
The episode we're sharing tells the story of how two grad school students with a unique way to search the internet launched a company that would become the gateway to the internet for the entire world.
In the rest of the season, Land of the Giants: The Google Empire will cover issues like Google’s relationship with the government, the origins of their antitrust troubles, and what their future may look like as they face off against Congress and the Biden Administration.
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The rise of Clubhouse competitors / Apple's WWDC rumors / What is Google Chrome FLoC?
Fri, 02 Apr 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk with Verge deputy editor Dan Seifert about this week's Apple rumors ahead of WWDC 2021 — from their AR headset to new iPads.
Senior reporter Ashley Carman joins the show to discuss social audio platform Clubhouse and the rise of competitors from other companies.
Further reading:
Real-world evidence shows that the COVID-19 vaccines work
Biden administration looks to organize ‘vaccine passport’ development
Apple Maps will show COVID-19 travel guidances so you know what to expect at the airport
Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine highly effective in adolescents
Amazon gets FDA authorization for an at-home COVID-19 test kit
Errors ruin 15 million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine
Apple WWDC 2021 announced as online-only event
Apple Aiming to Announce Mixed-Reality Headset With In-Person Event in 'Next Several Months'
Ming-Chi Kuo Says Apple’s AR/VR Headset Will Weigh Less Than 150 Grams
Apple reportedly plans revamped AirPods for as early as next year
New iPad Pros reportedly launching as soon as April, and the 12.9-inch model may have a Mini LED screen
Apple reportedly mulls rugged smartwatch coming as soon as this year
Casio announces first Wear OS smartwatch in iconic G-Shock lineup
Google Chrome FLoC: how it replaces cookies and what it means for privacy
T-Mobile is betting big on Google’s Android services: RCS, YouTube TV, Pixel, and more
T-Mobile is already shutting down its live TV service, partners with YouTube TV and Philo
Google Nest Hub (2nd-Gen) review: sleep on it
Huawei's Mate X2 foldable adopts Samsung's dual-screen ...
Xiaomi announces the Mi Mix Fold, its first folding phone
The Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra’s camera bump is no moon; it’s a space station
Bose Frames Tempo review: the specs to beat
Spotify is launching its own Clubhouse competitor
Even LinkedIn is making a Clubhouse clone
Discord’s new Clubhouse-like feature, Stage Channels, is available now
Slack is getting Instagram-like stories and push-to-talk audio ...
Instagram launches its own TikTok Duet feature called Reels Remix
Facebook shorted video creators thousands of dollars in ad revenue
Samsung created a whole Hulu series that’s sponcon for the Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
Biden plans to connect every American to broadband in new infrastructure package
NBA on NFT
We read your phone plan’s fine print so you don’t have to
The unsettling surveillance of anti-Asian racism
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OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro review / Zuckerberg, Dorsey, and Pichai testify before Congress once again
Fri, 26 Mar 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk with Verge reporter Allison Johnson about her review of the One Plus 9 and how it compares with their 9 Pro and other Android flagship phones.
Politics reporter Makena Kelly joins the show the discuss Congress’ first hearing of 2021 with the chief executives of Facebook, Google, and Twitter.
Further reading:
AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine 79 percent effective in US study
US officials publicly question AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine data
Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine website builds on a swine flu tool
OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro announced with Hasselblad-branded cameras
OnePlus 9 review: cheaper than the Pro and almost as good
The lower-cost OnePlus 9R is official, and it sounds surprisingly strong
OnePlus 9 Pro review: the elegant Android alternative
Here’s how the OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro compare to Samsung and Apple’s flagships
The $159 OnePlus Watch is OnePlus’ first smartwatch
Angry MacBook owners get class action status for butterfly keyboard suit
Intel invests $20 billion into new factories, will produce chips for other companies
Intel Unleashed, Gelsinger on Intel, IDM 2.0 - Stratechery
The startup trying to augment audio reality in public spaces
Yes or no: Are these tech hearings doing anything?
Mark Zuckerberg proposes limited 230 reforms ahead of congressional hearing
Jack Dorsey is just trolling Congress with Twitter polls now
Lina Khan is just the first step toward tougher US tech regulation
Congress tries to get the FTC in fighting shape
Microsoft rebrands Xbox Live to Xbox network
The street prices of Nvidia and AMD GPUs are utterly out of control
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Samsung Unpacked 2021 / Zack Snyder's Justice League is in 4:3 aspect ratio / EVs, e-bikes, and batteries
Fri, 19 Mar 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk to Verge reporter Julia Alexander about the long-awaited release of "the Snyder cut" of the Justice League film on HBO Max and more updates in the world of streaming services.
Verge senior reporter Andrew Hawkins joins the show to discuss the new electric vehicles that were announced this week, talking to Sen. Chuck Schumer about infrastructure, and the state of e-bikes in America.
Further reading:
People aren’t missing their second COVID-19 vaccine dose, CDC data says
Some research has gotten a huge boost during the pandemic
Biden promises May 1st vaccine eligibility for all adults and a federal vaccine website
Disneyland will reopen on April 30th, for California residents only
Tinder is giving away free mail-in COVID-19 tests
Apple Maps now shows COVID-19 vaccination locations
Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine website builds on a swine flu tool
You will watch the Snyder Cut in 4:3 aspect ratio because HBO Max respects cinema
Zack Snyder’s Justice League remains overshadowed by its social media campaign
Netflix is trying to crack down on password sharing with new test
HBO Max will debut its cheaper, ad-supported tier in June
YouTube Shorts arrives in the US to take on TikTok, but the beta is still half-baked
Chuck Schumer wants to replace every gas car in America with an electric vehicle
E-bikes are expensive, but this congressman wants to make ...
Canoo reveals a bubbly electric pickup truck
Kia shows off first full images of new EV6 electric car
Here are the biggest announcements from Volkswagen’s battery event
Elon Musk crowns himself ‘Technoking’ of Tesla
Foxconn says it might build EVs at empty Wisconsin site, or in Mexico
Samsung’s midrange phones now feature fast refresh rate screens, stabilized cameras
Samsung says it might skip the Galaxy Note this year
Apple discontinues the HomePod, but the HomePod mini will live on
New iPad Pros reportedly launching as soon as April, and the …
Intel puts Apple’s ‘I’m a Mac’ guy into new ads praising PCs
Biden to tap former Senator Bill Nelson as NASA chief
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NFTs explained / Sonos' new bluetooth speaker / Asus ROG phone 5 review
Fri, 12 Mar 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk to Verge deputy editor Elizabeth Lopatto about the NFT craze from the past few weeks and explains how the transactions work.
Verge deputy editor Dan Seifert joins the show for a gadget roundup — from the Asus ROG phone 5 review to the new Sonos Roam bluetooth speaker.
Further reading:
COVID-19 took disease tests out of the lab — and may keep them there
People who are vaccinated can socialize together without masks, CDC says
COVID-19 vaccine supplies are on the rise in the US
Single-shot COVID-19 vaccine is popular at vaccination sites
Artifacts from the first COVID-19 vaccination in the US are headed to the Smithsonian
Meet Dr. B, the startup connecting people to leftover vaccines
Beeple sold an NFT for $69 million
NFTs, explained
Of course John Legere bought an $888,888.88 NFT from Steve Aoki
Jack Dorsey’s first tweet may fetch $2.5 million, and he’ll donate the NFTy proceeds to charity
Sonos Roam officially announced for $169, preorders start now
Sonos partners with Audi to bring its audio tech to cars
Asus ROG phone 5 review
Leaked OnePlus 9 Pro and OnePlus 9 renders leave little to the imagination
OnePlus’ next phones will come out on March 23rd
Samsung will host another Unpacked event on March 17th
Apple reportedly overestimated iPhone 12 mini demand, by a lot
Insta360’s Go 2 is a $299 action camera with a surprisingly powerful case
The most powerful Wear OS watches are held back by Wear OS
Asus ROG Zephyrus G15 review: AMD and Nvidia at their best
Razer Blade 15 Base review: losing its edge
Best gaming laptops in 2021
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A conversation about Section 230 and the future of the internet
Mon, 08 Mar 2021
Last week, The Verge held a virtual event about regulating the internet — from antitrust to privacy to the many proposals for changing Section 230, hosted by Verge senior reporter Adi Robertson.
The event kicked off with a keynote from Sen. Amy Klobuchar, followed by a panel on Section 230 reform with general counsel at Vimeo Michael Cheah, researcher, writer, and strategist Sydette Harry, and general counsel at the Wikimedia Foundation Amanda Keton.
In this bonus Vergecast, Adi Robertson and Verge policy editor Russell Brandom discuss takeaways from the event and what's next for the future of regulation on the internet.
Further reading:
What will Section 230 mean for the internet?
Everything you need to know about Section 230
Why Congress can’t stop talking about Section 230
Klobuchar calls on Congress to get serious on tech reform
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Jack Dorsey’s Square, Inc. buys Tidal / Microsoft Mesh and the future of Microsoft Teams / Apple not switching to USB-C iPhones
Fri, 05 Mar 2021
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk to Billboard's Micah Singleton about Jack Dorsey’s Square, Inc. buying a majority stake in Jay-Z’s streaming service Tidal.
Verge senior editor Tom Warren joins the show to discuss the announcement of Microsoft's Mesh mixed reality platform and the various updates to Microsoft Teams, Outlook, and more.
Further reading:
Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine backed by independent FDA committee
Long COVID patients say they feel better after getting vaccinated
Vaccine centers embrace stickers and selfie stations
Countries are polluting like it’s 2019 again: Global CO2 emissions came roaring back as pandemic-induced restrictions loosened
Jack Dorsey’s Square, Inc. is buying a majority stake in Jay-Z’s streaming service Tidal
Square Is Acquiring a Majority Stake in Tidal for $297M
NFTs, explained
Microsoft Mesh feels like the virtual future of Microsoft Teams meetings
Microsoft Teams will soon let you pretend to be a news reporter during meetings
Microsoft’s new Intelligent Speakers deliver its promised meeting room of the future
Microsoft Teams is getting end-to-end encryption support
Microsoft’s new Outlook calendar board view looks a lot like Trello
Microsoft Edge gets a speedy startup feature and vertical tabs
Microsoft’s Windows 10 UI overhaul continues with new system icons
Google Workspace picks up new features designed for remote work
Microsoft Surface Pro 7 Plus review: built for business
A folding iPhone could be coming in 2023
Apple not switching to USB-C iPhones in the near future, according to Ming-Chi Kuo
iPhone 13 might finally bring a smaller notch and faster screens
Arizona advances bill forcing Apple and Google to allow Fortnite-style alternative payment options
Epic Games is buying Fall Guys creator Mediatonic
OpenHaystack is a new open-source tool that lets you create DIY AirTags on Apple’s Find My network
Exclusive: this is the Sonos Roam, coming in April for $169
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Spotify's big plan for podcasting / Where 5G is headed in 2021 / Everything to know about Paramount Plus
Fri, 26 Feb 2021
Hosts Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk with Verge reporter Allison Johnson about T-Mobile bringing back their unlimited 5G plan with no throttling, the results of the C-band spectrum auction, and the state of 5G in America.
Ashley Carman returns to the show to discuss Spotify's big event this week announcing their plans for podcasters and artists.
Julia Alexander joins to report on the details on Paramount Plus' streaming catalog.
Further reading:
Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot vaccine is effective, FDA confirms
One Medical gave COVID-19 vaccines to ineligible people, NPR report says
Stretched vaccine timelines re-enter the spotlight
COVID-19 vaccines are starting to work in the US
MWC insists on holding potential COVID-19 superspreader event in Barcelona
What is 5G, and why is it kind of bad right now?
Dish is confident in its plan to offer 5G in its first major cities by end of Q3 2021
T-Mobile just brought back a true unlimited data plan with 5G and no throttling
T-Mobile has 5G leverage and isn’t afraid to use it
Verizon and AT&T spent big in FCC C-band auction for 5G ...
The Terrible T-Mobile/Sprint Merger Must Be Undone
Spotify CEO Daniel Ek explains how the company plans to help artists (and itself) make money
Spotify HiFi is a lossless streaming tier coming later this year
Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets
Twitter planning a feature to let you auto-block and mute abusive accounts
Apple Fitness Plus review
Everything to know about Paramount Plus, ViacomCBS’s new version of CBS All Access
Shows based on Italian Job, Fatal Attraction, Flashdance, and more heading to Paramount Plus
Frasier revival in development for Paramount Plus
Paramount Plus is proof we’ve hit peak streaming
Are The Office and Friends bets paying off for Peacock and HBO Max?
Marvel’s Loki series will premiere on Disney Plus on June 11th
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Australia's bargain with Google and Facebook / Apple TV on Chromecast / Nintendo Direct's biggest announcements
Fri, 19 Feb 2021
Nilay Patel talks with Adi Robertson and Casey Newton about what Australia's News Media Bargaining Code means for Google, Facebook, and the open web in Australia.
Chris Welch and Julia Alexander join the show to discuss the new Amazon Fire TV stick, Apple TV on Chromecast, and the state of streaming services in 2021.
Andru Marino and Taylor Lyles discuss the announcements from this week's Nintendo Direct.
Further reading:
Maps show ZIP codes hit hardest by COVID-19 have low vaccination rates
Finicky COVID-19 vaccines raise the stakes of power outages
Vaccine rollout won’t be equitable unless health care reckons with racism
If you’re vaccinated against COVID-19, you won’t have to quarantine if you’re exposed
How to score a COVID-19 vaccine appointment
Texas freeze risks slowing COVID-19 progress
Facebook will block Australian users and publishers from sharing news links in response to new bill
Why Google caved to Australia, and Facebook didn’t
Facebook employee warned it used ‘deeply wrong’ ad metrics to boost revenue
Facebook’s Australian media ban is taking down official government pages
Apple won’t have to allow App Store alternatives on iOS after North Dakota bill fails
Amazon Fire TV Stick (2020) review: just get a 4K model
Apple TV app now available on the latest Google Chromecast
YouTube TV offering HBO Max, Showtime, and Starz for $5 less in new entertainment bundle
Donald Glover’s reported Amazon deal could lead to a more curated Prime Video
HBO Max is ordering way more kids’ content to compete with Netflix and Disney Plus
The 20 biggest announcements from today’s Nintendo Direct
Android 12 developer preview is available now with many under-the-hood updates
How to easily install the Android 12 developer preview
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Veken 55 Inch Large Electric Standing Desk
Elevate your workspace with this height-adjustable electric standing desk. Features include memory presets and cable management.
Google's mysterious lack of app updates / Apple’s rumored VR headset / Microsoft’s Surface Duo price drops to $999
Fri, 12 Feb 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Adi Robertson discuss Google's mysterious lack of iOS app updates, the rumors around Apple's potential VR headset, and the rest of this week's gadget headlines.
Further reading:
AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine has been confusing from the start
FDA officials are off on a three-week sprint to review J&J COVID-19 vaccine data
PSA: Don’t post your coronavirus vaccination card selfie on social media
Why the FDA is taking 22 days to look over J&J’s data
PSA: Please wear layers to your vaccine appointment
Google’s own iOS apps were begging for updates that don’t exist, but the company says it was because of a bug
Google is weighing an anti-tracking feature for Android, following Apple’s lead
iOS 14.5 lets you set Spotify and others as Siri’s default music service
New North Dakota bill would force Apple to allow alternative app stores and payment systems
An iOS developer wants Apple to know just how bad App Store scams have become
This may be our first look at Google’s new Android 12 OS
Apple’s rumored VR headset could cost $3,000, feature 8K displays and over a dozen cameras
Apple’s former hardware leader reportedly now overseeing AR and VR devices
Apple reportedly developing next-gen ultra-thin displays for AR devices with TSMC
Hyundai and Kia downplay Apple car rumors
Hyundai is getting serious about building a ‘walking car’ with four legs
Microsoft’s foldable Surface Duo price drops to $999, arrives in Europe next week
Sonos FCC filing hints it’s coming for the UE Boom and other small Bluetooth speakers
This laptop has seven times the average number of screens
Amazon reportedly building an Alexa ‘command center’ that mounts to the wall
How Sony put 40,000 PlayStation symbols under your fingertips
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is accepting $99 Starlink deposits amid ‘deep chasm’ of red ink
Tesla’s $1.5 billion bitcoin purchase clashes with its environmental aspirations
Miami mayor says Elon Musk will tunnel under the city for just $30 million
The Biden administration is working to help address global semiconductor chip shortage
Section 230 is 25 years old, and it’s never been more important
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Jeff Bezos steps away as Amazon CEO / Ford's electric Mustang Mach-E / Apple Car rumors
Fri, 05 Feb 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Sean O'Kane, and Becca Farsace discuss driving Ford's electric Mustang, what's next for Tesla's product line, rumors around Apple's Car endeavors, and Jeff Bezos stepping down as Amazon CEO.
Further reading:
Scientists want to know if vaccinated people can still become COVID-19 long-haulers
If you’re starting an online class, check to make sure your professor is alive
Volunteers built a one-stop website to find open NYC vaccine appointments
Amazon will have a new CEO as Jeff Bezos transitions to executive chair later this year
Bezos’ Amazon: from bookstore to backbone of the internet
Meet Andy Jassy, Amazon’s next CEO
Amazon’s electric Rivian vans will start making deliveries in 16 cities this year
Ford Mustang Mach-E
Kuo adds fuel to Apple-Hyundai electric car rumors
Apple and Hyundai-Kia pushing toward deal on Apple Car
Tesla’s new Model S can go up to 520 miles
Tesla Roadster production delayed to 2022
Tesla agrees to recall cars with failing displays
Tesla’s next car will seamlessly unlock with UWB, FCC leak suggests
Don’t buy Teslas during a production ramp, Elon Musk says
Another SpaceX Starship nails clean test flight, but explodes on landing
Elon Musk’s shot at Amazon flares monthslong fight over billionaires’ orbital real estate
The Alpha 1 is Sony's new flagship camera with monstrous
iOS 14.5 tries to solve Face ID’s mask problem with your Apple Watch
HP’s Spectre x360 14 review: the best 2-in-1 you can buy
Rad Power Bikes raises $150 million to grow its electric bike empire
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GameStop, Reddit, and Robin Hood: How r/WallStreetBets gamed the stock of GameStop
Fri, 29 Jan 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Elizabeth Lopatto explain how the users of the subreddit r/WallStreetBets sent GameStop, AMC and other stocks rocketing up through the stock market.
A year into coronavirus, we’re still counting the dead
Slow certification process keeps some pharmacists from giving COVID-19 vaccines
Go read this report about the tech systems behind the US’s vaccine distribution
Testing sidelined as health departments focus on vaccination
How r/WallStreetBets gamed the stock of GameStop
Reddit’s GameStop traders turn their attention to AMC stock
Memes have broken the brokerages
Robinhood blocks purchase of GameStop, AMC, and BlackBerry stock
Discord has turned into a virtual trade floor with memes, stocks, and chaos
r/WallStreetBets went private — and now it’s back with a message
After buy ban, GameStop hypebeasts are looking for a Robinhood alternative
Robinhood denies claims that it sold GameStop shares out from under its traders
Robinhood will allow ‘limited buys’ of stocks like GameStop starting Friday
Samsung Galaxy S21 review
Sony’s creator-focused Xperia Pro arrives in the US priced at $2,499
Tesla unveils redesigned Model S with new interior and 520-mile range option
OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei’s next company is literally called Nothing
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Galaxy S21 Ultra review / Apple redesign rumors / Paramount Plus and 2021's streaming services
Fri, 22 Jan 2021
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Julia Alexander, and Chaim Gartenberg discuss the Verge review of Samsung's Galaxy S21 Ultra, the numerous rumors about Apple's future products, and ViacomCBS's new rebranded streaming service.
Further reading:
Amazon offers to help Biden administration with vaccinations
CES showed off the COVID-19 mask gimmick arms race
Joe Biden halts US withdrawal from World Health Organization
Biden appoints Jessica Rosenworcel as acting FCC chair
FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on staying connected during a pandemic
The US will rejoin the Paris climate agreement, but that was the easy part
Joe Biden cancels Keystone XL permit
President Biden to use Defense Production Act for masks, vaccines
WhiteHouse.gov now has dark mode
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra review: The Real Deal
Apple’s VR and AR headsets detailed in new report
Apple is reportedly prototyping foldable iPhone screens
Apple reportedly planning big iMac redesign and half-sized Mac Pro
2021 MacBook Pro will ditch the Touch Bar and bring back MagSafe, say reports
Netflix had a record year in 2020, thanks in part to the pandemic
Paramount Plus, ViacomCBS’s new rebranded version of CBS All Access, launches on March 4th
Netflix had a record year in 2020, thanks in part to the pandemic
A visit from the Zune squad
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CES 2021 / Samsung’s S21 lineup and Galaxy Buds Pro
Fri, 15 Jan 2021
The Verge’s Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Monica Chin, and Chris Welch dive into all of the important announcements from both inside and outside of CES — including Samsung’s new flagship S21 smartphone line, the many new TVs with HDMI 2.1, Mini LED, webOS, and the next laptops with new chips from Intel and AMD.
Further reading:
Samsung Galaxy S21, S21 Plus, and S21 Ultra first look: polished design (and prices)
Samsung’s Galaxy S21 phones come with plenty of features — but not a charger
Samsung’s Galaxy S21 phones don’t include microSD card support
You’ll never believe it, Samsung made a black phone
Samsung Galaxy Buds Pro review
Samsung’s 2021 TVs have dramatically better picture, thanks to Mini LED
Samsung made a solar-charging Eco Remote for its latest TVs
LG’s 2021 TV lineup includes its brightest OLED ever
LG is overhauling its webOS TV software — and maybe ruining it
LG Display announces its smallest OLED TV panel yet
Sony announces 2021 TV lineup with 4K gaming at 120Hz and improved picture
Sony promises streaming quality nearly as good as 4K Blu-ray on Bravia Core movie service
Intel’s latest 11th Gen H-series chips promise the fastest ultraportable gaming laptops yet
Intel’s 12th Gen chips look to challenge Arm and Apple’s M1 CPUs later this year
Intel has to be better than ‘lifestyle company’ Apple at making CPUs, says new CEO
AMD’s 7nm Ryzen 5000 mobile processors promise 2021’s best gaming notebooks
AMD says RDNA 2 GPU-powered laptops will arrive in the first half of 2021
Nvidia announces $329 GeForce RTX 3060, available in February
Nvidia is bringing its RTX 3080 to laptops on January 26th
Asus ROG’s 2021 lineup includes its first convertible gaming laptop (ish)
Asus updates Zephyrus G14 and G15 with latest AMD and Nvidia chips
Asus’ 2021 laptop line includes two new dual-screen ZenBooks
MSI’s new GE76 Raider Dragon Edition Tiamat is a tribute to an ancient goddess
Lenovo’s new Legion gaming laptops go all in on AMD’s latest Ryzen chips
Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 hands-on: a new direction
Acer’s new Predator Triton 300 SE is an ultrapowerful, ultralight gaming laptop
MSI’s new Creator 15 comes with RTX 3000 graphics
Razer has created a concept N95 mask with RGB and voice projection
LG teases its Rollable phone again
LG’s Rollable phone is real and launching in 2021
Weird flex: TCL shows off two more of its rollable, extendable display concepts
Watch this flexible LG gaming TV bend from flat to curved
Finally you can have ice cream at home thanks to ice cream pods
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Trump banned from Twitter, Facebook, and others / Parler banned from app stores
Tue, 12 Jan 2021
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Adi Robertson, and Casey Newton chronicle the week since the Capitol riot: Trump gets deplatformed and Parler is removed from app stores.
Further reading:
It’s 2021, and the pandemic is still here
FDA tells US health providers not to modify COVID-19 vaccine dose schedule
Florida counties use Eventbrite to schedule COVID-19 vaccine appointments
Twitter permanently bans Trump
Twitter is deleting Trump’s attempts to circumvent ban
Twitter bans QAnon supporters, including former national security adviser Michael Flynn
Twitter pulls Trump video that it said posed a ‘risk of violence’
Facebook bans Trump ‘indefinitely’
YouTube says it will punish Trump and other channels that continue to spread election lies
YouTube removes Trump video addressing Capitol attack
Platforms take action against Trump after Capitol mob attack
Reddit bans r/donaldtrump forum for inciting violence
Twitch disables Trump’s account indefinitely
Big Tech pauses political spending after Capitol riot: Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Airbnb are pausing spending
Shopify takes down Trump’s campaign store
Google pulls Parler from Play Store for fostering calls to violence
Apple removes Parler from the App Store
Parler CEO says even his lawyers are abandoning him
Parler is gone for now as Amazon terminates hosting
Parler posts, some with GPS data, have been archived by an independent researcher
Parler sues Amazon for kicking it off the internet
Why the post-Capitol deplatforming was necessary
Trump’s ban from Twitter creates the ultimate case of link rot in posts across the internet
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The HDMI Holiday Spec-tacular
Thu, 24 Dec 2020
For a special Vergecast holiday episode, The Verge’s Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Chris Welch talk to three industry experts about the new HDMI 2.1 standard: Polygon's front page editor Samit Sarkar, Vizio CTO Bill Baxter, and HDMI Forum president David Glen.
The Vergecast crew discuss what to look for when buying a new TV, how serious the TV manufacturers are on supporting 2.1, and how the new standard is being implemented throughout the industry.
Happy holidays!
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Two new antitrust lawsuits against Google / AirPods Max review / iOS 14.3 has arrived with ProRAW for iPhone 12 Pro
Fri, 18 Dec 2020
The Verge's Dieter Bohn, Nilay Patel, and Adi Robertson discuss the two antitrust lawsuits against Google announced this week. Chris Welch joins to discuss his review of Apple's AirPods Max.
Further reading:
FDA authorizes first COVID-19 vaccine in US
Health care workers in US start receiving COVID-19 vaccines
Texas attorney general announces ad tech antitrust probe against Google
Google accused of search manipulation in third major antitrust lawsuit
Prosecutors say Google accessed private WhatsApp messages — but the evidence is thin
Apple launches new App Store privacy labels so you can see how iOS apps use your data
Facebook criticizes Apple’s iOS privacy changes with full-page newspaper ads
Facebook hits back at Apple with second critical newspaper ad
Apple defends upcoming privacy changes as ‘standing up for our users’
Epic Games Store now offers Spotify, signaling app store ambitions beyond just games
Judge orders Tim Cook and Craig Federighi to testify in Epic’s Fortnite case
Apple AirPods Max review: superb headphones, awful case
Apple Fitness Plus is now available
iOS 14.3 has arrived with ProRAW for iPhone 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max
Halide: Understanding ProRAW
Samsung confirms stylus support is coming to Galaxy phones like the S21
Samsung’s Galaxy Note series will reportedly still continue next year
Here’s the best look yet at Samsung’s Galaxy Buds Pro wireless earbuds
OnePlus 9 leak shows off the upcoming 2021 flagship in photos
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Apple announces AirPods Max / Qualcomm president Cristiano Amon interview
Fri, 11 Dec 2020
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Chris Welch discuss Apple's announcement of their AirPods Max noise-canceling headphones and give their first impressions.
Second half of the show, Nilay and Dieter talk with Qualcomm president Cristiano Amon about Qualcomm's new flagship processor the Snapdragon 888, the potential of 5G, and what he thinks about Apple's new M1 processor.
COVID-19 vaccine starts working within two weeks after first shot
Apple and Google’s COVID contact tracing tech is finally coming to their home state of California
COVID-19 vaccine monitoring program may be at risk of false reports
With guns drawn, police raid home and seize computers of COVID-19 data whistleblower
Florida’s justification for raiding COVID data whistleblower Rebekah Jones is looking a little shaky
The pandemic turned the volume down on ocean noise pollution
Uber asks governors to give drivers early access to COVID-19 vaccines
Apple announces $549 AirPods Max noise-canceling headphones, coming December 15th
AirPods Max first look
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The FTC is suing Facebook to unwind its acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp
Fri, 11 Dec 2020
In a bonus episode of The Vergecast, Nilay Patel talks with Verge policy editor Russell Brandom, senior reporter Adi Robertson, and contributing editor Casey Newton about the FTC suing Facebook to unwind its acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp.
Further reading:
The FTC is suing Facebook to unwind its acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp
The good and the bad in the government’s case against Facebook
Facebook calls antitrust lawsuits ‘revisionist history’
Instagram would be better off without Facebook
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Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 888 processor for 2021 Android phones / Warner Bros. will release new 2021 movies simultaneously on HBO Max / FCC Chairman Ajit Pai will step down on January 20th
Fri, 04 Dec 2020
Verge reporter Julia Alexander joins Nilay and Dieter to discuss WarnerMedia's decision to release all of its new 2021 movies simultaneously on HBO Max. News editor Chaim Gartenberg explains Qualcomm's new Snapdragon 888 processor for upcoming Android phones in 2021.
Stories from this week:
Facebook will remove COVID-19 vaccine misinformation
The people saving our lives should get vaccinated first, experts say
Moderna to ask FDA for COVID-19 vaccine authorization
Wonder Woman 1984 will be released on HBO Max the same day it’s in theaters for no extra cost
Warner Bros. will release all of its new 2021 movies simultaneously on HBO Max
Discovery, home of Shark Week, HGTV, and Food Network, enters the streaming wars with Discovery Plus
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai will step down on January 20th
Trump’s bias hawk FCC nominee is one step closer to confirmation
Trump calls for last-minute 230 repeal as part of defense spending bill
Comcast to impose home internet data cap of 1.2TB in more than a dozen US states next year
Comcast to raise internet and TV prices nationwide next year
Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 888 processor will power the Android flagships of 2021
Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 888 promises faster speeds, better cameras, and more powerful AI
Samsung begins wider rollout of Android 11 and One UI 3.0 to latest phones
Verizon’s Galaxy S20 models are the first to get Android 11 and One UI 3.0
Samsung rumored to discontinue Galaxy Note line, add stylus support to 2021 Galaxy S and Z Fold
Leaked Galaxy Buds Pro image reveals new rounded design
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Decoder: Alamo Drafthouse CEO on the future of movie theaters
Tue, 01 Dec 2020
On this episode of Decoder, Nilay talks with Shelli Taylor, the CEO of Alamo Drafthouse. Shelli stepped into her new role as CEO during the pandemic.
In the conversation, Nilay and Shelli discuss the steps she had to take to get her company back on solid ground — including justifying high fixed costs of expensive lightbulbs — and how the government has failed to manage the pandemic effectively for business owners. They also talk about what it will take to safely reopen theaters and what the future looks like, especially in the streaming age.
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Decoder: Microsoft's Phil Spencer on launching the new Xbox
Tue, 24 Nov 2020
On this week’s episode of Decoder Nilay Patel talks to Phil Spencer, the guy in charge of Xbox at Microsoft. They discuss not only the next-generation Xbox and PS5 just arriving in stores now, but how gaming itself has become part of mainstream culture, a trend that has definitely accelerated during the pandemic. We’ve also reached an inflection point for game streaming: Google, Amazon, and Microsoft all have services that allow consumers to play games on any device by streaming them over the internet, kind of like Netflix for games. Is that the future?
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Apple Macbook Air with M1 review / Apple will reduce App Store cut to 15 percent / end-to-end encryption for RCS in Android
Fri, 20 Nov 2020
Walt Mossberg joins the show to discuss his experience with Apple's Macbooks with the new M1 chip. Nilay, Dieter, Chris, and Dan discuss The Verge's reviews of the computers.
Stories from this week:
Trump’s post-election tantrum is holding up federal vaccine planning
Virus surges complicate the distribution of scarce COVID-19 treatments
CDC says people should not travel for Thanksgiving due to COVID-19 surges
The COVID-19 pandemic hits new highs and new lows
Apple Macbook Air with M1 review: new chip, no problem
Apple Macbook Pro with M1 review: flexing Arm
Apple Mac Mini with M1 review: over-performer
macOS Big Sur review
Here’s how to run any iOS app you own on Apple’s new M1 Macs
Apple will reduce App Store cut to 15 percent for most developers starting January 1st
Apple’s biggest App Store critics are not impressed with its new fee cut for small developers
Google Stadia is coming to iOS officially as a web app
Google Pay's massive relaunch makes it an all-encompassing ...
Google is rolling out end-to-end encryption for RCS in Android ..
Google’s latest Chrome update delivers ‘largest performance gain in years’
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Decoder: The future of remote learning with Sal Khan of Khan Academy
Tue, 17 Nov 2020
For the next few Tuesday's, we'll be sharing Nilay Patel's new podcast Decoder, an interview show that puts a spotlight on how innovators and policymakers at the frontiers of business and technology are navigating an ever-changing landscape.
On this week’s episode of Decoder, Nilay Patel talks with Sal Khan, the co-founder and CEO of Khan Academy, a nonprofit online learning platform for students in kindergarten through high school. Khan Academy is an organization that exists because of technology. What started with Sal tutoring his niece in math over video using off the shelf cameras and software, has grown into an organization with nearly 20 million users per month, available in 46 languages and used in more than 190 countries. And online learning has gotten even more vital with the pandemic.
In this conversation, Nilay and Sal discuss the future of learning, what online education is good at and where it struggles, how Khan Academy is growing, and how Sal’s thinking about handling trickier subjects like history and social studies.
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Great mic for podcasters
Logitech for Creators Blue Yeti Nano USB Microphone.
Apple announces M1 chip computers / iPhone 12 mini and Pro Max review / HomePod mini review
Fri, 13 Nov 2020
Nilay, Dieter, Dan, and Chaim discuss the new computers Apple announced at their "One More Thing" hardware event, as well as their reviews of the iPhone 12 mini, iPhone 12 Pro Max, and HomePod mini.
Stories from this week:
US sees two days with over 100,000 reported COVID-19 cases
COVID-19 vaccine is highly effective, manufacturers report
iPhone 12 mini review: fit to size
iPhone 12 Pro Max review: the best smartphone camera
The 5 biggest announcements from Apple’s ‘One More Thing’ hardware event
Mac users couldn’t launch apps this afternoon after Apple verification server issue
Apple announces MacBook Air with Apple’s Arm-based M1 processor
Apple says new Arm-based M1 chip offers the ‘longest battery life ever in a Mac’
All the apps and games Apple promises for Arm-based Macs
Apple announces new Arm-based Mac mini with M1 chip, starting at $699
Apple’s first Arm-based 13-inch MacBook Pro is here with an M1 chip
Apple’s new M1 computers top out at 16GB of RAM
The biggest difference between the new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro is a fan
Apple’s M1 Mac design emphasizes continuity over complexity
HomePod mini review
macOS Big Sur is now available to download
Google will end its free unlimited Photos storage on June 1, 2021
Microsoft: ‘please do not blow vape smoke into your Xbox Series X’
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Introducing Decoder with Nilay Patel: Mark Cuban on the future of American business
Tue, 10 Nov 2020
This is the first episode of Nilay Patel's new podcast Decoder, an interview show that will put a spotlight on how innovators and policymakers at the frontiers of business and technology are navigating an ever-changing landscape.
On the first episode of Decoder, Nilay interviews Mark Cuban. Mark is the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, he’s a tech investor, and is on the hit show, Shark Tank. The conversation, recorded as last week’s election results rolled in, covers how interwoven business, technology, and policy are, whether its 5G, or the NBA bubble, or AI, or his investments into healthcare -- if you want to understand the landscape of the future, you have to understand tech, you have to understand business, and you have to understand policy.
You can subscribe to Decoder anywhere you get your podcasts.
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Xbox Series X, Series S, and PS5 review / Apple announces 'One More Thing' event for November 10th
Fri, 06 Nov 2020
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Tom Warren discuss reviews of the new game consoles — Microsoft's Xbox Series X and Series S, and Sony's PS5.
Oh yeah one more thing, there's an Apple event next week.
Additional reading:
Xbox Series X review
Xbox Series S review
Astro’s Playroom is the perfect showcase for the PS5’s wild DualSense controller
The PS5’s new controller is amazing — here’s how it works
Sony confirms the PS5 won’t support SSD storage expansion at launch
Best Buy says next-gen Xbox and PS5 consoles will only be sold online for entire holiday season
Sony strongly urges gamers not to line up at stores on PS5 release date
Sony shows how much easier logging into the PS5 can be, among other tutorials
The different strategies of Microsoft and Sony’s next-generation consoles
Switch sales are so good that Nintendo is raising forecasts
Apple announces 'One More Thing' event for November 10th …
Apple to Launch MacBooks With Own Chips Next Week
Making macOS run well on ARM processors isn’t the hard part
Microsoft’s rougher ride in a similar transition could provide some lessons for Apple
Fortnite will reportedly be playable on iOS again through Nvidia’s GeForce Now
Sizing up the iPhone 12 mini and 12 Pro Max
DJI’s palm-sized Mini 2 drone flies further and shoots 4K for $449
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Facebook, Twitter take steps to limit the president’s false election claims
Fri, 06 Nov 2020
While the counting for the 2020 presidential election still goes on, The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Adi Robertson discuss what steps social media platforms have taken to limit misinformation.
Additional reading:
Watch the great people of Philadelphia count ballots live
Facebook, Twitter take steps to limit the president’s false election claims
Twitter restricts Trump campaign official’s tweet alleging Philadelphia voter fraud
Before the votes are fully counted, Trump falsely claims victory
Twitter restricts yet another Trump tweet for making up election rules
People are mistaking a Baltimore Orioles meme for an election misinformation botnet
Facebook shuts down huge ‘Stop the Steal’ group
YouTube says video claiming Trump won does not violate its election misinformation policies
Democrats call on Twitter to suspend Trump as election results file in
Massachusetts passes ‘right to repair’ law to open up car data
California poised to establish a new privacy regulator with ballot measure win
Uber, Lyft drivers aren’t employees after all, California voters say
Portland, Maine has voted to ban facial recognition
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Tearing down the iPhone 12 with iFixit
Tue, 03 Nov 2020
The Verge's Dieter Bohn talks with iFixit's Kyle Weins and Kay-Kay Clapp about their teardown reviews, the right to repair, and how to fix the Phone 12.
We're a finalist for a Discover Podcast Award! Vote here: https://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/5978795/2020-Discover-Pods-Awards-Finalists
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This week's Section 230 hearing / gadgets go to QVC / Motorola Razr 2020 review
Fri, 30 Oct 2020
Nilay, Dieter, and Adi discuss the latest Section 230 congressional hearing featuring the CEOs of big tech. Ashley Carman stops by to talk about how gadget makers are turning to shopping channels to market their products.
Stories from this week:
San Francisco and Oakland phase out Verily COVID-19 testing sites
White House officials considered Elon Musk for coronavirus ad campaign
We need to rebuild America’s pandemic-fighting agencies
Streaming was part of the future — now it’s the only future
Lime’s CEO on the future of scooters: ‘COVID has turned from a headwind into a tailwind’
Mark Zuckerberg just told Congress to upend the internet
The latest Section 230 hearing showed that Republicans want to make the internet smaller
The Right’s Regulator in Chief
Gadget makers’ biggest risk could be a huge reward
Influencers’ next frontier: their own live shopping channels
Everyone on Instagram will soon be able to go live for four hours
Facebook will test shopping from Reels later this year
Motorola Razr 2020 review: 5G folding flip phone feels fine
LG Wing review: learning to fly, failing to soar
Verizon’s Yahoo zombie appears again as a purple phone
First iPhone 12 mini hands-on video shows just how tiny it is
Mophie’s new wirelessly charging battery pack clips onto the back of your phone
T-Mobile expands its faster midband 5G network, nearly doubling its coverage
Microsoft Surface Pro X (2020) review: ARM gets more muscle
Amazon Echo Dot (2020) review: have a ball
T-Mobile expands into live internet TV with new TVision streaming service
PS5 in photos: our first look at Sony’s next-gen console
PS5 vs. Xbox Series X: the next-gen consoles in photos
Astro’s Playroom is the perfect showcase for the PS5’s wild DualSense controller
Control is coming to the Nintendo Switch today, but you can only stream it from the cloud
Vizio and LG’s next-gen-ready OLED TVs are up to $500 off at Best Buy
Meet the 24-year-old who’s tracking every broken McDonald’s ice-cream machine in the US
We're a finalist for a Discover Podcast Award! Vote here: https://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/5978795/2020-Discover-Pods-Awards-Finalists
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iPhone 12 and 12 Pro review with Joanna Stern and Nilay Patel
Tue, 27 Oct 2020
Every Tuesday this month, Vergecast co-host Dieter Bohn is hosting a series of discussions diving deep into tech review season, each focusing on a specific product.
This week, Dieter brings back Vergecast co-host Nilay Patel and senior personal technology columnist at The Wall Street Journal Joanna Stern to discuss their reviews of the latest iteration of the iPhone.
Dieter reviewed the iPhone 12, Nilay reviewed the iPhone 12 Pro, and Joanna reviewed them both side by side. The trio discusses what they focused on in their reviews — like 5G, Dolby Vison, and MagSafe — and how significant the upgrades are for this year’s devices.
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Quibi is shutting down / Google faces antitrust charges / Foxconn’s LCD factory is Wisconsin isn’t real
Fri, 23 Oct 2020
Dieter Bohn and Nilay Patel talk to Julia Alexander about Quibi shutting down, Adi Robertson about the US government filing antitrust charges against Google, and Josh Dzieza about his report on Wisconsin's empty Foxconn factory.
Stories from this week:
The ambitious effort to piece together America’s fragmented health data
Microsoft wants to cut down pollution from its business travel
Is Quibi done for?
Quibi is shutting down
11 reasons why Quibi crashed and burned in less than a year
Quibi’s top executives are ready to blame themselves, not just the pandemic, for Quibi failing
Watch AOC play Among Us live on Twitch with HasanAbi and Pokimane
The US government has filed antitrust charges against Google
Who is Google’s market power hurting?
Senate committee approves subpoenas for Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey
How to retweet using Twitter’s new temporary format
Republican lawmakers are furious after Twitter asks users to read stories before retweeting
Facebook’s independent oversight board is now accepting cases
The 8th Wonder of the World
Exclusive: Wisconsin report confirms Foxconn’s so-called LCD factory isn’t real
Apple iPad Air (2020) review: take it from the Pro
Amazon Echo (2020) review: music of the sphere
Beats Flex review: wireless earbud basics done right
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Pixel 5 with Android Central and Android Police
Tue, 20 Oct 2020
Every Tuesday this month, Vergecast co-host Dieter Bohn hosts a series of discussions diving deep into tech review season, each focusing on a specific product.
This week, Dieter talks with managing editor of Android Central Daniel Bader and Android Police editor-in-chief David Ruddock about the Google’s Pixel 5.
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Apple announces iPhone 12, MagSafe charger, HomePod mini
Fri, 16 Oct 2020
Stories from this week:
Apple’s iPhone 12 event: the 7 biggest announcements
Apple announces iPhone 12 with OLED screen and 5G speeds
iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max announced with larger displays, updated design, and 5G
Apple announces iPhone 12 mini, the ‘smallest and lightest 5G phone in the world’
Apple’s new iPhone 12 line-up comes with a ceramic-hardened display
Apple’s new iPhones won’t ship with earbuds or wall chargers
Apple cuts EarPods and iPhone charger prices by $10 after it stops bundling them
Apple’s iPhone 12 can wirelessly charge twice as fast, but only with a MagSafe charger
Apple’s revived MagSafe charging standard opens the door for a portless iPhone
The iPhone 12 Pro Max could be Apple’s biggest camera jump in years
Breaking down Apple’s three new iPhone 12 camera systems
Here’s how you’ll know when you’re on Verizon’s fast or slow 5G on an iPhone 12
The iPhone 12’s mysterious groove is a 5G mmWave antenna window — and it’s exclusive to the US
Apple’s iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 mini cost $30 extra for anyone who’s not an AT&T or Verizon customer
Apple announces smaller HomePod mini for $99
Apple’s HomePod will soon support Dolby Atmos with the Apple TV 4K
Beats announces $50 Beats Flex earbuds with USB-C and 12-hour battery life
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Samsung 2020 with Marques Brownlee
Tue, 13 Oct 2020
Every Tuesday this month, Vergecast co-host Dieter Bohn hosts a series of discussions diving deep into tech review season, each focusing on a specific product.
This week, Dieter talks with MKBHD aka Marques Brownlee about the various phones released by Samsung this year, from the S20 Ultra to the Z Fold 2 5G. The two also discuss the process of reviewing different tiers of phones and how it's changing the smartphone market.
This episode was brought to you by Novartis. To learn more about Cell and Gene Therapy visit vox.com/ad/novartis
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Congress releases tech antitrust report / Apple’s next iPhone will be announced on October 13th
Fri, 09 Oct 2020
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn bring in Russell Brandom and Adi Robertson to discuss congressional report about whether Amazon, Facebook, Apple, and Google are violating antitrust law.
Dan Seifert stops by to discuss Apple's upcoming iPhone event on October 13th.
Links:
Global TV shipments hit record high last quarter, report says
America’s internet wasn’t prepared for online school
I regularly forget that I have New York’s COVID-19 exposure notification app
Congress releases blockbuster tech antitrust report
What Google, Apple, Amazon, and Facebook have at stake in the antitrust fight
Apple made ProtonMail add in-app purchases, even though it had been free for years
Oracle and Google’s Supreme Court showdown was a battle of metaphors
Apple quietly stops selling Bose, Sonos and some Logitech gear — only Apple audio remains
The Supreme Court is taking on Google and Oracle one last time
Apple’s next iPhone will be announced on October 13th
Apple Watch SE review: pay a lot less to give up only a little
Why Apple needed the FDA to sign off on its EKG but not its blood oxygen monitor
The Apple Watch heart monitor sends too many people to the doctor
YouTube 4K has come to Apple TV, but we’re waiting on HDR, 60fps, and iPhone/iPad playback
Disney movies are now available in 4K on Apple’s iTunes store
Apple sues recycling partner for reselling more than 100,000 iPhones, iPads, and Watches it was hired to dismantle
Samsung Galaxy S20 FE review: the right price for the right stuff
Samsung Galaxy Note 20 review: stylus tax
Google Nest Audio review: the sweet spot
Google Fi now directly sells Samsung phones and adds a new 5G map
G Suite is now Google Workspace in a bid to merge Gmail, Chat, and Docs
Gmail has a new logo that’s a lot more Google
More early Prime Day 2020 deals have kicked off on Amazon
Meet Ricky Desktop, the most viral beatmaker on TikTok
SPACs, explained
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Pixel vs Nexus with UrAvgConsumer
Tue, 06 Oct 2020
Every Tuesday this month, Vergecast co-host Dieter Bohn hosts a series of discussions diving deep into tech review season, each focusing on a specific product.
This week, Dieter talks with YouTube's UrAvgConsumer about how the recently announced Google Pixel 5 shares some common ground with Google's 2013 smartphone project the Nexus 5.
This episode was brought to you by Novartis. To learn more about Cell and Gene Therapy visit vox.com/ad/novartis
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Google announces Pixel 5, Chromecast with Google TV, and Nest Audio
Fri, 02 Oct 2020
Nilay, Dieter, Dan, and Chris discuss all the announcements from Google's fall hardware event from this week, as well as Sonos suing Google for infringing five more wireless audio patents.
Links:
If you’re sick this fall, you’ll probably get two virus tests
The coronavirus pandemic by the numbers
Google announces the Pixel 5 for $699
Google announces Pixel 4A 5G with larger 6.2-inch display for $499
Verizon has an exclusive Pixel 4A 5G that’s $100 more expensive
Google says the Pixel’s Soli radar and Motion Sense will return
Can the Pixel 5 camera still compete using the same old aging sensor?
The Pixel 5 and 4A 5G play it safe
Google Chromecast (2020) review: reinvented — and now with a remote
Google announces new Chromecast with the new Google TV interface
The new Chromecast with Google TV won’t officially support Stadia at launch
Google Play Movies & TV is now Google TV but it’s not the same Google TV that runs on Android TV on the new Chromecast, it’s an app
New Chromecast works as a cheap but unsupported xCloud streamer
The Home Depot is selling a new Google Chromecast that hasn’t been announced
Sonos sues Google for infringing five more wireless audio patents
The new Roku Ultra has Dolby Vision and improved Wi-Fi performance
Roku is adding support for Apple’s AirPlay 2 and HomeKit later this year
Roku’s Streambar is a compact soundbar with built-in streaming smarts
Google’s new Nest Audio smart speaker is official, costs $99.99
A week with the Xbox Series X: load times, game performance, and more
Microsoft’s new $549 Surface Laptop Go aims to compete with Chromebooks
Microsoft’s updated Surface Pro X has a faster processor and new platinum color option
Apple Watch Series 6 review: minute improvements
The Apple Watch heart monitor sends too many people to the doctor
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Apple Watch Series 6 with WSJ's Joanna Stern
Tue, 29 Sep 2020
Every Tuesday this month, Vergecast co-host Dieter Bohn hosts a series of discussions diving deep into tech review season, each focusing on a specific product.
This week, Dieter talks with senior personal technology columnist at The Wall Street Journal and Verge alum Joanna Stern about Apple's Watch Series 6.
Dieter and Joanna also discuss the process of reviewing gadgets on video and the complications of reviewing a product that has this many variants.
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Amazon announces Ring security drone, new Echo devices, a gaming service, and a whole lot more
Fri, 25 Sep 2020
Nilay, Dieter, and Dan discuss all the important announcements from Amazon's fall hardware event this week, from a security drone for your home to a new cloud gaming service.
Stories discussed this week:
CDC removes guidance about airborne spread of the coronavirus
Averting a COVID-19 vaccination crisis will take careful communication
Ring’s latest security camera is a drone that flies around inside your house
Ring announces new line of security cameras for cars
Amazon will launch a new location-tracking mesh network system later this year
Amazon’s fall hardware event: the 13 biggest announcements
Amazon redesigns the Echo with a new spherical design and a custom machine learning processor
Amazon’s new Echo show 10 moves to look at you
Amazon’s Echo Show smart displays will soon stream Netflix video
Amazon’s AZ1 Neural Edge processor will make Alexa voice commands even faster
Alexa’s latest upgrades help it listen to multiple people and ask clarifying questions
Amazon unveils new Guard Plus subscription for $4.99 per month
Amazon announces new cloud gaming service called Luna
Amazon’s Luna game streaming service is powered by Windows and Nvidia GPUs
Amazon announces $29.99 Fire TV Stick Lite and upgraded Fire TV Stick
The latest Eero mesh Wi-Fi routers support Wi-Fi 6
iPad 2020 review
iOS 14 and iPadOS review: iPhone revolution, iPad evolution
iOS 14 basics: how to add widgets to your iPhone’s home screen
Fitbit Sense review: enough bugs to raise your heart rate
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Microsoft Surface Duo with Engadget's Cherlynn Low
Tue, 22 Sep 2020
Every Tuesday this month, Vergecast co-host Dieter Bohn hosts a series of discussions diving deep into tech review season, each focusing on a specific product.
This week, Dieter and Verge deputy editor Dan Seifert talks with Engadget's Cherlynn Low about Microsoft's Surface Duo.
The trio discuss how the process of reviewing this device differs from others in the past, where it stands in the phone and tablet market, and other notable points from Dieter and Cherlynn's time with the Duo that didn't make it into the review.
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Apple announces Watch Series 6 and new iPad Air / PS5 reveals price tag / Oculus announces Quest 2
Fri, 18 Sep 2020
Nilay, Dieter, Chaim, and Nicole discuss Apple's newly announced products including the Apple Watch Series 6 and the new iPad Air. Also discussed: the PS5 announced pricing, Oculus has a new headset, and TikTok acquisition news continues to brew.
More stories from this episode:
Apple Watch’s blood oxygen monitor is for ‘wellness,’ not medicine
Apple is creating a fitness subscription service called Fitness Plus
The new Apple Watch Series 6 has blood oxygen monitoring
The Apple Watch Series 6: first impressions of a very good smartwatch
The Apple Watch SE is a new lower-cost Watch
New Apple Watches won’t have a USB power adapter in the box
Family Setup lets you manage multiple Apple Watches from one iPhone
There’s a new iPad Air that looks a lot like an iPad Pro
The updated eighth-generation iPad has a familiar design but a new processor
New Apple One subscription bundles pack multiple services together
Nvidia is acquiring Arm for $40 billion
The PS5 will launch on November 12th for $499.99
PS5 Digital Edition launches November 12th for $399.99
Connect 7: All the news from Facebook and Oculus’ big VR / AR event
Oculus Quest 2 review: better, cheaper VR
Oculus’ new Quest 2 VR headset starts at $299 and ships October 13th
Mark Zuckerberg on why he doesn’t want to ‘put an Apple Watch on your face’
Google to launch Pixel 5, new Chromecast, and smart speaker on September 30th
Oracle reportedly wins deal for TikTok’s US operations as ‘trusted tech partner’
Trump to decide on TikTok Oracle deal with Walmart as an …
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We ask a biostatistician about the timeline of a COVID-19 vaccine
Tue, 15 Sep 2020
There’s a lot of information coming and going about the coronavirus, and the next steps for vaccines and treatments for COVID-19 — The Verge even has a newsletter dedicated to it.
But how do we asses all this information in a logical way, to prevent confusion, chaos, or something worse? The Verge’s Nilay Patel, Mary Beth Griggs and Nicole Wetsman talked to Dr. Natalie Dean, assistant professor of biostatistics at the University of Florida, about what we know so far about the timeline of a COVID-19 vaccine, and the best way to evaluate the flood of information coming in every day.
We are conducting an audience survey to better serve you. It takes no more than five minutes, and it really helps out the show. Please take our survey here: voxmedia.com/podsurvey.
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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 review / Android 11 review / Xbox Series S and X preview
Fri, 11 Sep 2020
Nilay, Dieter, and Tom discuss reviews of Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 2, Microsoft's Surface Duo, and Android 11. Also, previews of the Xbox Series X and Series S.
Stories from this week:
White House reportedly moves to eliminate COVID-19 security theater at airports
Trump’s latest attack on Section 230 is really about censoring speech
Microsoft Surface Duo review: double troubles
How Microsoft built its folding Android phone
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 review: an extravagant success
Android 11 review: features by the dozen
Welcome to the next generation of gaming
Microsoft’s new Xbox Series S is surprisingly small in size and price
A first look at Microsoft’s new Xbox Series X console
Microsoft confirms $299 Xbox Series S console
Microsoft reveals Xbox Series S specs, promises four times the processing power of Xbox One
Xbox Series X launches on November 10th for $499
Your move, PS5
Xbox Game Pass is adding EA’s Play subscription service at no extra cost
Xbox Game Pass for PC is doubling its price next week
A closer look at Nvidia’s new RTX 3080
Apple announces ‘Time Flies’ event for September 15th
Apple Music for Android contains mentions of rumored ‘Apple One’ services bundle
iPhone 12: everything we think we know about Apple’s 2020 5G iPhones
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Marc Levoy on moving from Google to Adobe and the ethics of computational photography
Tue, 08 Sep 2020
The Verge's Nilay Patel talks with former Google engineer Marc Levoy about his move to Adobe, the state of the smartphone camera, and the future of computational photography.
We are conducting an audience survey to better serve you. It takes no more than five minutes, and it really helps out the show. Please take our survey here: voxmedia.com/podsurvey.
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IFA 2020 gadgets / Intel announces 11th Gen Tiger Lake CPUs / Nvidia announces RTX 3080 and 3090
Fri, 04 Sep 2020
Nilay, Dieter, Chaim, and Chris dive deep into all the gadget news that dominated this week, including all the announcements at IFA 2020's virtual event showcase.
Stories discussed this week:
Apple and Google announce new automatic app system to track COVID exposures
Apple releases iOS 13.7 with support for new automatic COVID-19 notification system
The CDC’s testing guidance will make the pandemic worse
Emergency COVID-19 vaccines will have to convince a skeptical public
Robert Pattinson reportedly has COVID-19, and The Batman has halted production
Super Mario 3D World and other classic Mario games are coming to the Switch
Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit is a Switch racer that uses RC cars
Nintendo is releasing a 35th anniversary Super Mario Bros. Game and Watch
Intel announces its new 11th Gen Tiger Lake CPUs, available ...
Intel debuts a new logo alongside its 11th Gen chips
Asus’ latest ZenBook laptops feature Intel’s 11th Gen CPUs and Thunderbolt 4 ports
Acer’s new Swift laptops include Intel’s 11th Gen processors
Toshiba laptops are no more, but here are Dynabook’s new notebooks with Intel’s 11th Gen parts
Samsung launches Galaxy Book Flex 5G, the first 5G Intel Evo laptop
Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080: launching September 17th for …
Nvidia's new RTX 3090 is a $1,499 monster GPU designed for ...
Qualcomm's next budget Snapdragon 4-series chips could ...
Qualcomm’s 8cx Gen 2 5G processor promises a new wave of better ARM-based laptops
Qualcomm hopes to topple AirPods Pro with ‘adaptive’ noise cancellation for true wireless earbuds
Sonos patent gives possible first look at unannounced headphones
Bang & Olufsen’s $800 noise-canceling headphones copy the best part of Microsoft’s Surface Headphones
Samsung announces The Premiere, a luxury ultra-short throw 4K laser projector
The new Philips Hue lightstrip mounts to your TV and syncs with what’s on-screen
Lenovo Smart Clock
8BitDo made a mod-friendly, wireless arcade stick for the Nintendo Switch and
Asus Zenfone 7 Pro review: fun flipping cameras with a bulky phone attached
Samsung announces its cheapest 5G phone and new Trio …
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Recording police brutality: how technology is driving the new civil rights movement
Tue, 01 Sep 2020
Nilay Patel talks with Verge reporter Bijan Stephen and video producer Mariya Abdulkaf about The Verge's new multimedia project Capturing the Police.
Capturing the Police is a project from The Verge about how people use technology to bring awareness of police brutality and racism — and what it costs them when they agitate for justice.
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Surface Duo hands on / Amazon's Halo fitness tracker / Epic vs Apple: the latest
Fri, 28 Aug 2020
Wired's Lauren Goode returns to the show to discuss Microsoft's soon-to-be released Surface Duo, Amazon's new fitness tracker, and an update on Apple's battle with Epic over the App Store.
Stories this week:
FDA authorizes Abbott’s fast $5 COVID-19 test
FDA authorizes convalescent plasma to treat COVID-19
Tracking COVID-19 through symptom monitoring will be harder when flu season starts
Facebook chose not to act on militia complaints before Kenosha shooting
Facebook takes down ‘call to arms’ event after two shot dead in Kenosha
Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman interview
Amazon announced Halo, a fitness band and app that scans your body and voice
Amazon Look review (2017)
Fitbit’s new Sense smartwatch can take your skin’s temperature to help you manage stress
Microsoft Flight Simulator players are flying into Hurricane Laura
Fall Guys is the feel-good game of the summer
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 2 doesn’t have a release date, but you can already watch this review
This could be the first real picture of the Pixel 5
Sony Xperia 5 II leak reveals a new 120Hz display and a headphone jack
The Asus Zenfone 7 adds a third lens to its neat flipping camera
LG’s swiveling ‘Wing’ phone allegedly revealed in video leak
TikTok sues Trump administration over US ban
Kevin Mayer quits as TikTok CEO due to ongoing political turmoil
Walmart says it’s partnering with Microsoft on a TikTok deal
Epic judge will protect Unreal Engine — but not Fortnite
Why Epic can’t afford to lose the Unreal Engine in its legal fight with Apple
Read the emails between Epic and Apple that led to Fortnite’s App Store ban
Apple is holding the Unreal Engine hostage, Epic says in new motion
Epic confirms Fortnite’s new season won’t be on iPhone, iPad, or Mac
Fortnite is splitting into two different games because of Epic and Apple’s fight
Apple apologizes to WordPress, won’t force the free app to add purchases after all
Fortnite on iOS already feels empty and dated
Apple’s move to make advertising harder on iOS 14 is part of a trend
Announcing the Get Wired podcast
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Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman welcomes you to Team Antitrust
Tue, 25 Aug 2020
Antitrust criticism of big tech companies like Google, Apple, and Amazon have been louder than ever — from the consumers to the tech companies who compete with them. Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman has been vocal for years about the problem with Google’s dominant market share in maps, local search, and reviews.
“I’ve been working on it for over a decade and it’s great to see that more people have jumped on board.” Stoppelman says. “When we started out criticizing Google and highlighting some of their abuses, we got — especially from Silicon Valley — so many eye rolls.”
The Verge’s Nilay Patel and Casey Newton recently caught up with Stoppelman to discuss the evolving view of the media and the public on the tech monopolies, as well as how Yelp is handling their competition and what possible changes can be made with regulation from the government.
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Dieter, Dan, and Becca discuss reviews of Samsung's Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, Galaxy Buds Live, and Galaxy Watch 3. They also discuss a potential BlackBerry phone coming to the market...in 2021.
Stories from this week:
Attack of the gaiters
Galaxy Note 20 Ultra review
How Samsung’s beans broke the mold of wireless earbuds
iFixit’s Galaxy Buds Live teardown shows that even Samsung calls them beans
Samsung Galaxy Buds Live review: good sound, unique …
Google’s Pixel Buds are now available in more colors nearly four months after launch
Google’s Pixel Buds get new transcribe mode, attention alerts, and sharing detection
Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 review: time for a change
Fossil updates its Gen 5 smartwatches with sleep tracking and more fitness features
The Nubia Watch is a decadent OLED smart bracelet
New images of Fitbit Versa 3 and Fitbit Sense leak
Epic says Apple threatens ‘catastrophic’ response in two weeks if Fortnite doesn’t comply with rules
Apple tells Epic ‘we won’t make an exception’ for Fortnite
Uber CEO on the fight in California: ‘We can’t go out and hire 50,000 people overnight’
Here’s your best look yet at ZTE’s first smartphone with an under-display camera
Apple is now a $2 trillion company
A new 5G BlackBerry phone with Android and a physical …
theverge.com/newsletters
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How money and payments have become social media
Tue, 18 Aug 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to Lana Swartz, assistant professor of media studies at the University of Virginia about her new book New Money: How Payment Became Social Media.
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Fornite kicked off the App Store and Microsoft’s Surface Duo arrives on Sept 10th
Fri, 14 Aug 2020
Nilay, Dieter, Tom, and Dan discuss the timeline of events that lead to Epic Games suing Apple and Google after being kicked out of mobile app stores. They also discuss Microsoft's announcement of the Surface Duo's release date and technical specs.
Stories discussed this episode:
Big Tech pledged a billion to racial justice, but it was pocket change
US passes 5 million coronavirus cases
Big airlines are hoarding cash to survive the pandemic
Vaping linked to higher risk of COVID-19 in teens and young adults, study finds
Microsoft opens xCloud game streaming beta early on Tuesday
Apple confirms cloud gaming services like xCloud and Stadia violate App Store guidelines
Microsoft condemns Apple’s App Store policies
Facebook slams Apple’s App Store policies, launches Facebook Gaming on iOS without games
Fortnite vs Apple vs Google: a brief and very incomplete timeline
Epic offers new direct payment in Fortnite on iOS and Android to get around app store fees
Apple just kicked Fortnite off the App Store
Watch Epic’s Nineteen Eighty-Fortnite short mocking Apple right here
Epic Games is suing Apple
Fortnite for Android has also been kicked off the Google Play Store
Epic is suing Google over Fortnite’s removal from the Google Play Store
Google forced OnePlus to decimate a Fortnite launcher deal, claims Epic Games
Fortnite vs Apple vs Google: a brief and very incomplete timeline
Epic rallies Fortnite players against Apple with a warning that they’ll miss the next season
Microsoft’s Surface Duo arrives on Sept 10th for $1,399
Microsoft releases Surface Duo press event video with 30 minutes of demos
The Xbox Series X could launch on November 6th
Microsoft’s new Xbox Series S console confirmed in leaked controller packaging
When I don’t buy the new Xbox, Microsoft will laugh all the way to the bank
Android is becoming a worldwide earthquake detection network
Google is re-adding a Calendar app to Android Auto so you can see how to get to your next appointment
Google Maps finally works with CarPlay’s excellent dashboard mode
Google promises the next Wear OS update will launch apps up to 20 percent faster
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How a TikTok ban would affect the influencer economy
Tue, 11 Aug 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks with New York Times reporter Taylor Lorenz about what actually happens to TikTok users, creators, and the influencer economy if a ban on the app was implemented in the United States.
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Samsung Unpacked, Google Pixel 4a review, and Apple's new 27-inch iMac
Fri, 07 Aug 2020
Nilay, Dieter, Becca, Chris, and Dan discuss the products announced at Samsung's virtual event this week, as well as the Google Pixel 4a review, a new 27-inch iMac, and Greg Joswiak replacing Phil Schiller as head of Apple marketing.
Stories discussed this week:
Apple and Google’s COVID-19 tracking system will make its full US debut in new Virginia app
We can’t skip steps on the road to a COVID-19 vaccine
Twitter blocked Trump campaign account from tweeting over COVID-19 misinformation
Facebook removes Trump post for falsely claiming children are ‘almost immune’ to COVID-19
One tweet tried to identify a cop — then five people were charged with felony harassment
President Trump withdraws FCC renomination after 5G controversy
Donald Trump trying to control the FCC is a ‘disaster,’ says Sen. Ron Wyden
President Trump says he will ban TikTok in the US today
How the Trump administration could ‘ban’ TikTok
Apple is not interested in buying TikTok
Instagram launches Reels, its attempt to keep you off TikTok
Google announced Pixel 5, Pixel 4a 5G, and Pixel 4a all at once
Pixel 4a review
Galaxy Note 20 first look
The Galaxy Z Fold 2 is Samsung’s big promise that it can fix its foldable future
Samsung Galaxy Buds Live review
The best part of the Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 Plus is its screen
Sony WH-1000XM4 review
Greg Joswiak replaces Phil Schiller as head of Apple marketing
The new 27-inch iMac’s webcam isn’t just better; it’s smarter
Scientists rename human genes to stop Microsoft Excel from misreading them as dates
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Sen. Ron Wyden says Trump’s Section 230 FCC shuffle is a ‘disaster’
Tue, 04 Aug 2020
The Verge's Nilay Patel and Adi Robertson talk to Senator Ron Wyden, who co-authored Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
Wyden discusses the forced sale of TikTok to a US-based company, the bills out to reform Section 230, his new privacy bill preventing law enforcement from buying data on the open market, and how Trump's handling of recent FCC nominations is a "disaster."
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Tech antitrust hearing: the important moments and what comes next
Fri, 31 Jul 2020
Nilay, Makena, Adi, and Casey discuss the important moments from Congress' antitrust hearing with Apple’s Tim Cook, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, and Google’s Sundar Pichai.
Stories discussed this week:
Antivirus: A weekly digest of the latest COVID-19 research
Kodak is branching out into pharmaceuticals with US investment
Twitter forced Donald Trump Jr. to delete tweet spreading COVID-19 misinformation
Moms in Tech Facebook group splintering over allegations of racism
Google will keep employees working remotely until July 2021
NASA’s life-hunting Mars rover is officially on its way to the Red Planet
Tech antitrust hearing: all the news, updates, and documents from Congress’ big moment
Everything you need to know from the tech antitrust hearing
What Amazon, Google, Facebook, and Apple have in common
Antitrust panel says the messages show Zuckerberg trying to buy out his competition
Jeff Bezos can’t promise Amazon employees don’t access independent seller data
Google’s business model ‘is the problem,’ David Cicilline says
The iconic Flip Video almost became Google’s first camera, emails show
Amazon bought Ring for market position, not technology, emails suggest
Read Steve Jobs’ emails about why you can’t buy digital books in Amazon’s apps
Facebook usage and revenue continue to grow as the pandemic rages on
Google parent company Alphabet sees its first revenue decline in history
Apple reports strong Mac and iPad sales in record-breaking Q3 earnings
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Sandworm: A New Era of Cyberwar and the Hunt for the Kremlin's Most Dangerous Hackers
Tue, 28 Jul 2020
Verge editor-in-chief talks with Wired senior editor Andy Greenberg, author of Sandworm: A New Era of Cyberwar and the Hunt for the Kremlin's Most Dangerous Hackers.
Greenberg's book is all about a group of hackers inside the Russian government called Sandworm, who were responsible for damaging cyber warfare attacks in various countries over the past few years.
Andy and Nilay discuss the origins of Sandworm, the intricacies of their attacks, and how they escalated what we think of as "cyber war."
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Big tech antittrust hearing preview and the Xbox Games Showcase breakdown
Fri, 24 Jul 2020
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn talk with Casey Newton and Makena Kelly about what to expect at the upcoming big tech antitrust hearings featuring Jeff Bezos, Tim Cook, Mark Zuckerberg, and Sundar Pichai. Megan Farokhmanesh and Andrew Webster return to discuss the games announced at the Xbox Games Showcase this week.
Stories from this week:
New COVID testing strategy could speed up backlogged labs
‘COVID parties’ are a pandemic urban legend that won’t go away
The tech antitrust hearing is shaping up to be one for the ages
Antitrust investigations aren’t the biggest threat to Facebook’s future
The big winner in Slack’s Microsoft fight could be Google
Xbox Games Showcase: all the news from Microsoft’s July 2020 event
Sony’s first vlogging camera almost nails it
Latest iOS 14 beta offers more evidence of a 5.4-inch iPhone
Alexa will soon be able to launch Android and iOS apps using voice commands
Samsung promises new mobile and TV products at virtual September event
Blurry Samsung Galaxy Fold 2 leak hints at camera upgrades and gold model
Samsung’s Galaxy Note 20 Ultra may try to be the Xbox Phone
This is what Samsung’s bean-shaped Galaxy Buds Live will look like in your ears
The brain behind the Google Pixel camera is building a universal camera app for Adobe
Windows 10X might not arrive until 2021
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Election cybersecurity: How ready are we for November 3rd?
Tue, 21 Jul 2020
Cybersecurity journalist Kim Zetter talks with The Verge's Nilay Patel and Russell Brandom about the state of election security in the US — what methods are being proposed to stop potential interference in the voting process, the problems with mail-in voting during a pandemic, and how voting machines are not always the best solution for a presidential election.
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Twitter gets hacked / NBC's streaming service Peacock debuts / TikTok in the US is threatened
Fri, 17 Jul 2020
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Russell Brandom, and Julia Alexander discuss an unprecedented Twitter hack this week, the release of NBCUniversal's new streaming service Peacock, and the potential restrictions on TikTok in the US.
Stories discussed this week:
White House reportedly orders hospitals to bypass CDC during COVID-19 data collection
CDC employees say the agency has a culture of ‘racial aggression’
Etsy sellers are offering sheer mesh face masks that provide ‘very little protection’
Seventeen states sue Trump administration over new student visa guidelines
Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Elon Musk, Apple, and others hacked in unprecedented Twitter attack
Twitter shut off the ability for many people to tweet after massive hack
Twitter reveals that its own employee tools contributed to unprecedented hack
Lawmakers demand more details on Twitter’s massive hack
The massive Twitter hack could be a global security crisis
Twitter says passwords were spared in yesterday’s attack, but it’s still working to restore locked accounts
The FBI opens investigation into Twitter attack over national security concerns
White House says restrictions on TikTok could come in ‘weeks, not months’
TikTok’s biggest problem is outside its control
Peacock’s interface aims to recreate the feeling of live TV, but it comes up short
Why Peacock and HBO Max aren’t on the biggest streaming platforms
How to stream Peacock
Netflix names content chief Ted Sarandos as co-CEO
Netflix adds another whopping 10 million subscribers, but warns growth may slow
Microsoft discontinues Xbox One X and Xbox One S digital edition ahead of Series X launch
Xbox Series X can play all Xbox One games, unless they use Kinect
Microsoft to launch xCloud streaming free with Xbox Game Pass Ultimate in September
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Will virtual dates stick around after the pandemic?
Wed, 15 Jul 2020
The Verge's Why’d You Push That Button? is back for a special episode all about virtual dating in 2020. The pandemic has forced us all to stay at home when we can, which means if you want to go on a date, it may have to be done online.
Ashley Carman and Kaitlyn Tiffany return to talk to online daters and app makers about how they are adapting to virtual-only dating, and what features and behaviors will stick around after social distancing and the pandemic end.
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How Color of Change helped lead the Facebook boycott
Tue, 14 Jul 2020
Nilay Patel talks to Rashad Robinson, president of Color of Change.
Color of Change, an online racial justice organization, is one of the groups leading the ad boycott against Facebook and other social media companies in response to hate speech appearing on the platforms.
In the interview, Robinson talks about how the boycott campaign came together; his history pushing Facebook on issues of hate speech and civil rights; and meeting with Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg, and fellow leaders of the boycott to discuss the Facebook civil rights audit and how the company can improve the platform.
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iOS14 public beta is released, Google’s Pixel 3A is discontinued, and Samsung's event is coming soon
Fri, 10 Jul 2020
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Dan Seifert discuss Apple's iOS14 public beta, the future of Google's phones, and what to expect at Samsung's next hardware event.
Stories discussed this week:
This isn’t a COVID-19 wave — it’s a tsunami
Tracing the link between your phone and the next pandemic
Doctors are better at treating COVID-19 patients now than they were in March
After the pandemic, doctors want their new robot helpers to stay
Facebook and Instagram will remind people to wear face masks
White YouTube creators struggle to address past use of racist characters
Everything that the big social networks banned this week, ranked
Coca-Cola, Microsoft, Starbucks, Target, Unilever, Verizon: all the companies pulling ads from Facebook
Facebook auditors call out Mark Zuckerberg for ‘vexing and heartbreaking decisions’
iOS 14’s public beta is rolling out today
iOS and iPadOS 14 public beta preview: something for everybody
Reddit says it’s fixing code in its iOS app that copied clipboard contents
LinkedIn says it will stop repeatedly copying iOS clipboard
Apple promises to support Thunderbolt on its new ARM Macs
Intel’s Thunderbolt 4 standard looks to raise the bar for USB-C devices
Google’s Pixel 3A is discontinued, but these retailers are still selling it
Samsung reportedly won’t include chargers with some phones starting next year
Samsung needs a splashy product for its splashy product launch
Mysterious new Samsung wearable revealed in FCC filings
Logitech is already giving up on its Alexa-powered Harmony remote control
Google’s upcoming Nest speaker revealed in regulatory filing
BMW is going all-in on in-car microtransactions
A weakened version of the EARN IT Act advances out of committee
Fading Light: the story of Magic Leap’s lost mixed reality magnum opus
I built my own camera with a Raspberry Pi 4
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Bug bounties: the good and the bad of computer security
Tue, 07 Jul 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to founder and CEO of Luta Security Katie Moussouris.
Moussouris has a long history in computer security, working at Microsoft and the Department of Defense creating their first bug bounty programs to incentivize catching and reporting security bugs and vulnerabilities in software systems.
Nilay and Katie discuss the good and bad of bug bounties, encryption dilemmas with consumer devices, voting security in elections, and overall how we keep our software and networks secure.
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Introducing Land of the Giants: The Netflix Effect
Tue, 30 Jun 2020
This week we’re sharing an episode of Land of the Giants, a podcast from our friends at Recode and the Vox Media Podcast Network that examines the most powerful tech companies of our time.
The second season is called The Netflix Effect, and it’s hosted by Recode editors Rani Molla and Peter Kafka.
The Netflix Effect explores how a company that began as a small DVD-by-mail service ultimately upended Hollywood and completely changed the way we watch TV.
It’s a fascinating look at what really goes on behind the scenes at Netflix, one of the few companies that’s actually growing during the pandemic, and how they’re continuing to transform entertainment for you and me.
New episodes are released every Tuesday morning.
listen and subscribe to Land of the Giants: The Netflix Effect wherever you get The Vergecast.
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Apple announces macOS Big Sur, new silicon chips, and iOS 14
Fri, 26 Jun 2020
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn welcome back Verge alum and Wall Street Journal columnist Joanna Stern to discuss the big announcements from Apple's developer conference this week. Verge news editor Chaim Gartenberg joins in the second half to discuss the Apple updates you may have missed.
Stories discussed this week:
Fire and plague prepared these teens for the world
New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut will quarantine travelers from states with surging COVID-19 cases
The EU plans to ban US travelers indefinitely after haphazard COVID-19 response
The healing power of Black art
Big Sur is officially macOS 11.0 as Apple finally leaves OS X behind
Macs with new Apple-built chips will natively run iPhone and iPad apps
Apple’s new ARM-based Macs won’t support Windows through Boot Camp
Apple details iOS 14, its next major software update
iOS 14 and iPadOS 14 will let you set default email and browser apps
watchOS 7 announced with sleep tracking and rebranded Fitness app
Apple TV 4K will at last play YouTube in 4K with tvOS 14 update
AirPods updated with automatic switching and a new ‘Spatial Audio’ feature
Apple teases new tracking protections and an approximate location feature in iOS 14
Apple approves Hey email app, but the fight’s not over
After outcry, Apple will let developers challenge App Store guidelines
Hey opens its email service to everyone as Apple approves its app for good
Microsoft is shutting down Mixer and partnering with Facebook Gaming
Mixer failed — here's why
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Why activists need to think about cybersecurity
Tue, 23 Jun 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and policy editor Russell Brandom talk to founder of CryptoHarlem and cybersecurity expert Matt Mitchell, who works with activists to develop strategies to leave less data behind and help mitigate threats to their cause.
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WWDC predictions / Limiting Section 230 Immunity to Good Samaritans Act
Fri, 19 Jun 2020
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn run through the most interesting rumors and predictions of announcements at Apple's WWDC next week. Adi Robertson joins to discuss the latest threat to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
Stories discussed in this episode:
Cheap steroid reportedly improves survival for severe COVID-19 cases
FDA ends emergency authorization for hydroxychloroquine
Why there’s so much confusion around asymptomatic COVID-19 cases
The gadgets Late Night with Seth Meyers uses to keep the show running from home
Google commits $175 million to racial equity with focus on black-owned businesses
Instagram’s CEO says the platform is examining how its policies affect black users
Apple faces another EU antitrust complaint as App Store pressure grows
Apple says the App Store created $519 billion in commerce last year
Justice Department asks Congress for a sharp cut to websites’ legal protections
Senate Republicans want to make it easier to sue tech companies for bias
Facebook removes Trump ads for using Nazi imagery
Google Ads bans Zero Hedge for racist content, but reverses
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Basecamp CTO David Heinemeier Hansson and Rep. David Cicilline on Apple's monopolistic app store fees
Thu, 18 Jun 2020
Apple is acting like a monopolist and a bully, according to the chairman of the House Antitrust Committee.
Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) joined The Vergecast along with Basecamp CTO David Heinemeier Hansson to discuss the plight of Hey, Basecamp’s new $99-a-year premium email service. Earlier this week, Heinemeier Hansson revealed that Apple had rejected the Hey iPhone app from the App Store because it didn’t offer any way to sign up and pay in the app itself — which would require giving Apple a 30 percent cut of the fee.
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Wireless Microphone
Need a Mic for podcasting? DJI Mic 2 (2 TX + 1 RX + Charging Case), Wireless Lavalier Microphone, Intelligent Noise Cancelling
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and Verge reporter Makena Kelly talk to Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts about bringing broadband access into rural areas, the technology plights caused by the pandemic, privacy concerns over contract tracing, and the race to 5G.
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Android 11 beta / PS5 reveal / Amazon, IBM, and Microsoft ban facial recognition tech for police
Fri, 12 Jun 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Tinder CEO Elie Seidman on finding love during the pandemic
It’s hard to figure out how often people without symptoms spread COVID-19
Inside Nextdoor’s ‘Karen problem’
Nextdoor tells community leads to allow Black Lives Matter discussions after exposé
Contact tracing programs have to work with local communities to be successful
Apple launches $100 million Racial Equity and Justice Initiative
Android 11 beta: all the announcements
Android 11: conversations, bubbles, and making sense of complexity
Five new features Android 11 borrows from the iPhone
Android 11 may be the best texting platform if you use multiple chat apps
Apple’s virtual WWDC keynote will take place on June 22nd at 1PM ET
Apple will announce move to ARM-based Macs later this month, says report
Apple pulls podcast apps in China after government pressure
The new Sonos app and S2 update are available now
IBM will no longer offer, develop, or research facial recognition technology
Amazon bans police from using its facial recognition technology for the next year
Microsoft won’t sell facial recognition to police until Congress passes new privacy law
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Tinder CEO Elie Seidman on finding love during the pandemic
Tue, 09 Jun 2020
Tinder and its parent company Match Group have weathered the COVID-19 pandemic relatively well, all things considered. User engagement is up, as is interest around new product features, like video calls. More than six years after its launch, Tinder is finally introducing a one-on-one video calling feature that it says will be heavily moderated for content and safety. At the same time, Tinder CEO Elie Seidman says he and his team are focusing on how to keep young people coming to the app and how they can build digital relationships inside of it, especially as in-person dates slow down.Seidman joins Vergecast host Nilay Patel and Verge senior reporter Ashley Carman for a chat about the future of the platform, how it’ll keep people safe over video calls, and what happens to its Tinder U initiative that it’s focused on for years. Plus, he explains how Joe Exotic might be more important to a relationship than living near each other.
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SpaceX launches humans to space / Facebook's ongoing moderation controversy / Sonos Arc's convincing surround sound
Fri, 05 Jun 2020
Stories from this episode:
Blaming protesters for COVID-19 spread ignores the bigger threats to health
5G coronavirus conspiracy theorists are endangering the workers who keep networks running
Telehealth wasn’t designed for non-English speakers
The pandemic has made it harder to buy a new laptop
Byte flight
The United States will cut ties with the World Health Organization, says President Trump
FCC extends deadline for ISPs to quit charging customers who use their own equipment
K-pop stans overwhelm app after Dallas police ask for videos of protesters
SpaceX successfully launches first crew to orbit, ushering in new era of spaceflight
A rocket launch can’t unite us until the space world acknowledges our divisions
Watch NASA astronauts fly SpaceX’s Crew Dragon using touchscreens
SpaceX’s Crew Dragon successfully docks with the space station
What the future of the space station looks like after SpaceX’s historic launch
Meet the cute stuffed dinosaur that hitched a ride on SpaceX’s historic launch
SpaceX is launching its latest batch of internet satellites, including one with a visor
Trump’s Twitter order violates the First Amendment, new lawsuit claims
Facebook won’t take any action on Trump’s post about shootings in Minnesota
Facebook employees walk out in protest of Donald Trump’s posts
Twitter takes action against Rep. Matt Gaetz for glorifying violence
In leaked audio, Mark Zuckerberg expressed ‘disgust’ with Trump’s posts
Mark Zuckerberg defends hands-off Trump policy to employees after walkout
Nine things we learned from leaked audio of Mark Zuckerberg facing his employees
Ban them all
What other social networks can learn from Snapchat’s rebuke of Trump
Huawei P40 Pro review: there’s a catch
HBO Max won’t hit AT&T data caps, but Netflix and Disney Plus will
The Sonos Arc puts convincing surround sound in a single soundbar
Here’s our best look yet at Google’s new Android TV streaming device
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The head of HBO Max on launching without Roku, adding 4K HDR, and the Snyder Cut
Tue, 02 Jun 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and Verge reporter Julia Alexander talk to Otter Media CEO Tony Goncalves on his new project overseeing HBO Max.
Goncalves discusses AT&T's strategy for the WarnerMedia streaming service, the dispute with getting the app on Roku and Amazon, HBO Max's place in the streaming wars, and how their data usage works on mobile.
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Trump signs executive order targeting social media companies / HBO Max launches in the US
Fri, 29 May 2020
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn welcome back Adi Robertson and Casey Newton to the show to discuss Trump's executive order targeting social media companies like Twitter, Facebook, and Google. Julia Alexander also stops by to discuss the launch of WarnerMedia's new streaming service HBO Max.
Stories discussed this week:
Google search results will take ‘page experience’ into account next year
T-Mobile now supports cross-carrier RCS messaging
Google Messages may finally be adding end-to-end encryption for RCS
Why Twitter labeling Trump’s tweets as “potentially misleading” is a big step forward
FCC commissioner says Trump’s Section 230 plan ‘does not work’
Donald Trump is starting a messy fight with the entire internet
White House organizes harassment of Twitter employee as Trump threatens company
Donald Trump signs executive order targeting social media companies
YouTube is deleting comments with two phrases that insult ...
YouTube fixes error that deleted comments critical of the ...
YouTube says China-linked comment deletions weren't ...
HBO Max is full of potential, but its biggest hurdle remains AT&T’s messy execution
HBO Max is taking on Netflix with human curation instead of solely relying on algorithms
HBO Max will use anime from Crunchyroll to compete with Netflix’s growing empire
All eight Harry Potter movies are streaming on HBO Max much earlier than expected
Snyder Cut fans demanded AT&T’s attention, and now AT&T is demanding their cash
Here are the hundreds of classic movies people can stream on HBO Max
You can no longer subscribe to HBO via Apple TV Channels
HBO Max’s catalog is full of weird holes
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Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield on competing with Microsoft, the future of work, and managing all those notifications
Tue, 26 May 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield about remote working, competition with Microsoft, and the way technology changes how we communicate.
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Microsoft Build 2020, Elon Musk's factory play, and Joe Rogan moves to Spotify
Fri, 22 May 2020
It’s Friday, which means there’s a new episode of The Vergecast to fill you in on all of the news from this week. Join Nilay, Dieter, and a rotation of other editors for everything that you need to know. The three topics covered this week are:
Microsoft’s Build developer conference
Elon Musk’s... active month
Spotify getting exclusive streaming rights to The Joe Rogan Experience podcast
During the first part of the show, Verge senior editor Tom Warren joins Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn to discuss what was announced at Microsoft Build 2020 and what’s next for Windows software.
Microsoft Lists is a new app designed for Teams, SharePoint, and Outlook
Microsoft’s new Fluid Office document is Google Docs on steroids
Microsoft to unify Windows desktop and UWP apps with new Project Reunion
Microsoft’s new PowerToys Run launcher for Windows 10 is now available to download
Microsoft Edge is getting a new sidebar search feature and Pinterest integration
Microsoft is bringing Linux GUI apps to Windows 10
Microsoft’s new Windows Package Manager is already better than the Windows Store
Microsoft Surface Earbuds review: comfort at a cost
Microsoft Surface Go 2 review: don’t push it
First look: Microsoft’s 13.5-inch Surface Book 3
A little over 35 minutes into the show, Verge deputy editor Elizabeth Lopatto updates us on Elon Musk’s latest endeavors, including his battle with Alameda County over opening his factory, his protests against lockdown orders, and SpaceX’s upcoming Crew Dragon spacecraft launch.
Elon Musk’s battle to reopen Tesla’s Fremont plant may shape his legacy
Tesla drops its lawsuit against Alameda County over lockdown order
Elon Musk is playing Twitter footsie with the fringe right
Here’s why Elon Musk keeps raising the price of Tesla’s ‘Full Self-Driving’ option
Elon Musk’s Boring Company finishes digging Las Vegas tunnels
Meet the first NASA astronauts SpaceX will launch into orbit
Last but not least, senior reporter Ashley Carman stops by to explain the importance of Spotify landing The Joe Rogan Experience podcast as an exclusive.
Joe Rogan’s podcast is becoming a Spotify exclusive
It just took $700 million or so to put Spotify on top of the podcasting world
Google suspended a popular Android podcast app because it catalogs COVID-19 content
There’s a whole lot more discussed in this episode, so listen here or in your preferred podcast player to hear it all.
Other stories discussed in this episode:
Mark Zuckerberg on taking his massive workforce remote
Students are failing AP tests because the College Board can’t handle iPhone photos
Amazon reportedly delays Prime Day until September as it works to restore normal shipping
Here’s how NYC is using powerful UV light to kill the coronavirus on subways and buses
The FCC has received hundreds of complaints about carriers’ coronavirus pledge
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Sundar Pichai on managing Google through the pandemic
Tue, 19 May 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and executive editor Dieter Bohn interview Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai.
Pichai disusses Google’s COVID-19 response: the way the company is handling the pandemic and how he’s working with Tim Cook from Apple on exposure tracking.
They also talked about how he is running one of the biggest companies in the world remotely and how the company is handling employees working from home
Of course they talk about their products and services: the future of the Pixel, competing with companies like Apple and Samsung, and RCS messaging.
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Questions about Facebook's oversight board, Quibi's popularity, and the rumored Pixel 4a
Fri, 15 May 2020
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn welcome Dan Seifert, Casey Newton, and Julia Alexander to talk about gadget news, Facebook's oversight board, and updates in the streaming world.
Stories discussed this week:
The doomsday bunker market is thriving amid the coronavirus pandemic
Amazon asks Congress to pass a law against price gouging during national crisis
Uber’s response to COVID-19: face masks, selfies, and fewer people in the car
The lockdown live-streaming numbers are out, and they’re huge
Elon Musk defies coronavirus order and asks to be arrested
Tesla has already started making cars again at its California factory
Twitter introducing new labels for tweets with misleading COVID-19 information
Google says that the majority of its employees will work from home until 2021
The mastermind of Google’s Pixel camera quietly left the company in March
Google Pixel 4a Performance Review tests the phone's ...
Android 11's public beta to launch with June 3rd live stream …
TCL wants to be the next big name in budget phones
Apple 13-inch MacBook Pro (2020) review: return to baseline
Dell launches new XPS 17 and redesigned XPS 15 with 16:10 edge-to-edge displays
Alienware’s Area-51m, m15, and m17 laptops are getting new 10th Gen Intel chips and upgraded GPUs
Facebook will pay $52 million in settlement with moderators who developed PTSD on the job
Half of all Facebook moderators may develop mental health issues
How Facebook is using AI to combat COVID-19 misinformation and detect ‘hateful memes’
Facebook’s independent oversight board could be overwhelmed by the challenge
Tenet is now Hollywood’s litmus test for what happens next
The Mandalorian’s second season won’t be delayed, says Disney CEO
AMC Theaters will no longer play Universal movies after Trolls ...
Alamo Drafthouse launches Alamo on Demand VOD service
HBO Max will use anime from Crunchyroll to compete with Netflix’s growing empire
HBO is teaming up with Scener to give subscribers the ability to watch TV together
WarnerMedia expands free HBO Max deal to HBO subscribers ...
Quibi will add sharing features as the app struggles to find subscribers
Jeffrey Katzenberg Blames Pandemic for Quibi’s Rough Start
Major CBS All Access changes coming this summer as company speeds up relaunch
Wannabe influencers are being trained to film a believable YouTube apology video
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How pandemic disinformation is affecting social networks
Tue, 12 May 2020
Alex Stamos, former chief security officer of Facebook and director of the Stanford Internet Observatory talks to Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and editor Casey Newton about his role consulting on security for Zoom, disinformation around the pandemic on social media, and the threat of foreign interference in the 2020 election.
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New releases: Surface Go 2, Macbook Pro 13-inch, and the first Xbox Series X gameplay footage (Goodbye Paul)
Fri, 08 May 2020
Stories discussed this week:
The disappointing truth about antibody testing
Apple is giving $10 million to COVID-19 testing kit company
FDA authorizes CRISPR-based test for COVID-19
Sen. Ed Markey wants the FCC to rethink its broadband deployment plans
An Amazon warehouse worker in New York has died of COVID-19
An Amazon VP’s resignation has cast a spotlight on the company’s working conditions
Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders demand Amazon explain whistleblower firings
Pittsburgh’s airport is the first in the US to use UV-cleaning robots
NYC will use powerful ultraviolet lamps to kill the coronavirus on subways and buses
ESPN to air live NBA 2K League games
We’ve known how to make healthier buildings for decades
The spring of iterative hardware updates
MacBook Pro 13-inch: come for the keyboard, stay for the performance
The saga of Apple’s bad butterfly MacBook keyboards is finally over
Microsoft’s new Surface Go 2 has a bigger display and better Intel processor
Microsoft Surface Book 3: new Nvidia GPUs, up to ... - The Verge
Watch the first Xbox Series X gameplay footage, showing off ray-tracing and graphics of the next-gen console
These 11 new games will get free upgrades for the Xbox Series X
Here are the first 13 games optimized for the Xbox Series X
Xbox Series X Optimized games promise 4K up to 120fps, ray tracing, and fast load times
Madden 21 shows that cross-gen gaming on Xbox Series X and PS5 could be messy
Sonos announces the Arc, its first Dolby Atmos soundbar
Sonos will launch its new app and big S2 software update on June 8th
Google unifies all of its messaging and communication apps into a single team
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Sonos CEO discusses the Arc and customer backlash over leaving old products behind
Wed, 06 May 2020
This week we saw Sonos announce several new products, most significantly the Arc, which is the company’s first soundbar to support Dolby Atmos. Other new devices include the Sonos Five speaker and a refreshed Sub, and all three will only work with Sonos’ new S2 app that launches next month.
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence sat down virtually with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel for The Vergecast to discuss the new products, the S2 update, the backlash that Sonos took from customers over its “Recycle Mode”, and the perception that the company is leaving customers with older Sonos hardware behind.
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The 3 new CEOs of Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile, Big Tech's quarterly earnings, and Zoom's misleading user numbers
Fri, 01 May 2020
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul discuss quarterly earnings from tech companies, the new CEOs of the three biggest mobile carriers, and how Trolls World Tour may be changing the movie theater business.
Stories discussed this week:
More than 1 million people in the US have tested positive for COVID-19
No one knows when the COVID-19 pandemic will end
It’s impossible to count everyone with COVID-19
Elon Musk is dangerously wrong about the novel coronavirus
Elon Musk says shelter-in-place orders during COVID-19 are ‘fascist’
Americans are surprisingly open to letting their phones be used for coronavirus tracking
Apple and Google have begun testing their COVID-19 exposure notification API
How a team of NASA engineers developed a ventilator for COVID-19 patients in just a month
Apple’s latest iOS beta makes it easier to unlock an iPhone while wearing a face mask
Zoom admits it doesn’t have 300 million users, corrects misleading claims
Google Meet video conferencing is now free for anybody
Messenger Rooms are Facebook’s answer to Zoom and Houseparty for the pandemic
Microsoft Teams jumps 70 percent to 75 million daily active users
Google Duo video calls are about to look a whole lot better
Facebook usage is surging, but the company warns it may be temporary
New DisplayPort spec enables 16K video over USB-C
AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson is stepping down, John Stankey to serve as new CEO
John Legere abruptly resigns from T-Mobile board of directors ‘to pursue other options’
Trolls World Tour made nearly $100 million without theaters, but theaters aren’t obsolete
AMC Theaters will no longer play Universal movies after Trolls World Tour’s on-demand Next year’s Oscars will allow streaming-only movies to qualify, but with heavy restrictionssuccess
Regal Cinemas warns Universal over Trolls World Tour skipping theaters
WarnerMedia expands free HBO Max deal to HBO subscribers who pay through Apple’s services
Oppo Find X2 Pro review: supercar smartphone
Intel NUC 9 Extreme review: small size, big potential
Google Pixel Buds review: second time’s the charm
DJI’s new Mavic Air 2 has an upgraded camera and much longer flying time
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How Amazon's dominance is more visible during a pandemic
Tue, 28 Apr 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel interviews co-director of the Institute for Local Self Reliance Stacy Mitchell about her critique of Amazon's power in America's marketplace.
As Amazon becomes more essential infrastructure during the coronavirus pandemic, Nilay and Stacy discuss the increased visibility of Amazon's monopoly power and the way it treats its workers.
Is it possible to regulate a company that people use and love so much?
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Reviews of Apple's Magic Keyboard, iPhone SE, and Logitech Combo Touch
Fri, 24 Apr 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Google is now listing COVID-19 testing centers in search results
CEOs sticking with Trump’s ‘open the economy’ group after he tweets call to ‘liberate’ states
Bill Gates says countries will probably use interviews and databases to track the coronavirus
Bill Gates is now the leading target for coronavirus conspiracies, says report
Connecticut suburb deploys ‘pandemic drones’ to try to enforce social distancing
Boston Dynamics’ Spot robot is helping hospitals remotely treat coronavirus patients
The jury is still out on Zoom trials
Marco Polo has been around for years, but it’s blowing up amid the pandemic
Lo-fi beats to quarantine to are booming on YouTube
Apps aren’t a reliable way to measure blood oxygen levels
First at-home COVID-19 testing kit authorized by the FDA
iPhone SE review
Magic Keyboard for the iPad Pro review: the best way to turn an iPad into a laptop
Logitech Combo Touch review
Microsoft prepares to launch Surface Book 3 and Surface Go 2
Apple will reportedly use 12-core 5nm ARM processor in a 2021 Mac
LG V60 Dual Screen review: V for versatility
Motorola returns to flagship phones with the Edge Plus - The ...
Wi-Fi is getting its biggest upgrade in 20 years
Snapchat use is, predictably, way up with everyone home and staring at screens
Netflix adds 15 million subscribers as people stream more than ever, but warns about tough road ahead
Netflix says Tiger King is as popular as Stranger Things
HBO Max will launch on May 27th
Fandango just purchased Vudu from Walmart to better compete against Amazon, iTunes
Sonos launches its own streaming radio service
Samsung smart TVs are getting an Apple Music app
Google Duo video calls are about to look a whole lot better
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Interface Live: Casey Newton and Sarah Frier talk Instagram’s hidden history
Wed, 22 Apr 2020
Part of The Verge's Interface Live series, silicon valley editor Casey Newton talks with Bloomberg reporter Sarah Frier about her new book No Filter, which delves into the history of Instagram and how the app became what it is today.
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Apple's new iPhone SE, OnePlus 8 Pro review, and Verizon buys BlueJeans
Fri, 17 Apr 2020
Stories discussed this week:
The Interface Live on Zoom: the hidden history of Instagram, with Bloomberg reporter Sarah Frier
In a self-isolated world, developers are learning to make games from home
How GM and Ford switched out pickup trucks for breathing machines
The search for COVID-19 treatments shows how messy science can be
How Medium became the best and worst place for coronavirus news
Unemployment checks are being held up by a coding language almost nobody knows
How you’ll use Apple and Google’s coronavirus tracking tool
Apple’s second-gen iPhone SE is here: all the news and details
Even ‘small’ phones are big now
The iPhone SE 2’s camera setup is going to lean on Apple’s software
The new Moto G Stylus and G Power are surprisingly adept cameraphones
Samsung’s Galaxy S10 Lite will launch in the US on April 17th for $650
Google’s midrange Pixel 4A could launch soon, and there may not be an XL version
Apple is tweaking how MacBooks charge to extend battery lifespan
Apple’s new Magic Keyboard for the iPad Pro goes up for preorder, ships next week
Apple’s over-ear headphones reportedly have swappable ear pads and headbands
Here are five things with four wheels that cost less than the Mac Pro’s $700 wheel kit
Go read this analysis of what the iPad Pro’s LIDAR sensor is capable of
OnePlus 8 Pro review: big league
OnePlus 8 review: familiar formula
OnePlus announces the Bullets Wireless Z headphones
The $579 RedMagic 5G is the first phone with a 144Hz display
Verizon is buying BlueJeans, one of Zoom’s videoconferencing rivals
Google is reportedly building its own processor for Pixels and Chromebooks
Foxconn’s buildings in Wisconsin are still empty, one year later
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Apple and Google are building a coronavirus tracking system into iOS and Android
Fri, 10 Apr 2020
Nilay Patel talks with The Verge's Adi Robertson, Casey Newton, and Nicole Wetsman about Apple and Google announcing a system for tracking the spread of the new coronavirus, allowing users to share data through Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transmissions and approved apps from health organizations.
Links:
Apple and Google are building a coronavirus tracking system into iOS and Android
What is contact tracing?
Why Bluetooth apps are bad at discovering new cases of COVID-19
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Quibi's launch week, Asus laptop reviews, and Sony's PS5 controller
Fri, 10 Apr 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Webcams have become impossible to find, and prices are skyrocketing
Why the 5G coronavirus conspiracy theories don’t make sense
UK mobile carriers politely ask people to stop burning 5G towers
No one’s getting new emoji in 2021 because of the pandemic
Foxconn will produce ventilators at its controversial Wisconsin plant
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 review: AMD has rewritten the rules
Nvidia’s RTX Super GPUs for laptops have arrived — here’s where you’ll see them first
Asus’ ROG Zephyrus Duo 15 is a gaming laptop with two screens
MSI announces new laptops with Comet Lake H and new Nvidia GPUs
Gigabyte’s latest gaming laptop supports Intel’s most powerful 10th Gen Core i9 processor yet
Razer’s new Blade 15 has powerful specs and an improved keyboard
Samsung Galaxy Chromebook review
Asus Chromebook Flip C436 review
Microsoft reportedly delays Surface Neo beyond 2020
Can Meg Whitman outwit a pandemic with Quibi?
Quibi app review: shifting landscape
Quibi’s shows are fun, familiar, and a little forgettable
It’s impossible to screenshot a Quibi show, and that’s detrimental to its success
Disney Plus surpasses 50 million subscribers
Sony reveals new DualSense controller for the PlayStation 5
Microsoft’s Xbox Game Bar is getting custom widgets and its own store on Windows
The OnePlus 8 Pro will have super fast, 30W wireless charging
Google’s midrange Pixel 4A could launch soon, and there may not be an XL version
Google’s Hangouts Meet is now just Google Meet
Google extends free access to advanced teleconferencing features to September 30th
Google trademarks 'Google Meet' and 'Google Chat,' support ...
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Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott on AI for rural America
Tue, 07 Apr 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott about his new book Reprogramming the American Dream: From Rural America to Silicon Valley―Making AI Serve Us All.
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Zoom's privacy concerns, Apple buys Dark Sky, and Sprint is dead
Fri, 03 Apr 2020
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul talk to Tom Warren about Zoom's privacy and security concerns.
The crew also looks back at the history of Sprint after it finally merged with T-Mobile.
Paul's weekly segment "If I were a rich man" updates the keyboard-in-the-front club.
The show ends with some chat about Apple buying the weather app Dark Sky and allowing in-app rentals on their mobile devices.
Stories discussed in this episode:
After walkouts, Amazon pledges temperature checks and masks in all warehouses
Jeff Bezos’ space company is pressuring employees to launch a tourist rocket during the pandemic
Zoom is leaking some user information because of an issue with how the app groups contacts
Zoom faces a privacy and security backlash as it surges in ...
Zoom announces 90-day feature freeze to fix privacy and ...
Zoom isn't actually end-to-end encrypted
Zoom quickly fixes 'malware-like' macOS installer with new ...
Microsoft aims to win back consumers with new Microsoft 365 subscriptions
T-Mobile completes merger with Sprint, John Legere steps down as CEO
Sprint is dead. Long live Sprint
What’s next for Sprint customers now that the T-Mobile merger has gone through?
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 review: AMD has rewritten the rules
Apple now lets some video streaming apps bypass the App Store cut
Amazon Prime Video now allows in-app rentals and purchases on the iPhone, iPad, and Apple TV
Apple acquires popular weather app Dark Sky and will shut down the Android version
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Amy Webb is a quantitative futurist
Tue, 31 Mar 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to founder and CEO of The Future Today Institute Amy Webb.
Amy is also a professor at NYU's Stern School of Business and recently came out with a book called The Big Nine: How the Tech Titans and Their Thinking Machines Could Warp Humanity.
During the coronavirus pandemic, Amy and Nilay discuss whether we could have predicted this outbreak, how it can change trends in the future, and how it may even accelerate trends like AI and cloud-based robotics.
They also talk about The Future Today Institute's 2020 Tech Trend Report that was released this month — which is a quantitative look at the big trends that may dominate the future.
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Reviews for the Macbook Air and iPad Pro (2020) and how the coronavirus is affecting tech companies and culture
Fri, 27 Mar 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Amazon warehouse workers are outraged after a coworker tested positive for COVID-19 and they weren’t notified
‘We’re all going to get sick eventually’: Amazon workers are struggling to provide for a nation in quarantine
It’s time for a regular Amazon daily coronavirus briefing
Twitter locks account encouraging coronavirus ‘chickenpox parties’
Zoom is 2020’s hottest yoga studio
Apple says customers must wait to pick up repairs locked inside its retail stores
Best Buy moves to curbside pickup only as it sees surge in orders for home office equipment
Disney Plus and Facebook are also reducing streaming quality in Europe
Amazon and Apple are reducing streaming quality to lessen broadband strain in Europe
YouTube joins Netflix in reducing video quality in Europe
YouTube creators figure out how to film during a pandemic
Fashion influencers are rethinking their curated aesthetics because they can’t leave their houses
Fox will broadcast NASCAR’s substitute sim racing ‘season’ on television
Pro drivers are competing with gamers after F1 and NASCAR canceled races
How to watch movies with friends online
Everything you need to know about the coronavirus
Subscribe to Home Screen: a newsletter to brighten your inbox
Apple MacBook Air (2020) review: the best Mac for most people
Apple iPad Pro review 2020: small spec bump, big camera bump
Never buy hardware today based on a promise of software tomorrow
The new MacBook Air and iPad Pro are already discounted on Amazon
Huawei hopes the P40 Pro can lure you away from Google
Living a Google-free life with a Huawei phone
Dell now lets you control iPhones from its PCs
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Impossible Foods CEO Patrick Brown on a new kind of meat
Tue, 24 Mar 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to Impossible Foods CEO Patrick Brown about Impossible's mission to replace animal-derived meat worldwide and what that would mean for our climate and culture.
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Apple announces new iPad Pro and Macbook Air, Sony reveals PS5 specs, and confusion around the coronavirus testing website
Fri, 20 Mar 2020
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul discuss the new iPad Pro and Macbook Air that Apple announced this week, the confusion around Google's coronavirus testing website, and the specs revealed for the PS5.
Stories discussed this week:
Comcast modestly raises slow internet speeds for low-income users because of coronavirus
AT&T is suspending broadband data caps for home internet customers due to coronavirus
AT&T, Comcast, Verizon and others agree not to overcharge customers during coronavirus
Verily’s coronavirus screening website launches with very limited access
Trump’s Google testing announcement mixed up several real projects
The White House still can’t explain what’s going on with the coronavirus screening website
Coronavirus testing shouldn’t be this complicated
Apple announces online-only WWDC 2020 due to coronavirus spread
Apple announces new iPad Pro with trackpad support and a wild keyboard cover
iPadOS 13.4 adds full mouse and trackpad support
The iPad Pro is ready to supplant the Mac just as the MacBook Air is great again
Logitech’s iPad keyboard case with trackpad costs half as much as Apple’s
The new iPad Pro’s LIDAR sensor is an AR hardware solution in search of software
The new iPad Pro’s LIDAR scanner can turn a living room into an AR game of Hot Lava
You can try the iPad’s new trackpad and mouse support right now with Apple’s public beta
Apple announces new MacBook Air with improved keyboard, faster performance, and more storage
Moog and Korg are offering synth apps for free while we’re all stuck at home
PS5 vs. Xbox Series X: a complicated battle of SSD and GPU speeds
Sony says the PlayStation 5’s SSD will completely change next-gen level design
The Xbox Series X specs look impressive, but that’s not enough
Here’s how Xbox Series X removable storage will work
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FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on broadband access across America
Tue, 17 Mar 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and Verge policy reporter Makena Kelly talk to FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel about American broadband policy and the advocacy for internet access, broadband competition, and net neutrality.
While the coronavirus pandemic is happening and people are working online at home, now is a perfect time to talk about who has access to the broadband, who doesn't, how much it costs, and how we can get it to more people for less money.
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Galaxy S20 review and leaks of iOS 14, watchOS 7, and Pixel 4a
Fri, 13 Mar 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Dr Disrespect is the villain who could change the future of TV
This backpack has it all: Kevlar, batteries, and a federal investigation
The art and craft of scientific glassblowing
Samsung Galaxy S20 review: just right
Leaked watchOS 7 code reveals new ‘International’ watchface
Apple watchOS 7 features leak: sleep tracking, watchface sharing, and more
Apple Watches may soon detect blood oxygen levels
More iOS 14 leaks hint at next Apple hardware and a new home screen view
iOS 14 will reportedly have improved mouse cursor support
New MacBook models with scissor-switch keyboards are reportedly coming soon
Google Pixel 4A hands-on reveals specs, camera, and a possible release window
Google can reportedly revoke Android licenses if TV makers also partner with Amazon
A sneaky attempt to end encryption is worming its way through Congress
Congress takes aim at Google search in antitrust hearing
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COVID-19: How it spreads, how to test for it, and economic impact
Tue, 10 Mar 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks with Verge health reporter Nicole Wetsman and Verge deputy editor Liz Lopatto about the health concerns of the coronavirus outbreak as well as its economic effect in the United States.
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Mac Pro and Pro Display review, TCL's folding phone concepts, and rumors of an iPad keyboard with a trackpad
Fri, 06 Mar 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Everything you need to know about the coronavirus
The Verge Guide to 2020 Election
Congress proposes anti-child abuse rules to punish web platforms — and raises fears about encryption
The Verge tech survey 2020
Apple reportedly releasing an iPad keyboard with a trackpad later this year
Apple is planning to launch a 14.1-inch MacBook Pro with a ...
Mac Pro review: the price of power - The Verge
Apple Pro Display XDR review: category of one
TCL’s new foldable and rollable concepts imagine a wild future of phones
Vivo’s Apex 2020 concept has breakthrough cameras and an ultra-curved screen
Get a closer look at the Xiaomi Mi Mix Alpha in MKBHD’s hands-on video
New Google Pixel features coming this month include more emoji, dark mode scheduling, and Google Pay improvements
Samsung launches its 2020 lineup of 4K and 8K QLED TVs
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
This is an affiliate link. If you buy through this link we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Political advertising on social media, privacy and encryption legislation, broadband access in rural communities, and other tech policy in 2020
Tue, 03 Mar 2020
Verge policy reporter Makena Kelly chats with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel about important points in US tech policy recently as we go into the 2020 presidential election.
Nilay and Makena get into the policy topics that The Verge will be covering heavily this year — including political advertising on social media, amendments to Section 230, encryption and privacy legislation, and broadband access in rural areas.
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Galaxy S20 Ultra's camera issues and Bob Iger steps down as Disney CEO
Fri, 28 Feb 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra review: shutter bug
Samsung pledges to improve Galaxy S20 camera after reviewers see issues
Bob Iger steps down as Disney CEO, replaced by Bob Chapek
Meet Bob Chapek, Disney’s new CEO and the Tim Cook to Iger’s Steve Jobs
Disney’s new corporate synergy nightmare is personified in Simpsons promo
New Juul patent application hints at AI-powered vape to help users quit nicotine
Apple’s new Mac Pro and Pro Display technology overviews show off just how ‘pro’ they are
Sony did a phone with a headphone jack!
LG’s new V60 ThinQ 5G shows steady evolution for a company in need of big change
Amazon’s Eero routers get updated with Apple’s HomeKit support
Samsung Galaxy Buds Plus review: better sound, even better stamina
Huawei announces the Mate XS foldable with a more durable display and faster processor
Xbox Series X official specs: AMD CPU, 12 teraflop GPU, SSD, and more
Microsoft’s Xbox Series X will be able to resume games even after a reboot
Microsoft confirms Xbox Series X will support "four generations of gaming"
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Argo’s CEO explains why its fleet of self-driving taxis won’t be all-electric (at first)
Tue, 25 Feb 2020
One of the burning questions facing the world of self-driving cars is whether it makes sense to go all-electric or not. Some, like GM-owned Cruise, is all in on battery-electric vehicles. Others are going half-and-half, like Waymo building a fleet that includes both all-electric Jaguar I-Pace SUVs and gas-burning Chrysler Pacifica minivans.
Argo, the Pittsburgh-based self-driving company backed by Ford and Volkswagen, has concerns about an all-electric fleet, especially when it comes to the need to recoup the cost of all the expensive technology that makes the car autonomous. The company’s CEO, Brian Salesky, sat down with The Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and senior reporter Andrew Hawkins to explain why.
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Galaxy Z Flip review, CBS streaming service revamp plans, and Android 11 features so far
Fri, 21 Feb 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Folding glass: how, why, and the truth of Samsung’s Z Flip
A Motorola Razr’s screen is reportedly peeling right on the fold
Galaxy Z Flip teardown reveals that its hinge brushes may not block much dust
Galaxy Z Flip durability test calls Samsung’s Ultra Thin ‘Glass’ into question
Leaked images show TCL prototype phone with expandable, slide-out display
Dish Network floats merger with DirecTV over pace of cord-cutting
CBS is planning an improved streaming service after squandering its head start with All Access
HBO and HBO Max are headed to YouTube TV
HBO Max’s first ad wants to remind you how many of your favorite shows and movies it owns
Disney+ has surpassed 28 million subscribers since launch …
Tiger’s retro LCD handheld games are making a comeback
The most interesting new Android 11 features so far
Android 11 will fix dozens of small annoyances, but what about the apps?
Google releases Android 11 developer preview earlier than expected
Apple considers allowing apps like Chrome and Gmail to be set as iOS defaults
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Chief Product Officer of Adobe Scott Belsky returns
Tue, 18 Feb 2020
Chief Product Officer of Adobe Scott Belsky chats with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and reporter Dami Lee about what he learned from putting Photoshop on the iPad, adapting products to new creators and platforms, Creative Cloud for the Mac Pro, and the goals of the Content Authenticity Initiative.
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Motorola Razr review, Samsung's Galaxy S20 event, and T-Mobile and Sprint allowed to merge
Fri, 14 Feb 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Motorola Razr review: folding flip phone flops
Motorola Razr undergoes iFixit’s ‘most complicated’ teardown yet
Samsung learned some tough lessons from the Galaxy Fold debacle
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip beats the Motorola Razr in nearly every way
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip first look: folding glass changes everything
The Galaxy S20 is the first high-refresh display phone many people will own
Why Samsung’s 108-megapixel camera isn’t just a gimmick
All of the biggest announcements from Samsung’s Galaxy S20 event
Samsung confirms its AirDrop-like ‘Quick Share’ is launching on the Galaxy S20
Here’s how Samsung’s Galaxy S20 stacks up against the Pixel 4, OnePlus 7T, and more
Samsung’s regular Galaxy S20 doesn’t support ultra-fast 5G
Samsung’s Galaxy S20, Plus, and Ultra first look: cameras, 5G, and 120Hz screens
Samsung confirms its AirDrop-like ‘Quick Share’ is launching on the Galaxy S20
T-Mobile and Sprint win lawsuit and will be allowed to merge
The court let T-Mobile buy Sprint because Sprint completely sucks
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New Jersey’s former attorney general on Ring cameras and facial recognition
Tue, 11 Feb 2020
In this week’s Vergecast, former New Jersey attorney general Anne Milgram stopped by the studio to talk with Verge editor in chief Nilay Patel and me, senior reporter Colin Lecher.
As Nilay notes, Milgram, who also co-hosts the podcast Stay Tuned with Preet Bharara, is “the first cop we’ve ever had on the show,” and gave some thoughtful responses to questions about surveillance, predictive policing, and more.
“We all, I think, have the right reaction, which is we don’t want to use data that’s biased or we don’t want to have problems,” Milgram says. “And yet in our personal lives, we give access to a huge amount of information and a lot of it is not public.”
The rise of home security systems like Amazon’s Ring camera have raised serious questions about privacy, and Milgram weighed in on the issue. Below is an excerpt for that conversation, lightly edited for length and clarity.
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Iowa caucus app issues, Panos Panay takes over both Microsoft’s hardware and software, and Google reveals Q4 earnings
Fri, 07 Feb 2020
Stories discussed this week;
Election tech was supposed to clean up the Iowa caucus …
Iowa's caucus fracas shows we're still too ignorant about how …
America is bad at voting (it isn’t just Iowa)
US attorney general says tech and telecom industries should invest in Huawei competitors
Donald Trump ‘apoplectic’ in call with Boris Johnson over Huawei
US pushing tech and telecom industries to build 5G alternative to Huawei
Microsoft’s Windows future is now tied to hardware
Microsoft's Surface chief now leads Windows and hardware ...
YouTube is a $15 billion-a-year business, Google reveals for …
Creators finally know how much money YouTube makes, and ...
Google now has a 'multibillion-dollar' hardware business
Google opens its latest Google Glass AR headset for direct purchase
The Super Bowl is streaming in 4K HDR for the first time ...
Roku and Fox strike a last-minute deal to keep Super Bowl ...
Apple might be releasing a new Apple TV soon
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How 5G and edge computing fit into the future of Intel’s traditionally chip-focused lineup
Tue, 04 Feb 2020
Intel is one of the biggest names in the tech world, with chips that quite literally are the brains behind most of the computers and servers that we use every day. But the world of computers is expanding and Intel is changing, too, with a focus on both edge computing that puts processing resources in the cloud and the power that’s available directly on the physical device.
And at the head of that is Dr. Venkata (Murthy) Renduchintala, the chief engineering officer and group president of the Technology, Systems Architecture and Client Group at Intel. Renduchintala joined Intel in 2016, having previously headed up competitor Qualcomm’s chip business.
Renduchintala is the person in charge of almost all of Intel’s hardware, from design to engineering to manufacturing. He joined Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and news editor Chaim Gartenberg for an interview episode of The Vergecast this week to discuss the present and future of Intel, including the company’s place in the development of 5G, the changing landscape of personal- and cloud-based computing, and what the next-generation of processors could look like.
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iPad turns 10, Apple's first quarter earnings, and what Google is doing with the Search design
Fri, 31 Jan 2020
Stories discussed this week:
Former Windows chief reveals Microsoft's reaction to the iPad …
Apple's iPad changed the tablet game 10 years ago today …
The iPad is still finding its place ten years in
Microsoft's Surface Pro X is the world's most extravagant ...
Apple's iPhone 11 and AirPods help company hit a new …
Apple reportedly working on tracking tags, high ...
Google's ads just look like search results now
How much longer will we trust Google's search results?
Google is backtracking on its controversial desktop search …
Google aims to unify its workplace tools and messaging apps into one service
The Scroll subscription service is an ingenious web technology hack
Scroll makes hundreds of websites ad-free for $5 per month …
Pentagram designed a smart speaker that’s like HitClips for kids
Here’s what you need to watch the Super Bowl in 4K HDR
WarnerMedia takes $1.2 billion revenue hit in hopes that HBO ...
AT&T tried to buy out the streaming wars — and customers are ...
Comcast is raising rates for cable subscribers as it moves ...
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip rumor roundup: everything we think …
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Neil Young says the Macbook Pro has “Fisher-Price” audio quality
Tue, 28 Jan 2020
Musician Neil Young and tech executive Phil Baker have been trying to push the tech industry to make it easier for consumers to listen to high-quality audio for almost a decade now. The duo’s hi-res music player Pono aimed to fix problems they said plagued MP3 players like the iPod and music software like iTunes — like compressed, lossy, and low-fidelity audio files that were not similar enough to their original recordings.
But five years after the Pono was released, Young believes the tech industry has still not advanced enough for consumers to easily listen to high resolution audio. The two men’s new book, To Feel the Music: A Songwriter’s Mission To Save High Quality Audio, details the hurdles they had to overcome to create the Pono, as well as what the tech industry should do in order to get consumers to realize what their missing with streaming and “CD-quality” music.
In an interview with The Vergecast, Young tells Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel that even though Grammy-winning artists are able to make music almost anywhere they go on their laptop or mobile devices, they’re still sacrificing on audio fidelity.
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Apple's encryption controversy, Bezos's hacked phone, and Sonos stopping old product updates
Fri, 24 Jan 2020
Stories from this week:
Trump demands Apple unlock iPhones: ‘They have the keys to so many criminals and criminal minds’
How to FBI-proof your encrypted iPhone backups
Can Apple live up to Apple’s privacy ads?
Apple rejects AG Barr’s claim that it didn’t assist with Pensacola shooting probe
The FBI has asked Apple to unlock another shooter’s iPhone
Senator asks Jeff Bezos for more information on Saudi-linked hack
Saudi Arabian prince reportedly hacked Jeff Bezos’ phone with malicious WhatsApp message
PSA: Never open a WhatsApp message from the crown prince of Saudi Arabia
Here’s a first look at Android on Microsoft’s dual-screen Surface Duo
Microsoft’s software plan for the Duo Android phone is surprisingly realistic
Introduction to dual-screen devices
Motorola’s foldable Razr will launch on February 6th after delay
Cruise driverless taxi: no steering wheel, no pedals
Sonos will stop providing software updates for its oldest products in May
Comcast plans price hikes for cable customers as it looks ahead to streaming Peacock launch
Google’s ads just look like search results now
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Rep. David Cicilline on regulating big tech monopolies
Thu, 23 Jan 2020
After a congressional hearing with executives from Sonos, Tile, Basecamp, and PopSockets, the chairman of the House Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law, Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), speaks to The Verge’s Nilay Patel and Adi Robertson about leading an investigation into how big tech platforms like Google, Amazon, and Apple are affecting competition for other tech companies.
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August's Yves Behar and Jason Johnson unlock the smart home
Thu, 23 Jan 2020
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel interviews Yves Behar and Jason Jason, co-founders of the smartlock company August about their new products, the state of the smart home, and making products that work in both European and American homes.
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AMD CEO Dr. Lisa Su talks new Ryzen 4000 chips and out-performing Intel
Tue, 21 Jan 2020
Editor-in-chief of The Verge Nilay Patel talks to CEO of AMD Dr Lisa Su at CES 2020 about AMD's new Ryzen laptop chips, the competition with Intel for consumer laptops, and if she is going to take on the high end of Nvidia's GPUs.
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Wireless earbuds
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? Skullcandy Method 360 ANC Wireless Earbuds
Microsoft’s Edge Chromium launches, NBC reveals Peacock details, and our CES takeaways
Fri, 17 Jan 2020
Stories this week:
The Verge Awards at CES 2020: welcome to the land of the concept
Eight big takeaways from CES 2020
These gaming PCs want to compete in the console wars
Laptops were boring at CES, but there’s hope for the future
The most important TVs of CES 2020 were finally for the masses
Microsoft’s new Edge Chromium browser launches on Windows and macOS
How to install extensions on Microsoft’s new Edge browser
The browser wars are back, but it’s different this time
Google is finally killing off Chrome apps, which nobody really used anyhow
Google to 'phase out' third-party cookies in Chrome, but not for ...
Roomba’s robot vacuum could grow arms in the near future
OnePlus confirms its next phone will jump to a 120Hz screen
Latest Galaxy S20 Plus leak shows off 120Hz display and no …
Samsung’s Galaxy S20 and its many cameras revealed in leaked photos
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Anna Wiener's Uncanny Valley
Thu, 16 Jan 2020
Anna Wiener talks to Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel about her book Uncanny Valley, a memoir about her time in Silicon Valley working for startups when they were new and flashy. Wiener also discusses the shift in tone to the reality of what technology and connection do to us and our culture.
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OnePlus' CEO Pete Lau doesn't think folding phones are good enough
Tue, 14 Jan 2020
At CES 2020, The Verge's Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn sat down with OnePlus CEO Pete Lau in his first podcast appearance to talk about the OnePlus concept phone with a disappearing camera as well as his thoughts on newer technologies in the smartphone world, like 5G and folding phones.
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CES 2020 roundtable: Concept cars, Quibi, foldables, and more
Fri, 10 Jan 2020
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Ashley Carman, and Sean O'Kane highlight the most important, weird, and surprising things The Verge saw at CES 2020.
Stories from this episode:
Sonos said what every smaller tech company was thinking: working with big tech sucks
Amazon’s hardware boss responds to Sonos accusations of stolen technology
Sony’s electric car is the best surprise of CES
Byton’s 48-inch screen might not be as distracting as it looks
Mercedes-Ben’s Avatar-themed concept car with scales
Sony surprises with an electric concept car called the Vision-S
Segway S-Pod
Quibi versus the world
Spotify will use everything it knows about you to target podcast ads
2020 might be the year of reasonably okay foldable PCs, maybe
Foldable and dual-screen laptops desperately need Windows 10X
Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Fold is a $2,499 PC with a folding OLED screen
PS5 logo
Intel NUC Extreme platform
Neon CEO explains the tech behind his overhyped ‘artificial humans’
Samsung’s ‘artificial humans’ are just digital avatars
This is Intel’s first discrete graphics card in 20 years, but you can’t buy one
Samsung’s Ballie
The most promising AirPower alternative isn’t ready yet
Royole’s new smart speaker has a wraparound touch display
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CES 2020 Day 1: Sero rotating TV, Galaxy Chromebook, and a preview of the week
Tue, 07 Jan 2020
Recorded live in Las Vegas, The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Ashley Carman discuss what has already been announced at the start of CES 2020 as well as what to expect throughout the week.
Stories discussed in this episode:
Amazon’s Fire TV soundbars will get Dolby Atmos, HDMI switching, and more later this year
Samsung details its stunning bezel-less 8K TV
Samsung’s new Sero TV can rotate vertically for your TikTok and Instagram videos
LG unveils eight ‘Real 8K’ OLED and LCD TVs ahead of CES
LG’s smart TVs are the latest to add Apple TV, and you won’t have to buy a 2020 model to get it
Sony’s first TVs of 2020 include its smallest 4K OLED ever
TCL will enable variable refresh rates for some TVs later this year
Vizio’s 2020 lineup includes its biggest TV yet and first-ever OLED
TCL’s new soundbar uses reflectors for more immersive Dolby Atmos audio
Roku launches program to let third-party soundbars integrate with Roku TV
Amazon’s Fire TV soundbars will get Dolby Atmos, HDMI switching, and more later this year
Vizio’s new soundbar rotates its speakers for better Dolby Atmos surround sound
Ring adds lightbulbs, solar power to its smart lighting lineup
The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook is beautiful, fast, and expensive
Segway’s newest self-balancing vehicle is an egg-shaped wheelchair
My favorite thing so far at CES
Dell’s Concept Ori and Concept Duet laptops imagine a foldable and dual-screen future
Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Fold is a $2,499 PC with a folding OLED screen
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The lives of YouTube moderators, a new smart home standard, and the Xbox Series X announced
Fri, 20 Dec 2019
Stories discussed this week:
Google and YouTube moderators speak out on the work that’s …
Big tech is finally working together to fix the smart home
Z-Wave is making a huge change so it doesn’t get left behind in the smart home wars
Ikea 2.0: inside the furniture giant’s big bet on the smart home ...
This Apple Watch charger plugs directly into a USB-C port so you can carry fewer cords
Xbox Series X: all the news about Microsoft’s next-gen game console
Microsoft’s next Xbox is Xbox Series X, coming holiday 2020
The Xbox Series X is basically a PC
The Xbox One Series X: bad name, good design
Google Stadia should have stayed in beta
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The toxic work environment at Away
Tue, 17 Dec 2019
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks Verge news reporter Zoe Schiffer about the concerning work conditions at luggage startup Away and the details from the Verge investigation.
Further reading:
Former Away employees describe a toxic work environment
Away replaces CEO Steph Korey after Verge investigation
The Away scandal is a moment of reckoning for Slack
Here’s the leaked memo in which Away tells employees not to fave The Verge’s investigation
Away’s new CEO was going to be second in command — until a toxic workplace story blew up
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Apple's expensive Mac Pro, gadgets of the decade, and Twitter's project Bluesky
Fri, 13 Dec 2019
Stories this week:
Apple’s most expensive Mac Pro costs $52,599
Apple’s most expensive Pro Display XDR requires a special, Apple-made cloth to clean it
You can now buy Apple's new Mac Pro and Pro Display XDR …
The Mac Pro's optional wheels cost $400
Logitech made a bespoke $200 magnetic 4K webcam for …
Apple will reportedly release an iPhone without any ports in 2021
Lightroom finally adds direct photo import on iOS
The Apple TV remote is so bad that a Swiss TV company developed a normal replacement
Rewound is a new app that turns your iPhone into an iPod
The Verge’s gadgets of the decade
Twitter is funding research into a decentralized version of its ...
A decentralized Twitter would bring the company back to its past
Twitter will now let you post iOS Live Photos as GIFs
Twitter is bringing back labels for US election candidates
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FaZe Clan CEO talks growing pains, global expansion, and lawsuits
Tue, 10 Dec 2019
Editor-in-chief of The Verge Nilay Patel and Verge reporter Julia Alexander sit down with CEO/Co-Owner of FaZe Clan Lee Trink. Lee talks how he runs a multifaceted company from working with talent to the dependence on platforms to selling apparel.
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Tesla Cybertruck first ride, Elon Musk's bad tweets trial, and Google's founders leaving
Fri, 06 Dec 2019
2:00- Tesla Cybertruck first ride: inside Elon Musk’s electric pickup truck
23:55 - Ford’s Mustang Mach-E is an electric SUV with up to 300 miles of range
30:30 - No, e-bikes aren’t cheating
37:03 - Elon Musk tries to explain Twitter in ‘pedo guy’ defamation case
1:00:55 - Paul’s weekly segment “In the apocalypse, we don’t need space bars”
1:03:23 - Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin relinquish control of Alphabet to CEO Sundar Pichai
1:19:05 - Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 865 flagship is here — without integrated 5G
Other links:
Tesla Cybertruck will get up to 500 miles of range and start at $39,900
Elon Musk explains why Tesla’s Cybertruck windows smashed during presentation
Elon Musk promises Cybertruck vs. Ford F-150 rematch after controversy
Google’s third era
Larry Page is the tech world’s Dr. Manhattan
The rise, disappearance, and retirement of Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin
Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 865 promises 5G, camera, and gaming improvements
In 2020, Qualcomm’s slower chips may be more important than its best ones
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 765 chip could usher in the first affordable 5G phones
Emotonal Baggage: Inside the toxic work environment at Away
The dark side of electronic waste recycling
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How to fight lies, tricks, and chaos online
Tue, 03 Dec 2019
Verge reporter Adi Robertson talks to Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel about how to spot lies, false information, and trolling online and how to handle it as a user on the internet. Adi just published a guide on The Verge that details a system for slowing down and thinking about information — whether that information is true, false, or something in between.
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Pirate Radio » The PIRATE Act
Tue, 26 Nov 2019
Congress is in the process of passing a non-partisan bill to increase support for enforcement against illegal pirate radio operations: Fines can now go as high as $2 million, and the FCC will fund “enforcement sweeps” in major radio markets. Does this target well-intentioned community radio, designed to speak to immigrant communities?
Episode three of The Verge's Pirate Radio mini-series featuring Bijan Stephen.
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Pirate Radio » Dial up!
Fri, 22 Nov 2019
How the Hmong diaspora uses the world's most boring technology to make something weird and wonderful.
Episode two of The Verge's Pirate Radio mini-series featuring Mia Sato.
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Pirate Radio » Outside the wire
Tue, 19 Nov 2019
When the US entered Afghanistan, local DJs were hired to help with the war effort. And when the American military pulled out, they abandoned those voices, leaving many of them for dead.
Episode 1 of The Verge's Pirate Radio mini-series featuring Chris Harland-Dunaway.
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Apple releases 16-inch Macbook Pro, Motorola announces a new Razr, and Disney+ launches
Fri, 15 Nov 2019
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul go through the products announced this week including Apple's 16-inch Macbook Pro and Motorola's new Razr foldable phone. Julia Alexander then joins the show to cover the initial launch of Disney+ and the ongoing streaming wars.
Stories this week:
The everything town in the middle of nowhere
Apple’s 16-inch MacBook Pro is here, and it has a good keyboard
A fully loaded 16-inch MacBook Pro costs $6,099
Apple’s new Mac Pro is shipping next month
Google’s rollout of RCS chat for all Android users in the US begins today
Motorola resurrects the Razr as a foldable Android smartphone
John Carmack stepping down as CTO of Oculus to work on AI
Disney+ experiencing ‘unable to connect’ errors on launch day
The Mandalorian’s first episode shows that Star Wars can work on the small screen
Disney+ doesn’t have to sell anyone on streaming
How to get a year of free Disney+ from Verizon
The Simpsons’ aspect ratio is messed up on Disney+
Verizon’s new set-top box is possibly the worst option out there for streaming
Apple could bundle news, TV, and music into one subscription as soon as 2020
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Wireless earbuds
Want to listen to podcasting like a pro? Skullcandy Method 360 ANC Wireless Earbuds
How America gave up on free markets with Thomas Philippon
Tue, 12 Nov 2019
On this week’s Vergecast interview, Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to finance professor and an economist at the NYU stern school of business Thomas Philippon. Thomas just wrote a book called The Great Reversal: How America Gave Up on Free Markets all about competition and consolidation in different markets.
When Thomas moved to the United States from France in the 90s, he noticed everything from laptops to internet access was cheaper in America, but over time has gotten more and more expensive. In the interview Nilay and Thomas discuss why that is — unsurprisingly the answer is consolidation in a lot of our markets.
Thomas makes a point that in some places, concentrations are actually good and creates value for the consumers, but in some markets like healthcare, technology, and airtravel, that consolidation has resulted in way higher prices for Americans. Since the prices go up slowly, we don’t actually notice.
If you have been listening to The Vergecast and been paying attention to our big conversations about whether or not we should be breaking up big tech companies, whether we should regulate them, or whether tech companies with network effects like Google and Facebook are different than companies like AT&T and GE, this conversation is up your alley. Below is lightly edited except of the conversation.
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Microsoft Surface roundup: Surface Pro X, Surface Laptop 3, and their processors
Sun, 10 Nov 2019
In a bonus episode of The Vergecast this week, Dieter Bohn hosts a Microsoft Surface roundup with deputy editor Dan Seifert and senior editor Tom Warren. The trio go through reviews of this years new product lineup and how they compare with their counterparts.
Links:
Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 15-inch review: it’s a bigger Surface Laptop
Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 13.5-inch review: have a normal one
Microsoft Surface Pro 7 review: I wish this looked like a Surface Pro X
Microsoft Surface Pro X review: heartbreaker
Surface Pro X vs. Pro 7: ARM needs some legs
Microsoft bet against Intel with its new Surfaces — and lost
Microsoft leak reveals Windows 10X will be coming to laptops
Microsoft unveils new Edge browser logo that no longer looks like Internet Explorer
Microsoft’s Edge Chromium browser will launch on January 15th with a new logo
Microsoft previews the future of Office documents with Fluid Framework for the web
Hands-on with Microsoft’s xCloud game streaming service
Xbox Game Streaming hands-on: turn your Xbox into a game streaming server
Xbox Elite 2 controller review: Microsoft’s best Xbox controller just got better
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Adobe Max 2019 announcements, AirPods Pro, and missed texts from Valentines Day
Fri, 08 Nov 2019
This week on The Vergecast, everything that happened at Adobe Max 2019, reviews for the Microsoft Surface Pro X and AirPods Pro, and missed text messages from Valentines Day.
Stories this week:
Adobe Max 2019: all the top announcements
Adobe’s Photoshop for the iPad is finally here, with more features to come
Adobe is developing Illustrator for the iPad, to be released 2020
Adobe Aero turns Photoshop layers into interactive AR experiences
Adobe’s Fresco drawing app arrives on Windows
Photoshop adds an extremely helpful AI subject selection tool
Adobe previews an AI feature that can tell when an image has been manipulated-
Adobe’s AI-powered video framing tool is available now in Premiere Pro
Adobe is launching a free AI-powered Photoshop Camera app
Adobe is building live-streaming into Creative Cloud apps
Adobe’s Premiere Rush can now publish directly to TikTok
Microsoft Surface Pro X review: heartbreaker
Microsoft's Edge Chromium browser will launch on January …
Microsoft unveils new Edge browser logo that no longer looks ...
Microsoft’s new Office app for iOS and Android combines Word, Excel, and PowerPoint
Microsoft previews the future of Office documents with Fluid Framework for the we
A ton of people received text messages overnight that were originally sent on Valentine’s Day
Somehow, Android's messaging mess is about to get even …
AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile have finally agreed to ...
Apple AirPods Pro review: perfect fit
Google buys Fitbit for $2.1 billion
Google is buying Fitbit: now what?
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What happened in the comments section of the FCC's net neutrality hearing?
Tue, 05 Nov 2019
This week on The Vergecast, Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks with Jeremy Singer-Vine, the data editor for the BuzzFeed News investigative unit, about his story that was published recently regarding the fake comments on the Federal Communications Commission’s online net neutrality debate.
If you haven’t read the piece, you should. The investigation details where all of the fake comments in the FCC’s net neutrality process came from, including dead people leaving comments and shady political operatives involved in the scam.
It’s not really a story about net neutrality; rather, it’s about how systems designed for public participation in the government are so easily scammed, and what the challenges are for preventing such scams from happening.
Nilay and Jeremy discuss why it happened, how it happened, and what happens next if we want to use the internet to encourage open access participation in government without corruption.
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The future of photos with Google Pixel camera's product manager and Instagram's director of product
Fri, 01 Nov 2019
Live at The Glass Room in San Francisco, Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Ashley Carman are joined by Google Pixel camera product manager Isaac Reynolds and Instagram head of product Robby Stein to talk about how the photos we share influence the photos we take — and vice versa.
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Amber Baldet on what blockchain technology can do for us beyond cryptocurrency
Tue, 29 Oct 2019
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel interviews cryptocurrency expert Amber Baldet, co-founder of Clovyr and on the board of the Zcash foundation. Nilay and Amber discuss where cryptocurrencies on the blockchain are going, the potential of Facebook's Libra project, and how the blockchain can revive our trust in putting our data online.
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Reviewing the Pixel 4, the calm before the streaming war, and a Foxconn Wisconsin update
Fri, 25 Oct 2019
Stories discussed this week:
Foxconn finally admits its empty Wisconsin ‘innovation centers’ aren’t being developed
Foxconn’s giant glass dome in Wisconsin is back, baby
Google Pixel 4 and 4 XL review: more than the sum of its sensors
Google to update Pixel 4 face unlock with eye detection ‘in the coming months`
The Pixel 4 is more like an iPhone than any other Android phone
Google promises another Pixel 4 software update, this time for the screen’s refresh rate
Google’s older Pixels won’t get the Pixel 4’s dual exposure and Live HDR+ features
Google’s Pixel 4 was $100 off on Amazon for a second time
Microsoft Surface Pro 7 review: I wish this looked like a Surface Pro X
Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 15-inch review: it’s a bigger Surface Laptop
Apple TV app launches on Amazon Fire TV devices
Comcast’s ‘free’ streaming box actually requires an additional $13 / month fee
Disney CEO says Scorsese and Coppola can ‘bitch about movies’ if they want
Verizon is offering a free year of Disney+ to unlimited data and Fios customers
There’s a new Banana Phone, and it can play ‘Bananaphone’
Twitch megastar Shroud is joining Ninja on Mixer as an exclusive streamer
Caffeine hopes celebrities and entertainment can help it beat Twitch
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Will the Sprint and T-Mobile merger create competition?
Tue, 22 Oct 2019
This week for our interview series on The Vergecast, host and Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to Gigi Sohn, a distinguished fellow at Georgetown Law’s Institute for Technology Law and Policy. We’ve had Gigi on the show before to talk about the ramifications following the repeal of net neutrality.
This time, we brought her back to talk about some recent developments in the tech policy world, including lawmakers in states like California introducing net neutrality bills.
We also talk to Gigi about the Sprint and T-Mobile merger and the issues surrounding how that merger will seemingly go through unless it’s stopped by a lawsuit from several states. Can Dish become a fourth mobile carrier?
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Pixel 4 hands-on and Mark Zuckerberg's speech on free speech
Fri, 18 Oct 2019
The biggest announcements from Google’s 2019 Pixel event
The Pixel 4 has a radar chip that lets you control music and wave at pokémon
Google Pixel 4 and 4 XL hands-on: this time, it’s not about the camera
The Pixel 4 lacks one of the best perks that came with Google’s previous flagship phones
Google improves the Pixel 4 camera with Live HDR and more
With no buds or adapter, Pixel 4 opens the door to rival headphone makers
Pixel Buds 2 hands-on: Google takes on the AirPods
Pixelbook Go: Google finally made a reasonably priced Chromebook
Google’s new Nest Mini has better controls, similar sound, and the same price
Nest Wifi first look: Google finally combined a smart speaker and a router
Google’s Stadia wireless controller won’t be very wireless at launch
Facebook’s decision to allow lies in political ads is coming back to haunt it
Democrats are striking back against Facebook’s ads policies
Mark Zuckerberg on lies in political ads: ‘I don’t think it’s right for a private company to censor politicians’
Mark Zuckerberg took on China in a speech defending free expression
Facebook privacy abuse targeted by ‘Mind your own business’ bill
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Google's Rick Osterloh shows off new Pixel and Nest hardware
Wed, 16 Oct 2019
Vergecast hosts Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn attended Google's hardware event on Tuesday and sat down with SVP of Devices & Services Rick Osterloh to discuss Google's new products: the Pixel 4, the Pixelbook Go, the Nest Mini, and the Pixel Buds 2.
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Twitter's Kayvon Beykpour on product features Twitter is prioritizing
Tue, 15 Oct 2019
Twitter’s head of product Kayvon Beykpour sits down with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and Silicon Valley editor Casey Newton to talk about how Twitter juggles its policy with trust and safety, the state of verification, the future of video in your feed, and how tweets can become more ephemeral.
Please take our survey here: theverge.com/survey
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A deep dive into macOS Catalina, iPadOS, and the 2019 iPad
Fri, 11 Oct 2019
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller go deep on Apple's updated operating systems: macOS Catalina and iPadOS.
Also, Sony confirms their next console will be the PS5 in 2020.
Stories this week: Apple’s macOS Catalina update is coming todayCatalina ReviewPhotoshop and Lightroom users should wait before updating to macOS CatalinaNetflix confirms it won’t port its iPad app to macOSYou need a MacBook with a butterfly keyboard or a modern Mac desktop to use macOS Catalina’s SidecarWhy I’m turning off auto-updatesApple starts selling Microsoft’s Xbox controller after adding support in iOS, macOS, and tvOSiPadOS review: it’s complicated, finallyLinksys' mesh routers can now detect motion using Wi-FiApple’s Siri can now play music through SpotifyiOS 13 has gotten better, but there’s still a long way to go Apple iPad (2019) review: no competitionSony confirms next console is called PlayStation 5 and coming holiday 2020The next console war is going to be way more fun than the last oneSamsung made the smartwatch Google couldn’t
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Logitech's CEO Bracken Darrell on going beyond hardware
Tue, 08 Oct 2019
This week on The Vergecast interview series, Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel speaks to current CEO of Logitech Bracken Darrell.
Logitech has acquired a couple of companies over the past few years, notably Blue Microphones and Ultimate Ears. Recently, Logitech acquired their first software company Streamlabs, a streaming software company used by almost half of all streamers on platforms like Twitch and YouTube.
Nilay and Bracken talk about how acquiring this software company makes sense for Logitech, its own hardware that works with Streamlabs, and what it’s like making hardware for big companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Google.
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Facebook's leaked audio, Microsoft's Surface event, and net neutrality's battle this week
Fri, 04 Oct 2019
Stories this week: Mark Zuckerberg leaked audioRead the full transcript of Mark Zuckerberg's leaked internal Facebook meetingsElizabeth Warren: companies like Facebook ‘repeatedly fumble their responsibility to protect our democracy’Microsoft is building a phone again, it’s called the Surface DuoWindows 10X is Microsoft’s latest stab at a ‘Lite’ operating system, exclusively for dual-screensMicrosoft announces dual-screen Surface Neo, coming next holidayMicrosoft’s future is built on Google’s codeMicrosoft doesn’t think Windows is important anymoreA first look at Surface Duo, Microsoft’s foldable Android phoneMicrosoft Surface Neo first look: the future of Windows 10X is dual-screenInside Microsoft’s new custom Surface processors with AMD and QualcommMicrosoft announces Surface Pro 7 with long-awaited USB-C portThe Surface Pro X and Surface Laptop 3 are upgradable, but only a littleMicrosoft’s Surface Laptop 3 comes in two sizes and with two different processorsMicrosoft Surface Pro X and Surface Pro 7 hands-on: It’s ARM vs. IntelMicrosoft Surface Earbuds first listen: live transcribe your lifePolitical Operatives Are Faking Voter Outrage With Millions Of Made-Up Comments To Benefit The Rich and PowerfulThe FCC can repeal net neutrality, but it can’t block state laws, says court iOS 13.1.1 now available with fixes for battery drain, third-party keyboard bug, and moreApple is fixing iOS 13’s bugs at a breakneck pace with another new update today
Please take our survey here: theverge.com/survey
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Microsoft’s Panos Panay unfolds the Surface Duo
Thu, 03 Oct 2019
Chief Product Officer of Microsoft Panos Panay joins editor-in-chief of The Verge Nilay Patel and senior editor Tom Warren hours after Microsoft’s Surface hardware event to talk about the new Surface lineup — including the debut of their foldable devices.
Mr. Panay also talks about why Microsoft is using Android for their Duo device, their relationship with Google, and the future of dual-screen form factors. Below is a lightly edited transcript of the conversation.
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Burn Book: A Tech Love Story (Hardcover)
A witty, scathing, and fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead, by journalist Kara Swisher.
This is an affiliate link. If you buy through this link we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Inside Bill Gates' brain with Davis Guggenheim
Tue, 01 Oct 2019
This week on our Vergecast interview series, editor-in-chief of The Verge Nilay Patel chats with filmmaker Davis Guggenheim on his new documentary “Inside Bill’s Brain: Decoding Bill Gates” on Netflix.
Davis talks about how he got Bill Gates to participate in the film, the structure for the documentary, the most surprising thing he’s learned about Bill, and more.
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Amazon's 80 new products, Oculus Connect, and Xiaomi’s Mi Mix Alpha
Fri, 27 Sep 2019
Stories this week: Amazon pushes Alexa privacy with new delete optionsAmazon’s new Echo Studio sounds like the future of smart speakersThe top 8 Echo products Amazon announced todayHere are all of the other new Echo and Ring products announced todayAmazon announces third-generation Echo smart speakerAmazon’s new $59 Echo Dot with Clock includes an LED displayAmazon’s Echo Buds sound good and are great at noise reductionUsing Amazon’s Echo Loop ring is like whispering a secret to AlexaAmazon Echo Frames preview: trying on the Alexa smart glassesAmazon’s new Echo Loop puts Alexa in a discreet smart ringAmazon follows up its Alexa microwave with a new Alexa Smart OvenAmazon is simplifying device setup with ‘Certified for Humans’ programAmazon announces Fetch pet tracker that uses new Sidewalk networkingAmazon’s new Echo Flex lets you put Alexa everywhere in your homeAmazon’s Echo Glow is a $29 lamp for Alexa dance parties and bedtime storiesAll the new features coming to Alexa, including a new voice, frustration mode, and Samuel L. JacksonJeff Bezos says Amazon is writing its own facial recognition laws to pitch to lawmakersFacebook says it will build AR glasses and map the worldOculus will add new social features powered by FacebookOculus Link will let you plug your Quest headset into a gaming PC to play Rift gamesOculus is launching hand tracking on Quest next yearFacebook acquires neural interface startup CTRL-Labs for its mind-reading wristbandOculus CTO John Carmack says ‘we missed an opportunity’ as the Gear VR diesXiaomi’s Mi Mix Alpha is almost entirely made of screenThe OnePlus TV is finally here7 good and 3 bad things in iPadOSSamsung will let Galaxy Fold owners replace their screens once for $149
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John Gruber and Nilay Patel compare their iPhone 11 reviews
Tue, 24 Sep 2019
John Gruber of Daring Fireball joins Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel for the annual iPhone review week to compare notes on Apple's new iPhone 11 and 11 Pro.
John and Nilay also get into their approach for reviewing tech products in 2019.
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Reviews for the iPhone 11 Pro, Apple Watch Series 5, and a new Facebook Portal
Fri, 20 Sep 2019
Apple iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max review: the battery life is real
Apple iPhone 11 review: the phone most people should buy
iOS 13 is now available to download
Apple pushes up iOS 13.1 and iPadOS to September 24th
iOS 13 review: join the dark side
Apple Watch Series 5 review: the best smartwatch
What can Google do to compete with the Apple Watch? Not much
Amazon Music rolls out a lossless streaming tier
Everything we know about the Pixel 4, the most-leaked phone …
Google announces October 15th hardware event for Pixel 4 ...
Microsoft is working on foldable Surface devices with liquid …
Microsoft's Surface Laptop 3 may include a new 15-inch …
Microsoft's next Surface Pen looks like it'll have wireless ...
Facebook's new Portal devices are cheaper, smaller, and …
Facebook introduces Portal TV, a video chat camera ...
The 10 Apple Arcade launch games you have to play - The …
Apple Arcade could have huge consequences for the iOS app …
Where’s the Apple Arcade, Music, and TV Plus bundle?
Nintendo Switch Lite review: a triumphant return to dedicated ...
We’re hiring! theverge.com/podcastjob
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Dani Deahl on how streaming and sampling is changing the music industry
Tue, 17 Sep 2019
This week on The Vergecast interview, Nilay Patel talks to music reporter and host of the The Verge video series Future of MusicDani Deahl.
Dani walks Nilay through two episodes of the brand new season — one about how music sampling has changed the way people are writing music, and the other about how the music streaming platforms are re-shaping the music industry.
You can watch Future of Music now on The Verge's YouTube channel.
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Apple announces the iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, Watch Series 5, and more
Fri, 13 Sep 2019
Stories from this week: iPhone 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max: hands-on with Apple’s new flagship phonesApple’s new iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro cameras: what they doWith the iPhone 11 Pro, what does it even mean for a phone to be ‘pro’? Apple’s new iPhone finally sacrifices thinness for battery lifeThe 3 best and worst features of the iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro MaxThe iPhone 11 Pro comes with a USB-C 18W wall charger and USB-C to Lightning cableiPhone 11 improves on the XR in every wayiPhone 11: a first look at Apple’s new default iPhoneThe iPhone 11, Pro, and Pro Max will cost $699, $999, and $1,099, respectivelyAirDrop on the iPhone 11 will let you point at people to share photosApple’s iPhone 11 doesn’t have 5G because 5G isn’t ready for the iPhoneWhat we’re still waiting for after Apple’s iPhone 11 eventApple Watch Series 5: hands-on with the new generation smartwatchThe upgraded seventh-gen iPad has a 10.2-inch displayiPad 10.2-inch: hands-on with Apple’s new 7th-gen tabletApple Arcade is launching on September 19th for $4.99 a monthApple TV Plus one-year trial comes with every Apple device purchasHere’s Apple TV Plus’ launch lineupApple TV Plus launches on November 1st for $4.99 per monthGoogle takes one tiny step closer to the world beneath the worldGoogle Pixel 4 XL leaked in extensive hands-on videos …Leak reveals how the Pixel 4’s new face unlock setup differs …Leaked Google Pixel 4 photos show orange color variant …Leaked Google Pixel 4 promo video includes gestures …Latest Pixel 4 rumors claim 8x zoom, improved Night Sight …Leaked Google Pixel 4 XL pictures show off the giant top ...
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Can you build a company like Uber without being a jerk?
Mon, 09 Sep 2019
On this week’ interview episode of The Vergecast, editor-in-chief of The Verge Nilay Patel sits down with New York Times reporter Mike Isaac. Isaac has been reporting on the ride-sharing company Uber for over five years now and just released a book all about Uber and the stories surrounding it called Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber.
Nilay and Mike talk about how Uber got to where it is today, Uber’s interactions with companies like Apple and Google, and whether or not you have to be a “jerk” to start a company that changes the world.
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Android 10 official release, IFA 2019 dispatch, and Facebook Dating launches
Fri, 06 Sep 2019
This week on The Vergecast, there's a new "portable" Sonos speaker, Android 10 is now available on all Pixel phones, our reporters at IFA 2019 run through the announcements from the field, and Facebook brings their dating feature to the United States.
Discussed this week: Sonos CEO Patrick Spence: “There’s no category of audio that I don’t think we want to explore”Sonos’ first portable speaker is the $399 MoveAndroid 10 officially released for Google Pixel phonesAndroid 10 review: permanent betaGoogle Assistant’s Ambient Mode turns Android devices into smart displaysGoogle can’t fix the Android update problemPhilips Hue gets Edison-style light bulbs, a smart plug, and updated Hue Go lampAmazon, Roku, and the battle for your TVAnker is putting Fire TV in a soundbar for the first timeAmazon announces new Fire TV Cube with Dolby Vision, HDR10+, and ‘Local Voice Control’LG’s new G8X ThinQ bets that two screens are better than a foldable oneHow Samsung fixed the Galaxy FoldFacebook Dating launches in the United States todayNike’s Adapt Huaraches will let you ask Siri to unlace your shoesApple iPhone 11 event rumors ranked from mind-blowing to no wayApple Music launches on the webTouch ID and Face ID could coexist in 2020 iPhones, says reportApple may release a new Apple TV with an A12 chipThe New York MTA would like you to stop dropping your AirPods onto the tracks
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Sonos CEO Patrick Spence: "There's no category of audio that I don't think we want to explore"
Thu, 05 Sep 2019
CEO of Sonos Patrick Spence sat down with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel for The Vergecast once again, this time immediately after a Sonos press event in New York City. Sonos had just announced a few new products, notably their first Bluetooth speaker — the Sonos Move — so Spence answered some questions about those new products, what it took to finally bring Bluetooth to a Sonos device, and if Apple’s Siri will be coming to their speakers.
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iPhone event Sept 10th, Microsoft Surface event Oct 2nd, and the future of Siri
Fri, 30 Aug 2019
Stories this week: HP has a new CEOApple’s next iPhone event will take place on September 10thApple releases iOS 13.1 beta before iOS 13 is even outApple apologizes for Siri audio recordings, announces privacy changes going forwardApple was a little behind on Siri privacy, now it’s way aheadApple contractors were allegedly listening to 1,000 Siri recordings a day — eachWe’re still not getting voice assistants rightBBC plans ‘Beeb’ voice assistant for its apps and servicesA phone insurance company bought uBreakiFix, the official Pixel and Galaxy phone repairerApple will let more independent repair shops buy ‘genuine’ iPhone partsMicrosoft announces Surface event on October 2nd in New York City ...Microsoft’s HoloLens 2 headset goes on sale in SeptemberSamsung announces Galaxy Home Mini public beta before full-size speaker has even shippedFitbit’s new Versa 2 has an OLED screen and Alexa voice supportFossil ‘Gen 5’ smartwatch review: best of a Wear OS situationGarmin’s best GPS sport watches are getting even betterLG’s $4,399.99 fridge makes ‘craft ice’ for cocktail loversGoogle’s been thinking about a watch with a hole-punch cameraNintendo Switch Lite hands-on: a budget handheld with a premium …TV manufacturers unite to tackle the scourge of motion smoothing
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Former chief security officer of Facebook Alex Stamos
Tue, 27 Aug 2019
Nilay Patel interviews Alex Stamos, director of Stanford's Internet Observatory and former chief security officer for Facebook. Nilay and Alex talk about how Cambridge Analytica changed Facebook, the tradeoffs big tech companies make with working with law enforcement and keeping users secure, and how prepared Facebook is for the next presidential election.
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Galaxy Note 10 Plus review, Apple fall lineup rumors, and green bubble Giphys
Fri, 23 Aug 2019
This week on The Vergecast...Dieter's got a review for the Galaxy Note 10, Samsung has some blue bubble bashing GIFs, and there are a whole bunch of Apple device rumors.Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus review: should you spend for the stylus?Samsung made a sad Giphy page filled with comeback GIFs to send people who diss green bubblesApple’s Pro iPhones, new iPads, and 16-inch MacBook Pro detailed in Bloomberg reportApple’s noise-canceling AirPods and cheaper HomePod expected in 2020iOS 13 beta hints at an Apple iPhone 11 event on September 10th …New ceramic and titanium Apple Watch models spotted in watchOS 6 …Apple TV Plus will reportedly cost $9.99 per month and launch in …Apple reportedly ups TV spending by $5 billion to compete with Amazon and NetflixApple warns you may permanently discolor your Apple Card if it’s stored in leatherYou should opt out of the Apple Card's arbitration clause — here's how …Intel introduces eight new 10th Gen Comet Lake processorsDell’s latest XPS 13 and Inspiron laptops feature Intel’s Comet Lake 10th Gen CPUsBose tries to beat Sonos to the punch with a do-everything portable speakerSonos’ first portable Bluetooth speaker leaks in more detailApple’s noise-canceling AirPods and cheaper HomePod expected next yearThis label means your laptop has nine hours of real battery life ...Verizon just announced a partnership with Boingo to solve its biggest 5G problem
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Sen. Michael Bennet talks tech in the next election
Tue, 20 Aug 2019
The Verge's Makena Kelly and Nilay Patel sit down with senator and presidential candidate Michael Bennet to discuss his new book "Dividing America"
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Huawei announces HarmonyOS, Apple's bad battery week, and smart ovens turning on overnight
Fri, 16 Aug 2019
Stories discussed this week: Smart ovens have been turning on overnight and preheating to 400 …June Oven competitors want you to know their smart ovens can't ...Apple explains the new iPhone warning for 'unauthorized' battery …Apple is locking iPhone battery repair, says iFixit - The VergeThe FAA has banned recalled MacBook Pros from all flights — like any ...Spotify takes Spotify for Podcasters out of beta Apple and Spotify are reportedly in talks to let Siri play your Discover …Spotify is testing a new Favorite Device feature for handing off music toSonos is making a Bluetooth speaker, and here are some of its ...Snap announces Spectacles 3 with an updated design and a second …Facebook now lets anyone make an Instagram face filterSecurity researchers find that DSLR cameras are vulnerable to ransomware attackHuawei delays Mate X launch beyond SeptemberHuawei's new operating system is called HarmonyOSThe Honor Vision TV is Huawei's first HarmonyOS device
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Exclusive: Matt Mullenweg and Automattic bought Tumblr. What’s next?
Wed, 14 Aug 2019
Automattic just bought Tumblr from Verizon for reportedly 3 million dollars. CEO of Automattic Matt Mullenweg sits down with The Verge's Julia Alexander and Nilay Patel for this emergency episode of the Vergecast to share what his plans are for the micro-blogging platform.
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TechFreedom's Berin Szóka on bad tech policy
Tue, 13 Aug 2019
This week on the Vergecast interview series, The Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel sits down with Berin Szóka, the president of TechFreedom. TechFreedom is a tech policy think tank based in Washington, DC that “digs deep into the hard policy and legal questions raised by technological change.”
Berin and Nilay have differed on a few issues regarding tech policy, like net neutrality, but what they do agree on is the state of the tech policy conversation — it’s bad. Szóka says Republicans he has previously worked with are now getting important topics like Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act wrong, and bad-faith politicians are misinterpreting it to try to score points and pass policy in their favor.
Hear Berin talk about what’s happening now with legislation like Sen. Josh Hawley’s platform moderation bills, why it’s weird for conservatives to want to directly regulate speech on the internet, and how this might play out in the future. Below is a lightly edited excerpt of the conversation.
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Samsung shows off Galaxy Note 10, Disney announces streaming bundle, and Apple's Siri recordings controversy
Fri, 09 Aug 2019
Stories this week: Samsung Galaxy Note 10: two sizes, new S Pen, and DeX on your …Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Unpacked event: the biggest ... Samsung didn't mention Bixby once during its entire Galaxy Note 10 …Samsung confirms its long-delayed Galaxy Home smart speaker is still in the worksSamsung isn’t going it alone in the fight against Apple and GoogleSamsung's new Galaxy Book S is a Qualcomm-powered laptop with …Pixel 4 will reportedly feature a screen with a 90Hz 'Smooth Display …Google releases final beta for Android Q and changes the back …Android Q’s back gesture controversy, explained Samsung's Galaxy Watch Active 2 brings back the bezel controlDisney announces $12.99 bundle for Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ Disney has made $8 billion at the box office, but its ambitions are …Disney is drastically changing Fox’s future after a number of flopsJuul launches a Bluetooth e-cigarette that tracks how much you vapeApple stops letting contractors listen to Siri voice recordingsDeleting your Siri voice recordings from Apple's servers is confusing …Microsoft contractors are listening to select Skype calls and Cortana recordingsThe Apple Card starts rolling out today
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Being hopeful about the web with Paul Ford
Tue, 06 Aug 2019
This week on the interview episode of The Vergecast, editor of cheif of The Verge Nilay Patel sits down with CEO of Postlight Paul Ford.
Paul Ford co-founded Postlight in 2015 and is a writer, product strategist, educator, programmer, and software consultant.
If you read a lot of tech writing, you probably know Paul’s name. In 2015, Ford wrote an entire issue of Bloomberg’s Business Week titled “What is code?” which colorfully explained how programming works on the web for people who don’t do it. Recently, he wrote a piece in Wired about how we should still be hopeful and excited about tech and what it can still do for us.
Theres a lot of negative conversation about tech lately — regulating huge companies, what Facebook and Amazon are doing wrong — but from someone who builds things for the web, Paul brings an optimistic look at how tech can positively and creatively impact our lives in a fun and exciting way.
Paul comes in to talk about his hopefulness, his piece in Wired, the state of building stuff for the web, and how people think about tech today.
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Apple diversifying business, face unlock for Pixel 4, and a bill banning endless scrolling
Fri, 02 Aug 2019
Stories this week:The iPhone now makes up less than half of Apple’s businessApple confirms the Apple Card is coming in AugustGoogle is asking people on the street to scan their faces for $5The Google Pixel 4 will unlock using a face scanThe less expensive Pixel 3A helped Google sell twice as many smartphones last quarterNew bill would ban autoplay videos and endless scrollingThe major broadcasters are suing to shut down this app that streams ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC for freeT-Mobile CEO on 5G: Verizon is ‘clueless,’ AT&T is ‘lying, confusing’Dish confirms that it will become a major US mobile carrierVerizon says it has a secret 5G plan after T-Mobile CEO calls company ‘clueless’Verizon expands its 5G network to four more citiesVerizon’s CEO thinks half of the US will have access to 5G next yearLook upon Samsung’s new 3.5mm to USB-C dongle, ye mighty, and despairYou can already reserve the Galaxy Note 10 and it will arrive on August 23rdNew Nvidia Shield TV box shows up at FCCMophie’s iPhone XS and XR battery cases are now available for allIt’s a keyboard! It’s a trackpad! It’s almost a great iPad mouseYou can now run Android on a Nintendo Switch
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Mark Cuban on why AI is the future and Facebook’s Libra isn’t
Tue, 30 Jul 2019
Billionaire businessman Mark Cuban stops by to discuss his views on artificial intelligence, net neutrality, breaking up Big Tech, investment opportunities he’s excited about, and why he thinks Facebook’s Libra is dangerous.
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Apple's Intel acquisition, the Galaxy Fold starts its comeback, and a $5 billion fine for Facebook
Fri, 26 Jul 2019
Stories discussed this week: Apple buys Intel’s smartphone modem businessSamsung says it has fixed the Galaxy Fold and will release it in SeptemberT-Mobile won’t sell the Galaxy Fold when it is rereleasedSony’s latest RX100 camera finally gets a mic jackThe first speakers from Ikea and Sonos are inexpensive and sound greatFTC hits Facebook with $5 billion fine and new privacy checksFacebook will have to monitor its own privacy rules — and that’s likely not enoughFTC sues Cambridge Analytica and restricts former CEO’s business activityFacebook confirms new FTC antitrust investigation after posting strong earningsWhy wasn't the FTC harder on Facebook?Facebook design flaw let thousands of kids join chats with unauthorized usersJustice Department announces broad antitrust review of Big TechAmazon ‘destroyed the retail industry across the US’ says Treasury Secretary MnuchinTrump keeps losing tech policy fightsDish reportedly reaches deal with T-Mobile and Sprint to become the new fourth major US carrierOrigin PC’s Big O gaming PC has a built-in PS4 Pro, Xbox One X, and Nintendo SwitchAnker CEO Steven Yang is all in on USB-CApple iPhone 11 rumors: Lightning port, new Taptic Engine, upgraded …This year's iPhone should be the last with LightningYou can subscribe to Land of the Giants: The Rise of Amazon here
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Why everyone hates Big Tech with Matt Yglesias of The Weeds
Mon, 22 Jul 2019
Vox Senior Correspondent and host of The Weeds Matt Yglesias joins Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel in this special crossover episode to explain what Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which allows platforms to circumnavigate liability for user content, really means. They also discuss Elizabeth Warren’s proposal to break up big tech platforms, and how it may or may not fix anything.
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Big tech at Capitol Hill, Elon Musk's brain machine interface, and Macbook 2019 reviews
Fri, 19 Jul 2019
Nilay Patel invites a cavalry of experts from The Verge (Makena Kelly, Adi Robertson, Liz Lopatto, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller) to discuss the Big Tech hearings that took over Capitol Hill, Elon Musk's Neuralink brain machine interface, and the new Macbook reviews.
Stories this week: Facebook reportedly reaches $5 billion settlement with the Federal …Facebook tells Congress how it thinks Libra should be regulatedHouse Democrats are considering a bill to ban Facebook from the …Senators aren’t sold on Facebook’s Libra projectEU opens Amazon antitrust investigationThe unpredictable legal implications of Trump’s Twitter-blocking defeatElon Musk unveils Neuralink's plans for brain-reading 'threads'Boston Dynamics' robots are preparing to leave the lab — is the world ready? Apple is silently updating Macs again to remove insecure ... Apple MacBook Air (2019) review: the new normalApple MacBook Pro 13 2019 Two USB ports review: considered ...
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Everything is too hard to use, with Asurion CEO Tony Detter
Tue, 16 Jul 2019
Everything is too complicated. Asurion CEO Tony Detter joins Verge editor-in-chief, Nilay Patel to discuss simplifying our experience with tech products, the problems with closed eco-systems and why an insurance company like Asurion got involved with tech support.
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Nintendo announces Switch Lite, Apple updates Macbooks, and a wild email from Foxconn
Fri, 12 Jul 2019
Nintendo announced a new Switch! Nilay, Dieter, and Paul discuss what's different with the new model and what's being updated with the original one. But first, continuing coverage of Foxconn's factory in Wisconsin — this time with a cryptic email.Next: new Macbooks! Kind of. Apple updated the Macbook Pro and Air and got rid of the 12-inch Macbook and its butterfly keyboard for future models. There's a whole lot more like a Zoom security flaw, a new streaming service, and of course some FCC talk.
🎶This week's theme song 🎶Foxconn will only create 1,500 jobs, says Wisconsin governorNintendo Switch Lite is a smaller, cheaper Switch built exclusively for handheld playNintendo is updating the original Switch with a new CPU and storageApple is reportedly giving up on its controversial MacBook keyboard …Apple discontinues 12-inch MacBookApple is silently removing Zoom’s web server software from MacsApple Watch eavesdropping vulnerability forces Apple to disable Walkie-TalkieI’m Jad Abumrad, and This Is How I WorkA small notebook for a system administrator WarnerMedia confirms its Netflix rival will be called HBO MaxAT&T says it will automatically block robocalls ‘in the coming months
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Net neutrality was repealed a year ago. Gigi Sohn explains what’s happened since
Tue, 09 Jul 2019
It's been a year since net neutrality was repealed. Gigi Sohn, a distinguished fellow at Georgetown Law's Institute for Technology Law and Policy, chats with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel about what's happened since by explaining the ripple effect of harmful policy decisions and more.
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Mourning a robot with Ashley Carman and Kaitlyn Tiffany of 'Why'd You Push That Button?'
Fri, 05 Jul 2019
What happens when your robot friend dies? Ashley Carman and Kaitlyn Tiffany of Why'd You Push That Button? explore the grieving community surrounding the short-lived social robot Jibo.
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Why big companies will never get content management right, with UCLA’s Sarah T Roberts
Tue, 02 Jul 2019
Behind the screen: content moderation in the shadows of social media author Sarah T Roberts joins Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel to discuss the business and dark side of content moderation while pondering future solutions.
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Jony Ive leaving Apple, iPadOS public beta, and Bill Gates’ greatest mistake
Fri, 28 Jun 2019
Public betas for iPadOS, iOS 13, and macOS Catalina are available now so Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller discuss the updates from using the software themselves. Also, It was announced during this recording that Apple’s chief design officer Jony Ive will depart the company later this year — the crew reacts. Other topics this week include Bill Gates discussing Microsoft losing to Android, a new Raspberry Pi, and updates on Foxconn's factory in Wisconsin.
Stories discussed this week: Jony Ive leaving Apple after nearly 30 years to start new design firmiPadOS public beta preview: worthy of the new nameiOS 13 hands-on: dark mode, Apple Maps, Reminders, and moreiOS 13’s best upgrade is in your car macOS Catalina first look: goodbye, iTunes; hello, iPad apps on Mac$35 Raspberry Pi 4 announced with 4K support and up to 4GB of RAMJony Ive leaving Apple after nearly 30 years to start new design firmBill Gates says his ‘greatest mistake ever’ was Microsoft losing to AndroidOne year after Trump's Foxconn groundbreaking, there is almost nothing to show for it
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Kara Swisher on Silicon Valley’s lack of competition
Tue, 25 Jun 2019
Recode editor-at-large Kara Swisher joins Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel to discuss the possibilities of breaking up big tech companies like Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon. Kara also explains how the dominance of these four giant companies harms competition and innovation in Silicon Valley and why tech companies should be doing more to help.
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Facebook announces Libra, Section 230 threatened, and RCS in the hands of Google
Fri, 21 Jun 2019
Paul Miller explains Facebook new cryptocurrency Libra, Adi Robertson explains Senator Josh Hawley's move to amend Section 230, and Dieter explains how Google is taking charge of RCS.
Stories discussed this week: Samsung accidentally makes the case for not owning a smart TV GE accidentally makes the case for not owning smart GE bulbs A paper towel dispenser with an end-user license agreement is a special kind of hellFacebook's Calibra is a secret weapon for monetizing its new ..Facebook confirms it will launch a cryptocurrency called Libra in 2020 …Internet giants must stay unbiased to keep their biggest legal shield Both parties are mad about a proposal for federal anti-bias certification Microsoft and Kano are launching a build-your-own Windows 10 PC kitGoogle is taking charge of RCSUsing secure chat is a moral imperative, and iMessage is my bestCyberpunk 2077 doesn't look weird enough to be edgy
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Death, fear, and anxiety at Facebook’s worst-performing content moderation site in North America
Wed, 19 Jun 2019
Earlier this year, The Verge’s Casey Newton broke the story about the working conditions of Facebook moderators at a campus in Phoenix, AZ In his feature, “The Trauma Floor,” In his follow-up reporting “Bodies in Seats,” he discovered that the pattern of severe workplace conditions extends to a second campus. Nilay Patel and Casey Newton discuss a workplace in Tampa, FL plagued by fear and anxiety and worse.
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Facebook executives Adam Mosseri and Andrew Bosworth on splitting up Facebook, privacy and more
Tue, 18 Jun 2019
Facebook executives Adam Mosseri and Andrew Bosworth sit down with The Verge’s Casey Newton at Code Conference to discuss antitrust and the prospect of breaking up Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. They also discuss Facebook Portal, and how the company is adopting new approaches to privacy, content moderation, and more.
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Introducing Nice Try! Utopian
Sat, 15 Jun 2019
Nice Try! is a new podcast from Curbed and the Vox Media Podcast Network that explores stories of people who have tried to design a better world, and what happens when those designs don't go according to plan. Season one, Utopian, follows Avery Trufelman on her quest to understand the perpetual search for the perfect place. Enjoy this special preview of the first episode, Jamestown: Utopian for Whom, and subscribe to Nice Try! for free in your favorite podcast app.
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Recapping Code Conference, Youtube’s CEO apologizes, and the Pixel 4 leaks
Fri, 14 Jun 2019
Fresh off of Code Conference, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul discuss YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki’s apology and difficult week, and consider whether there’s any viable alternative to Youtube. They also discuss the leaked photo of the upcoming Pixel 4. And later, a recap of what happened at E3 includes video game and hardware updates.
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Beyond Meat CEO Ethan Brown on sustainable food systems and the science of protein
Tue, 11 Jun 2019
Fresh off his IPO, Beyond Meat CEO Ethan Brown joins Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel to discuss the evolution of plant-based burgers, the science of protein, why his company avoids GMOs, and their mission to help create a more sustainable food system.
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YouTube’s bad week: pedophiles, hate speech, and Steven Crowder
Fri, 07 Jun 2019
There was so much news this week that we had to add another Vergecast episode to cover it all. Besides Apple’s WWDC, the most important story in The Verge’s coverage has been the various crises YouTube is facing over its moderation policies — problems with hate speech and harassment, pedophiles on the platform, and white supremacist content.
Verge editor-in-chiefand Vergecast co-hostNilay Patel invites Silicon Valley editor Casey Newton and senior reporter Adi Robertson to the show to explain what is happening on YouTube, how YouTube is handling it, and the outrage cycle surrounding it.
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WWDC 2019, a new Mac Pro, and updates to the iPad
Fri, 07 Jun 2019
This week Apple held their annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller discuss everything announced — from the Mac Pro to iOS to iPadOS.
Also, Google gave some updates on their new Stadia game service right before the show so the crew dives into that as well as the Palm Pre 10th anniversary.
Stories discussed this week:
-The Palm Pre launched 10 years ago today, here’s what it meant to me
-Apple’s $5,000 Pro Display monitor doesn’t come with a stand in the box
-Apple announces all-new redesigned Mac Pro, starting at $5,999
-Does the iPad make sense as a computer now?
-Apple knows that iPad mouse support has broad appeal
-iPadOS should make the iPad a better tablet, but not a laptop
-Sidecar lets you use your iPad as a second display for your Mac
-Apple reveals iPadOS for iPad with new home screen widgets and multitasking improvements
-Apple Maps is getting its own version of Google Maps’ Street View
-House lawmakers launch antitrust investigation into Big Tech
-Apple announces new sign-in tool to compete with Facebook and Google
-Apple will permanently remove Dashboard in macOS Catalina
-Apple CarPlay getting design refresh and better Siri support in iOS 13
-Apple TV and iOS will soon support Xbox One and PS4 controllers
-Apple’s HomePod speaker will be able to recognize who’s speaking to it with iOS 13
-Apple enables HomeKit support for home security cameras and routers
-Apple wants to save your hearing and track your menstrual cycle with new Apple Watch update
- Google’s Stadia game service is officially coming November: Everything you need to know
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The ethics of AI with Google's AI lead Jeff Dean
Tue, 04 Jun 2019
What are tech giants like Google doing to tackle the ethical issues that surround artificial intelligence? Verge senior reporter James Vincent speaks with Google AI lead Jeff Dean and Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel about AI bias, facial recognition, and government regulation around AI.
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Weird laptops of Computex, new Intel and AMD chips, and a WWDC preview
Fri, 31 May 2019
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller discuss all the new laptops revealed at Computex 2019, the new processor chips from Intel and AMD, what's to come at Apple's WWDC next week, and more updates on the T-Mobile and Sprint merger.
Stories discussed this week: Laptops are getting weird and wonderfulTwin River is Intel’s attempt to build a dual-screen laptop out of fabricDid Intel just nail the dual-screen gaming laptop?Asus put two 4K screens on its extravagant ZenBook Pro Duo laptop Intel, AMD, and ARM each see our computing future differentlyAMD’s flagship Ryzen 9 3900X has all the performance at half the price of IntelIntel’s 10th Gen, 10nm Ice Lake CPUs: everything you need to knowApple WWDC 2019: Mac Pro, iOS 13, Marzipan, and what else to expectApple should make more iPad apps for the MacApple refreshes the iPod touch with the iPhone 7’s processorApple’s latest defense of the App Store shows how hard it is to compete with AppleApple’s former app approval chief says he’s ‘really worried’ about company’s anticompetitive behaviorExperts are furious over the FCC’s rosy picture of broadband accessT-Mobile and Sprint might have to create a new carrier to get their merger approvedSprint’s 5G network is here, and it’s completely different from what Verizon and AT&T are doing5G has arrived in the UK, and it’s fast
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How technology is changing music with Switched on Pop’s Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan
Tue, 28 May 2019
Switched on Pop hosts Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan join Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel to unpack how technology is changing the distribution, making, and sound of popular music.
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The T-Mobile and Sprint merger, Apple tweaks the Macbook keyboards, and Huawei vs. Trump
Fri, 24 May 2019
The Verge's Russel Brandom joins the show to decipher the Huawei ban as well as its larger implications.
Second half of the show, Dieter Bohn explains how Apple is tweaking its troubled keyboard design on its current and future Macbooks. Nilay Patel ends the show with updates on the T-Mobile and Sprint merger.
Playdate is an adorable handheld with games from the creators of Qwop, Katamari, and moreOuya will be shut down for good on June 25thHuawei vs. Trump: all the news about the Chinese phone maker's …Intel, Qualcomm, and other chipmakers reportedly join Google in Huawei banGoogle pulls Huawei’s Android license, forcing it to use open source versionLawmakers applaud Google for revoking Huawei’s Android licenseHuawei can keep sending software updates to phones for three months, US saysMicrosoft removes Huawei laptop from store, remains silent on potential Windows banApple tweaks its troubled MacBook keyboard design, expands repair …Apple will repair 2016 MacBook Pros with 'flexgate' display issues for …Apple updates top-end MacBook Pros with tweaked keyboard and ...Sprint will sell off Boost Mobile if merger with T-Mobile is approved …T-Mobile's merger promises are meaningless Justice Department recommends blocking T-Mobile-Sprint ... The future of AT&T is an ad-tracking nightmare hellworld
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Huawei, 5G, and Robocalls with FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks
Tue, 21 May 2019
FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks stops by to discuss Huawei, regulating robocalls, net neutrality, the race for 5G and more with The Verge’s Nilay Patel and Makena Kelly.
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OnePlus 7 Pro review, the White House's censorship tool, and more streaming wars
Fri, 17 May 2019
Dieter Bohn's OnePlus 7 Pro and Pixel 3a review starts off the show, followed by Adi Robertson's coverage of everything the government is doing with Facebook and tariffs, and we end on our featured updates on the streaming wars.
Stories mentioned this week: One month ago, Foxconn said its innovation centers weren't empty …Verizon’s 5G network is now hitting gigabit download speedsThe new Apple TV app launches today on iOS, Apple TV, and Samsung TVsFacebook will increase pay for its contractors in North AmericaSamsung’s Galaxy Home missed its April launch date, and the company won’t say whyGoogle Pixel 3A review: a $399 phone with a great camera OnePlus 7 Pro review: an amazing screen meets a good enough …White House launches tool to report censorship on Facebook …Donald Trump is short-circuiting the electronics industry Phones and laptops are next to be hit by Trump's China tariff hikes …White House cracks down on Huawei equipment sales with executive …FCC commissioner calls for investigation into Chinese telecoms operating in US networksHP’s new dual-screen gaming laptop lets you watch Twitch and play simultaneouslyWhat does it cost to compete with Disney and Netflix? Quibi bets $2 …Disney wants full control of Hulu, but doesn't want to lose any shows …Comcast is giving Disney full control of HuluSubscribe to The Vergecast for free in your favorite podcast app
https://pod.link/430333725
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The lawyer who won against Apple at the Supreme Court
Tue, 14 May 2019
Apple just lost a case at the Supreme Court, and an antitrust lawsuit claiming that the App Store is a monopoly will proceed. Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and senior reporter Adi Robertson speak to Mark Rifkin, one of the lawyers who argued the case against Apple.Subscribe to the Vergecast here for free in your favorite podcast appFor more on this case, check out Adi Robertson's recent work on The Verge
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Google I/O and the future of Android with Google SVP Hiroshi Lockheimer and Android Director Stephanie Cuthbertson
Thu, 09 May 2019
Google's I/O conference in Mountain View, California, the Vergecast crew chats with Hiroshi Lockheimer, SVP at Google for Android, Chrome, Chrome OS, Play, comms and photos, and Stephanie Cuthbertson, director of Android to the show to talk new products such as the Pixel and Nest line, messaging, and of course Android.
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F8 and Facebook's future in privacy
Fri, 03 May 2019
Facebooks F8 conference happened this week so The Verge's Nilay Patel, Casey Newton, Ashley Carman, and Paul Miller break down the biggest announcements and updates from the event including Messenger, Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus, and more.
Stories discussed this week:The 5 biggest announcements from Facebook’s F8 developer conference keynote Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says the ‘future is private’Facebook keeps asking whether its keynote makes people like FacebookFacebook Messenger is coming to the desktopThe next version of Facebook Messenger will be radically smallerWhy Facebook is making a big bet on MessengerFacebook bans Alex Jones and Laura Loomer for violating its policies against dangerous individualsFacebook could create new privacy positions as part of FTC settlementFacebook adds ‘secret crushes’ so you can see which friends are thirsting after youFacebook’s Portal is getting WhatsApp support and launching internationallyOculus Quest review: a great system with a frustrating compromiseNubia stuck a cooling fan in its latest gaming smartphoneApple explains why it’s cracking down on third-party screen time and parental control apps
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Luminary and the podcast wars to come, with Nick Quah and Ashley Carman
Tue, 30 Apr 2019
The Podcast Wars are coming. After Luminary’s troubled launch, The Verge’s Nilay Patel and Ashley Carman sit-down with podcast expert Nick Quah of Hot Pod to discuss if Luminary or anyone could be “the Netflix of podcasts” and where the industry is headed.
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WWDC leaks, Luminary’s launch troubles, and Galaxy Fold review
Fri, 26 Apr 2019
After a week of Galaxy Fold troubles, The Verge's Dieter Bohn, Ashley Carman, and Paul Miller continue the foldable saga, along with drama with the new podcast app Luminary. We've also got some leaks from Apple's upcoming WWDC event and a rumored Pixel 3a from Google I/O so keep listening to stay informed.
Stories this week: Samsung Galaxy Fold review: broken dreamSamsung delays Galaxy Fold indefinitely: ‘We will take measures to strengthen the display’AT&T is now telling customers the Galaxy Fold will ship on June 13thiFixit’s Galaxy Fold teardown reveals its biggest design flawPodcast wars: $100 million startup Luminary launches Tuesday …iPad ImportiPad Windowing, dark modeiPad external DisplaySiri Intents & Siri ShortcutsOnePlus 7 Pro launch event set for May 14thThe OnePlus 7 Pro will have a 'breakthrough' display and 5GGoogle's Pixel 3 and Pixel 3a may come to T-Mobile Google teases new Pixel announcement for May 7th
To see The Vergecast live at Google I/O, RSVP at theverge.com/vergecastlive
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Aurora CEO Chris Urmson on what's next for self-driving cars
Tue, 23 Apr 2019
Aurora CEO Chris Urmson stops by to discuss the future of self-driving cars with The Verge's Nilay Patel and Andrew Hawkins. They explore how the industry has evolved over the years, and how long it will take before self-driving cars are commonly used on the road.
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Samsung's Galaxy Fold phones are breaking
Fri, 19 Apr 2019
The Samsung Galaxy Fold is here — and it’s already breaking. The Verge’s Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller talk first impressions of Samsung’s new phone. Later, they discuss the end of the feud and lawsuits between Apple and Qualcomm and more.
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The electric scooter revolution with Lime co-founder Brad Bao
Tue, 16 Apr 2019
Lime co-founder Brad Bao explains how the electric scooter revolution will evolve. The Verge's Nilay Patel and Andrew Hawkins discuss the seemingly overnight emergence of electric scooters in cities across the country. They explore the tension scooters can create and ponder the future of urban mobility.
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Foxxconn's empty innovation centers and a blackhole photo revealed
Thu, 11 Apr 2019
Loren Grush discusses the first image of a black hole, Nilay discusses Foxconn's broken dreams, Dieter discusses gadgets, and Paul discusses Microsoft's Chromium Edge browser. Long show but stick with us, there's a lot to know here.
Stories discussed this week:
- See the first image ever taken of a supermassive black hole
- Ikea and Sonos made the ultimate speaker lamp
- Foxconn’s ‘innovation centers’ are a bunch of empty buildings in Wisconsin
- Turns out Amazon buying Eero wasn’t the startup success story we thought
- New Zealand privacy commissioner says Facebook is run by ‘morally bankrupt’ liars
- T-Mobile relaunches Layer3 TV service as TVision Home
- Netflix confirms it killed AirPlay support, won't let you beam shows to …
- YouTube TV raises monthly price to $50, but adds Discovery channels ...
- Google patches ads into Android TV home screens without warning …
- LG G8 ThinQ review: many gimmicks, not enough progress
- Samsung's Galaxy A80 is an automated notchless slider with a ...
- Hidden Google Play info suggests 'midyear' release for Pixel 3 devices ...
- Microsoft's Chromium Edge browser is now officially available to test …
- Microsoft reveals all the Google things it removed in its Chromium …
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Jaron Lanier's ideas for the future
Tue, 09 Apr 2019
Computer philosophy writer and "founding father of virtual reality," Jaron Lanier, chats with Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel about why he's optimistic about the future. Lanier shares his thoughts on how the "manipulation economy" has reshaped the world we live in and why we should be controlling and profiting from our own data.
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AirPods 2 review, AirPower gone, and all the things Google killed
Fri, 05 Apr 2019
Apple cancelled AirPower! But they released AirPods 2. The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller discuss what Apple's next move is as well as what their competitor Google is cancelling too.
There's a whole lot more so keep listening for Paul's weekly segment "A jaunty nega-notch", an AirPod competitor, and more 5G updates.
Stories discussed this week:The Creators IssueApple cancels AirPower wireless chargerApple drops HomePod price down to $299Apple AirPods 2 review: even more wirelessAmazon Is Making a Rival to Apple’s AirPods as Its First Alexa WearableAndroid Q's second beta embraces foldable phones, multitasking …Leaked Oppo Reno pictures show off the weirdest notch-killing slider yetAnker's GaN charger-battery combo is now in the Apple Store Verizon begins deploying its 5G mobile network in parts of Chicago and MinneapolisMicrosoft unveils new Surface Book 2 model with Intel's latest quad …Dell XPS 13 (2019) review: the right stuff, refinedApple apologizes for continued reliability problems with its MacBook …
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Figuring out Apple's TV plans with Recode’s Peter Kafka
Tue, 02 Apr 2019
Will Apple's new foray into streaming be able to swim in the same waters as Netflix and Disney, or will it go the way of Verizon's Go90? Recode executive editor Peter Kafka and Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel discuss Apple's plan for streaming, news, and more.
Subscribe to Recode Media with Peter Kafka.
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Apple unveils credit card, streaming plans, and more
Wed, 27 Mar 2019
Apple's event this week introduced Apple TV Plus, Apple News Plus, Apple Card, Apple Arcade, and more channels on Apple TV. The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Chris Welch, and Paul Miller run through the event, their new services, and how it will compete with current products in the market.
Stories discussed this week: Apple Event 2019: TV plus shows, News, Oprah and biggest …Apple's TV efforts: an abridged history over the yearsApple News Plus: price, release date and how to sign upApple launches $9.99 Apple News PlusThe Apple Card is a perfect example of Apple's post-iPhone strategy …Apple announces Apple Card credit cardApple Card: Apple's thinnest and lightest status symbol everApple Arcade has game developers excited, but questions remain …Apple Arcade is a new game subscription for iOS, Mac, and Apple TV All the shows coming to Apple's TV streaming serviceApple's revamped TV app is coming to Roku and Fire TVMacbook Air (2019) reviewI rode with Nissan’s AR and 5G-powered virtual passengersNintendo plans two new Switch models for this year: WSJ
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The Age of Surveillance Capitalism with Shoshana Zuboff
Tue, 26 Mar 2019
The age of surveillance capitalism author Shoshana Zuboff considers whether "data is the new oil" and explains how data collection has fundamentally changed the economy and how big companies interact with consumers. Shoshana Zuboff breaks down how to define, understand and fight surveillance capitalism.
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Apple's new iPad mini and Google's Stadia gaming platform
Fri, 22 Mar 2019
A rundown of Apple's latest product updates including the new iPad mini, iPad Air, and AirPods. The Vergecast crew Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller also discuss Apple's upcoming event on Monday and what their new services may contain.
Second half of the show features Google's announcement of their new game streaming platform Stadia.
Links:
- Facebook stored hundreds of millions of passwords in plain text
- Apple updates $399 iPad mini with Apple Pencil support
-Apple’s new iPad mini is a terrific small tablet with no competition
-Apple brings back the iPad Air with 10.5-inch display and Smart Keyboard support
-Apple’s new AirPods come with a wireless charging case, Hey Siri support, and more battery life
-Apple will let you add 256GB of RAM to an iMac Pro for $5,200-Apple updates iMacs with new Intel processors and AMD GPUs
-A brand-new AirPower image has appeared on Apple’s Australian site-What to expect from Apple’s TV and news service event
-Apple’s plan for its new TV service: Sell other people’s TV services
- gone90.biz
-Here are the shows and films coming to Apple’s streaming service
- Is this robotic therapy pet the uncanny valley of dog?-Google unveils Stadia cloud gaming service, launches in 2019
-Google Stadia uses a custom AMD chip to offer 10.7 teraflops of cloud gaming power-Oculus unveils the Rift S, a higher-resolution VR headset with built-in tracking
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The future of Facebook and democracy with Casey Newton and Alex Stamos
Tue, 19 Mar 2019
Facebook's former chief security officer Alex Stamos joined Casey Newton onstage at SXSW to discuss the difficult issues that plague Facebook and democracy.
Subscribe to The Interface, Casey Newton's newsletter about social platforms and democracy.
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Check out Switched on Pop, a podcast that digs into the musical theory and cultural context of pop music. In this episode, hosts Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan explore how streaming changed the sound of pop music.
For more from Switched on Pop, subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
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Galaxy S10E review and Spotify takes on Apple
Fri, 15 Mar 2019
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Natt Garun, and Paul Miller discuss the changes in the new Android Q beta as well as a review of the Samsung Galaxy S10, S10+. and S10E. Which phone is best?
Also, Spotify files antitrust complaint over 'Apple tax'
All that and much more on this week's Vergecast.
Stories discussed in this episode: Android Q developer beta is available now on all Pixel devices The best early features of Android Q Every new Android Q feature we have found so farSamsung Galaxy S10E review: short, not shortchangedSamsung Galaxy S10 review: the awkward middle childSamsung Galaxy Buds review: imperfectly acceptableFacebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp are still down for some users …Facebook returns after its worst outage everFacebook and Instagram's outage cost advertisers thousands of …Spotify files antitrust complaint over 'Apple tax' Why Vivo thinks port-less phones are the futureApple confirms March 25th event, expected to announce new TV …Apple's WWDC 2019 will kick off on June 3rd
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Breaking up Apple, Google, Amazon, and Facebook
Tue, 12 Mar 2019
How would we break up the world’s most powerful companies? Live from SXSW, The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Casey Newton, and Ashley Carman discuss just how one would break up giants like Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google.
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Facebook's privacy pivot and the streaming wars
Fri, 08 Mar 2019
Breaking down Mark Zuckerberg’s letter on Facebook about its privacy-focused future. The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Julia Alexander, Casey Newton, and Paul Miller discuss Facebooks new pivot to privacy, the next move for HBO after the AT&T restructure, and YouTube's bad actors.
Stories from this episode: The president just called the CEO of Apple ‘Tim Apple’Read Mark Zuckerberg's letter on Facebook's privacy-focused future …Mark Zuckerberg promises a newer, more private Facebook Facebook knows Facebook isn't the futureFacebook's pivot to privacy has huge implications — if it's realThe messy details behind Facebook’s messaging plansHBO CEO Richard Plepler is leaving the company amid AT&T …AT&T's new HBO chief criticizes Netflix, says it 'doesn't have a brand …AT&T just made its first huge changes to HBO and the rest of …Game of Thrones' final season trailer prepares us for the biggest fight …Disney is ending its vault program, giving Disney+ a huge boost in the streaming warsHow baseball’s tech team built the future of televisionDying social robot Jibo goes out with a song and a danceYouTube is demonetizing all videos about Momo YouTube's family vloggers worry about future amid comments …YouTube terminates more than 400 channels following controversy …YouTube is 'aggressively approaching' solution to child exploitation ...voxmedia.com/podsurvey
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Can Anchor be the Youtube for podcasts? And should they?
Tue, 05 Mar 2019
Anchor CEO Michael Mignano discusses the company's recent acquisition by Spotify, the future of podcasting, and whether Anchor could become the "YouTube for podcasts." The Verge's Nilay Patel and Ashley Carman talk to Mignano about the current difficulties the podcast industry faces along with possible solutions for discovery and questioning what to do with the RSS feed.
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Mobile World Congress: How should your foldable phone fold?
Fri, 01 Mar 2019
The latest news from Mobile World Congress including Huawei's new foldable phone, Nokia's five-camera phone, and Sony's very tall phone.
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Dan Seifert, Paul Miller, Natt Garun, and Chaim Gartenberg discuss which foldable phone so far has the best design, what phone can actually get 5G, and Microsoft's updated headset the HoloLens 2.
Stories discussed this episode:
- Huawei has the best first draft for a foldable phone
- This 18,000mAh battery has a phone in it
- Sony’s Xperia 1 literally stands out from the crowd with a super tall screen
- LG enters the 5G game with the V50 ThinQ
- LG’s palm-reading G8 has a unique vision of the future
- LG’s answer to the foldable mania is a second screen
- The Nokia 9 PureView has five cameras and a lot to prove
- Motorola confirms its foldable phone is coming, and it could look like a RAZR
- HoloLens 2: inside Microsoft's new headset
- A closer look at Microsoft’s new Kinect sensor
- USB 3.2 standard gets new, even more confusing names ahead of its mainstream debut
Thanks to Microsoft Azure for sponsoring this episode. Get started with a free account and 12 months of popular free services at Azure.com/trial today.
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Casey Newton on the secret life of Facebook moderators
Tue, 26 Feb 2019
In “The Trauma Floor,” The Verge’s Casey Newton uncovered the horrendous working conditions for contract Facebook moderators. On this week’s Vergecast, he and editor-in-chief Nilay Patel discuss how he uncovered them.
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The Samsung Galaxy Fold is here and so is the Galaxy S10
Fri, 22 Feb 2019
Samsung unveils its new Galaxy foldable phone and the new S10 at their latest event. The Verge’s Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Dan Seifert, and Paul Miller react to the latest Samsung event and debate whether a foldable phone priced at a nearly $2,000 will be a game-changer. They also discuss the new updates to Samsung’s S10 phone, including a headphone jack.
Stories mentioned in the show:
Samsung’s foldable phone is the Galaxy Fold, available April 26th starting at $1,980
Samsung officially announces the Galaxy S10 and S10 Plus, starting at $899
The Samsung Galaxy S10E is small without skimping too much
Hands-on with Samsung’s new Galaxy Watch Active
Samsung’s new Galaxy Watch Active measures blood pressure
Nike says it’s ‘actively working’ to fix its broken smart sneakers
Samsung’s Galaxy S10 5G will temporarily be a Verizon exclusive
Trump wants 6G internet ‘as soon as possible’
AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson on Recode Media
Google claims built-in Nest mic was ‘never intended to be a secret’
Apple dug a tunnel beneath the App Store, and the rats are getting through
Apple to combine iPhone, iPad, and Mac apps by 2021, says Bloomberg
You can remap the Bixby button on Samsung’s Galaxy S10 to do whatever you want
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Foursquare is tracking you... responsibly
Tue, 19 Feb 2019
CEO of Foursquare Jeff Glueck discusses the ethics of companies that track their users’ movements. Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel and Glueck further explore Foursquare's aim to help its customers become less reliant on mapping companies like Google, and how responsibly managing a user’s data and privacy is not only the right thing to do, but good for business.
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Amazon HQ2 cancelled and Apple's rumored March 25th event
Fri, 15 Feb 2019
Nilay, Dieter, Casey, and Paul react to Amazon cancelling plans for their second headquarters in NYC, Apple's rumored spring event and announcements, and some new Android phones hitting the market soon.
Stories featured in this episode: Amazon cancels HQ2 in New York after backlashAmazon HQ2 defeat is a win for Queens activists but a ‘facepalm’ for tech leadersAmazon is buying mesh router company EeroJeff Bezos says National Enquirer is threatening to publish his nude …Apple’s Netflix competitor will reportedly be unveiled in March... or maybe AprilApple is reportedly planning a March 25th event for its subscriptionApple just made it easier to find and manage subscriptions in iOS …Apple's video service may launch without HBO and Netflix support …Apple reportedly demanding a staggering 50 percent of revenue with ...Apple's new deal for journalism should send publishers runningEarth is dying and this couple is crowdfunding a sex buttonNorth Focals glasses review: a $600 smartwatch for your facePhone makers aren’t even trying to keep their secrets secret anymoreGoogle launching Pixel 3 Lite and Pixel Watch in 2019, says Nikkei …The LG G8 has a vibrating OLED screen for a speaker
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Bill Gates on solving the world’s problems… and building a better toilet
Tue, 12 Feb 2019
Bill Gates and Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel discuss the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s ambitious plans to improve health in poor countries, build better toilets, gather better data about women, and rethink taxes on the wealthy.
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5G madness: why is Sprint suing AT&T?
Fri, 08 Feb 2019
Sprint is suing AT&T for falsely advertising its network as "5G." Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel chats with Sprint's legal counsel, Craig Whitney, about why Sprint is suing AT&T and why no one can seem to agree on what 5G is.
Sprint is suing AT&T over '5G E' lies
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Spotify’s big audio play, plus a Palm tiny phone review
Fri, 08 Feb 2019
Spotify acquires Gimlet Media and Anchor in a play to further expand into audio beyond music streaming. Later, Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller review the tiny new Palm phone, address Samsung Galaxy S10 rumors and finally, some Apple updates.
Links:
- Spotify gets serious about podcasts with two acquisitions
- Latest leaks confirm cheaper and smaller Samsung Galaxy S10e
- Samsung’s Galaxy S10 will be one of the first Wi-Fi 6 phones
- New Samsung true wireless earbuds appear in leaked promotional …
- Samsung Galaxy Sport leak shows a sleek bezel-less smartwatch …
- Palm phone review: it won’t save you from your phone
- Apple releases iOS 12.1.4 to fix Group FaceTime security flaw
- Apple is compensating the 14-year-old who discovered major FaceTime security bug
- Apple retail chief Angela Ahrendts is leaving in April
- Apple just endorsed AT&T’s fake 5G E network
- Fine, here’s a $100 Lightning to Ethernet dongle for iPads
- Net neutrality takes center stage at congressional hearing
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Lina Khan on Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox
Tue, 05 Feb 2019
Should we break up Amazon and Facebook? Columbia Law School academic fellow Lina Khan, who wrote the impactful “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox" for The Yale Law Journal, joins Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel to discuss whether Amazon and Facebook should be broken up and what it might look like if that were to happen.
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Apple goes to war with Facebook and Google
Fri, 01 Feb 2019
Apple has disabled Facebook and Google’s internal applications after privacy violations were revealed, leaving Google and Facebook employees at a standstill for key operations. Meanwhile, in other Apple news, the tech giant’s revenue declined over the holiday quarter and is reportedly testing new iPhones with three rear cameras and a USB-C port.
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Fixing America’s internet, with Susan Crawford
Tue, 29 Jan 2019
Harvard Law School professor Susan Crawford explains how America’s internet connectivity issues and corrosive infrastructure are holding the country back and how we can rally to fix it. She and Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel also discuss the Huawei scandal, politicians' roles in improving broadband internet, and her new book Fiber: The Coming Tech Revolution—and Why America Might Miss It.
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More Galaxy S10 leaks and Sonos headphones
Fri, 25 Jan 2019
The Samsung Galaxy S10 continues to leak, indicating that it may have a headphone jack, a hole-punch display, and a cryptocurrency wallet.
But that’s not all. We also saw some new concepts for foldable phones, a rumor about Sonos headphones, and theories on Google’s secret Fuchsia operating system.
So this week on The Vergecast, Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Paul Miller run through all of that and then some, which you can listen to right now.
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Pixel 3 Lite leaks, Apple releases new battery cases, and Samsung readies the S10
Fri, 18 Jan 2019
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter run through a week of gadget news. Images of the Google Pixel 3 “Lite” and the Samsung Galaxy S10 have leaked, starting up a new season of phone releases. The crew also looks forward to what Google will do with its investment in Fossil’s smartwatch tech, Microsoft’s experiment with foldable devices, and how the Federal Trade Commission will react to Tim Cook’s call to give consumers more privacy.
There’s a whole lot more in this week’s episode — including Paul’s weekly segment “Please replace magenta” — so listen to it all to stay informed.
You can also check out our new narrative fiction series Better Worlds, featuring 10 stories by 10 different fiction writers about the future and hope.
YouTube
Verge Extras
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August CEO Jason Johnson on opening the smart home of the future
Tue, 15 Jan 2019
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel chats with August CEO Jason Johnson about smart locks and the challenges of integrating various technologies within a smart home. They discuss whether every company needs to be a data collection company, and why it's so difficult to be a hardware company in tech.
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CES: Google vs. Alexa and the latest 5G delusion
Wed, 09 Jan 2019
More from CES with The Verge’s Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Dami Lee, and Dan Seifert who talk through the ongoing developments in voice assistant technology and the continuing rivalry between Google Assistant and Amazon’s Alexa. They also discuss a range of gadgets from the showroom floor such as Alienware's Area51m laptop to a laundry-folding robot as well as Verizon’s shots fired at AT&T over their 5G claim.
2:05 - Tim Cook says Apple will “announce new services this year”
8:02 - Google’s plan to take on Alexa: new features, new devices, and a Trojan horse
9:25 - We finally heard Google Assistant work on Sonos speakers
12:01 - Google Assistant’s new interpreter mode can translate conversations — but it’s not magic
15:06 - Google Assistant is coming for your car with new hands-free voice control from Anker and JBL
27:05 - Foldimate’s laundry-folding machine actually works now
31:24 - Wacom’s $649 Cintiq 16 bridges the gap between hobbyists and pros
38:16 - BOCCO emo
42:05 - The Alienware Area-51m is a full-fledged desktop disguised as a laptop
42:23 - Lenovo’s new Yoga S940 is all about its impressive display
49:12 - Verizon says it won’t launch fake 5G icons like AT&T did
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CES: LG’s impressive rollable TV and Samsung’s iTunes integration
Tue, 08 Jan 2019
The Verge's Nilay Patel, Ashley Carman, Dieter Bohn, and Vlad Savov discuss the first big news day at CES — including Samsung getting iTunes on their TVs, LG's new rollable display actually coming out in 2019, and the numerous announcement of 8K.
07:28 - Apple trolls CES with a giant dig at Android and Alexa privacy
08:16 - Five big questions about Apple putting iTunes on Samsung TVs
17:12 - LG will bring AirPlay 2 support to its 2019 TVs
20:20 - Taking the smarts out of smart TVs would make them more expensive
27:08 - LG’s groundbreaking roll-up TV is going on sale this year
33:08 - LG’s 2019 TV lineup includes Alexa, HDMI 2.1, and an 88-inch 8K OLED
33:50 - Samsung’s 75-inch MicroLED 4K TV is a huge step into the future
33:59 - Sony is adding Apple’s AirPlay 2 and HomeKit to its Android TV
38:27 - Sony’s best 2019 party speaker has cup holders for your beer
43:33 - Roku and TCL are working on an 8K HDR TV coming in 2019
46:11 - Smells like there could be drama in the scented proprietary pods business
49:08 - Kohler’s smart toilet promises a ‘fully-immersive experience’
54:08 - Asus reversed the notch to get its laptop bezels even thinner
55:47 - Corsair shrunk the RGB LED down to be as small as the head of a pin
59:07 - T-Mobile roasts AT&T for updating phones with a fake 5G logo
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CES: Privacy and smart TVs with Vizio CTO Bill Baxter
Mon, 07 Jan 2019
To kick off our coverage of the Consumer Electronics Show, Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel sits down with Vizio chief technology officer Bill Baxter to talk about the future of the SmartCast platform, what it’s like to put AirPlay 2 and Apple HomeKit on Vizio TVs, and, most importantly, privacy relating to data tracking on smart TVs.
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Apple's iPhone problem and CES preview
Fri, 04 Jan 2019
This week, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter prep by looking at rumors, early announcements, and predictions for the upcoming “biggest event in tech”.
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GoPro CEO Nick Woodman on how to compete without competition
Tue, 18 Dec 2018
GoPro CEO Nick Woodman joins The Verge's Nilay Patel and Sean O'Kane to discuss GoPro's recent launches, occupying a space with few competitors, and why it pulled out of the drone market.
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334: Sundar Pichai testifies, Samsung A8, and Verizon's future
Thu, 13 Dec 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter devote half the show to discussing what happened when CEO of Google Sundar Pichai testified before the House Judiciary Committee. Congress thinks Google has a bias problem — does it?
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What Foxconn’s really doing in Wisconsin, with Reply All’s Sruthi Pinnamaneni
Tue, 11 Dec 2018
Nilay Patel interviews Sruthi Pinnamaneni on The Vergecast
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333: 5G phones, Juul, and Microsoft's move to Chromium
Fri, 07 Dec 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter are joined by Verge science reporter Rachel Becker to discuss what’s going on in the world of Juul — why it’s so popular, how addictive it is, and where it’s being restricted.
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The history of online harassment before and after Gamergate with Caroline Sinders
Tue, 04 Dec 2018
Cataloging online harassment before and after Gamergate with Caroline Sinders
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332: Pixel Slate, Google Fi, and Section 230
Fri, 30 Nov 2018
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul are back from Thanksgiving and ready to spill the beans on the tech news you may or may not have been paying attention to this week.
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On this week’s interview episode, Nilay is joined by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Verge policy reporter Makena Kelly to discuss Congress’ plans to regulate Big Tech in the new year. Earlier this month, Democrats were able to take back a majority in the House of Representatives, and after blockbuster events this year like Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica scandal, lawmakers are gearing up to rein in these Silicon Valley giants.
Khanna, who represents the California district that houses the Apple and Google campuses, was tasked with developing a set of principles these companies should abide by when it comes to issues like privacy, net neutrality, and anti-competitive behavior. He made the rounds, consulting with think tanks, the creator of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee, and the tech companies themselves. From those discussions, Khanna was able to put forth a framework of 10 rights US citizens should have when they’re on the internet.
Khanna’s set of principles is called the “Internet Bill of Rights,” and with Democrats recapturing the House, tech leaders like Khanna have a chance to codify ideas like these into laws.
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Wireless Microphone
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Dieter Bohn, Casey Newton, and Paul Miller bring you the latest this week with Amazon's announcement of the location of its new headquarters, a report on Facebook's leaders, a Google Pixel 3 Night Sight review,and a whole bunch more.
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President of StubHub Sukhinder Singh Cassidy
Tue, 13 Nov 2018
Nilay Patel interviews President of StubHub Sukhinder Singh Cassidy
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330: iPad Pro review, Macbook Air review, and Walt Mossberg
Thu, 08 Nov 2018
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn reviewed Apple’s new iPad Pro and MacBook Air, and discuss their take on this week’s show.
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Anker CEO Steven Yang is all in on USB-C
Tue, 06 Nov 2018
Nilay interviews Steven Yang, Founder and CEO of Anker.
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329: Macbook Air, iPad Pro, and Mac Mini
Fri, 02 Nov 2018
Vergecast hosts Nilay and Dieter were able to attend Apple’s event in Brooklyn this week, so you can guess that’s what the crew talked about on this weeks show.
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Ivy Ross (Google’s VP of hardware design) and Rishi Chandra (Google’s VP of home and Nest)
Tue, 30 Oct 2018
Google's Ivy Ross and Rishi Chandra discuss the evolving and increasingly human design language of Google products, the future of devices like the Home Hub in a world that demands privacy, and — yes — the infamous Pixel 3 notch.
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328: iPhone XR review, Google Home Hub and Yoga Book C390
Fri, 26 Oct 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter discuss Nilay’s review of the iPhone XR as well as reviews of the Yoga Book C930 and Google’s Home Hub.
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Julia Alexander says YouTube makes everything more extreme
Tue, 23 Oct 2018
How YouTube makes everything more extreme
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327: Pixel 3 review, the new Palm phone, and Google antitrust violations
Fri, 19 Oct 2018
Pixel 3 review, Google antitrust violations, and the new Palm phone
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Scott Belsky brings Photoshop to the iPad
Mon, 15 Oct 2018
Scott Belsky brings Photoshop to the iPad
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Pixel 3, Pixel Slate, and Home Hub
Thu, 11 Oct 2018
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Dan Seifert went to Google’s Pixel 3 event this week in New York City. After the event, the trio, along with Paul Miller, got together for an early taping of The Vergecast to discuss Google’s product announcements and their first impressions.
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Ring CEO Jamie Siminoff wants to reduce neighborhood crime
Tue, 09 Oct 2018
Ring began as a humble crowdfunded project called Doorbot — a Wi-Fi-enabled video doorbell that enabled two-way communication. In 2013, it was rejected on Shark Tank. This year, the company was acquired by Amazon for over $1 billion.
Nilay sat down with Ring CEO Jamie Siminoff on this week’s Vergecast to talk about joining the Amazon family of brands, the future of security in smart homes, and how Ring product owners may (or may not) work with law enforcement to make neighborhoods safer.
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325: Chinese spy chips, Microsoft announcements, and Pixel 3 preview
Fri, 05 Oct 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul bring in experts to report on the top stories on the site this week. Reporter and host of Why’d You Push That Button Ashley Carman stops by the studio to explain the Bloomberg report detailing “Chinese spy chips” that may have been planted on servers from companies like Apple and Amazon.
After that bizarre piece of news, senior editor Dan Seifert comes on the show to talk about the Microsoft hardware event he attended this week and the new products that were announced.
We’ve also got a Google hardware event coming up next week, so they run through the leaks and rumors of gadgets that we might see. Check back next week for our full event coverage on this show.
There’s a whole lot more in between all of that — including our favorite reoccurring segments from Liz Lopatto and Paul Miller — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:45 - What we still don’t know about the Facebook breach
2:48 - Chinese spy chips would be a ‘god-mode’ hack, experts say with Ashley Carman
29:18 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto
33:37 - Microsoft Surface event 2018: the 5 biggest announcements with Dan Seifert
1:10:03 - Paul’s weekly segment “Type like nobody’s watching”
1:13:58 - New Google Pixel 3: the 8 most credible leaks
1:16:36 - LG V40 Review: one phone, five cameras
1:19:28 - iPhone XS: Why It’s A Whole New Camera – Halide
Also, in case you missed it, Nilay talked to Meredith Rose from Public Knowledge about the Music Modernization Act. You can listen to that along with this episode right in the Vergecast feed.
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Public Knowledge’s Meredith Rose explains the Music Modernization Act
Tue, 02 Oct 2018
The Music Modernization Act has passed Congress and now sits on President Trump’s desk, awaiting his signature. The bill is years in the making, a much needed solution to the complicated collision of music streaming services, licensing issues, and copyright law. For this week’s interview episode of The Vergecast, Nilay sat down with Meredith Rose, Policy Counsel at Public Knowledge, a consumer advocacy group. They talked about how the Music Modernization Act will help artists get paid, companies license music, and how new streaming services might compete with giants like Spotify.
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324: Instagram chaos, Photokina 2018, and Elon Musk gets sued
Fri, 28 Sep 2018
This week, we saw the two founders of Instagram abruptly leave, so Casey Newton comes on the show to talk about all that drama and what it might mean for Facebook’s prized possession.
Then, Dan Seifert joins us to talk about all of the cameras that were announced at Photokina this year, plus all the models that were announced before the show even started.
Finally, Liz Lopatto comes on for an impromptu This Week In Elon to discuss the fact that the SEC has filed a lawsuit against Mr. Musk, which happened just before we started recording the show.
1:28 - Instagram founders resign from Facebook
5:00 - 5 times Facebook messed with Instagram
20:43 - Whats App co-founder Forbes interview
22:32 - Former boss of Facebook Messenger calls Brian Acton “low class”
32:31 - Photokina 2018 recap
38:39 - Zeiss camera with built-in Adobe Lightroom
51:16 - Paul’s weekly segment “Space Egg”
56:07 - This week in Elon Musk: Live Edition™ with Liz Lopatto
1:09:52 - Oculus Quest
Also, in case you missed it, Nilay talked to Google AMP’s Malte Ubl about how he’s trying to make the mobile web better. You can listen to that in the Vergecast feed.
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Portable Teleprompter
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Google AMP’s Malte Ubl wants to make the mobile web better
Tue, 25 Sep 2018
You may not have heard of Google AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) but you almost certainly have used it. The Google open-source project has been making waves since it launched in 2016 in an effort to make the mobile web faster to load and smoother to navigate. This week, Nilay sat down with Malte Ubl, creator and tech lead of AMP, to talk about the controversy of bifurcating the web, forming a technical steering committee to co-lead the project, and Ubl’s vision for the future of the mobile web.
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iPhone XS review, Apple Watch 4 review, and Amazon's surprise hardware event
Fri, 21 Sep 2018
This past week, Nilay reviewed the new iPhone XS and XS Max while Dieter reviewed the Apple Watch series 4. Paul, Dieter, and Nilay dedicate half the show to their review and whether it’s worth upgrading to the new model. Second half of the show, the crew tries to cover all of the insane amount of gadgets that Amazon announced this week, including a DVR for over-the-air channels. There’s a whole lot more in between that — like deputy editor Liz Lopatto’s “This week in Elon” segment — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all. 01:26 - Apple iPhone XS and XS Max review: smoothed out 32:10 - Apple Watch Series 4 review: the best gets better 54:44 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto 59:00 - Paul’s weekly segment “Spin to win” 1:03:46 - The 14 biggest announcements from Amazon’s surprise hardware event 1:33:09 - Sony is launching a PlayStation Classic console this December loaded with 20 games Also, in case you missed it, Nilay along with transportation reporter Sean O’Kane talked to Ford AV CEO Sherif Marakby about self-driving cars and what Ford is doing with them. You can listen to that right in the Vergecast feed.
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Ford Autonomous Vehicles President and CEO Sherif Marakby
Tue, 18 Sep 2018
Big car companies like Ford have broken themselves up to enter the market of self-driving cars and compete with Silicon Valley companies like Tesla and Uber. Ford Autonomous Vehicles hopes to become the go-to supplier of autonomous driving software, and have even set the ambitious goal of shipping a self-driving car without a steering wheel or pedals in the next few years. For this week’s interview episode of The Vergecast, Nilay and Verge transportation reporter Sean O’Kane sit down with Ford Autonomous Vehicles President and CEO Sherif Marakby to discuss the past, present, and future of self-driving cars.
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Apple iPhone XS event, iPhone XR, and Apple Watch Series 4
Thu, 13 Sep 2018
Vergecast hosts Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn attended the Apple event on Wednesday, and they were able to get their hands on the new iPhones and Apple Watch that were on display.
After the event, they headed to our San Francisco studio to Skype with Paul Miller to record their first impressions, a summary of the event, and lay to rest some conspiracies.
That’s all you really need to know before listening!
3:11 - Apple’s AirPower charger is still a no-show, one year after it was first announced
5:18 - September Keynote 2018 — Opening Film
08:33 - iPhone XS and XS Max: hands-on with Apple’s giant new phone
13:18 - The 3 best and worst features of the iPhone XS and XS Max
20:32 - iPhone XS Max overview
31:16 - Apple iPhone XR hands-on: the new default iPhone
47:15 - Paul’s weekly segment “E-skates arm race”
49:39 - Apple watch4 hands-on: bigger is better
1:04:15 - Apple adds lyric search, phone calls, and multiple timers to the HomePod
1:14:47 - What’s worse than a dongle? No dongle
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Anki CEO Boris Sofman
Tue, 11 Sep 2018
Anki, known for creating “robots that move you,” just finished a successful Kickstarter campaign to fund their new home robot, Vector. Anki CEO Boris Sofman sat down with Nilay for this week’s interview episode of The Vergecast to talk about the new companion robot, why gendering the robots is important, and how to avoid the uncanny valley.
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Apple event preview, social media hearings, and monopoly week
Fri, 07 Sep 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, Russell, and Dieter dedicate half the show to The Verge’s monopoly week, which dives into the future of tech monopolies. They also discuss the social media hearings that happened on Capitol Hill on Wednesday.
In the second half of the show, the crew updates us on what to expect for next week’s Apple event, from the mysterious third phone to the updated AirPods rumors.
There’s a whole lot in between that — like a whole section dedicated to Roombas — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:33 - Trump says Amazon, Facebook, and Google represent a ‘very antitrust situation’
08:08 - The 7 biggest moments from Wednesday’s social media hearings
26:13 - This week in Elon Musk with Sean O’Kane
30:39 - The 9 most plausible rumors about the new iPhones
35:28 - Pixel 3 XL found in a Lyft, had already leaked enough for driver to recognize it
37:39 - New 6.5-inch iPhone X model reportedly called the ‘iPhone XS Max’
38:25 - Third-party USB-C to Lightning cables are reportedly happening
42:41 - Five things to expect at the Apple event next week
45:16 - Paul’s weekly segment “The decline of dirt”
50:59 - Google’s Pixel 3 event will take place on October 9th
51:53 - BMW is the latest automaker to introduce its own in-car voice assistant
52:04 - Netflix and YouTube are most throttled mobile apps by US carriers, new study says
52:20 - Razer confirms it’s working on a second-generation Razer Phon
53:17 - Samsung teases foldable smartphone launch for later this year
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Tim Wu thinks it’s time to break up Facebook
Tue, 04 Sep 2018
Best known for coining the phrase “net neutrality” and his book The Master Switch, Tim Wu has a new book coming out in November called The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age. In it, he argues compellingly for a return to aggressive antitrust enforcement in the style of Teddy Roosevelt, saying that Google, Facebook, Amazon, and other huge tech companies are a threat to democracy as they get bigger and bigger.
Nilay sits down with Wu for this week's interview episode of The Vergecast.
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IFA 2018, Apple event announced, and iPhone/Apple watch leaks
Fri, 31 Aug 2018
This week, The Verge has been at IFA 2018, Europe’s big tech event. There are a lot of new gadgets, so Nilay, Dieter, and Paul go through their favorites on The Vergecast.
Also, Apple announced its September event this week, and immediately following the announcement, iPhone and Apple Watch leaks surfaced. The crew discusses.
And, of course, we have our fan-favorite segments: Liz’s “This week in Elon Musk” and Paul’s “Keyboard-in-the-front club: population 2”
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Sonos announcing a geeky new amp — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:04 - The Internet of Garbage by Sarah Jeong
02:08 - Apple’s next iPhone event will be on September 12th
03:24 - Purported iPhone XS image shows gold color and Plus-sized display
15:03 - Leaked Apple Watch Series 4 image reveals bigger display, new complications
25:15 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto
29:30 - IFA 2018: all the biggest news from Europe’s grand tech showcase
29:43 - Acer’s absurd Predator Thronos gaming chair is fit for a king
32:29 - Lenovo’s new Yoga Book replaces the keyboard with an E-Ink screen
36:22 - Asus’ new laptop has a touchscreen trackpad
37:44 - Skagen’s minimalist Falster smartwatch gets a sequel with fitness features
43:01 - Sony’s 1000X M3 noise-canceling headphones have an improved design and USB-C
45:09 - Paul’s weekly segment “Keyboard-in-the-front club: population 2”
48:51 - Trump lashes out at Google: all the news about the president’s intensifying feud with Silicon Valley
52:18 - The new Sonos Amp is coming to save your old speakers
59:20 - The last Blockbuster: what we really lose when video stores shut down
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Microsoft’s president explains how Gab shutdown notice went from customer support to his desk
Tue, 28 Aug 2018
We're kicking off our secondary Vergecast episode of the week with an interview with Microsoft President and Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith.
In this wide-ranging interview , Smith expanded on why the company nearly shut down Gab.ai, the “free-speech” absolutist platform that’s become an alt-right favorite.
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App Store chaos, ray tracing, and new Macbook Air rumors
Fri, 24 Aug 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Paul, Nilay, and Dieter start off the show with the news that Netflix is testing a payment feature to bypass Apple’s App Store fees, which leads into a larger discussion of (as Nilay calls it) “App Store chaos.”
Paul seems pretty excited about “ray tracing” — a term that Nvidia is using for its upcoming graphics cards — so the crew explains what that means and how far ahead Nvidia is compared to its competition.
Competition is a general theme in this week’s episode.
We’ve also got our two recurring segments in the show: deputy editor Liz Lopatto’s “This Week in Elon Musk” (which is now a newsletter) and Paul’s segment “Cold ears, warm heart.”
And we must not forget the latest Apple rumors that have hit the news in preparation for the likely Apple event in September.
But there’s a whole lot more in between that, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
03:35 - Netflix is testing a payment feature to bypass Apple’s App Store fees
20:39 - ‘Ray tracing’ could bring the biggest graphics jump in a decade
30:59 - DJI’s new Mavic 2 drones have upgraded cameras and zoom lenses
34:34 - Nikon strikes back at Sony with first full-frame mirrorless cameras
40:09 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto
44:15 - Apple’s MacBook Air successor will reportedly have slim bezels and high-res Retina display
51:14 - Microsoft to bundle Xbox One consoles, Xbox Live, and Game Pass into a monthly subscription service
52:56 - Paul’s weekly segment “Cold ears, warm heart”
53:52 - A day in the life of a Waymo self-driving taxi
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This week in Twitter, Elon Musk, and batteries
Fri, 17 Aug 2018
We’ve got a whirlwind of an episode this week on The Vergecast. Nilay, Paul, and Dieter bring back Silicon Valley Editor and host of Converge Casey Newton to discuss Twitter’s bad week and what the heck is going on with them.
But before that, there’s a whole lot of other things that came up. We reviewed both the Galaxy Note 9 and Android 9 Pie this week, so Dieter runs through everything you need to know about the two launches.
We’ve also got two fresh segments this this week. Deputy Editor Liz Lopatto updates us on this week in Elon Musk, and culture reporters Megan Farokhmanesh and Bijan Stephen stop by to tell us what’s happening in culture section of The Verge.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — such as Paul’s segment, “Phone prison,” that he does every week — so listen in to hear it all.
01:36 - Battery week
02:14 - Note 9 review
09:58 - Android 9 Pie review
18:11 - This week in Elon with Liz Lopatto
21:51 - Tesla allegedly covered up drug trafficking and spied on employees at the Gigafactory, whistleblower says
23:03 - Verizon’s 5G home internet launch will come with free YouTube TV or Apple TV 4K
23:26 - Sprint and LG will release a 5G smartphone in the first half of 2019
31:02 - This week in culture with Megan and Bijan
38:18 - Twitter’s fear of making hard decisions is killing it
1:01:05 - Twitter officially kills off key features in third-party apps
1:08:00 - Paul’s weekly segment “Phone prison”
1:11:20 -Google may add Windows 10 dual-boot option to Chromebooks
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Magic Leap, Galaxy Note 9, and Android Pie
Fri, 10 Aug 2018
If you’ve been reading The Verge this week, then you know Samsung announced a few products. We got our hands on the Galaxy Note 9, the Galaxy Watch, and we even got to look at that Home speaker as well. That news is covered in a big chunk of The Vergecast this week, but there was also so much other stuff that happened.
Adi Robertson was able to travel down to Plantation, Florida, to check out Magic Leap’s creator edition headset. She sits down with Nilay, Paul, and Dieter to discuss her experience with the device and how it compares to the years of hype surrounding it.
And, of course, since another week went by on this planet, there is another week of Elon Musk news. Science editor Liz Lopatto graciously fills us in on the show.
Like I said, there’s a whole lot more — like Paul’s weekly segment SHAASUIVG — so if you listen to it all, you’ll get it all really.
03:32 - Samsung announces Galaxy Note 9 with bigger screen, huge battery, and more powerful S Pen
16:20 - Fortnite for Android is launching today exclusively on recent Samsung Galaxy devices
23:47 - Samsung unveils its latest smartwatch — the Galaxy Watch
24:27 - Samsung announces Galaxy Home speaker
25:49 - Samsung is partnering with Spotify across its devices
29:20 - The 5 most important Android Pie updates
32:57 - I tried Magic Leap and saw a flawed glimpse of mixed reality’s amazing potential
54:25 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto
58:33 - Microsoft Surface Go review: a little goes a long way
1:03:03 - The new Anki Vector robot is smart enough to just hang out
1:08:35 - The FCC lied to Congress about an alleged cyberattack and didn’t come clean until now
1:12:00 - Justice Department appeal says AT&T-Time Warner merger decision is ‘contrary to fundamental economic logic’
1:14:48 - Paul’s weekly segment “SHAASUIVG”
1:17:24 - Google Pixel 3 XL leak appears to show production hardware and wired USB-C Pixel Buds
1:18:09 - The Palm smartphone reboot is shaping up to be disappointing
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Surface Go, Apple earnings, and HipChat memories
Fri, 03 Aug 2018
In the thrilling conclusion to our three part epic miniseries, "Apple doesn't make the laptops we want," Nilay, Paul, and Dieter discuss how nothing really even matters because Apple is a phone company worth $1 trillion.
Samsung, Amazon, and Tesla earnings are also discussed, along with Farhad Manjoo's "Frightful Five" thesis.
Then, in "The Bezel Wars," our hosts discuss the Surface Go, iPad rumors, and the Windows 10 S life Dieter has been living.
Paul's weekly segment about "Wireless Vapes" is as poignant as ever.
Ultimately, the final question is something like, "How many notches can you fit on the blockchain?"
02:19 - The race to $1 trillion
05:25 - Phones, not Macs
14:18 - Amazon's cloud power
24:53 - Dieter's Surface Go impressions
26:41 - Can you name ten Windows 10 S apps?
34:20 - #donglelife
38:44 - Paul's weekly segment, "Wireless Vapes"
44:35 - Two notches, max
46:31 - Pixel 3 leak
47:54 - Mergers and acquisitions
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Macbook Pro review, Lenovo smart display review, and the Data Transfer Project
Fri, 27 Jul 2018
After a week of speculation on whether the new MacBook Pro was throttling performance under heat, Apple released a software fix to address the problem. Dieter’s review for the laptop (post software fix) published on Wednesday so Nilay, Paul, and Dieter discuss what happened with the product and how it performs.
Dieter also reviewed the new Lenovo Smart Display, so there's a chunk of the show dedicated to that device, which exceeded expectations.
And we’ve got another week of Elon Musk. Transportation reporter Andrew Hawkins gives us an update in what has been happening in the world of Tesla, SpaceX, and the various endeavors of the unpredictable billionaire.
We’re going strong with our weekly interviews, and this week we have Brian Willard from Google to discuss the Data Transfer Project — Google’s initiative designed to transfer data from one service to another without downloading and re-uploading.
We also can’t forget the segment Paul does every week called “What is it like to be a dolphin?” so keep listening for that.
But you know, we’ve got a whole lot more in between that — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
02:30 - Apple MacBook Pro review (2018, 15-inch): the heat is on
22:01 - This week in Elon Musk with Andrew Hawkins
26:53 - Lenovo Smart Display review
35:44 - Data Transfer Project with Brian Willard of Google
59:46 - Paul’s weekly segment “What is it like to be a dolphin?”
1:02:30 - Amazon’s Alexa Cast makes it simpler to play music from your phone on Echo speakers
1:10:00 - Facebook growth slows in aftermath of privacy scandals
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Google gets fined, Macbook Pro benchmarks, and Roku CEO Anthony Wood
Fri, 20 Jul 2018
We’ve got a super stuffed episode of The Vergecast this week.
First, the biggest news in tech right now is the European Commission’s ruling that Google has been unfairly using Android to push Google search on users, giving it an unfair advantage. Nilay, Dieter, and Paul sit down and discuss the implications.
In the second half of the show, Dieter discusses some of the new MacBook Pro benchmarks that claim the processors may throttle performance due to cooling issues.
Nilay got an exclusive interview with Roku CEO Anthony Wood, so we’ve included that in this episode as well.
Also, our culture coverage continues this week with another roundup by Megan Farokhmanesh and Bijan Stephen.
There’s even a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s newly sponsored segment “Fold the phone” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:46 - Verizon is shutting down its original video app Go90
06:26 - Six questions you were afraid to ask about Google’s EU antitrust case
25:09 - Google may put its Fuchsia OS on smart home devices within three years
34:25 - This week in culture with Megan and Bijan
39:42 - Test suggests 2018 MacBook Pro can’t keep up with Intel Core i9 chip’s thermal demands
53:15 - Roku CEO Anthony Wood interview
1:17:33 - Paul’s weekly segment “Fold the phone”
1:20:39 - Galaxy Note 9 leak suggests it looks a lot like the Note 8
1:22:12 - Walmart reportedly plans to launch Netflix competitor under its Vudu brand later this year
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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Updated Macbook Pros, Microsoft Surface Go, and this week in Elon
Fri, 13 Jul 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter discuss an Apple event they were invited to this week for Apple’s updated MacBook Pros. Along with Paul, they dive into how creatives are using these machines, and what these new specs are.
Another laptop announcement from this week is Microsoft’s Surface Go. The crew runs through their demo with the computer and discuss how it compares to the other Surface devices.
And continuing with our trend, we also have a new edition of “This week in Elon Musk,” hosted by science editor Liz Lopatto.
There’s a lot more in between that — like Paul’s newly sponsored segment “Hearrings” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:36 - 10 years of app store
05:12- Apple’s new MacBook Pros have the latest Intel processors and quieter keyboards
21:58 - Apple worked with Blackmagic on a new external GPU
33:09 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto
38:20 - Microsoft’s $399 Surface Go aims to stand out from iPads or Chromebooks
45:49 - Magic Leap is shipping its first headset this summer
51:56 - Justice Department appeals ruling in attempt to block massive AT&T–Time Warner merger
57:24 - Paul’s weekly segment “Hearrings”
1:00:23 - YouTube TV goes down (again) during World Cup
1:02:43 - Xbox One is getting Dolby Vision support
1:03:32 - Apple will end its photo printing operation in September
1:06:55 - This amazing new web tool lets you create microsites that exist solely as URLs
1:08:09 - This app reads Wikipedia to teach you about the cities you’re driving through
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macOS Mojave beta, Microsoft Surface USB-C dongle, and this week in Elon Musk
Fri, 29 Jun 2018
The Vergecast starts off this week in a traditional fashion with a talk about dongles — Microsoft’s $80 USB-C dongle to be exact. But there’s a whole bunch of little things that also happened this week that Nilay, Dieter, and Paul discuss. We’ve got Apple acknowledging the problem with its MacBook keyboards, Google demoing Duplex, and Apple releasing the Mojave public beta.
Also this week, we bring you two new rotating segments on the show. First we have transportation reporter Sean O’Kane with “This Week in Elon Musk” — a rundown of the news that happened this week in the Elon Musk canon. Second, culture reporters Megan Farokhmanesh and Bijan Stephen run though their favorite “Culture Headlines” on The Verge this week.
And of course we’ve got Paul’s weekly segment that he does every week, “Rhymes With What’s Poppin’,” so if you listen to the whole show, you’ve got a stew going.
02:20 - Microsoft’s Surface USB-C dongle launches on June 29th for $79.99
09:15 - Apple acknowledges faulty MacBook and MacBook Pro keyboards with new repair program
15:00 - macOS Mojave is now available in public beta
20:59 - Intel now faces a fight for its future
29:06 - This week in Elon Musk with Sean O’Kane
33:41 - Google Duplex really works and testing begins this summer
42:03 - BlackBerry Key2 review: a keyboard with a phone
42:59 - LG says screw everything, we’re doing five cameras for the V40
43:57 - The Galaxy Note 9 hits the FCC, with launch of Samsung’s next flagship presumably on the horizon
45:51 - AT&T more than doubles ‘admin fee’ for every wireless customer
48:31 - Culture headlines with Megan and Bijan
52:58 - Honda retires its famed Asimo robot
53:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “Rhymes with whats poppin”
55:58 - Amazon adds voice control to its Alexa iOS app
59:19 - Sonos Beam review: living room upgrade
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Recode's Kara Swisher, AT&T - Time Warner, and IGTV
Fri, 22 Jun 2018
Instagram announced on Wednesday a standalone app called IGTV, a place for watching long-form vertical video. Casey and Ashely — who went to Instagram’s event that announced the app — talk with Nilay, Dieter, and Paul about their initial feelings about the platform and predict how it will fit into the social mediasphere.
Also, Nilay Patel sits down with Kara Swisher to talk about the recent AT&T and Time Warner merger. Kara published a book in 2003 about the AOL and Time Warner merger There Must Be a Pony in Here Somewhere (the merger split off in 2009) so the two discuss the similarities and differences between the two mergers and what they can potentially mean when distribution companies own content.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment (now up for sale) “Shaavoop” — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
01:54 - Instagram announces IGTV, a standalone app for longer videos
19:33 - AT&T launches new WatchTV streaming service at aggressive $15-per-month price
27:26 - Tinder parent company buys anti-Tinder dating app Hinge
35:51 - Kara Swisher talks AT&T - Time Warner merger
1:07:12 - Paul’s weekly segment “Shaavoop”
1:11:51 - What happens if Apple loses its Supreme Court App Store antitrust appeal?
1:19:27 - Apple’s AirPower charging mat rumored to ship in September following ‘technical hurdles’
1:19:48 - Apple and Oprah are teaming up to make videos
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Sonos CEO Patrick Spence, E3, and net neutrality ends
Fri, 15 Jun 2018
In addition to our classic Nilay, Dieter, and Paul trio, we’ve added a few things this week.
To give you the best coverage of E3, culture editor Laura Hudson gives us a quick rundown of the news from the expo to start off the show
In the second half of the show, Nilay sits down with Sonos CEO Patrick Spence.
Don’t worry, there’s plenty of other classic Vergecast — some gadget talk, Paul’s weekly segment (you know, “How big is the Moon?”), and some deep dives into net neutrality, antitrust law, and Comcast’s $65 million bid on 21st Century Fox.
02:06 - Laura Hudson’s E3 roundup
07:13 - Sony issues weak response to Fortnite cross-play controversy on PS4 and Switch
11:26 - Microsoft is getting ready for the next Xbox vs. PlayStation console war
16:33 - Joseph Gordon-Levitt is defending a controversial plan to crowdsource Beyond Good and Evil 2 art
25:01 - Interview with CEO of Sonos Patrick Spence
1:02:49 - Paul’s weekly segment “How big is the moon?”
1:06:28 - I picked up a Boring Company Not-A-Flamethrower and it’s mine now
1:07:04 - The Boring Company’s Chicago project seems awfully cheap for something so big
1:11:18 - HTC U12 Plus review: fixing what didn’t need to be broken
1:12:54 - Samsung upgrades the Chromebook Plus with a second camera and new processor
1:13:44 - Eero promises not to brick routers if you don’t pay a subscription
1:17:47 - Net neutrality is dead — what now?
1:19:48 - Comcast makes $65 billion offer to steal 21st Century Fox away from Disney
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WWDC, Sonos Beam, and Microsoft buys Github
Fri, 08 Jun 2018
Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference happened this week, and Nilay, Dieter, Jake, and Ashley are on top of it.
Second half of the show, we’ve got Dieter’s exclusive look at the Sonos Beam, Microsoft buying GitHub, a new Fire TV thingy, and breaking news for Essential.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment (hosted by Jake Kastrenakes) “Hey look at this thing I just found on theverge.com“ — so if you listen to it all, you’ll get it all.
02:48 - Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference
04:35 - Siri will soon be able to pull off multistep routines through Shortcuts
15:40 - Walkie-Talkie on the Apple Watch is a clever riff on FaceTime Audio
19:01 - Apple’s Memoji lets you create an Animoji of yourself
23:35 - Apple CarPlay will soon let you use Google Maps, Waze, and other third-party maps
25:21 - Apple will let developers port iOS apps to macOS in 2019
33:51 - The Apple TV is finally getting Dolby Atmos support
38:56 - The Essential Phone’s first new module since launch is a magnetic headphone jack
41:02 - The Beam is Sonos’ ambitious attempt to win the living room
50:40 - Amazon’s Fire TV Cube is an Echo, streaming box, and universal remote in one
55:05 - Paul’s weekly segment “Hey look at this thing I just found on theverge.com” by Jake
57:30 - Microsoft confirms it’s acquiring GitHub for $7.5 billion
1:00:07 - Facebook accused of giving over 60 device makers inappropriate access to user data
1:06:06 - Instagram might soon let you post videos up to an hour long
1:09:48 - California’s net neutrality bill could set a national standard
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Code Conference, Pixel 3 rumors, and WWDC preview
Fri, 01 Jun 2018
The Vergecast is here once again to fulfill the weekly prophecy of illuminating tech news. This week, Dieter is at Recode’s Code Conference, but he still calls in to talk to Nilay, Natt, and Paul about what he saw and heard.
Also, Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference is next week, so the crew runs through what to expect.
There’s a whole lot in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “Embarrassingly parallel,” rumors about the next Pixel phone, and some deep philosophy about whether a phone is a tool or an instrument — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
00:41 - Code Conference 2018
5:32 - Evan Spiegel on Facebook: ‘We would really appreciate it if they copied our data protection practices’
11:56 - AT&T and Verizon both want to run massive ad-tracking networks to rival Facebook
21:03 - Apple’s WWDC 2018: iOS 12, macOS, and what else to expect
27:31 - Apple’s AirPlay 2 with multiroom audio streaming and stereo
37:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “Embarrassingly parallel”
40:24 - Cryptocurrency mining rigs are just PCs — so why won’t Stripe let you sell them?
44:04 - Google reportedly planning Pixel 3 for October, and the XL model will have a notch
48:26 - 2018 O’Reilly AI Keynote, Thomas Reardon, CEO, CTRL-labs
53:02 - Your phone is an instrument, not a tool
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Elon Musk, Red Hydrogen, and Zuckerberg in the EU
Fri, 25 May 2018
Are you driving somewhere for the holiday weekend? Here at _The Verge_ we'd like to encourage you to use a car that's wholly or at least primarily powered by dirty fossil fuels. On this week's episode of _The Vergecast_, Nilay, Natt, Casey, and Paul discuss how we're financially beholden to Big Car, and what to do about it now that Elon Musk has called us out on our bias.
We also got a chance to discuss Nilay's insane theory about Apple's dongle suppression campaign, Mark Zuckerberg's wacky trip to the EU, and spoke with unearned confidence about Dieter's hands-on with the Red Hydrogen One. Paul's weekly report on robots that do backflips is, of course, also something that happened.
01:50 - Elon Musk
27:54 - Red Hydrogen One hands-on
32:34 - RIP Essential?
36:37 - BlackBerry KEY2
41:19 - Dongle suppression EXPOSED
47:15 - Paul’s weekly segment “Robot backflip weekly update”
51:08 - GDPR is happening
55:54 - Mark Zuckerberg in the EU
1:03:51 - Casey shamelessly plugs Converge
1:06:35 - What’s happening in the rest of tech
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The Selfish Ledger, YouTube Premium, and One Plus 6
Fri, 18 May 2018
The Vergecast trio comes together this week to discuss an internal Google video that was obtained by The Verge titled “the Selfish Ledger.” That topic takes up a good chunk of the show, but there’s a lot more after that.
Nilay, Paul, and Dieter jump into other Google-related topics, like what’s happening to YouTube Red, Google Duplex theories, and a list of gadget news.
They were able to fit in Paul’s weekly segment he does every week “Don’t block my chain,” so if you listen to it all, you’ll get it all.
04:04 - Google’s Selfish Ledger is an unsettling vision of Silicon Valley social engineering
19:02 - Apple Watch behavioral science
19:47 - Google Duplex demo, or say whether the calls were edited
23:56 - Google Chrome is removing the secure indicator from HTTPS sites in September
28:12 - Entire Nest ecosystem of smart home devices goes offline
30:16 - YouTube Music and YouTube Premium announced as YouTube Red replacement
39:28 - OnePlus 6 announced with a glass back and a notched 6.3-inch display
41:42 - The RED Hydrogen One is coming to AT&T and Verizon this summer
44:16 - Onkyo’s receivers will work with Sonos, thanks to upcoming June firmware update
46:33 - A new Wi-Fi standard could let different mesh routers work together
48:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “Don’t block my chain”
52:46 - Microsoft’s Surface Hub 2 is designed for an office of the future
53:29 - Microsoft reportedly working on $400 Surface tablets to compete with the iPad
53:44 - The desktop belongs to Electron
1:01:38 - Uber CEO: our future won’t just be cars
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Bonus: Ctrl-Walt-Delete special edition - iMac 20th anniversary
Fri, 11 May 2018
Ctrl-Walt-Delete returns for a special episode all about the iMac 20th anniversary. Walt Mossberg and Nilay Patel reminisce on the introduction of Apple's iMac, and how it influenced the open web and computers going forward.
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Google I/O and Microsoft Build
Fri, 11 May 2018
So much happened this week in the world of The Verge. Both Google and Microsoft hosted their annual developer conferences and announced a whole bunch of stuff, so Nilay, Paul, Natt, and Dieter gather to break it down and give you the highlights.
And this wouldn’t be an episode of The Vergecast without the segment Paul does every week, “Kick flip the kickstand script.” It’s a big one, so listen to the whole episode to get everything you need for this massive week in tech news.
01:28 - 10 Biggest announcements from Google I/O
03:45 - The selfishness of Google Duplex
21:09 - Android P
26:41 - At I/O Google showed its willingness to change and shape our lives
34:33 - JBL’s Android-powered soundbar does a lot of things right
38:43 - Volvo’s native Google integration is the next level for Android Auto
44:06 - Six new Google Assistant voices, including John Legend
47:49 - Nadella’s Microsoft
56:51 - What is edge computing?
1:08:16 - Paul’s weekly segment “Kick flip the kickstand script”
1:10:38 - Net neutrality, mergers, AT&T, and Michael Cohen: what we know so far
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Facebook’s F8, Oculus Go, and Apple earnings
Fri, 04 May 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay returns to the show after welcoming a child! Dieter is out this week, so Nilay and Paul bring on Adi Robertson and Casey Newton to discuss what happened at Facebook’s F8 developer conference, the Oculus Go, and some earnings talk.
There are also a lot of new Instagram features. Is it slowly just becoming Facebook?
There’s a lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “Safety first!’ they said” — so if you listen through this whole episode, you’ll be all caught up on the tech news this week.
05:51 - All of the news from Facebook’s F8 developer conference
22:51 - Oculus Go review
36:47 - Video calls are coming to Instagram
42:21 - Over 400 Startups Are Trying to Become the Next Warby Parker. Inside the Wild Race to Overthrow Every Consumer Category — Inc.
46:14 - Paul’s weekly segment “Safety first!’ they said”
47:45 - Koss Porta Pro Wireless
49:13 - Sprint and T-Mobile have announced that they will merge
59:56 - Verizon is putting Oath bloatware like Go90 on its Galaxy S9 phones
1:04:18 - Apple reports solid iPhone revenue but stays quiet on HomePod sales
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New Gmail, Spectacles 2.0, and iPhone SE 2?
Fri, 27 Apr 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Dieter, Natt, and Paul are still without Nilay but there’s a whole lot to talk about.
Google made some changes with Gmail — which is now live, and Snap surprised us this week with their new edition of Spectacles — but what makes them different from the original model?
Also, there’s a whole bunch of Amazon news and rumors this week, including an Echo Dot for your child.
There’s even a whole lot more in between that — like the segment Paul does every week (say it with me) “I’ve carved this for you out of aluminum” — so listen if you listen to this whole episode of The Vergecast, you’ll be all up to date with the tech news of the week and won’t have to worry about much else the rest of your weekend.
01:20 - Gmail’s biggest redesign is now live
09:49 - Google is finally making a standalone Tasks app
16:38 - Snap’s second-generation Spectacles are more grown up — and more expensive
28:05 - Amazon will now deliver packages to the trunk of your car
32:33 - Amazon’s new Echo Dot Kids Edition comes with a colorful case and parental controls
37:04 - Amazon is reportedly working on its first home robot
40:29 - Amazon teases upcoming Fire TV Cube
43:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “I’ve carved this for you out of aluminum”
45:53 - Dieter essential phone feels
47:47 - There are a ton of sketchy rumors about an upcoming iPhone SE 2
50:44 - The OnePlus 6 is coming on May 16th
52:56 - Spotify launches a redesigned app with on-demand playlists for free users
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Chat for Android, Nintendo Labo, and Motorola (like a) G6
Fri, 20 Apr 2018
It was a slow week until Google decided to attempt another fix for Android messaging and Nintendo made the entire staff fall in love with cardboard. Nilay’s still on paternity leave, but Dieter and Paul are joined again by Technology Editor Natt Garun to explain it all.
We also jumped on the hot-button issues like the Russian ban of Telegram and how Alexa Skill Blueprints aren’t Turing complete. And, of course, Paul’s weekly segment “Ring-a-ding-ding” has all the insightful Bluetooth MIDI accessory commentary you crave.
1:20 - Chat for Android
20:48 - Telegram
29:22 - Nintendo Labo
37:41 - Amazon Skill Blueprints
41:09 - Motorola G6
43:44 - Paul’s Weekly Segment "Ring-a-ding-ding"
46:39 - New free Spotify
48:51 - RIP vaunt
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Zuckerberg testifies, Spotify hardware, and Huawei P20 Pro review
Fri, 13 Apr 2018
After a week of Facebook-intensive news, The Vergecast is here to break it all down for you. Nilay is out this week, so Dieter and Paul welcome senior editor Natt Garun and Silicon Valley editor Casey Newton to the show to go over all the news.
Even though Mark Zuckerberg took up most of the site this week, there was a still a lot of other stuff happening. Spotify may be releasing some hardware products, we reviewed the Huawei P20 Pro, and the cast gets into some classic talk about the web.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “Record resolution revolution” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:03 - Mark Zuckerberg testifies in front of Congress
33:17 - Spotify’s first hardware device might be this music player for your car
43:00 - Apple’s RED iPhone 8
43:37 - Huawei P20 Pro review
49:15 - Paul’s weekly segment “Record resolution revolution”
51:34 - Web apps are only getting better
52:52 - HP goes up against the iPad Pro with its $599 Chromebook x2
52:56 - This is the new Gmail design
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iPad review, Facebook drama, and Apple drama
Fri, 06 Apr 2018
It is episode 300 of The Vergecast! To celebrate, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul start the show by explaining inside jokes that have been stamped into the show over the past few years. Don’t understand what Scissor Vodka is? Are you wondering why Bixby is a dog? Do you need to know why Paul says his name at the end of each episode? Well, we took the time to answer that.
Also, there’s some news that came out this week. We have an iPad review, some Mark Zuckerberg updates, and a little bit of Apple drama.
There’s a lot more in between that — like Paul’s segment he does every week with the same name “Lonely Alone” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
03:14 - Joke explainer
16:13 - Mark Zuckerberg calls Tim Cook’s comments on Facebook ‘extremely glib’
21:54 - Apple Music had a better Weeknd than Spotify
24:03 - Apple hires Google’s former AI boss to help improve Siri
31:16 - Apple iPad (2018) review
35:50 - Apple’s redesigned Mac Pro is coming in 2019
46:30 - Paul’s weekly segment compilation
49:38 - Paul’s weekly segment “Lonely Alone”
52:18 - Facebook wants a social media supreme court so it can avoid hard questions
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New iPads, Microsoft reorg, and Europe's new privacy rule
Fri, 30 Mar 2018
We’ve got a bunch of tech luminaries on The Vergecast this week to help us understand the week in tech news.
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul welcome Lauren Goode back to the show for her last week at The Verge to discuss the new iPads that Apple released this past Tuesday. Lauren and Dieter went to Chicago for the event, so they share their experience and insight on the new products and their relationship with the education field.
After that, the crew bring in senior reporter Russell Brandom to help us understand how Europe’s new privacy rule is reshaping the internet.
And finally, senior editor Tom Warren returns to the show to share his expertise with Microsoft and break down Microsoft’s announcement of the reorganization of their company.
There’s a whole lot more in between all of that — like Paul’s weekly segment “The little robot that could” — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
03:12 - The 5 biggest announcements from the Apple education event
32:18 - How Europe’s new privacy rule is reshaping the internet
51:17 - Paul’s weekly segment “The little robot that could”
53:12 - Microsoft is ready for a world beyond Windows
If you enjoyed this podcast and want to hear more audio from The Verge, well you’re in luck. Season 2 of Why’d You Push That Button hosted by Kaitlyn Tiffany and Ashley Carman is here! This week’s episode is about Facebook event invites. You can subscribe anywhere, including on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play Music, and our RSS feed. And get caught up on season 1 if you missed out.
Also! You can check out Lauren Goode’s podcast Too Embarrassed to Ask.
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Bonus: Casey Neistat full interview
Fri, 23 Mar 2018
Nilay talks one-on-one with Casey Neistat about a multitude of topics, including Beme, his view of YouTube, Twitch, and other platforms, sponsorship, and what he’s up to next. It’s exactly what you’d expect from Neistat, honest and direct.
If you already listened to the edited version on The Vergecast this week, skip to 11:50.
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Cambridge Analytica, Casey Neistat, and Apple's education event
Fri, 23 Mar 2018
It’s loaded Vergecast this week. Nilay, Paul, and Dieter welcome back Silicon Valley editor Casey Newton to break down the Cambridge Analytica scandal at Facebook, after talking through predictions for next week’s Apple event.
But first, another Casey makes his debut on The Vergecast — Casey Neistat! Nilay talks one-on-one with Casey about a multitude of topics, including Beme, his view of YouTube, Twitch, and other platforms, sponsorship, and what he’s up to next. It’s exactly what you’d expect from Neistat, honest and direct.
02:36 - What to expect from Apple’s education event
20:56 - Casey Neistat interview
52:07 - Paul’s weekly segment “Swag for Me? Swag for you too”
54:59 - Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica data scandal, explained
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Wixen vs Spotify, problems with Siri, and Breadbot
Fri, 16 Mar 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul are back in New York City after being at SXSW last weekend. To kick off the show, they welcome back senior writer Sarah Jeong to explain a $1.6 billion lawsuit between Spotify and Wixen Publishing.
In the second half of the show, the trio discusses recent reports of the inner workings of Siri — including the history and how it stands today.
There’s a lot more in between that — like the segment Paul does every week, “Untitled” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:27 - A $1.6 billion Spotify lawsuit is based on a law made for player pianos
31:45 - What went wrong with Siri
47:38 - Paul’s weekly segment “Untitled”
48:45 - Never forget a letter value with this Scrabble-themed keyboard
49:13 - These gargantuan ‘headphones’ massage your ears
49:43 - Google’s NSynth Super is an AI-backed touchscreen synth
50:28 - BreadBot is an insanely over-engineered gadget just for baking loaves of bread
51:03 - This Japanese startup is making a hover backpack to augment jumping ability
52:05 - Bose is developing augmented reality glasses with a focus on sound
57:04 - Fitbit takes a second swing at smartwatches with the $199 Versa
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Galaxy S9 review, Android P, and Google tries to fix the web (live @ SXSW 2018)
Sat, 10 Mar 2018
This week, The Vergecast is down in Austin, Texas for South by Southwest 2018 in front of a live audience. Nilay, Dieter, Casey, and Ashley run through the news and share their expertise about Google’s new plan to make the web faster, using Samsung’s Galaxy S9, and Android P for developer testing. If you wanted to see the show, sorry you missed it! But good news for you, I recorded it so you can listen to it whenever you want.
And here’s the articles discussed on the show this week:
00:45 - Google’s latest plan could change how you browse the web
10:03 - Amazon has a fix for Alexa’s creepy laughs
17:16 - Samsung Galaxy S9 review
27:17 - Android P is available for developer testing
32: 57 - Paul’s weekly segment “Shoes — You’ve got em”
35:24 - On Twitter, lies spread faster than the truth
41:02 - Snap confirms layoffs of ‘just over 120’ engineers
45:00 - Barack Obama is reportedly planning Netflix shows
50:59 - Q&A
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Mobile World Congress 2018, Galaxy S9, and Vivo Apex concept phone
Fri, 02 Mar 2018
The Vergecast trio is back and so is gadget news. Mobile World Congress was this week, and so much happened in the world of The Verge. Nilay, Dieter, and Paul have everything you need to know.
A few other things sprinkled in are the next Light Phone 2, Google Clips review, and a little bit of camera talk — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
03:07 - Samsung’s Galaxy S9 packs an upgraded camera in a familiar body
17:22 - Vivo’s Apex concept phone
19:15 - The Clone Wars: iPhone X copycats battle for notch supremacy
25:59 - Android Go is here to fix super cheap phones
32:44 - Nokia’s banana phone from The Matrix is back
36:59 - The Light Phone 2 adds messaging and more to the ultra-minimalist cellphone
38:40 - Huawei’s new laptop has a mechanical pop-up webcam in the keyboard
44:29 - Amazon has acquired Ring to bolster its home security products
48:54 - Paul’s weekly segment “Bounce shot’
52:07 - Sony’s new A7 III is a $2,000 full-frame mirrorless camera that should terrify Canon and Nikon
52:40 - Google Clips review
If you enjoyed this podcast and want to hear more audio from The Verge, well you’re in luck. There’s a new show Why’d You Push That Button, hosted by Kaitlyn Tiffany and Ashley Carman, which you can subscribe to right now! Season 2 starts March 6th.
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S9 leaks, Google Reply, and Twitter's war on bots
Fri, 23 Feb 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Dieter is on vacation, so Silicon Valley editor and host of an upcoming Verge podcast, Casey Newton, joins us. Nilay, Paul, and Casey run through the news of the week, including Samsung Galaxy S9 leaks, Twitter bots, and third-party keyboards.
Also, as a preview of Casey’s upcoming podcast Converge with Casey Newton, Casey takes over as the host of The Vergecast for a segment to beta test a new game for his podcast with Nilay and Paul as contestants.
We’ve got a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s segment he does every week “Warm robot hugs” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:26 - Everything we think we know about the Samsung Galaxy S9
09:26 - Intel’s 5G laptops vs Qualcomm’s all day LTE laptops
16:22 - Does Google Reply count as another messaging app?
20:28 - Swype keyboard has been discontinued
22:00 - Twitter bans bulk tweeting and duplicate accounts in bot crackdown
31:32 - Here’s some Twitter options for Mac users now that the official app is going away
37:05 - Converge with Casey Newton beta
56:36 - Paul’s weekly segment “Warm robot hugs”
58:26- Apple employees can’t stop walking into the beautiful glass doors at new Apple Park campus
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Waymo v Uber, another iOS bug, and AMP Stories
Fri, 16 Feb 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul welcome senior writer Sarah Jeong to the show for the first time. Sarah was at the federal court in San Francisco for Waymo v. Uber trial and has been reporting on it for The Verge, so she lends us her expertise to explain what was going on between the two companies.
Also, Dieter explains why so much software is broken and also checks the pulse of the open web with this week’s tech headlines.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like the segment Paul does every week “Fingers are round if you think about it” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:06 - HomePods are staining wooden tables with a white ring
06:28 - Tesla Model 3 first impressions feat. MKBHD
07:34 - The Uber-Waymo trial with Sarah Jeong
25:21 - Major new iOS bug can crash iPhones and disable access to apps and iMessages
32:52 - Samsung halts Android Oreo rollout on Galaxy S8 due to ‘unexpected’ restarts
35:21 - Fiat Chrysler sent an over-the-air update that is causing Uconnect to endlessly reboot
39:27 - Paul’s weekly segment “Fingers are round if you think about it”
41:56 - Microsoft is turning Progressive Web Apps into Windows apps
45:42 - The ‘Stories’ format is coming to Google search next
57:36 - Caavo review
1:04:56 - Boston Dynamics robots can now hold the door for its friends
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Homepod review, Intel's Vaunt smart glasses, and Falcon Heavy launch
Fri, 09 Feb 2018
A lot of things happened this week in the world of The Verge, and we have some first-hand experience to share.
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul, welcome science reporter Loren Grush back to the show to tell us what it was like to watch SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket launch in person, as well as meeting SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.
Also, Dieter got an exclusive look at Intel’s new smart glasses, and Nilay reviewed Apple’s HomePod, so they share their experiences with the technology and discuss what it means for the rest of the market.
There’s a lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “USB-C-crets” (I think that’s how you spell it) — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:17 - Intel made smart glasses that look normal
20:40 - Apple HomePod review
44:28 - SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy launch with Loren Grush
1:07:57 - Paul’s weekly segment “USB-C-crets”
1:11:44 - The Uber-Waymo trial: greed, ambition, and robot cars
1:15:01 - Inside the desperate fight to keep old TVs alive
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The Boring Company flamethrower, Samsung foldable displays, and iOS12 reports
Fri, 02 Feb 2018
The Vergecast is here once again! Nilay, Paul, and Dieter run through the news that hit the site this week to fill you in case you missed it. We talk about the Boring Company’s flamethrower, some Samsung leaks and previews, a bit of 5G wireless network talk, and wow — now that I’m looking at it — a lot more topics.
Keep listening for a deep dive into what each member of The Vergecast thinks The Vergecast is, as well as Paul’s weekly segment that everyone knows the name of.
Happy Groundhog Day!
01:12 - Elon Musk has sold all his flamethrowers
11:22 - Samsung Galaxy S9 images leak ahead of next month’s unveiling
13:38 - Samsung says foldable displays and Bixby will help drive growth in 2018
17:41 - The thesis of The Vergecast
27:48 - The Trump administration said it has no plans to build a 5G wireless network
40:26 - Paul’s weekly segment “Not my editor’s choice”
44:07 - Headphones talk
50:31 - Nintendo is bringing Mario Kart to smartphones
54:17 - Apple reportedly focusing on reliability and performance in iOS 12 over new features
1:06:55 - ICE has struck a deal to track license plates across the US
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DJI Mavic Air, HomePod ships in February, and iOS11.3 preview
Fri, 26 Jan 2018
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul call Ben Popper — former business editor at The Verge who now works with DJI — to answer some questions about the new drone the company announced this week, the Mavic Air.
There is also a discussion about what’s happening at Apple this week. The HomePod was announced without some key features at launch in a few weeks. There’s also an update to iOS 11 that’s being publicly previewed on their website.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “A Kin for your wrist” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
Here are the articles discussed in this week’s episode:
02:45 - Apple previews iOS 11.3
13:37 - Apple will release its $349 HomePod speaker on February 9th
27:54 - DJI Mavic Air with Ben Popper
54:10 - Paul’s weekly segment “A Kin for your wrist”
57:43 - Amazon doesn’t care if you accidentally shoplift from its cashier-less store
1:01:17 - RED says its Hydrogen One smartphone will ship this summer
1:01:42 - Acer announces $349 Chromebook Spin 11 with 360-degree hinge and USB-C
1:03:25 - Samsung teases camera improvements for Galaxy S9
1:04:18 - Trump administration wants to end NASA funding for the International Space Station by 2025
1:05:07 - How the Apple Watch tries to change your behavior
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Nintendo Labo, Detroit Auto Show, and Facebook's transforming news feed
Fri, 19 Jan 2018
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul have returned from CES 2018 and are all together in the New York City office for this week’s Vergecast. As I was typing out the timestamps on here, I realized there’s a lot of news this week. So check it out! We’ve got highlights from the Detroit Auto Show, the changing algorithm of your Facebook News Feed, and the most gadgety gadget we’ve seen in a while, Nintendo Labo.
There’s a whole lot more discussed in between all of that — like Paul’s weekly segment “Win or Lose 2: the secret to winning” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:31 - YouTube is taking down Tide Pod Challenge videos and oh my god don’t eat laundry pods
03:40 - YouTube tightens rules around what channels can be monetized
12:00 - Nintendo is making a bunch of weird DIY cardboard toys for the Switch and they’re awesome
17:30 - The best, worst, and weirdest cars from the 2018 Detroit Auto Show
19:40 - Apple’s CarPlay is finally coming to Toyota and Lexus vehicles
23:13 - Is BMW going to make you pay for Apple CarPlay every year?
24:43 - Tim Cook says the next iOS update will allow users to disable intentional battery slowdowns
32:55 - Facebook’s startling new ambition is to shrink
44:54 - Paul’s weekly segment “Win or Lose 2: the secret to winning”
47:59 - Project Fi creates its own version of an unlimited plan
51:12 - Half of US Senate supports reversing FCC’s net neutrality ruling, but it still won’t be overturned
52:23 - Verizon’s streaming TV service might have standalone app ‘channels’
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CES 2018: Robots, TVs, and virtual assistants
Fri, 12 Jan 2018
The Verge crew is on our way back home after a week at the Consumer Electronics Show 2018. This week, we did a ton of reporting, a ton of videos, and four live Circuit Breaker shows, so we did not have a lot of time to sit down and tape a full-length Vergecast. But what we did do was collect a bunch of audio recorded throughout the show — including clips from Circuit Breaker Live — to give you an idea of what it’s like to be at CES, and what kinds of things we saw this year.
Enjoy, and we’ll see you next week.
00:44 - Day -1
03:14 - Day 0
24:54 - Day 1
45:30 - Day 2
1:05:02 - Day 3
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Meltdown and Spectre will kill us all
Fri, 05 Jan 2018
CES is next week, and we'll get to it, but first we need to talk to security expert Russell Brandom to make sure we won't all be dead from CPU security vulnerabilities before then. Also, stay tuned for Paul Miller's excellent and enlightening sci-fi short story allegory for how Meltdown actually works. He did a great job.
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn, the world's foremost experts on what to expect from the world's most important technology tradeshow, make their CES predictions, and Paul does his weekly segment "Mustard, back off!" So wow, what a great episode. Sorry about the sad stuff where computers are fundamentally flawed and nothing is safe.
2:56 - Meltdown and Spectre
42:17 - Paul's weekly segment "Mustard, back off!"
48:14 - CES preview
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Magic Leap, iPhones slow down, and Microsoft removes Chrome installer from Windows Store
Fri, 22 Dec 2017
Hello! And happy holidays. This is the last Vergecast of 2017! But we go out with a bang (At least two computers broke down during this recording). The two big things that happened this week was the unveiling of the mysterious Magic Leap augmented reality goggles and Apple confirming they slow down older iPhones. So Nilay, Dieter, and Paul welcome senior reporter Adi Robertson back to the show, who has been reporting on Magic Leap for the past few years.
There’s a whole lot more in between that, like Paul’s weekly segment “Robots teach me how to breathe?” so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
01:41 - Magic Leap finally unveils augmented reality goggles
31:39 - Apple confirms iPhones with older batteries will take hits in performance
50:13 - Paul’s weekly segment “Robots teach me how to breathe?”
52:45 - Google brings Chrome to the Windows Store as just a download link
57:29 - Caavo, the universal remote control that uses machine vision, will ship on February 14th
1:02:50 - Amazon Echo Spot review
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Burn Book: A Tech Love Story (Hardcover)
A witty, scathing, and fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead, by journalist Kara Swisher.
This is an affiliate link. If you buy through this link we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
FCC kills net neutrality, the iMac Pro arrives, and T-Mobile buys Layer3 TV
Fri, 15 Dec 2017
The Vergecast three-piece is back together, with Nilay leading the flagship podcast. The biggest news this week is something we’ve seen coming for a while: on Thursday, the FCC voted to repeal net neutrality rules. Nilay, Dieter, and Paul sit down to discuss the action and their viewpoints on what this means going forward for the internet.
Also, the iMac Pro is now available to order and Dieter got to write about it. There’s quite a bit of talk about whether this computer is worth the price for its power.
There’s a lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “The internet of claps” — so listen to the whole episode to get everything to need to know in the world of tech this week.
02:10 - The FCC just killed net neutrality
41:53 - The iMac Pro is a beast, but it’s not for everybody
57:23 - What is Layer3 TV and why is T-Mobile buying it?
1:04:16 - Paul’s weekly segment “The internet of claps”
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ARM powered PCs, Google vs Amazon, and Messenger Kids
Fri, 08 Dec 2017
This week, Dieter Bohn runs the show with Paul Miller and Natt Garun, and it's been a wild week of news. Amazon and Google are basically feuding right now: Google is pulling YouTube from the FireTV so the podcast trio ponders what this frightening predicament means for the streaming and the open web. Also, Microsoft launched some ARM-powered Windows 10 PCs, so you bet these tech luminaries are going to talk about it.
There’s lots more in between that, like Paul’s weekly segment (say it with me) “Color me surprised,” so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
05:00 - Microsoft launches ARM-powered Windows 10 PCs with ‘all-day’ battery life
17:44 - Qualcomm announces the Snapdragon 845 processor
22:40 - How Messenger Kids takes more from families than it gives them
30:17 - Google and Amazon are punishing their own customers in a bitter feud
40:27 - DeepMind’s AI became a superhuman chess player in a few hours, just for fun
44:21 - Major airlines are about to ban ‘smart luggage’
49:45 - Paul’s weekly segment “Color me surprised”
52:06 - Instagram is testing Direct, a standalone messaging app that replaces the current inbox
54:57 - Apple's had a shockingly bad week of software problems
1:00:22 - Bitcoin hits $15,000
1:04:01 - CryptoKitties
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HQ, selfie authentication, and solar panels turning air into water
Fri, 01 Dec 2017
Let get this out of the way: Nilay and Dieter are not on the show this week.
But really, we’ve got a great show hosted by Verge podcast professionals Lauren Goode and Casey Newton. Oh and Paul is still here, too!
So what are we talking about on the show today? Well, a lot. Lauren, Casey, and Paul analyze the news that was at the top of the site this week, including a glitch that left American Airlines without pilots during the week of Christmas; a rundown of the new trivia app HQ; and the reveal of the man who deactivated Trump’s Twitter account briefly a few weeks ago.
Also, Lauren gives us a closer look into the newest episode of her video series Next Level, which deals with solar panels that turn air into drinking water.
There’s a whole lot in between that, like Paul’s weekly segment “Whiskey pods? No.” So, listen to it all, and you know what? You’ll get it all.
02:56 - Google might merge back with Nest to make more smart home products
10:23 - The man who deactivated Trump’s Twitter account has revealed himself
17:35 - HQ
25:35 - Facebook uses selfies as login authentication for suspicious activity
29:02 - Verge holiday book recommendations
32:00 - ‘Only a few hundred’ American Airlines flights still lack pilots after massive computer glitch
34:27 - Inside the decade-long fight to expose Morgan Marquis-Boire
38:53 - Next Level season 2 episode 3
52:07 - Paul’s weekly segment “Whiskey pods? No.”
55:56 - Amazon unveils $250 AI camera and machine learning tools for businesses
1:04:50 - Is now a good time to buy a new phone / laptop / TV?
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Net Neutrality 2017 Thanksgiving madness
Mon, 27 Nov 2017
The FCC decided to bury the news about its plan to end the Net Neutrality rules in the middle of Thanksgiving week here in the US. But that won't stop Nilay, Paul, and Dieter from doing a Vergecast.
This was originally broadcasted live on YouTube on November 24th, 2017.
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Pixel Buds review, OnePlus 5T, and Surface Book 2
Fri, 17 Nov 2017
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter run through a few things in the tech world that happened this week, like reviews for Google’s Pixel Buds and Microsoft’s Surface Book 2, and the announcement of the OnePlus 5T.
Also, Lauren Goode stops by the show to talk about season 2 of her video series Next Level, which takes a closer look at technology's impact on the human experience. This week’s episode featured DJI's Aeroscope technology that can track rogue drones.
There’s a lot more in between all of that — like Paul’s weekly segment “Robot dogs are people, too” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:50 - Microsoft Surface Book 2 review
13:12 - Google Pixel Buds review
25:40 - Next Level season 2 episode 2
47:54 - iPhone X: a few weeks later
1:01:04 - OnePlus 5T announced with bigger screen, new camera system, and a headphone jack
1:05:15 - Paul’s weekly segment “Robot dogs are people, too”
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Pixel 2XL screen saturation update, an iOS11 bug, and Harmony Link hub services shut down
Fri, 10 Nov 2017
There’s a lot of little tech news this week, and we’ve got the perfect podcast to sum it all up. This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter run through topics like Samsung’s ad that mocks the iPhone, the update to Pixel 2 XL screens, and Logitech shutting down Harmony Link hub services.
Also, The Verge’s video series Next Level is back! Lauren Goode returns to talk about the season premiere, which deals with creating holographic videos, and how that can be used to preserve memories.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like obviously Paul’s weekly segment “One 2 Won (One)” — so listen to this whole show to get everything you need.
02:23 - Samsung returns to mock iPhone X buyers in latest commercial
06:06 - An iOS bug won't let some users type 'I'
15:02 - Google updates Pixel 2 XL with new 'saturated' color display option
18:21 - How big of a problem is the Pixel 2 XL's screen, really?
21:32 - Next Level S02 E01 with Lauren Goode
43:36 - Logitech will brick its Harmony Link hub for all owners in March
52:49 - Intel and AMD team up against Nvidia to produce a new laptop chip
59:32 - Paul’s weekly segment “One 2 Won (One)”
1:02:26 - Justice Department pushes back against AT&T–Time Warner merger
1:10:32 - Broadcom may acquire Qualcomm amid existential legal battle with Apple
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iPhone X Review
Fri, 03 Nov 2017
The iPhone X is finally here. Nilay had the chance to review it, so, along with Paul, Ashley, and Dan, he discusses what it’s like to use the phone in the real world as well as what the process of reviewing it was like.
We also welcome Phil Esposito, The Verge’s lead video director, to the show for the first time to discuss the roller coaster that is working on the two videos we produced throughout the week.
There’s a whole lot in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment about a robot dog — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
03:22 - iPhone X first impressions
24:33 - iPhone X review with Phil Esposito
37:16 - Animoji
50:14 - Paul’s weekly segment “Can form an emotional bond with members of the household while providing them with love, affection, and the joy of nurturing and raising a companion”
53:48 - The HTC U11 Plus was originally intended to be the Google Pixel 2 XL
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Pixel 2 XL screen, Amazon Key, and iPhone X preorder
Fri, 27 Oct 2017
Nilay, Dieter, and Paul run through the news this week on The Vergecast, with a lot of heavy sighs to go around. There's the Pixel 2 XL screen fiasco, Amazon's home camera invasion efforts with Amazon Key, and Amazon's oversized new Fire TV. Plus, Paul is back with his weekly segment about water pods. And more! Listen in and lament the current state of technology with your three best friends.
02:44 - Google 'actively investigating' reports of Pixel 2 XL screen burn-in …
17:39 - Google Pixelbook review
27:50 - Microsoft kills off Kinect, stops manufacturing it
31:38 - Amazon Key is a new service that lets couriers unlock your front door
37:22 - Amazon Echo (2nd gen) review
38:07 - Amazon Fire TV (2017) review
46:00 - Apple’s Face ID struggles detailed in new iPhone X report
55:54 - Paul’s weekly segment “WATER PODS”
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Pixel 2 review, KRACK, and Microsoft's Surface Book sequel
Fri, 20 Oct 2017
The reviews are in and everybody just loves the quality OLED component Google picked for the Pixel 2 XL. Really just can't stop talking about it. And talking? That's what the Vergecast is for. On this episode Nilay, Paul, and Dieter discuss the reviews of Google's new phones, and The Verge's security expert Russell Brandom drops by to explain KRACK and four-way handshakes. It's all the grit and off-axis color shifting of a Pentile display, in podcast form.
03:08 Dieter: Pixel 2 review
10:27 Smartphone screens, display
17:58 Features, camera, speaker
26:12 Russell: Wi-Fi, WPA 2 protocol
39:40 Paul’s Segment
46:45 Dieter: Surface Book 2
52:14 Microsoft fall creator update
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Oculus Go, Movies Anywhere, and Windows Phone died again
Fri, 13 Oct 2017
We’ve got a bloggy Vergecast today. In between review weeks, a few things popped up in the news that Nilay, Dieter, and Paul needed to talk about. Google is integrating video chat into a phone but still not text; you can now watch all the movies you’ve purchased online in one place; Apple is on a “hype cycle” talking about AR; and Windows Phone died again.
But that’s not all. There’s a whole lot in between that — like the segment Paul does every week, “You know Dan, the duck face is no longer cool” — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
07:28 - Android Messaging rant
18:49 - Hollywood studios join Disney to launch Movies Anywhere digital locker service
26:07 - Google will “permanently remove” Home Mini feature that led to constant recording
32:21 - Apple hype cycle
38:02 - Oculus announces new $199 self-contained VR headset called Oculus Go
49:59 - Windows Phone is dead
58:17 - Paul’s weekly segment “You know Dan, the duck face is no longer cool”
1:01:50 - Amazon finally makes a waterproof Kindle, after 10 years of Kindles
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Pixel 2 first look, Pixel Buds, and Google Home Max
Fri, 06 Oct 2017
Another week, another tech event: on Wednesday, Google had its fall hardware event. Nilay, Paul, and Dieter try to fit everything they want to say into 90 minutes. Dieter had some exclusive looks at the products, and was able to talk to CEO Sundar Pichai and senior vice president of hardware Rick Osterloh, so the crew lets Dieter talk this week to get more of the details.
There’s a whole lot in between that — including everyone’s favorite segment “Micro is more mini than mini” — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
01:46 - Google event
13:12 - Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL
29:02 - Google Buds
51:43 - Pixelbook
1:02:14 - Google Home Mini and Max
1:10:30 - Google Clips
1:26:18 - Paul’s weekly segment “Micro is more mini than mini”
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Echo Spot, Fire TV 4K, and Pixel 2 event preview
Fri, 29 Sep 2017
Amazon announced a few more Echo devices this week, and The Vergecast is here to recap it all. Nilay, Dan, Dieter, and Paul discuss Amazon’s strategy with these new products, as well rumors of stuff that will be announced at Google’s event next week.
There’s a whole lot of stuff in between that — like Twitter’s new 280 character limit — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
02:22 - Twitter just doubled the character limit for tweets to 280
06:08 - The 5 biggest announcements from Amazon’s surprise hardware event
09:23 - Amazon’s Echo and Echo Plus are hiding a lot of new tech
16:41 - Amazon's Echo Spot is a sneaky way to get a camera into your bedroom
24:31 - Google pulls YouTube off the Amazon Echo Show
41:16 - This week in TV stuff
46:52 - Amazon announces new Fire TV with 4K and HDR for only $70
52:33 - Paul’s weekly segment “Kitsch in the Kloud”
54:14 - Google Pixel 2 event: what to expect
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iPhone 8 review, Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE review, and Apple TV 4K review
Fri, 22 Sep 2017
Last week, we brought you The Vergecast live from San Francisco after the Apple event. This week, The Vergecast is back in NYC for Apple reviews week.
Nilay Patel, Paul Miller, Lauren Goode, and Dan Seifert go through the reviews, including the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus, the Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE, and the 4K Apple TV.
There’s a lot more in between that — more leaks about the upcoming Google event! — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
02:51 - iPhone 8 and 8 Plus review
35:32 - Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE review
1:00:26 - Apple TV 4K review
1:24:27 - Google leaks
1:27:19 - Paul’s weekly segment “DOG FOOD PODS”
1:29:40 - Google is buying part of HTC’s smartphone team for $1.1 billion
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Apple's iPhone X Event, Bodega, and Animoji
Fri, 15 Sep 2017
Recorded live in front of an audience in San Francisco after Apple's iPhone X event, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul welcome Lauren Goode and Casey Newton back to The Vergecast to run through everything announced at the new Steve Jobs theater in Apple Park.
The gang also takes questions from the audience.
If you weren't able to make it to the show, we've got the tape for you here.
02:11 - Apple park
07:54 - Apple TV 4K
12:32 - iPhone 8
17:52 - iPhone X
28:57 - "the notch"
38:38 - Apple Watch
48:41 - Paul's weekly segment "Is there a refrigerator in this thing?"
53:40 - Animoji
1:02:34 - The state of Apple
1:17:37 - Q & A
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Apple event rumors, Galaxy Note 8 review, and Loren in zero gravity
Fri, 08 Sep 2017
We’re one week away from The Vergecast Live in San Francisco, so Nilay, Dieter, and Paul talk through the last-minute rumors about what to expect at Apple’s event on September 12th.
We also dedicate part of the show to the Galaxy Note 8, which was reviewed on the site this week.
And for the season finale of her video series Space Craft, Loren Grush stops by to tell us what it was like being in zero gravity on a parabolic plane.
There’s a lot more in between that, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
03:14 - Juicero, maker of the doomed $400 internet-connected juicer, is shutting down
06:41 - The Boston Red Sox used an Apple Watch to steal pitching signs
10:44 - Galaxy Note 8 review
31:09 - Space Craft episode 4 with Loren Grush
52:41 - Apple iPhone 8 event: what to expect
1:16:32 - Paul’s weekly segment “Untitled”
1:20:34 - lots of TV stuff
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The Vergecast returns to the New York studio this week. Dieter, Nilay, and Paul run through what was announced so far at IFA 2017, including the LG V30, Sony Xperia XZ1, and lots of smart speakers.
Halfway through the show, Loren Grush makes a pit stop on her way to space to talk about episode 3 of her new video series Space Craft.
04:01 - LG’s V30 loses the gimmicks and gains a beautiful OLED screen
12:41 - Sony’s Xperia XZ1 and XZ1 Compact have refreshed designs and Android Oreo
21:10 - Lenovo made a weird $70 Alexa speaker that only works with its Android tablets
23:26 - Lenovo’s new Yoga 920 laptop has far-field microphones so you can shout at Cortana
24:56 - Google announces three third-party speakers with Assistant, plus LG appliance integration
34:07 - Space Craft episode three with Loren Grush
51:46 - In colossal screw up, Essential shared customers’ driver’s licenses over email
57:34 - Fitbit has a lot to prove with Ionic, its new smartwatch
1:08:56 - Paul’s weekly segment “Who will let me out of this yarn prison?”
1:11:03 - Sony's new wireless earbuds include noise-cancellation technology
1:12:36 - Apple’s iPhone 8 event is happening on September 12th
Oh yeah, and Apple announced that its next event will be September 12th. So we announced we are doing a live Vergecast on September 13th in San Francisco! Join us!
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Hands-on with the Note 8, Android Oreo, and Verizon's new unlimited data plans
Fri, 25 Aug 2017
This week on The Verge, Dieter was able to get his hands on the new Galaxy Note 8. So on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul go over the first impressions of Samsung’s latest product and what the pricing will mean for future smartphones.
Next up, Loren Grush returns to the show to talk about the second episode of Space Craft, as well as her experience seeing the eclipse this week in Nashville.
There’s a lot more in between, like Android Oreo’s name announcement, Verizon’s new unlimited data plans, and some new smart speakers on the horizon, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
02:43 - Note 8 specs and features
17:06 - Apple reportedly planning $999 price for new iPhone
26:36 - How I outran clouds to get the perfect eclipse photo with Loren Grush
34:12 - Space Craft episode two with Loren Grush
44:34 - Android O is now officially Android Oreo
47:40 - Google may take on the Echo Dot with a mini Google Home
51:26 - Samsung confirms it’s working on a smart speaker
52:13 - Paul revisits Intel’s new chip announcements
57:41 - Verizon’s good unlimited data plan is now three bad unlimited plans
1:09:38 - Paul’s weekly segment “YotaPhone 3; still Yota-ing”
1:12:07 - Apple TV is losing badly to Roku and Amazon in the living room, survey finds
1:13:28 - iOS 11 Safari will turn Google AMP links back into regular ones when sharing
1:19:34 - Nikon’s new D850 has 45.7 megapixels and enough features to tempt Canon shooters
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Essential phone review, Charlottesville online, and Space Craft
Fri, 18 Aug 2017
On The Verge’s flagship / only podcast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul go through the weekly rundown of news that hit the site this week.
The show begins by addressing the accumulation of online hate as a result of the Charlottesville attack, and how it’s affecting the topics we cover.
Also, the Essential Phone is out today, and Dieter had the chance to review it. Nilay, Paul, and Dieter discuss where phones like Essential are headed with this release and the other upcoming releases this fall.
We’ve got a new segment for you as well! Loren Grush, science reporter and friend of the show, steps into the studio to talk about her new video series Space Craft, where she finds out what it takes to be an astronaut in modern-day space programs.
There’s a whole lot in between, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
Here’s a list of stories we talked about on the show:
05:46 - Charlottesville attack puts a spotlight on online hate
23:09 - Essential Phone review
43:25 - Headphone jack still missing
49:43 - Space Craft episode 1 with Loren Grush
1:09:30 - Paul’s weekly segment “You say surveillance, I say sousveillance”
1:11:52 - Eclipse toolkit
1:14:07 - Samsung’s new fitness smartband leak reveals offline Spotify support, 5 ATM water resistance
1:14:48 - Apple is reportedly investing $1 billion in original video content
1:15:42 - Walmart’s Vudu video streaming service is coming to Apple TV on August 22nd
1:19:03 - Intel announces its next-generation Ice Lake chips unexpectedly early
1:22:02 - iOS 11 has a “cop button” to temporarily disable Touch ID
1:23:32 - Meet the streamers using Twitch to pay for college
1:23:42 - The Docx games: three days at the Microsoft Office World Championship
1:24:03 - Science doesn’t explain tech’s diversity problem — history does
1:25:12 - Paul’s podcast “Why watch people play video games?”
If you enjoyed this podcast and want to hear more, let us know what you want to hear! We’re starting some new podcasts soon and want your feedback.
In the meantime, you might want to check out Recode Decode, hosted by Kara Swisher, and Too Embarrassed to Ask hosted by The Verge’s Lauren Goode! You can find them all in iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, and anywhere you get your podcasts.
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Google memo, Surface PCs reliability, and fall phones preview
Fri, 11 Aug 2017
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Lauren, Dieter, and Paul begin by discussing the controversy over the Google engineer who was fired over writing a 10-page viral memo about diversity. The story illustrates a deeper problem in Silicon Valley, which Lauren has discussed in her podcast recently, so the cast talks about the science of the claims, the responsibly of Google, and what it means in the larger tech industry.
In the second half of the show, the crew runs through the latest leaks, releases, and controversies in the gadget world, including Paul’s segment he does every week, “FROYO PODS.”
01:46 - Google engineer fired over memo files labor complaint
33:09 - Consumer Reports stops recommending Microsoft Surface PCs over reliability concerns
37:41 - The new iPhone could have a resizable home button and face recognition for payments
46:22 - 4K Apple TV with HDR spotted in HomePod firmware
48:54 - Essential promises a new phone release date 'in a week'
56:19 - Another Pixel 2 leak shows the phone’s large front bezels
58:14 - Paul’s weekly segment “FROYO PODS”
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Tesla Model 3 first drive, iPhone leaks, and a bluetooth salt shaker
Fri, 04 Aug 2017
We are without Nilay Patel on The Vergecast this week, so Dieter Bohn and Paul Miller step up to host with some very special guests: transportation editor Tamara Warren, and tech editor Natt Garun. Tamara was one of the few people who got to test drive the Tesla Model 3 last week, so she brings her expertise to the show to talk about what she knows so far.
Also, some of the iPhone’s design and features got leaked out from code in the HomePod, so Natt Garun helps the crew break down all the information we’ve gleaned.
There’s a whole lot in between that — like Paul’s segment about the salt shaker Smalt — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
01:18 - Tesla Model 3 first drive
31:02 - The next iPhone’s screen design and face unlock apparently confirmed by HomePod firmware
39:52 - This iPhone 8 concept video imagines a touchscreen in the home button
48:33 - Next Level final episode with Lauren Goode
1:10:56 - Paul’s weekly segment “Smalt you later”
1:14:25 - Apple returns to growth as cheaper iPads boost sales
1:15:32 - Fitbit says its long-awaited smartwatch will be ready for the holidays
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Bonus: Walt Mossberg remembers the iPod nano
Fri, 28 Jul 2017
Apple announced this week that the iPod nano has been discontinued, taking down the website for both the shuffle and the nano today. Walt Mossberg - renowned tech reviewer, looks back on the iPod nano's origin with an anecdote about an interaction he had with Steve Jobs.
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iPod nano discontinued, Microsoft Paint's fate, and Foxconn's new factory
Fri, 28 Jul 2017
The Vergecast summer 2017 continues! This week, The Verge launched Verge Guidebook, a new guide to show you what to buy, what you shouldn't, and how to use it all. Nilay, Dieter, and Paul start off the show discussing the new review system and how-tos coming to the site.
Then, there’s another set of obituaries this week: Apple nano, Adobe Flash, and Microsoft Paint. The crew pays their respects to the weird moments these products gave us.
Returning for episode 3 of her series Next Level, Lauren Goode stops by to give us behind-the-scenes info on the latest episode and what’s in store for episode 4.
There’s a whole lot of stuff in between, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
03:22 - Welcome to Verge Guidebook
16:51 - Apple confirms iPod nano and iPod shuffle have been discontinued
22:20 - Adobe will finally kill Flash in 2020
29:35 - Microsoft Paint isn’t dead yet, will live in the Windows Store for free
39:02 - Next Level episode 3 with Lauren Goode
56:12 - A Wisconsin company will let employees use microchip implants to buy snacks and open doors
1:00:20 - Pixel 2 headphone jack
1:01:21 - Apple supplier Foxconn unveils plan to build a $10 billion LCD factory in Wisconsin
1:17:18 - Paul’s weekly segment “Meizu? Me, too”
1:22:22 - Twitter stalls, fails to add new users this quarter
1:23:43 - YouTube’s head of music confirms YouTube Red and Google Play Music will merge to create a new service
1:33:23 - Elon Musk dismisses Mark Zuckerberg’s understanding of AI threat as “limited”
1:37:37 - An eight-year-old reviews the Nintendo Switch
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Bixby launches, Alexa on Android, and a new hyperloop
Fri, 21 Jul 2017
Summer editions of The Vergecast continue as Nilay and Dieter welcome Ashley Carman and Jake Kastrenakes back to the show to discuss the news that hit the site this week. Elon Musk said he got “verbal” approval from The White House to build a hyperloop on the East Coast, Comcast is back at it again with statements on net neutrality, and we’ve got a few updates in the AI department.
Also, Lauren Goode updates us on the newest episode of her series Next Level once again! This week, she visited Dolby Labs to explore their experiments to track people’s emotional responses as they watch movies and TV.
There’s a lot more in between that, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
02:52 - Pacific Rim: Uprising’s teaser
05:24 - Elon Musk says he has a green light to build a NY-Philly-Baltimore-DC hyperloop
11:47 - Bixby feels more like a return of the old Samsung than a path to the future
20:27 - Next Level episode 2 with Lauren Goode
37:21 - You’ll be able to talk to Alexa on Android phones starting this week
40:25 - Why is Comcast using self-driving cars to justify abolishing net neutrality?
44:09 - Microsoft wants to close the rural broadband gap with TV white spaces
51:58 - Ashley’s weekly segment “Let’s talk about translucent gadgets”
54:26 - Google Glass is back from the dead
58:04 - Snap’s Spectacles are now available directly from Amazon
1:00:18 - How Instagram is reshaping restaurant design
1:04:25 - Apple joined by Foxconn and others in its fight with Qualcomm
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RIP Windows phone, net neutrality day of action, and Next Level
Fri, 14 Jul 2017
Welcome back to another week of The Vergecast. Nilay, Paul, and Dieter sit down in the studio to bring you the news that hit our site this week. First off, the net neutrality day of action was on Wednesday, as was Nilay’s piece on the matter. The gang debate the issue in this net neutrality “season” of news.
Halfway through the show, senior tech editor Lauren Goode stops by to talk a little bit about her new video series Next Level, which shows the technology that’s being worked on at some of the world’s most innovative companies and research institutions. You can check out the first episode here.
Last, but not least, we have what you’ve been waiting for — phone news! We have a mini Verge mobile show to discuss the deaths and births of the mobile world recently.
There’s a whole lot in between that, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
03:45 - A Microsoft font may have exposed corruption in Pakistan
07:39 - Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T want Congress to make a net neutrality law because they will write it
23:39 - The FCC says net neutrality destroys small ISPs. So has it?
35:47 - Next Level with Lauren Goode
52:13 - iFixit teardown confirms Note 7 Fan Edition is just a Note 7 with a new, smaller battery
53:30 - BlackBerry KeyOne launches on Sprint, the eternal harbor of innovation
54:25 - Death of Windows Phone
59:47 - The new Pixel XL
1:01:54 - Luxury phone maker Vertu is shutting down its UK manufacturing operation
1:03:27 - Andy Rubin’s Essential is staying quiet on the Essential Phone delay
1:06:51 - Paul’s weekly segment “Mag me later”
1:10:31 - Alexa news
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Echo Look, RED announces a phone, and new iPhone rumors
Fri, 07 Jul 2017
The week of Independence Day, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter get together in a classic format of The Vergecast to bring you the top tech news that hit the site this week. To name a few, we’ve got a review of the Echo Look, a new Android phone announced, and some breaking news in the middle of the show.
There’s a lot more in between that, so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
04:48 - Amazon’s Echo Look does more for Amazon than it does for your style
25:17 - RED is making a $1,200 smartphone with a “holographic display”
32:07 - New report claims iPhone 8 won’t feature fingerprint sensor in display
41:08 - Ashley’s segment “Spotted”
42:16 - Qualcomm is trying to ban iPhones from being sold in the US
51:24 - Paul’s weekly segment “TOOTHPASTE PODS”
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The iPhone turns 10, Petya ransomware and an iOS 11 preview
Fri, 30 Jun 2017
Did you know it was the iPhone's 10th anniversary on Thursday? The Vergecast knows. Nilay, Dieter, and Paul talk about what the iPhone means to them, to the industry, and to the entire universe. With just a slight tangent to talk about Orbs for Kings.
Better yet, Nilay interviewed Verge reporter Russell Brandom about the Petya ransomware. It's a segment Russell calls "CyberTalk," but Nilay wants to call it "Brandom Security with Russell Brandom." Please vote in the comments.
1:00 - The iPhone turns 10
21:56 - iPhone or smartphones: which had the bigger impact?
31:50 - Petya ransomware in “Brandom Security with Russell Brandom” / “CyberTalk”
47:15 - Amazon Echo Show Review
55:31 - iOS 11 preview
66:00 - ARKit
72:30 - Paul’s weekly segment “Spin Safety”
74:50 - Galaxy Note 7 (Fandom Edition)
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Uber’s CEO resigns, Tumblr’s fight for net neutrality, and Bixby first look
Fri, 23 Jun 2017
Here we go, another classic episode of The Vergecast. There were a lot of little things that happened this week, and we wanted to discuss them all, so Nilay, Dieter, and Paul go through their list of hits on the site.
Also, to continue our weekly summer interview series, Nilay sits down with culture reporter Kaitlyn Tiffany to talk about her recent piece on Tumblr’s relationship with the fight over net neutrality.
There’s so much in between all of this, so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:17 - OnePlus 5
4:29 - Scott Forstall breaks silence to talk about the iPhone’s creation
10:34 - First look at Samsung’s Bixby Voice preview for Galaxy S8
13:58 - Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8 will reportedly be announced in August
17:10 - Amazon's new Dash Wand is half magic, half boring
21:12 - You can now watch your smart home camera from an Amazon Echo Show
27:48 - Verizon is killing Tumblr’s fight for net neutrality with Kaitlyn Tiffany
45:36 - Travis Kalanick resigns as Uber CEO
1:00:00 - Paul’s weekly segment “My Dinner with Andre”
1:02:59 - iPad Pro 12.9 review: a great iPad, one I won’t buy
1:03:57 - 3.33 years after its release, someone actually beat Threes
1:04:58 - Microsoft now lets Surface Laptop owners revert to Windows 10 S
1:07:11 - You won’t be able to use your Surface Book if you want to take the bar in Tennessee
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Panos Panay, E3 2017, and iPad Pro 10.5-inch
Fri, 16 Jun 2017
Day two of The Vergecast this week! Yesterday, Nilay interviewed Brian Merchant, author of The One Device: The Secret History of the iPhone. Today, we have another full episode with a lot going on.
First off, E3 happened this week, and there’s a ton of news in the gaming world. Paul interviews culture reporter Megan Farokhmanesh (who is at the expo) live on tape to talk about what happened on the show floor, the press conferences, and the multitude of games that were shown.
Next, Dieter and Nilay have a fun conversation with special guest Panos Panay from Microsoft to talk about Microsoft’s newest product, the Surface Laptop.
And, of course, we have new reviews out this week! Along with the Surface Laptop, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter discuss the 10.5-inch iPad Pro and the future of these new kinds of computers.
There’s a whole mess of stuff in between that, so listen through it all, and you’ll get it all.
05:37 - Xbox One X
13:47 - E3 2017 with Megan Farokhmanesh
34:44 - Panos Panay interview
1:00:57 - 10.5-inch iPad Pro and Surface Laptop reviews
1:17:44 - Paul’s weekly segment “I C Seed; so much seeing”
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Bonus: Brian Merchant, author of The One Device
Thu, 15 Jun 2017
We’re doing two episodes of The Vergecast this week — the usual one on Friday, and this very special edition with Brian Merchant, author of The One Device: The Secret History of the iPhone.
We ran a big excerpt of the book this week, and we got deep on talking about the book, where it came from, and Merchant’s feeling that we should know more about the technology products in our lives — and know more about the hundreds of people who make them, from the unsung engineers at tech companies to the extremely unsung miners who dig the raw materials out of the ground.
And, of course, we talk about the quotes from Tony Fadell and Bill Bilbrey in the excerpt we just published, in which Fadell tells a story about Phil Schiller arguing the iPhone should have a hardware keyboard. Schiller has said the story isn’t true, and Fadell has tried to walk it back as well.
“So I wasn't in the room at Apple 10, 15 years ago when this would have happened,” says Merchant, who has the exchange on tape. “But this is a quote verbatim as Tony Fadell who was in the room told it to me. He told me this quote in such detail and he gave such a vivid account and I had no reason to believe it was untrue.”
Merchant says the controversy has “blown him away.”
“It certainly wasn't intended to make Phil Schiller look dumb. It was an opposing viewpoint... I think that it's totally fine to be a dissenting voice and want to contextualize this emergent technology and even be opposed to it. Why would you not have someone in the room who is forcing people to think critically about this potentiality?”
There’s a lot more on the podcast, including a deep dive into the early research projects at Apple exploring touch interfaces.
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HomePod, WWDC 2017, and DJI Spark
Thu, 08 Jun 2017
This week, it’s Apple’s turn to take over The Vergecast. Dieter and Jake have just come back from WWDC while Nilay and Paul watched from afar so the gang has a lot to talk about with the new products announced.
We also have Ben Popper stop by the show to talk about DJI’s newest drone, the Spark.
There’s a whole lot more in between that so listen to it all you get it all.
04:56 - Apple announces HomePod speaker to take on Sonos
32:14 - DJI Spark review with Ben Popper
47:22 - Apple announces new 10.5-inch iPad Pro
1:02:51 - Apple is launching an iOS ‘ARKit’ for augmented reality apps
1:06:05 - iMac Pro introduced / macOS High Sierra
1:18:37 - watchOS 4 brings new Siri watchface, fitness coaching, and a new app-browsing UI
1:21:32 - Paul’s weekly segment “Gates-all-around, all around”
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Code Conference, Essential Phone, and Chromebook Pro
Fri, 02 Jun 2017
This week’s Vergecast is recorded out of the studio. Nilay heads to the West Coast to reunite with Dieter, Lauren, and Casey at this year’s Code Conference. The gang discusses the speakers (in more than one way) at the event including Andy Rubin, Hillary Clinton, and Reed Hastings. They also chat a little about the news outside of the conference.
Back in New York, Paul reports on gadget week with his weekly segment “Let me hug your robot heart.”
There’s a whole lot more in between, so listen to get it all!
01:29 - The case for editing tweets
06:01 - The Essential Phone: a first look at the hardware
30:11 - Paul’s weekly segment “Let me hug your robot heart”
32:49 - Netflix CEO says net neutrality is ‘not our primary battle’
42:41 - Clinton says the Russians had to be ‘guided by Americans’ in how they weaponized information
55:37 - Don’t buy the Chromebook Pro until Google fixes a critical bug
59:11 - Verizon says the Droid brand isn’t dead, but it sure looks like it
1:01:30 - Microsoft's new Skype redesign is a radical change that looks like Snapchat
1:04:55 - Samsung's Bixby voice assistant is reportedly still weeks away from US launch
1:07:11 - Apple’s ‘Siri speaker’ reportedly enters manufacturing as announcement nears
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Gadget news, FCC's final proposal, and Vlad
Fri, 26 May 2017
Here’s The Vergecast. This week, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul plow through a week of news starting with (no surprise) the FCC’s ongoing mission to destroy net neutrality. This was also a week full of new gadgets — from the new Microsoft Surface Pro, to the Jamboard, to a $9,000 laptop, we walk you through the things we saw and reviewed in the Circuit Breaker world.
Also, even though we filled our time, we added a bonus segment in between it all: Vlad Savov, a fan favorite of the show, stops by and quickly breaks down what is on his mind and what gadgets have piqued his interests.
There’s a whole bunch of other stuff discussed on the show, (sorry, this show is an hour and a half), so listen through it all for more.
03:27 - Breaking down the FCC’s proposal to destroy net neutrality
32:36 - Inside the mind of Vlad
49:38 - And now, a brief definition of the web
51:03 - Microsoft's new Surface Pro has 13.5 hours of battery life and LTE option
56:22 - Microsoft has created a Surface USB-C dongle for “people who love dongles”
1:00:12 - DJI's $499 Spark is the company's cheapest and tiniest drone yet
1:04:43 - Google made a $5,000 whiteboard — and it’s weirdly fun
1:06:14 - Samsung responds to complaints about HDMI switching, will offer a firmware update
1:10:57 - How Anker is beating Apple and Samsung at their own accessory game
1:11:54 - Acer Predator 21 X review
1:14:14 - Paul’s weekly segment “Vroom Vroom goes the car”
1:17:00 - TV lightning round
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Google I/O, Android O, and Assistant on the iPhone
Fri, 19 May 2017
Fresh out of my export folder is a brand new episode of The Vergecast. This week, because of the business that is Google I/O, we recorded our episode Friday morning. This resulted in Nilay’s attempt to bring a morning show vibe to episode 257, despite Dieter, Adi, Natt, and Paul’s (and my) disapproval of sound effects. There was a lot to discuss thanks to Google’s developer conference, so here it is! Enjoy!
06:43 - Google is finally replacing its bad emoji blobs in Android O
13:59 - Google Assistant is on the iPhone now
24:41 - Google wants the Assistant to be everywhere — but first it needs to conquer the iPhone
31:46 - Android O
37:40 - Google is adding Kotlin as an official programming language for Android development
45:37 - Google AR / VR
1:01:25 - Ford update brings Android Auto and Apple CarPlay to its 2016 fleet
1:06:50 - New Surface Pro leak confirms Microsoft's hatred for USB-C
1:07:28 - AMD is bringing its new Ryzen processors to laptops later this year
1:08:15 - FCC votes to begin overturning net neutrality
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Microsoft Build 2017, Echo Show, and a Cortana speaker
Fri, 12 May 2017
Welcome back. This week’s episode of The Vergecast comes after Microsoft Build 2017, so Nilay and Dieter bring in Ashley Carman and first-time guest Chaim Gartenberg, two of our great Circuit Breaker reporters, to fill us in on what happened. The cast also discusses Amazon’s newest addition to the Echo lineup, the Echo Show, and what’s happening with these voice assistant products.
There’s a lot more in the show, so listen to it all to get all the scoops.
01:38 - Microsoft Build 2017
20:38 - Windows Store news
22:57 - 10 S — lockdown
29:25 - Microsoft’s Story Remix app is Windows Movie Maker on steroids
24:17 - Harman Kardon teases its Cortana-powered speaker
37:13 - Amazon officially unveils touchscreen Echo Show
55:12 - Ashley’s weekly segment “Echo Gadget”
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Microsoft Surface laptop, Samsung DeX, and Google Doc phishing
Fri, 05 May 2017
This week Microsoft unveiled its new laptops in New York City, and Verge senior editor Tom Warren flew in from London to check it out. Nilay, Paul, and Dieter invite Tom to the show to discuss the new products from Microsoft and the various other news that popped up on the site this week, including Samsung’s new docking station, Apple’s earnings, and the Google Doc you should not have clicked.
Will Dieter’s AirPods last throughout the show? Listen to find out.
01:26 - Microsoft Surface Laptop event
36:16 - The Google Docs spam attacks played off Google’s most fundamental weakness
47:33 - Samsung DeX review: the closest thing we have to using our phones as PCs
1:00:04 - Paul’s weekly segment “Four Fours” (previously known as 4444)
1:06:46 - Apple’s earnings show modest growth, but iPhone sales are flat
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Net neutrality special edition
Fri, 28 Apr 2017
We’ve got a special edition episode of The Vergecast for you this week. On Thursday, the FCC put out a draft proposal for reversing the net neutrality order of 2015. The Verge has been following FCC chairman Ajit Pai’s actions in restoring “Internet Freedom” and how it will affect the internet for all of us.
Nilay Patel invites news editor Jake Kastrenakes on the show, who has been reporting on this for the past few months, as well as senior reporter Adi Robertson, who reported on the FCC’s net neutrality rules back when this was a problem in 2014. The trio talk about the past, present, and future of the open internet and the FCC’s actions disrupting it.
If you’re out of the loop or just need more information on this topic, now is the time to listen!
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Facebook F8, Galaxy S8, and Juicero's fate
Fri, 21 Apr 2017
Here we are! Another episode of The Vergecast. It’s been a busy week, which means lots for Nilay, Ashley, Dan, and Paul to talk about on the show. Facebook’s F8 developer conference took place this week so there’s lots of weird updates with AR, social VR, and mind reading. "It's two sci-fis at once," Paul says.
And of course, the Galaxy S8 has been reviewed! Dan gives us his first-hand impressions, what his favorite features are, and whether he prefers it over the iPhone and the Pixel.
And wow there’s a whole bunch of other stuff we talked about so listen through it all to keep feeding your brain
01:37 - Juicero offering refunds to all customers after people realize $400 juicer is totally unnecessary
06:34 - Samsung Galaxy S8 review: ahead of the curve
29:25 - Facebook F8 conference 2017
54:23 - Paul’s weekly segment “One day, not so far away, it may be possible for me to think in Mandarin and for you to feel instantly in Spanish”
55:39 - Plastc swiped $9 million from backers and just completely vanished
59:35 - Nintendo is reportedly planning to launch a miniature SNES before Christmas
1:00:17 - Intel's next-generation SSD technology is finally ready and it's really, really fast
1:00:51 - Slack is adding AIM-style custom status messages
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iPhone chips, Scorpio specs, and RIP NES Classic
Fri, 14 Apr 2017
This week on Vergecast, Chris Plante is in town! Nilay, Dieter, and Paul bring him in to discuss a few things that confused us all throughout the week — Apple and Qualcomm suing each other, how the FCC may kill net neutrality, and Nintendo discontinuing the NES Classic.
There’s a lot more in between all that so take a listen, give us a review, and enjoy your weekend.
01:50 - The FCC’s plan to kill net neutrality will also kill internet privacy
16:59 - Qualcomm sues Apple for hobbling its iPhone chips to make Intel look better
33:12 - Microsoft reveals its final Xbox Project Scorpio specs
52:00 - Nintendo doesn’t want your money — it wants your soul
1:00:03 - Paul’s weekly segment “Guess who’s got a birthday coming up?”
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Mac craziness, YouTube TV, and Project Scorpio
Fri, 07 Apr 2017
Hey! The Verge has brought you another episode of The Vergecast. This week we’ve got Nilay, Paul, Ashley, and Dieter talkin’ the tech talk to y’all: more specifically the future of Mac computers, Youtube TV, and the newest Android phones on the market.
As always, Paul and Ashley share their gadget of the week, and Nilay makes fun of Dieter for wearing AirPods. Listen to the whole show for more.
02:50 - Apple working on “completely rethought” Mac Pro and pro display
28:30 - Paul’s weekly segment “Here’s a new phone!”
29:09 - Ashley’s weekly segment “Huh, this looks a lot like a beehive”
31:15 - YouTube TV
42:30 - HTC U Ultra, LG G6, and other Android phones
52:54 - Project Scorpio
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Galaxy S8 hands-on, FCC privacy rulings, and Ghost in the Shell
Fri, 31 Mar 2017
Welcome back! We have a great show for you today. No really! If you listen to this podcast, you know Samsung announced the Galaxy S8 this week, so Nilay and Dieter bring in senior editor and friend of the show Dan Seifert; who recently took a trip to South Korea to tour Samsung’s headquarters.
Second half of the show, news editor Jake Kastrenakes joins to discuss his coverage of the FCC and privacy ruling in Congress.
There’s even more! Megan Farokhmanesh is here to enlighten the crew on the culture side of site; Persona 5 and Ghost in the Shell.
Theres a bunch of little topics sprinkled in between this focused episode, so listen through to find them all.
00:43 - Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy S8
17:46 - Samsung’s Bixby assistant
33:13 - Persona 5 review
42:16 - Ghost in the Shell review
50:23 - FCC reporting
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The RED iPhone, Mass Effect: Andromeda, and the new iPad
Fri, 24 Mar 2017
The Vergecast returns to New York! Nilay, Dieter, Natt, and Megan are here to update you with the news of the week. Apple has a new iPhone... kinda! And a new iPad... kinda! Natt got a look at the Android O developer preview, and Megan played Mass Effect: Andromeda. There’s a lot of stuff in between that so listen!
01:40 - Apple’s new products
05:04 - Apple replaces iPad Air 2 with cheaper 9.7-inch iPad
10:38 - Apple bought the best utility app for the iPhone, Workflow
16:52 - Apple’s new Clips app makes social videos for other social networks
21:43 - Android O brings fun customizations that set the stage for bigger changes
30:15 - Android / Chrome tablets
34:33 - Megan’s Kulture Korner
48:33 - Natt’s weekly segment “Did you know hoverboards were still a thing?”
51:32 - Samsung S8 / DeX
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SXSW Films, Fasten, and Pandora Premium
Tue, 14 Mar 2017
On Sunday, Nilay and Dieter brought The Vergecast to Austin, TX for South by Southwest 2017 and streamed it live on Facebook.
Today we did it again! This time, we welcome culture reporter Megan Farokhmanesh and senior editor Chris Plante on to talk about what happened so far in the culture world at SXSW, most notably the film festival.
Also, with addition to more tech news that’s happened since Sunday, we open the floor for questions from the audience.
01:58 - Atomic Blonde is a good movie improved by an exceptional soundtrack
04:54 - The new Pennywise terrified the young cast of Stephen King’s IT reboot
14:54 - A short film gets to the heart of being targeted by an internet mob
25:14 - Paul’s weekly segment “Stronger Together”
28:07 - Sure, slap an Android touchscreen on some headphones. Why not?
29:33 - Fasten / Ride Austin
35:10 - Tag Heuer and Intel are making another $1,600 Android Wear smartwatch
39:36 - Pandora Premium
45:47 - audience Q&A
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SXSW Part 1, Facebook Messenger Day, and Sonos Playbase
Sun, 12 Mar 2017
As you may have heard, The Vergecast is live this week at South by Southwest! We have one episode down and another one to go on Tuesday.
On this special episode, Nilay and Dieter welcome Lauren Goode and Casey Newton on to talk the news outside of SXSW; in the tech world.
And the show wouldn’t be complete without the weekly gadget segment, so Paul — relaxing at home in New York — sent the gang a letter to keep the tradition alive.
You can listen here, or watch the video on The Verge Facebook page.
03:55 - Google and Levi’s connected smart jacket will come out this fall and costs around $350
06:59 - Uptime is a goofy video sharing app from Google’s Area 120 startup incubator
09:13 - Facebook Messenger Day
19:52 - The Sonos Playbase is a $700 speaker that sits under your TV
26:19 - FCC’s walk back of ISP privacy rules
36:27 - Anchor is like Snapchat stories for audio, and it’s delightful
38:56 - Paul’s weekly segment “Friendship is like a Keurig”
41:39 - Latest Samsung Galaxy S8 leak gives us a close look at button changes
45:20 - LG G6 and the mobile/desktop dream
53:49 - Twitch replaced its homepage with a Twitter clone for gamers
Tune in Tuesday at 1:30 ET/12:30 CT/10:30 PT for another live episode!
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Google Cloud Next Conference, Iron Fist, and Hot Tinder
Fri, 10 Mar 2017
On this special episode of The Vergecast, the ladies of The Verge take over the show. Did you know that nearly half of the team is female? Seriously, we’re probably two women away from a 50 / 50 split, but you’d never know that if you only listened to The Vergecast! That’s why, in honor of International Women’s Day this week (and Women’s History Month all month!), we have Megan Farokhmanesh, Adi Robertson, Natt Garun, and Ashley Carman in the studio talking about Google’s big and enterprise-y week, Iron Fist, and the exclusive, invite-only version of Tinder for mega-hotties. Whatever that last thing is.
Culture reporter Kaitlyn Tiffany also joins in to tell us her account of the Women’s Day strike.
00:49 - International Women’s Day
10:49 - Google's giant 4K digital whiteboard, Jamboard, will cost $4,999
13:55 - Google’s Gboard will now translate text into another language as you type
15:32 - Google confirms small number of Pixel phones have broken microphones
17:35 - Google Hangouts is getting a major overhaul to take on Slack
21:39 - Google can now recognize objects in videos using machine learning
23:55 - Iron Fist isn't just racially uncomfortable, it's also a boring show
28:45 - There’s a secret version of Tinder for hot people and you can’t use it
36:31 - Ashley’s weekly segment “Yo, when will I be able to afford this phone case?”
39:32 - The CIA is hacking Samsung Smart TVs, according to WikiLeaks docs
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Switch review, Galaxy S8 leaks, and iPhone with USB-C
Fri, 03 Mar 2017
Usually I start these posts by apologizing, but ya know... by now I think you know what you’ve gotten yourself into — unless this is your first episode. So great! Hey! We’ve got a great show for you! (This is a podcast.) Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Ross Miller, and Paul Miller (no relation) compiled a list of things from our cherished website TheVerge.com and dug a little deeper, with different angles, viewpoints, and behind-the-scenes journalistic insight.
We’ve got more time with the Nintendo Switch than we did last week (even a taste test), a roundup of MWC announcements from over the weekend, and tons of little stories. I’m sure there’s a bunch of stuff you missed because of the Amazon web server disruption since those four hours were the only time you get your news.
03:04 - Nintendo Switch review: pure potential
14:05 - The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild review
21:33 - Amazon’s web servers are back online after more than four hours of disruption
24:34 - Samsung Galaxy S8 leaks in its full glory and The BlackBerry KeyOne resurrects the keyboard with style
30:08 - Google Assistant begins huge expansion across Android devices today
38:05 - 5G: Super fast data, throttled by reality
41:10 - The next iPhone won’t switch to USB-C, but its cable likely will
49:32 - Paul’s weekly segment “Hey look at me now”
51:55 - FCC chairman says net neutrality was a mistake
58:40 - YouTube launches its own streaming TV service
1:02:20 - Amazon is working on its own home security camera
1:03:47 - Spotify is preparing to launch a Hi-Fi music tier
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Away Travel Duo: Carry-On Suitcase & Everywhere Bag Set – Jet Black
The ultimate business travel power couple. This set includes an airline-approved Carry-On with a TSA lock and patented compression system, plus the Everywhere Bag with a dedicated 16" laptop pocket and trolley sleeve to secure it to the suitcase. Look polished and stay organized on every corporate mission.
This is an affiliate link. If you buy through this link we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Bonus: Vergecast at SXSW 2017
Thu, 02 Mar 2017
A special announcement from Nilay Patel
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The anniversary of Scissor Vodka, Nintendo Switch hands-on, and the secret behind the OP-1 processor
Fri, 24 Feb 2017
Hello! We’re still testing out our new studios so we thought we’d see how many people we can fit into the show. This week we’ve got Nilay, Paul, and Ashley in the podcast room, with Dieter and Chris Plante coming in over Skype. Everyone had so much to say so we gave you a few bonus minutes to listen to. Included are: Chris’ Nintendo Switch review, Dieter’s scoop about chips in Chromebooks, some MWC previews, and much, much more!
04:26 - Nintendo Switch hands-on
23:24 - Solving the mystery behind the OP1 processor in the Chromebook Plus
41:44 - MWC preview: LG G6 / Scissor vodka anniversary
47:44 - Verizon is planning 5G tests in 11 cities this year
55:49 - FCC news updated
1:06:15 - Lightning round — Snapchat Spectacles are now available online
1:08:22 - Meitu’s new T8 phone
1:16:37 - Amazon says Alexa’s speech is protected by the First Amendment
1:21:27 - Ashley’s weekly segment “Good Boy”
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Planet of the Apps, Verizon unlimited, and Sonos audio
Fri, 17 Feb 2017
Hey, y’all. This week’s episode of Vergecast is the first in our new studio. And our heroes (Nilay, Paul, and Dieter, in case you were unaware) are still getting used to it. But you can’t see them while you’re listening, so it doesn’t really matter! It’s a new look but it has the same great taste. Topics on this week’s show include: lots of TV talk, including Apple TV and Caavo; more unlimited data plans; a bit of consumer audio speak; and a few anecdotes and reviews sprinkled in.
And Megan Farokhmanesh stops by briefly to talk about her experience using a new dating app called Hater. Does she love it or hate it? Tune in to find out.
02:17 - Code Media
03:23 - Apple headlines, iPhone 8 rumors
09:58 - TV stuff
14:34 - Planet of the Apps
21:54 - Caavo
33:32 - Verizon’s new unlimited data plan
40:52 - Hater app with Megan
46:48 - Paul’s weekly segment “Dieter wouldn’t let me make a slurping noise for the name of this segment”
49:08 - This Belle doll will dance for you, but only if you attempt to code
53:08 - Sonos news / consumer audio talk
1:02:28 - Android apps on Chrome OS
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Android Wear 2.0, Google Smart Home, and Vizio gets caught
Fri, 10 Feb 2017
This week on Vergecast, we’re in our new office! But our studios aren’t ready yet! So Nilay and Paul set up in a conference room and Skype with Dieter to share what they learned in the tech world over the past seven days. We even recorded it for you!
Here it is.
01:54 - Android Wear 2.0
14:52 - Google Assistant on phone and smart home
27:02 - Apple's Ultra Accessory Connector dashes any hopes of a USB-C iPhone
32:08 - Fidget cube
33:56 - Most smart TVs are tracking you — Vizio just got caught
43:52 - Paul’s weekly segment “Please don’t talk to me, can’t you see I’m busy?”
47:13 - Neckbuds
51:30 - The Nintendo Switch is missing a golden tablet opportunity
57:16 - Lightning round
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Snap Inc IPO, ARM processors in Macbooks, and Apple earnings
Fri, 03 Feb 2017
Vergecast episode 241! This week, Nilay and Dieter bring back Ross Miller and Megan Farokhmanesh to assist covering the news from this week. Snap Inc. filed for a $3 billion IPO, Apple is reportedly putting ARM chips in Macs, and Facebook is making a TV app. In between all that listen to Nilay’s take on fire logs, Dieter’s experience with a Zelda-themed escape room, and the wackiness of internet culture from Megan and Ross.
Nilay and Dieter apologized for this episode to me personally — but really, we covered a lot and had a good time so I think they’re just being hard on themselves. Enjoy!
03:37 - Snap Inc IPO
08:41 - Facebook wants to build app for set-top boxes
16:21 - Duraflame
18:37 - Apple earnings
31:42 - MacBook Touch Bar barred from bar test takers this February
35:50 - ARM processors in MacBooks
40:07 - Why politics shows up on our site a lot lately
49:47 - Zelda escape the room
51:31 - We Are Your Friends
56:56 - Ross’ weekly segment “Gadgetorial? Counterpoint”
1:03:15 - Lightning round
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Samsung Galaxy S8, the politics of science, and the net neutrality debate reignited
Fri, 27 Jan 2017
Another Vergecast is up! We have a CES Twitter live show reunion, featuring Nilay, Dieter, Megan, and Paul discussing this week in news. As Nilay mentions throughout the show, the gang has senioritis as they prepare to move to new offices next week... just FYI.
Also, Verge science editor Liz Lopatto returns to the show to discuss the new administration’s action toward the science world, and how the scientists are handling it.
If you keep listening, you’ll come upon a talk about net neutrality — another debate sparked by the recent transfer of power.
Look, we’re like 15 minutes over our regular time so theres plenty of other stuff in between that to look forward to.
03:02 - Amazon Echo’s new wake word
07:49 - Resident Evil 7
13:21 - Samsung Galaxy S8 rumors
21:24 - Trump’s phone
26:22 - LG G6
29:01 - Science, EPA, and Trump with Liz Lopatto
44:56 - Paul’s weekly segment “Dry your sweaty palms”
49:12 - Net neutrality debate
1:07:01 - CBS’s Hunted
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FTC vs Qualcomm, Trump vs Apple, and Oculus vs ZeniMax
Fri, 20 Jan 2017
This week on Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, Ashley, and Dieter take on the topics in the tech world you may have missed out on this week. Trump spoke with Tim Cook about moving production of Apple products to the US; Qualcomm is being sued by the Federal Trade Commission; and both Palmer Luckey and Mark Zuckerberg take the stand in the Oculus trade secrets trial.
That’s only the first half of the show, so keep listening for more on this week in tech.
3:07 - Trump / Apple
17:03 - FTC / Qualcomm
24:29 - Oculus Trial
32:36 - Paul’s weekly segment “Put this computer in that computer”
34:53 - Smart duvet
38:45 - Andy Rubin / Android
46:47 - Nintendo Switch
52:59 - Smart garden / AirPods
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iPhone 10th anniversary, Nintendo Switch, and the HTC U Ultra
Fri, 13 Jan 2017
You watched the live show at CES and now we’re back in podcast mode. Nilay, Dieter, and Paul get together to share some of their experiences from the Consumer Electronics Show, along with a review of what happened this week. The iPhone turned 10 on Tuesday, so the trio looks back to when it was first announced and discuss what will happen with smartphones in the future. There’s also lots of gadget talk: HTC’s U Ultra, the Nintendo Switch (!), and lots of throwback devices. This is a really good nerdy tech-centric episode of Vergecast, I hope you like it.
3:31 - iPhone 10th anniversary and the future of smartphones
19:03 - iPhone prototypes
22:38 - Macbook Pro battery life
31:38 - HTC U Ultra
46:02 - Nintendo Switch
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CES 2017 Day 3
Sat, 07 Jan 2017
This year, we hosted The Vergecast Live at CES 2017 as a Twitter Live video show. We've decided to share the full audio here, but you can see clips from the show on Twitter (@Verge). The following is from Friday, January 6th.
http://www.theverge.com/2017/1/7/14200992/vergecast-live-at-ces-2017-twitter-replay-rewatch-vod
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CES 2017 Day 2
Fri, 06 Jan 2017
This year, we hosted The Vergecast Live at CES 2017 as a Twitter Live video show. We've decided to share the full audio here, but you can see clips from the show on Twitter (@Verge) and catch our last show Friday at 4:30PT at ces.twitter.com. The following is from Thursday, January 5th.
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CES 2017 Day 1
Fri, 06 Jan 2017
This year, we hosted The Vergecast Live at CES 2017 as a Twitter Live video show. We've decided to share the full audio here, but you can see clips from the show on Twitter @Verge and catch our last show Friday at 4:30PT at ces.twitter.com. The following is from Wednesday, January 4th.
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Zuckerberg's smart home, Android Wear, and CES predictions
Fri, 23 Dec 2016
As the year ends, Nilay, Dieter, Paul, and Ross gather together from across the country via Skype to sit down and bring up what’s been troubling them this week. Nilay can’t stand Mark Zuckerberg’s video about his home AI, Dieter doesn’t know what laptop to take to CES, Paul feels that emoji is too totalitarian, and Ross...is already in holiday mode.
Grab a glass of eggnog (from justthenog.com) and sit beside the fire with your favorite tech luminaries of 2016.
04:11 - Mark Zuckerberg’s “smart home”
14:56 - Rogue One talk (level 4 spoilers 16:51-18:01)
17:59 - laptops
22:42 - Apple, Macbook batteries, and new desktops
26:23 - Emoji consortium
28:52 - AirPods review
34:58 - Android Wear
43:34 - CES 2017 predictions
55:08 - Paul's weekly segment "WebOS still exists, Dieter. Are you sad?"
59:19 - Dieter note
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Super Mario Run, Uber's self-driving cars, and Apple's new TV app
Fri, 16 Dec 2016
Everyone was in New York this week, so we had a jam-packed studio with Nilay, Dieter, and Paul, along with culture reporter Megan Farokhmanesh and transportation reporter Andrew Hawkins. Megan joins us on Vergecast for the first time to talk about what dominates the site this week: Nintendo’s new mobile game Super Mario Run, and the new Star Wars film Rogue One (no spoilers). Meanwhile, Andrew enlightens us on what is going on in the world of self-driving cars: Uber’s autonomous cars in San Francisco, and Google’s new car company Waymo.
There’s a lot more along with that so hit play and drive.
02:21 - Super Mario Run
14:41 - Rogue One
23:16 - Uber / Google self-driving car news with Andrew Hawkins
45:39 - Lightning round (kinda) starts here
45: 48 - Apple TV app
54:48 - AirPods
58:17 - Paul’s weekly segment “Speaking of Things You Can’t Buy”
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Fitbit buys Pebble, Windows 10 on ARM, and gadgets aren't dead
Fri, 09 Dec 2016
Nilay, Dieter, Lauren, and Ashley are back! This week on Vergecast, we talk about Fitbit buying Pebble, the status of the gadget universe, and Microsoft bringing Windows desktop apps to mobile ARM processors. Lots of tech, lots of jokes, here we go.
01:34 - Fitbit / Pebble / wearables
18:23 - Gadgets aren’t dead
33:10 - Windows / ARM
53:23 - Lightning round (Westworld spoilers 53:23–55:10)
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Net neutrality, Final Fantasy, Gilmore Girls, and the Spectacles line
Fri, 02 Dec 2016
Welcome to Vergecast Lonely Paul edition. Dieter and Nilay are out this week, so Paul enlisted some of his colleagues who would never let him down like that and made his own Vergecast that's centered around talking to people not named Dieter or Nilay. Want to learn what AT&T's new DirecTV Now service has to do with net neutrality? Want to figure out why nearly all women and nearly everybody actually loves Gilmore Girls? Want to know if video games are good sometimes? Want to experience what it would be like to stand in line for Snapchat Spectacles but not actually purchase Spectacles because you hate lines? Then you'll probably love what we've done here.
2:39 – Interview with T.C. Sottek on net neutrality
33:24 – Interview with Kaitlyn Tiffany on Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life
52:38 – Interview with Andrew Webster on Pokemon Sun and Moon and Final Fantasy XV
1:06:30 – Interview with Ashley Carman live at the Snapchat Spectacles line in NYC
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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet (Hardcover)
Journalist Andrew Blum goes inside the Internet's physical infrastructure, revealing the hidden world of cables, compounds, and data centers.
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Fake news, Touchbar, and the Surface Studio
Fri, 18 Nov 2016
The tech review season continues this week with reviews of the Macbook Pro with Touch Bar, Microsoft’s Surface Studio, and even an actual book that Apple released. This week on Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, and Dieter give an overview of these products along with the topic of the week (or the month, or maybe the year): the problem of social media dealing with fake news articles that go viral. Paul sits down with Casey Newton, Silicon Valley editor at The Verge to discuss it all.
00:48 - Fake news on social networks
05:44 - Interview with Casey Newton
33:57 - Macbook Pro with Touchbar review
39:56 - Apple’s book Designed by Apple in California
44:25 - Apple TV
50:20 - Microsoft’s Surface Studio review
57:54 - PS4 Pro
1:02:52 - NES Classic
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Daydream, Playstation Pro, Snapchat, and Instagram
Fri, 11 Nov 2016
Here we are, a few days after the election. With the world still adjusting to the future, we thought we’d give you a break from it all and briefly talk about what we know best: the future of technology. This week we have reviews for the Playstation 4 Pro and Google Daydream, the continuing saga of adapting to a plug drought, and Snapchat’s new Spectacles that were released to the public this week.
So sit back, relax, (unless you are driving... if you’re driving and listening to this please focus on the road), and let us fill you in with the Verge updates you may have missed this week.
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Verge turns 5, Google Home, and Assistant
Fri, 04 Nov 2016
Happy Vergecast day! Look we’ve got a new logo!
This week, in honor of The Verge’s fifth anniversary and the redesign of the website, we start off the show by giving some behind-the-scenes details on the new things you see on the site and things we’ve changed.
But don’t worry, we still have that weekly news you all subscribe for. Nilay, Dieter, Paul, and Dan discuss using the Google Home speaker and how it works with the Google Assistant. Also, we have reviews of the 13-inch Macbook Pro (yeah the one without the Touch Bar), Paul’s weekly segment “Cookie Pods,” and some great ad reads in between.
01:49 - The Verge turns 5
15:58 - Google Home
27:49 - Google Assistant
40:35 - Macbook Pro
1:06:27 - Paul’s weekly segment “Cookie Pods”
We want to thank the listeners, new and old, for tuning in each and giving feedback on the show, we greatly appreciate it.
A quote from Nilay on this week’s episode:
“We launched The Verge basically on the back of this podcast. This podcast when Paul and I were doing it with Josh as the Engadget podcast was so popular that we could fucking leave and start a new podcast, our listeners came with us, and we were able to launch This Is My Next and then The Verge so it’s wild that we’ve done it for five years.”
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Macbook Pro, Surface Studio, and the events surrounding
Fri, 28 Oct 2016
This week is a special episode of The Vergecast. After attending the Apple event, Nilay and Dieter sit down in San Francisco together and talk about the newest product announcements from Cupertino.
Let us not forget, Microsoft also announced new computers this week! We invited an old friend of the show, senior editor Vlad Savov, to help cover it all.
01:27 - Microsoft event/Surface Studio
24:00 - Apple Mac event
28:25 - Macbook Pro
32:27 - Touchbar
41:01 - Specs
52:39 - Apple TV app
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Pixel, Nintendo Switch, and new MacBook Pros
Fri, 21 Oct 2016
This week at The Verge has been a busy one! Reviews for Google’s Pixel phone are out, Chinese tech firm LeEco just announced a plethora of new products coming to the US, Nintendo finally showed us new hardware for their games, and Apple is teasing a new Mac event for next week. Even Tesla had a few things to say.
Nilay, Dieter, Paul, and Jordan cover it all on this week’s Vergecast.
02:27 - Google Pixel review
24:06 - Masterclass ad
27:24 - Tesla
39:27 - Hello Fresh ad
41:26 - LeEco
54:21 - Nintendo Switch
59:27 - Apple’s upcoming Mac event
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Galaxy Note 7s don’t explode, they sizzle
Fri, 14 Oct 2016
This week on Vergecast, we have the exclusive interview with our tech and transportation reporter Jordan Golson, who has been reporting nonstop on the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 debacle. Nilay, Lauren, and Paul welcome Jordan to the show to talk about the recent events regarding Samsung, as well as what it means for competitors and the tech ecosystem.
02:42 - Samsung recall
22:48 - Masterclass ad
27:07 - Google Pixel
36:44 - iOS10
37:12 - Samsung vs. Apple
50:15 - Graphicstock ad
51:24 - Ashley’s weekly segment “A Genuine Gadget Connection”
55:26 - Amazon Unlimited Music and the various tech ecosystems
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Google event, Oculus event, and Playstation VR
Fri, 07 Oct 2016
This week on Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, Dan, and Dieter cover two big events and announcements from the past few days. As you may have read on the site, Google announced a plethora of hardware devices on Tuesday. Then yesterday, Oculus announced a few new features for their VR platform.
Will Nilay buy a Pixel on the show?
Listen and find out.
01:42 - Google event, new products, and new competition
38:16 - Oculus event and VR
49:08 - Paul’s weekly segment “Having a Coke with you”
51:14 - Lightning round
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SpaceX, colonizing Mars, and Snapchat spectacles
Sun, 02 Oct 2016
This week on Vergecast, science editor Liz Lopatto is in town and stops by the Vergecast to talk about the news out of the International Astronautical Congress; Elon Musk's plan to colonize Mars. Paul also interviews Loren Grush live in Mexico at the event and breaks down Mr. Musk's presentation.
The cast also talks about the death of BlackBerry-made phones, the ever-changing use of smartwatches, and Snapchat's Spectacles.
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Siri, Sierra, Photokina, and Allo
Fri, 23 Sep 2016
Apple ended our summer with the release of both new hardware and software. Now that fall has finally arrived, we await the next big tech event...from Google. This week on Vergecast, Nilay, Paul, Ashley, and Dieter float between these two rituals with reviews and rumors about both companies. Throw in a bit of prosumer camera talk and we’ve got a show goin’.
01:17 - iOS10
11:18 - Siri
15:02 - macOS Sierra
21:31 - Apple rumored to buy McLaren and Lit
23:06 - Autodesk Graphic ad
24:05 - Photokina, cameras, and photos
34:55 - Northeastern U ad
35:47 - Google Allo, Assistant, and upcoming event
52:14 - Paul’s weekly segment “Medium format in the moonlight”
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AirPods, exploding batteries, and yeah Apple
Fri, 16 Sep 2016
After a week of swimming in Apple news, the classic cast of Nilay, Lauren, Dieter, and Paul get together via the internet to get deeper into their reviews of the new products and talk a little bit about their effect on the near future of consumer tech.
01:38 – Galaxy Note 7 recall
13:01 – Apple Watch
20:13 – AirPods / Bluetooth
32:44 – Autodesk Graphic ad
33:43 – watchOS 3
39:03 – iPhone 7
53:00 – Wealthfront ad
53:37 – Paul's weekly segment "Costco Cool"
57:11 – Lightning audio round
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Playstation 4 Pro, 4K, and for your entertainment
Fri, 09 Sep 2016
While Nilay, Dieter, Lauren, and Walt make a Vergecast out of Ctrl-Walt-Delete, this leaves Paul to head the show this week with Chris Plante to talk about the other thing that happened on Wednesday: the Sony Playstation 4 Pro event.
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IFA, the Yoga Book, and looking ahead at the Apple event
Fri, 02 Sep 2016
The IFA, or Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin, is upon us and we are looking at the best tech announced at the show. Nilay Patel, Paul Miller, Ashley Carman, and Dan Seifert give us the scoop on the birth of new gadgets, the death of others, and the continuation of the booming gadget market. Paul also calls up senior editor Vlad Savov, who is on the show floor at IFA, to give us a first-hand experience of the show.
01:53 - RIP Sunrise
08:16 - RIP Chromebook Pixel
10:42 - Sonos
20:48 - Interview with Vlad at IFA
46:39 - Wealthfront ad
48:46 - Lenovo Yoga Book
58:03 - smart watches
1:04:54 - Squarespace ad
1:06:23 - Ashley's weekly segment "Gadget Pie"
1:11:30 - Apple event next week!
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Hack the planet
Fri, 26 Aug 2016
This week on Vergecast, it's Wilderness Week! Nilay, Paul, and Dieter welcome video director James Temple to the show to talk about his new Verge series, Climate Hackers, which features scientists set on trying to reverse the effects of climate change.
The cast also goes into this week in tech: the performance of the Galaxy Note 7, Apple's rumored Snapchat clone, as well as Android Nougat and the problem with getting it on certain phones.
2:07 - Android Nougat
14:02 - Android update problem persists
18:41 - Note 7 performance
25:08 - Apple rumors
34:50 - Citi ad
35:22 - Climate Hackers with James Temple
47:03 - GraphicStock ad
48:19 - Paul's "Let me touch you with science" weekly segment
52:53 - Lightning round
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Unlimited data, Galaxy Note 7, and a merch store
Fri, 19 Aug 2016
This week on our flagship audio experience, our cast of tech luminaries Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Paul Miller, and Dan Seifert break down new unlimited data plans and what they really mean for the consumer. Dan also details the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 after reviewing it this week and Dieter and Paul talk about Google, including the new Nexus phone arriving this year and a new operating system Fuchsia.
Halfway through the show we bring back the enlightening Nicola Fumo to give us her take on the tech world this season and what is changing in pop-up shops and tour merch.
02:25 - Data plans
25:38 - Galaxy Note 7
31:34 - Nexus phones
36:15 - Google Fuchsia
41:37 - Hangin' with Nicola Fumo
47:50 - Kanye and Square
55:35 - Apple watch
59:56 - iOS 10
1:04:05 - Paul's "Kobo hype"
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Apple rumors, wireless headphones and No Man’s Sky
Fri, 12 Aug 2016
This week on Vergecast, both Nilay and Paul are out so Dieter and Lauren have taken the reins and invited fellow Verge colleagues Chris Plante, Dan Seifert, and Ross Miller to the show. The group discusses Apple rumors, new video game consoles, and No Man's Sky.
1:46 – Apple rumors
25:26 – Wireless headphones
28:42 – Game consoles
47:03 - No Man's Sky
55:36 – Dan's cool gadgets for rad dudes / dudettes
1:03:11 – Lightning round
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Great mic for podcasters
Logitech for Creators Blue Yeti Nano USB Microphone.
This week on Vergecast, our usual team of Nilay Patel, Paul Miller, and Dieter Bohn bring in senior editor, tech expert, and friend of the show Dan Seifert to discus Samsung and their new Galaxy Note 7. Dieter gives us his review of the Xbox One S, and the Flag Ship goes deep into Google's Accelerated Mobile Pages and what this means for the web.
01:28 - Xbox One S
15:43 - Google AMP
37:15 - Paul's "The gadgets have eyes"
41:16 - Galaxy Note 7
48:40 - Samsung
57:29 - TV talk
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Two admirals, a coxswain, and a guy with a steering wheel
Fri, 29 Jul 2016
We've been going over in time for the past few episodes, and this week is no exception. But we have an excuse. It's earnings week and there are a lot of thoughts. Nilay, Dieter, Paul, and Lauren bring the news right to your ears.
01:55 - Apple earnings
22:52 - Apple car
25:33 - The trolley problem
29:09 - Apple TV
44:45 - Paul's "Gadget Flavor"
50:31 - Google earnings
53:51 - Facebook earnings
54:53 - Twitter earnings
1:00:43 - Google hardware
1:04:52 - Amazon earnings
1:05:53 - BLU phone
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ARM, EFF, and SDCC
Fri, 22 Jul 2016
With a classic cast of Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Paul Miller, and Lauren Goode, we have a very nerdy episode of Vergecast this week. For starters, there’s the news about SoftBank buying chip maker ARM, then the Electric Frontier Foundation filing a lawsuit that takes on anti-circumvention rules. The gang also goes deep into nostalgia with classic consumer electronics.
But we couldn’t leave it at that. Paul interviews our own senior reporter Bryan Bishop, who calls in live from San Diego Comic-Con to tell us what he’s seen so far at the convention. To top it all off, we go into the nerdiest part of the celebrity feud between Kayne West and Taylor Swift, which leads to the cast going through their own note-taking apps.
08:20 – Softbank buys ARM
24:45 – Paul’s "Gadget shhecrets"
29:20 – EFF copyright lawsuit
37:40 – Nostalgia note
44:24 – SDCC interview with Bryan Bishop
56:26 – Taylor Swift / Kanye West / Kim Kardashian feud
1:02:57 – Note app game
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What is a monetization structure?
Fri, 15 Jul 2016
This week on Vergecast, Senior Editor Chris Plante comes to town to join Paul, Nilay, and video director Miriam Nielsen to discuss the overwhelming response to topics reported on our site; Pokémon GO and Nintendo's new NES. They also go deeper into augmented reality and how Nintendo is dealing with their properties.
Paul once again brings us his weekly segment "Pokémon GO Tips and Tricks Review: Gadgets"
03:38 - Pokémon GO
16:59 - AR
33:40 - Nintendo
47:58- Paul's "Pokémon GO Tips and Tricks Review: Gadgets"
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iOS 10, Sierra, and bookstore bathrooms
Fri, 08 Jul 2016
03:12 Apple Battery Case
05:10 News Intro
06:08 Apple Updates
08:10 Live Photos
10:45 IOS 10 Updates
44:15 Gadget Guyz
49:00 Pokemon Go
54:60 Lightning Round
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Secrets
Fri, 01 Jul 2016
This week on Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Paul bring in resident cybersecurity expert Russell Brandom to explain the cryptocurrency Ethereum and how there was a recent attack on the Decentralized Autonomous Organization which stole $53 million.
Then, later on in the show a surprise guest pops in to give us breaking news on the Android.
And after you listen to the podcast, head over to theverge.com and cast your vote in the poll for this week's Gadget Face-off featured on this week's podcast!
03:52 - Ethereum
theverge.com/2016/6/17/11965192/ethereum-theft-dao-cryptocurrency-million-stolen-bitcoin
17:02 - Breaking News
22:04 - Squarespace ad
24:42 - BLU phones
35:33 - Paul’s Gadget Secrets/Gadget Face-off
39:44 - Coors ad
40:50 - Mr. Robot discussion
48:45 - Handshakes
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Oh gadget, my gadget
Fri, 24 Jun 2016
This week on Vergecast, Paul Miller and Ashley Carman, part of our Circuit Breaker team, join Nilay and Dieter to discuss trends they've noticed while blogging. Also, fan favorite Nicola Fumo stops by the show to tell us what she's been up to and explains her recent tech troubles.
This wouldn't be a tech podcast without us discussing the iPhone headphone jack rumors so get ready for that too!
01:46 - Gadgets with Paul and Ashley
08:20 - Headphone jack debate
21:53 - Coors ad
22:57 - Nicola Fumo guest
38:06 - Mr Robot ad
40:45 - Gadget Bonanza
47:09 - lightning round
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Live from WWDC and E3
Fri, 17 Jun 2016
Another week on the road for Vergecast; we recorded from WWDC and we have (cross off your bingo square) special guests! All together in the same room again, Nilay and Dieter bring back the ever-wise Lauren Goode and Walt Mossberg, with first-time Vergecaster and co-anchor of CNBC's "Squawk Alley" Jon Fortt. Also, Paul Miller's weekly segment "Games are Gadgets Too" calls Casey Newton live from E3 to talk about the newest demos on the show floor.
watchOS 01:58
macOS 17:39
tvOS 28:31
Paul’s Games are Gadgets Too: 43:43
iOS: 58:31
Final thoughts 01:27:50
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So much news this week and more to come next week
Fri, 10 Jun 2016
Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Dan Seifert sit down and don't know where to start so they bring in Paul Miller and Loren Grush to help them out. The gang talks Lenovo Tech World, Nest, WWDC, Game of Thrones and much much more.
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Live from Code Conference
Fri, 03 Jun 2016
This week on a late night, sleep-deprived Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter reunite in Los Angeles to attend Recode's Code Conference and meet up with Lauren Goode and Casey Newton to give their take on the interviews and throw in a few anecdotes from the night. Things get silly. Also, Paul Miller updates us on new PC backpacks on this week's Gadget of the Week/Gadget Corner (we're still working on the name).
04:26 - Jeff Bezos
34:56 - Paul’s Gadget of the Week
37:32 - Casey reads an ad for Squarespace
39:35 - Twitter talk
48:07 - Facebook talk
55:01 - Sundar Pichai
1:10:55 - Elon Musk
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Season 3
Fri, 27 May 2016
Vergecast is back! But something is different…Dieter moved to San Francisco and Nilay is still in New York City. How can they make it work? This is the future and we can chat in cyberspace, that's how. Using ~technology~ we also patch in Paul Miller and Lauren Goode for a special State of Tech discussion.
Wait! There's more! Nilay interviews Kara Swisher, executive editor of Recode, to talk about what's to come with this year's mammoth guest lineup at the Code Conference.
We want your feedback! Tell us what you want to see on the show, who you want on the show, or even where you want the show! New episodes every week.
25:55 - Paul’s gadget of the week
31.12 - Nilay and Dieter’s car trouble
41:31 - interview with Kara Swisher
52:23 - lightning round
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Emotional time zones
Fri, 06 May 2016
This week on Vergecast, Dieter and Nilay bring back Paul Miller to talk about this week in tech and gadgets, as well as science reporter Arielle Duhaime-Ross to discuss what it was like to spend four days with a biohacker while he tried to kill and then replace his body’s bacteria.
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Introducing Circuit Breaker, Google hardware, and the next Apple Watch
Fri, 29 Apr 2016
With Nilay out, Dieter brings in the editor of Circuit Breaker, Paul Miller, and news editor Jake Kastrenakes to discuss this week in tech. Racked senior reporter Nicola Fumo engages the hype matrix in this week's episode of Vergecast.
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Purple Macbook
Fri, 22 Apr 2016
This week on Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, Adi, and Nicola discuss the legacy of Prince, the new MacBook, and the mystery of Magic Leap. Also Nilay talks with Professor Randal Picker of University of Chicago Law School to explain Google's antirust charges from the European Union.
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Facebook in space
Fri, 15 Apr 2016
Nilay and Dieter bring back science reporter Loren Grush to take on this week's news in science and tech; discussing Facebook's F8 developer conference, SpaceX, and Telsa's Model S. Racked senior reporter Nicola Fumo engineers the hype matrix once again for this spaced out episode of Vergecast.
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Reunion
Thu, 07 Apr 2016
Happy 200! Hear the uncut and unscripted episode featuring Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and special guests Joanna Stern, Paul Miller, Chris Ziegler, and Ross Miller as they reminisce about the early days of The Verge and also talk tech news today. This is an episode you don't want to miss!
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Juice responsibly
Fri, 01 Apr 2016
This week on the Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, Jake, and Nicola review the reviews! The iPad Pro 9.7, Soundcloud Go, and the Microsoft Build developer conference; with much talk about bots. We're covering all the top tech news so if you liked what you read this week, listen in for the in depth discussion.
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Is kale more interesting than the iPhone SE?
Fri, 25 Mar 2016
This week on Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter bring in news editor Jake Kastrenakes to discuss happenings at the Apple event this week as well as Vizio's new products and initiatives. Racked style editor Nicola Fumo again joins us to helm the hype matrix.
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Team Spherical
Fri, 18 Mar 2016
This week on the Vergecast, Nilay welcomes some of our video team: producer Tre Shallowhorn, directors Tom Connors and Miriam Nielsen, and creative director James Bareham, to discuss the process of developing our 360 video interview with Michelle Obama and also talking about this week in tech news.
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Walk of life
Fri, 11 Mar 2016
This week on Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter are joined by news editor Jake Kastrenakes; discussing Google's Android N, Samsung's Galaxy S7, as well as science reporter/space cadet Loren Grush to talk Blue Origin and other space news.
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VR, Amazon Echo, and more VR
Fri, 04 Mar 2016
Nilay and Dieter are joined by senior reporter Adi Robertson to talk VR technology and fan favorite: Amazon Echo. Racked style editor Nicola Fumo operates the hype matrix once again in this week's episode of Vergecast!
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Cut the night
Fri, 26 Feb 2016
Another week of Vergecast and we have SO much to talk about so we extended the episode to 90 minutes…and then some.Mobile World Congress just wrapped up so Nilay, Dieter, and news editor Jake Kastrenakes are here to analyze the coverage.
Also, the Oscars are this Sunday so our entertainment section is taking over Vergecast during halftime! Entertainment editor Emily Yoshida leads the discussion with entertainment editor Jamieson Cox, and senior reporter Bryan Bishop.
Nicola Fumo commands the hype matrix once again for this show-within-a-show episode of Vergecast!
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Encryption in the hype matrix
Fri, 19 Feb 2016
This week on Vergecast, Nilay returns, bringing in business editor Ben Popper to unfold his feature on public schools’ initiative to bring Chromebooks into classrooms. Reporter Russell Brandom joins to discuss the timely debate on encryption in light of this week’s Apple news. Racked style editor Nicola Fumo reclaims the hype desk to introduce the "Fumo hype matrix."
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TLOP: The Love of Physics
Fri, 12 Feb 2016
This week on the Vergecast, with Dieter, Nilay, and Nicola missing we have put together an alternative cast featuring Chris Ziegler, Sean O'Kane, and Loren Grush, with video director Mark Linsangan and social video reporter Kirsten Frisina discussing the news of gravitational waves, Google cars, and maybe a little Valentine's Day talk. Also, will there be a Clockstoppers 2?
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Morning Computer
Fri, 05 Feb 2016
This week on The Vergecast, Dieter and Nilay are joined by Dan Seifert and Racked style editor Nicola Fumo to discuss the iPad air 3, Amazon Echo features, the new Uber logo, Apple software and lots more. Also, what would happen if ALF and Urkel met?
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Brain gotta get there
Fri, 29 Jan 2016
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn are joined by Lauren Goode and Racked style editor Nicola Fumo.
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Pain is Available at 6
Fri, 22 Jan 2016
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn are joined by Jake Kastrenakes and Racked style editor Nicola Fumo to talk about T-Pain, T-Pain's house, and Apple's new set of music making apps.
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Facist papa color
Fri, 15 Jan 2016
This week on The Vergecast, Dieter Bohn is joined by Emily Yoshida, Nicola Fumo, and Sean O'Kane as the panel checks in for the first time since CES 2016. The topics of discussion include the 2016 Detroit Auto Show, Oscar nominations, and bad tech fashion.
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CES 2016 Day 4
Sat, 09 Jan 2016
Today on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, Casey, and Nicola gather together one more time at CES 2016 and chat about what they saw, what they learned, and what is next to come post-CES.
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CES 2016 Day 3
Fri, 08 Jan 2016
Today on The Vergecast, Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn are joined by Nicola Fumo, Vlad Savov and Kirsten Frisina to discuss CES 2016.
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On Day 2, Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn are joined by some familiar faces as Joanna Stern and Sam Sheffer return to talk about CES.
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CES 2016 Day 1
Tue, 05 Jan 2016
Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn are joined by Dan Seifert, Lauren Goode, and Sean O'Kane in Las Vegas at CES 2016. The panel discussed the numerous keynotes, including Intel, LG, Samsung and Sony, being very tired, and 3D printed souls.
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Star Wars: The spoilers unleashed
Fri, 18 Dec 2015
This week on a very special Vergecast, we discuss all things Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Emily Yoshida and Ross Miller will be joined by Bryan Bishop and Tasha Robinson to have a critic's discussion of the new film. Kaitlyn Tiffany will be occupying the hypeseat and will likely interject Hamilton into the discussion. Be warned: there will be spoilers. This is an episode that should be listened to after you see the movie.
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Alexa, play Vergecast
Fri, 11 Dec 2015
This week on the Vergecast, Nilay is joined by Casey Newton, Chris Plante and Nicola Fumo (who is keeping Project Figure Head in full effect). The panel discusses the iPhone battery case and Nicola tries to put together the Google Pixel C.
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Fear the reaper
Fri, 04 Dec 2015
This week on The Vergecast, Dieter Bohn is joined by a rotating panel of guests, as well as Nicola Fumo in the hypeseat. Elmo Keep, the author of our massive feature on Transhumanism, will be on to discuss presidential candidate Zoltan Istvan with Vergecast rookie Michael Zelenko. We'll also have our car experts Chris Ziegler and Andrew Hawkins on to talk about cars, car sharing, and car feelings.
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Tinder DJs
Fri, 20 Nov 2015
Today on The Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter are joined in studio by Lauren Goode to continue their discussion about the iPad Pro, as well as how it stacks up against the Surface Pro 4. In addition, the panel will discuss the end of Rdio, as well as the best set-top box on the market. Nicola Fumo once
again occupies the hypeseat.
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Swipe left for iPad
Fri, 13 Nov 2015
The week on the Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter are joined by Nicola Fumo and Lauren Goode to talk about the iPad Pro, Tinder, and the BlackBerry Priv.
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The state of Android, smartwatches and Twitter hearts
Fri, 06 Nov 2015
This week brought no shortage of topics to discuss, but one item stood out among the smoke and mirrors. Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Dan Seifert are joined by Nicola Fumo of Racked in the hypeseat to discuss the state of smartwatches, what might happen with Google's two operating systems, and of course, the new branded vape from musical artist The Weeknd. It's not one to miss.
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Apple TV, universal remotes, and the joy of dropping phones
Fri, 30 Oct 2015
It was a good week to arguing about the state of television, with both Apple and Roku releasing new content delivery boxes. A trio of original Verge editors — Nilay Patel, Chris Ziegler, and Ross Miller — are joined by Helen Havlak in the Hype seat. In between heated debates about universal remotes and IR blasters, our Fab Four find time to talk about HTC's One A9 and — quite literally — toss around the new "drop-proof" Droid Turbo 2. Don't worry, you'll hear it.
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The Hype Council is in session
Fri, 23 Oct 2015
This week on the Vergecast, Joanna Stern invades to talk about the Surface Book and the Surface Pro 4 — and Tom Warren joins the invasion over Skype. And for the first time, the Hype Council of Kirsten Frisina, Loren Grush, and Kaitlyn Tiffany sit in judgement of the Nexus 6P and YouTube Red. Along with Dieter and Nilay, that's seven humans. It doesn't get more Vergecast than this.
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Coterie of vapes
Fri, 16 Oct 2015
This week's Vergecast features Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Chris Plante in the Skype seat, and Nicola Fumo in the Hype seat. They talk fashion and tech struggles, Pax, bro's gold iPhones, Metal Gear, Battlefront, this fall's video game releases, new iMacs, the new Harmony Universal Remote, and — well — weed.
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The perfect Swiss man
Fri, 09 Oct 2015
Dieter Bohn, Nilay Patel, Casey Newton, and Kirsten Frisina on the hype-seat caress your brain with knowledge about Microsoft's new confident and purposeful direction, whether Twitter Moments is useful or not, Google AMP's benefits for the internet at large, and how the Steve Jobs movie is a great film but also a castle of lies. Thought of the 'cast: If you die in HoloLens, do you die in real life?
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Soccer moms racing turbos
Fri, 02 Oct 2015
Dieter Bohn, Nilay Patel and hype-seater Kristen Frisina are joined by Chris Ziegler and Lauren Goode in a rare five-seater that eats up the week’s news, including the new Nexus phones, the Chromecast dongles, the Pixel C tablet, the new over-engineered Tesla, and Dieter’s nefarious plan to sprinkle gluten over the food at Google events.
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Ctrl-Walt-Delete: Nilay owes Walt $100
Fri, 25 Sep 2015
Walt and Nilay kick things off with a discussion of the iPhone 6S, the weird new prices of phones, the 2007 iPhone, and more.
Subscribe to Ctrl-Walt-Delete on iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ctrl-+-walt-+-delete/id1043196031?mt=2
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Pacific Time should be illegal
Fri, 25 Sep 2015
Nilay Patel is joined by Liz Lopatto, Loren Grush, and hype-seater Arielle Duhaime-Ross in a special science issue of The Vergecast. They break down why The Verge cares about science, the space (lack of) race, Verge staff childhood misadventures, the Vergier year ahead and the terrible, oh-so-terrible use of exclamation points in ad copy.
Don't forget to check out our brand new podcast Ctrl-Walt-Delete with our very own Walt Mossberg. The first episode will be on our Vergecast feed right after this.
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Special guest Farhad Manjoo of The New York Times joins Dieter Bohn, Nilay Patel, and new hype-seater Kirsten Frisina to talk ad blocking and the changing state of the internet, Alexa versus Siri, the house of the future, Google beyond search, the possibility of threatening Gregs, and more!
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Peek, pop, whip, and nae nae
Fri, 11 Sep 2015
A day after Apple’s huge event, we ran through all the big announcements. The Hype Seat has transformed into the Skype Seat so that Casey Newton can join Dieter Bohn, Jake Kastrenakes, and Chris Welch. Is the Apple TV just a super Roku? Just how Surface-y is the new iPad Pro? If you 3D Touch a 2D screen in a 1D forest, does it make a sound? All these questions will be answered with a Live Shot, except instead of a moving picture it’s a podcast.
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Hype's out for summer
Fri, 24 Jul 2015
What started as a chill summer situation becomes very heated this week. Nilay, Dieter, Sam, and Special British Guest Tom Warren discuss Windows 10, Apple Music, an alleged new Moto X, and The Beach Boys.
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Shoutout to grandmas
Fri, 17 Jul 2015
There's lots of news this week, so there are lots of guests as well. Nilay and Dieter are joined by Sean O'Kane, Jake Kastrenakes, and Kaitlyn Tiffany to talk about the Pluto flyby, San Diego Comic-Con, Windows 10, Reddit, and further refinement of the hype scale.
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Uphill to Pluto both ways
Fri, 10 Jul 2015
We're back in the Bohn Zone as Dieter is in charge of the proceedings this week. Tom Warren is on hand to catch us up on Microsoft's Nokia woes, and we welcome Vergecast rookies Sean O'Kane and Loren Grush to discuss the future of space. And of course, Sam Sheffer is on hand to check hype throughout.
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Worldwide!
Thu, 02 Jul 2015
Shoutout to music! Shoutout to stars! Shoutout to hearts! This week on The Vergecast, Nilay, Dieter, and Emily are joined by Racked's Nicola Fumo in the hype seat to discuss Apple Music, Beats 1 radio, the cultural force that is Magic Mike XXL, and the fate of comments. Crank it up and get ready to join us in motivational chants.
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Puddle of burn
Fri, 26 Jun 2015
Welcome to a very special episode of The Vergecast, featuring our new colleagues from Re/code, Walt Mossberg and Lauren Goode. They join Nilay and Sam to take a break from the news this week, and take stock of the state of the union in tech. From Amazon and Google to Microsoft and Beyonce, the crew takes stock of where we are, and what constitutes hype. Don't miss this one.
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Hot swap your D-pad
Fri, 19 Jun 2015
It's a special bicoastal episode of The Vergecast, as Nilay, Dieter, Emily, and Sam are joined remotely by the one and only Casey Newton, live from the E3 convention in Los Angeles. It's been a big show, and there are some big opinions about it on display here. And while we're on the subject of opinions, Emily comes to the table with plenty of them as the discussion moves to this week's Game of Thrones season finale.
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Bad Millennial
Fri, 12 Jun 2015
On this week's show, special guest Nicola Fumo from Racked joins us to talk about Apple. But we couldn't get to Apple right away, because Oculus up and decided to announce a million VR things. So Dieter Bohn had feelings about those VR things. Then Nilay Patel had feelings about WWDC things and Emily had feelings about Apple Music things. Then Nicola had feelings about Millennials. That's what The Vergecast is for: feelings.
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What do you own?
Fri, 05 Jun 2015
On this week's show, Nilay Patel has some thoughts on ownership, Dieter Bohn offers some feelings about Google, Adi Robertson makes assertions about Ingress, and Sam Sheffer spends the whole hour downloading illegal ROMs. There's also some talk about Recode, Google I/O, and WWDC predictions.
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Spoken like a true snake person
Fri, 29 May 2015
This week we have a special Google I/O edition of the Vergecast, guest hosted by Ross Miller, Emily Yoshida, Dan Seifert, and Sam Sheffer. They discuss the announcements out of the keynote, including Now on Tap, Photos, Android M, Cardboard, and the fact that Dan cannot tell his own children apart.
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Lumber guitar licks
Fri, 22 May 2015
The music industry is (and has been) undergoing significant changes. Join Nilay Patel, Micah Singleton, Emily Yoshida, and Sam Sheffer as they discuss Spotify’s expansion, Sony Music’s no-to-secret contract with Spotify, Apple’s upcoming music service, iTunes, and more.
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Air Bud 6
Fri, 15 May 2015
Nilay Patel is fired up about media aquisions, Dieter Bohn is delirious, Sam Sheffer is hyped beyond belief, Russell Brandom is on the Facebook beat, and Josh Dzieza is on hand to report on the rat takeover. What a time to be alive. Join us, won't you?
This week's Vergecast is sponsored by:
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Igloo
Tripcase
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Why is Offline So Hard
Fri, 08 May 2015
How do you augment reality? With music? With the Microsoft HoloLens? With insane superhero Avengers mythology? Yes, yes, and yes. All those topics and more in this week's podcast.
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Helmets Are the Future
Fri, 01 May 2015
It's been an action-packed week in tech, and we're here to keep the adrenaline pumping. Micah Singleton and TC Sottek join Nilay Patel and Sam Sheffer to reflect on daily life with Apple Watch, the leather backed LG G4, the future of HoloLens, and what exactly Hadoop is, anyway.
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It may sound as if this episode of The Vergecast were recorded from within the aisles a Party City, but no; it's just our enthusiastic celebration of our sesquicentennial episode. Join us as we combine all the classic ingredients of a successful birthday blowout: failed corporate mergers, MVNOs, smartwatch apps, and silly cardboard hats. Thanks for listening for 150 episodes!
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The Force Naps
Fri, 17 Apr 2015
It's a veritable who's who of podcasting today, as Dieter Bohn takes the Vergecast reigns, and invites Chris Ziegler, Sam Sheffer, Emily Yoshida, and Kwame Opam to The Vergecast. We've got the gold MacBook, the Surface 3, the new Star Wars trailer, and Ryan Gosling's rumored presence in a Blade Runner sequel.
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I Don't Think Anyone is Great
Fri, 10 Apr 2015
There is finally an actual Apple Watch in the studio, and Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Joanna Stern, and Sam Sheffer are on hand to look at it, talk about it, and force touch it. Also on the show are the new MacBook, Android Wear on iOS, and a genuine Motorola selfie stick. Join us.
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Netflix Bedtime
Fri, 03 Apr 2015
What ever happened to predictability? Well, we're throwing it out the window today, as special guests Liz Lopatto and Kwame Opam join Nilay and Sam, with a very special crossover cameo at the top of the show. It's a rare condition, this day and age, to read any good news on the newspaper page, so it's a mixed bag of topics this week. We've got Furious 7, Microsoft's newest Surface, the ongoing Californian drought, Amazon Dash and Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool. Only time will tell if all these dreams fit under one umbrella, but we hope you enjoy.
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Good radio
Thu, 26 Mar 2015
It's another tech-filled week, but this one is just a little more British than usual. International visitor Tom Warren joins Nilay, Dieter, and Sam to discuss the release of the Samsung Galaxy S6, HTC One M9, Facebook's chat ambitions, and the release of Periscope.
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Dutch Teens Who Solve Crimes
Fri, 20 Mar 2015
This week's episode is a whirlwind of news, thoughts, and feelings. Dieter Bohn regales us with his final assessment SXSW, Nilay Patel cannot get over the size of an Acer Chromebook, Ross Miller believes in a future of cord cutting, and for the first time ever, Helen Havlak is in the hype chair to keep things in hype check. Plus, our hosts map out the pilot of a new Dutch children's mystery show.
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Sam from the Future
Fri, 13 Mar 2015
The lineup is turned on its head this week as Joanna Stern joins Nilay Patel and Chris Plante, and Chris Ziegler takes the hype reins while Sam is absent. These great minds reflect on this week's Apple event, Star Wars, and the upcoming Frozen sequel.
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Bonus: Apple Watch and MacBook Event
Mon, 09 Mar 2015
This is a special bonus Verge Live episode, recorded after Apple's March 9, 2015 event.
As Apple wraps up its Spring Forward event — Apple Watch! A new MacBook! HBO Now on Apple TV! — Ross Miller and Chris Ziegler are heading to the studio for The Verge Live. Join us as we break down all the news of the day, and later on, we're joined by Casey Newton, who is live at the event... hopefully stealing us a few $10,000 trinkets.
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Infinity Gigabytes and Infinity Buckets
Fri, 06 Mar 2015
The Vergecast is a roller coaster of emotions this week. Dieter breaks down and shares his feelings about the Galaxy S6, Nilay declares his love for lambos, Chris expounds upon luxury, and Sam expresses profound confusion when presented with the words "Wayne's World."
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Ikecheck
Fri, 27 Feb 2015
We've captured lightning in a bottle this week. We somehow managed to record The Vergecast in the brief moments between the Arizonan llamas and the white-gold-blue-black dress debate. It was a moment of clarity, a calm we didn't know we should have savored. Journey back with us to that simpler time, and hear Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Chris Ziegler, and Sam Sheffer weigh in on the FCC's net neutrality ruling, the price of an Apple Watch, the upcoming Galaxy S 6, and the classic 1992 romantic thriller, The Bodyguard.
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Vaping Alone with Wikipedia
Fri, 20 Feb 2015
Are you ready to settle in for another hard tech episode? I hope so, because that's what we have this week. Nilay, Dieter, Chris, and Sam bring the beef/sweat/swag/hype to the table to discuss Jony Ive, cars, Sony, and the merits of various Matrix sequels.
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I Will Putter in RadioShack
Fri, 13 Feb 2015
We're back in the Bohn Zone this week. Nilay is away, but Dieter, Ross, Chris, and Sam are here to weave a tapestry of technology and pop culture, with a very professional introduction to kick it all off. Plus, this episode features the premiere of What's Tech, Chris Plante's new podcast.
If you like What's Tech, be sure to subscribe on iTunes, or paste this feed into your favorite podcast app.
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In the Tweet Mix
Fri, 06 Feb 2015
This week's show includes a very special attempt at an actual introduction. That's right, we're rolling out the red carpet for Nicholas Carlson, Business Insider's chief correspondent. The professionalism doesn't last for long, though, as we quickly devolve into the mathematical definition of a hypecheck, the FCC's role in the future of the internet, and Apple's new take on photo management.
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Dressed as a Pirate
Fri, 30 Jan 2015
It's a very special episode of The Vergecast. This is David Pierce's final day at The Verge, and as such, we have dressed him as a pirate and forced him to discuss technology, film, and the merits of Snapchat. Nilay Patel wrangles the troops, Sam Sheffer brings the swag, and Emily Yoshida is back from Park City to reflect on Sundance.
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Special Edition: The 2015 Sundance Film Festival
Tue, 27 Jan 2015
The Verge's Casey Newton, Emily Yoshida and Bryan Bishop chat about the films of the Sundance Film Festival, the huge steps Oculus is making in the narrative film world, and the unstoppable force of nature that is James Franco.
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Burn Book: A Tech Love Story (Hardcover)
A witty, scathing, and fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead, by journalist Kara Swisher.
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Business Hole
Fri, 23 Jan 2015
It's been quite the week, as evidenced by the fact the Dieter has been awake for a full 24 hours at this point. We've got BIll Gates, holograms, local Super Bowl ads, and a tired variation on a classic genre we like to call "lazy jazz." Join Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Chris Plante, and his Swaggesty Sam Sheffer on a journey through time and incoherence on this week's show.
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Heartbeat Trolling Everyone All the Time
Fri, 16 Jan 2015
We're going hard tech with Nilay Patel, Chris Ziegler, and special British guest Tom Warren. We've got Microsoft, Apple, VR, Hyperloop, and dispatches from the North American International Auto Show. And, of course, Sam Sheffer is on hand to check the hype at various points along the way. It's beef.
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The Verge YouTube Roundtable at CES
Sat, 10 Jan 2015
Join Dieter Bohn, Austin Evans, Marques Brownlee, and Jonathan Morrison as they discuss the best gadgets they saw at CES 2015.
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CES 2015, Day 3
Fri, 09 Jan 2015
They said it wasn't possible. They said the show couldn't go on. And yet, here we are, at the fourth and final Vergecast of CES 2015. Send the week off with your friends Nilay Patel, Casey Newton, Nitasha Tiku, and Emily Yoshida.
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CES 2015, Day 2
Thu, 08 Jan 2015
It's Day 2 of CES 2015. We're confused, we're delirious, and we have a lot of feelings about Say Anything. Join Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, Chris Plante, and Sam Sheffer on this live Vergecast odyssey from the show floor.
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CES 2015, Day 1
Wed, 07 Jan 2015
On this, the first official day of CES 2015, The Vergecast is a reflection on the day's experiences. Nilay Patel yells across the floor to Sony's booth, Chris Ziegler relinquishes control to a self-driving car, Chris Plante breaks things on the show floor, and special guest Joanna Stern has a selfie stick. Join us, won't you?
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CES 2015, Day 0
Tue, 06 Jan 2015
CES is here, and the Vergecast has come along with it. Join Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Chris Plante on a journey through the show's biggest news. We’ve got cars, the Internet of Things, smart TVs, and more forklifts than we ever anticipated being on the podcast.
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Texting for Drugs
Fri, 19 Dec 2014
As the year winds to a close, we reflect back on the horrors of hacking, the collusion against Goliath, the merits of a physical keyboard, and something about The Mars Volta.
Programming note: The holidays are upon us, so the next official Vergecast will be coming to you from CES 2015 at the beginning of January. Have a wonderful New Year!
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Roomba with a Knife
Fri, 12 Dec 2014
We're joining the enterprise on this week's Vergecast. Sony, Microsoft, Apple—we've got all your corporate backend stories covered. Plus, Dieter introduces us to the native vocabulary of Minnesota.
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You've Got to Be a Grownup When You're on the Internet
Fri, 05 Dec 2014
CONFIDENTIAL - DO NOT DISTRIBUTE
As The Vergecast progresses as a premier, category leading podcast, it is important to identify its core strengths and messaging. To that end, we have identified some key themes:
-Confused introductions
-Varied degrees of Star Wars enthusiasm
-Hype
-British Christmas specials
-Principals
-Food and Man living in harmony
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Stephen Elop, King of Thieves
Fri, 21 Nov 2014
It was a week of learning and growth on the Vergecast. Specific lessons included who actually owns Nokia, who has used an Apple Watch, what qualifies as a varsity sport, the merits of Pitch Perfect, and just how little of the 90s Sam remembers.
Programming note: The Vergecast will be taking next week off, in observance of Thanksgiving, but we'll be back the following week.
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Artisanal Hipster Vinyls
Fri, 14 Nov 2014
This week's show involves a lot of policy: policy on the internet, policy in music, policy concerning not being stabbed when retrieving your stolen iPhone. And then there was something involving Taylor Swift and Scooby Doo.
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Hypecheck
Fri, 07 Nov 2014
To some, it's a black-and-white answer. To others, it's a subtle gray. Some say hype can't be felt, only psychically perceived. It's a beacon of hope, a pillar of truth. We cannot see it, but we know it exists. It's everywhere and nowhere, all at once. We follow its call, but fear its power. We may never agree about what hype truly is, but that doesn't matter. We all know deep down inside that what really counts is that hype is in us all: teeming, stirring, ready to be checked.
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I Have 23 Children
Thu, 30 Oct 2014
The hype meter is off the charts this week. The sweat is real. This Vergecast is beef, not bust. Our hosts Nilay Patel, Chris Plante, and The Verge's social beast Sam Sheffer begin the hour with a reflection on various motorized death machines and enormous phones. Then David Pierce steps in to discuss super heroes, Apple Pay vs. CurrentC, Microsoft's fitness band, and Chris's alarming misunderstanding of contraception. Join us, won't you?
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An Incorrect Oral History of Vaping
Fri, 24 Oct 2014
Following an immediate but brief foray into Nilay Patel’s dark memoir-in-progress, the Vergecast progresses nicely into a week chock full of news, led by Nilay, Dieter Bohn, and David Pierce. We have Google’s new Nexus lineup, Apple’s new iPads and iMac, a brave new email paradigm, and Twitter’s content problems. Then, for some reason, there was some mild debate about the nature of vaping, but you’ll have to listen to fully grasp that thread.
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Veken 55 Inch Large Electric Standing Desk
Elevate your workspace with this height-adjustable electric standing desk. Features include memory presets and cable management.
This week is a Very Special Episode of the Vergecast. In fact, it's The Verge Live, straight from Apple's October event. Ross Miller and Chris Ziegler are joined by Dieter Bohn on the ground in California to discuss new iPads, new iMacs, new OSes, and Stephen Colbert.
(If you'd like to watch this special live show in video form, check it out here: http://www.theverge.com/2014/10/16/6988049/the-verge-live-ipad-2014)
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A Meter of Sweat
Fri, 10 Oct 2014
Chris Plante joins Nilay Patel and Dieter Bohn on this week's Vergecast to read his unstructured, free verse poetry about the HTC Re Camera. Or maybe it's Re Poetry. Either way, let's just be thankful that there's not a macron diacritical mark above the "e" in Re, that way lies madness. We also discuss Apple before taking a hard turn into talking about what's happening in Gamergate.
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Milwaukee With Rich People
Fri, 03 Oct 2014
The Vergecast is back with Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, new Verge science editor Liz Lopatto, and notable humanoid trollbeast TC Sottek. There was Ebola, Windows 10, really good Twitter stuff, and then Dieter foolishly took a bet that will see him use a BlackBerry Passport for the next two weeks.
It got real.
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The Robot Nearly Killed Me
Fri, 26 Sep 2014
The Vergecast is back with Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Tom Warren. No iPhones were bent in the creation of this episode, nor were any bricked by rogue iOS updates. Microsoft's product strategy turned out to be remarkably similar to Taco Bell's, we discovered, and then there was the robot. The robot is definitely trying to kill us.
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Diego is useless
Fri, 19 Sep 2014
Yes, finally: The Vergecast is really back, and there's a whole lot to talk about. This week, Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and David Pierce get together to discuss their impressions of the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, Amazon's slew of new tablets, and Microsoft's purchase of Minecraft. Oh, and Dora the Explorer too.
Download MP3 (31.5 MB)
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Pardon me, is that Apple you're wearing?
Sat, 13 Sep 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology. On this week's episode, we discuss the iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, and the Apple Watch. Join Nilay Patel, Chris Ziegler, and Dieter Bohn as they go over their hands-on impressions and agonizing decisions over which iPhone to get.
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Getting in touch with Android Wear
Fri, 21 Mar 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology. On this week's episode, we discuss the announcement of Android Wear, the presence of VR at GDC 2014, and the hiatus of the show.
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Finding your digital prophet
Fri, 14 Mar 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology. On this week's episode, we discuss SXSW, compare Jared Leto to a beautiful pony, and explore the notion of heaven as portrayed by Philadelphia Cream Cheese commercials.
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The man behind Bitcoin and the return of 'Shaq Fu'
Fri, 07 Mar 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology — and anything else that pops into the twisted minds of this week's hosts. Join Joshua Topolsky, Katie Drummond, and T.C. Sottek for a discussion on the reported uncovering of the man behind Bitcoin, LSD therapy, and the return of Shaq Fu.
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Six degrees of 'Lawnmower Man'
Fri, 28 Feb 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology — and anything else that pops into the twisted minds of this week's hosts. Join Joshua Topolsky, Ross Miller, and T.C. Sottek for a scintillating discussion on latest tech news.
On this week's episode, we talk about how cable network oligopolies and the FCC are ruining the internet, whether the new Samsung Gear line is what consumers have been waiting for, and how Google is slowly buying up an entire town.
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Why Facebook acquired WhatsApp
Fri, 21 Feb 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology — and anything else that pops into the twisted minds of this week's hosts. Join Dieter Bohn, Chris Ziegler, David Pierce, and Ellis Hamburger for a scintillating discussion on latest tech news.
On this week's episode, we discuss the dizzying sums of money Facebook spent on WhatsApp, the Loop mobile wallet, and Google's indoor mapping prototype, Project Tango.
Audio:
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Comcast and TWC, the Lumia Icon, and NSA protest
Fri, 14 Feb 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology. On this episode, Nilay Patel, Dieter Bohn, and Adi Robertson discuss Comcast and Time Warner Cable's recently announced merger, Verizon's Lumia Icon, and how we didn't fight back on The Day We Fight Back.
Audio:
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Video:
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The red Nexus 5, Satya Nadella, and the odd success of Flappy Bird
Fri, 07 Feb 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, and technology. On this week's episode, Nilay Patel, David Pierce, and Ross Miller discussed the red Nexus 5, Microsoft's new CEO Satya Nadella, and the strange success of Flappy Bird.
Audio:
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Video:
Also available on YouTube.
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Google's sale of Motorola, the iPod's decline, and Daft Punk helmets
Fri, 31 Jan 2014
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the worlds of art, culture, science, technology, and anything else our hosts might deem interesting. On this week's episode, Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, and Dieter Bohn talk about Google's attempt to sell Motorola to Lenovo, the declining sales of the iPod, and the obvious benefits of a Daft Punk helmet.
Audio:
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