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The Vergecast

The Vergewww.theverge.com
The Vergecast is the flagship daily podcast from The Verge about small gadgets, Big Tech, and everything in between. Every Friday, Nilay Patel and David Pierce hang out and make sense of the week’s most important technology news. And Monday through Thursday, 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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Episodes

AI agents are invading your PC

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, som...

Nov 21, 20251 hr 34 min

It's not your job to fix the internet

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, ...

Nov 18, 20251 hr 4 min

Version History: LimeWire

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. If you like the show, ⁠ ⁠subscribe to ...

Nov 16, 20251 hr 14 min

Valve made Microsoft's dream console

This episode delves into Valve's return to living room gaming with the Steam Machine, Steam Controller, and Steam Frame VR headset, contrasting their consumer-focused approach with Microsoft's perceived shift towards enterprise AI. Joanna Stern shares her experience with the Neo robot, highlighting the vast gap between AI hype and reality in robotics. The discussion also covers Satya Nadella's vision of AI agents using computers, the YouTube/Disney spat, Apple's new mini apps, and Waymo's cautious highway expansion, questioning the current state and future of AI in consumer tech.

Nov 14, 20251 hr 40 min

Extreme smart home makeover

This episode of The VergeCast features a comprehensive smart home makeover as Jen Pattison Tuohy guides David Pierce through outfitting his new house with cutting-edge technology. They delve into specific recommendations for every room, from Matter-enabled fridges and advanced coffee machines to adaptive lighting systems and smart sensors for plant care. The discussion highlights the importance of energy management, multi-platform compatibility, and the evolving role of Home Assistant for seamless automation.

Nov 11, 20251 hr 23 min

Version History: Fire Phone

This episode delves into the epic failure of the Amazon Fire Phone, a device launched in 2014 with ambitious but ultimately flawed features like "dynamic perspective" 3D and "Firefly" shopping. The hosts dissect Jeff Bezos's deep involvement, the questionable product strategy, and the critical reception that led to its rapid discontinuation. The discussion explores the phone's legacy, what lessons Amazon learned, and its impact on subsequent products like Alexa.

Nov 09, 20251 hr 23 min

Bring back the iBook, you cowards

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...

Nov 07, 20251 hr 49 min

Your smart home questions, answered

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 throu...

Nov 04, 20251 hr 6 min

Version History: Zune

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. If you like the show, ⁠ ⁠subscribe to the Version History feed⁠ ⁠ to make s...

Nov 02, 20251 hr 17 min

God will be declared by a panel of experts

The Vergecast explores the dual nature of AI, examining how Adobe is integrating it into creative suites for efficiency while also enabling "slop content" generation for social media. The hosts discuss Meta's aggressive push for AI-generated content, warning of an impending collapse for the creator economy as platforms prioritize automated volume over human artistry. A deep dive into OpenAI's restructuring and the farcical AGI "expert panel" reveals the speculative financial underpinnings of the AI boom, contrasted with Sam Altman's evolving, more cautious rhetoric. The episode concludes with a lightning round covering Brendan Carr's FCC actions, New York Times puzzle controversies, AOL's latest sale, the elusive Trump phone, Cybertruck recalls, and alarming ads on Samsung smart fridges, highlighting the broad and often concerning impact of technology on daily life.

Oct 31, 20251 hr 43 min

An Apple Shortcuts masterclass

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,...

Oct 28, 20251 hr 25 min

Version History: Guitar Hero

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. If you like the show, subscribe to the Version History feed⁠ to make sure you get every ne...

Oct 26, 20251 hr 17 min

ChatGPT enters the browser wars

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....

Oct 24, 20251 hr 40 min

The new Xbox is not an Xbox

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,...

Oct 21, 20251 hr 20 min

Version History: Sony Watchman

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. If you like the show, ⁠ subscribe to the Version H...

Oct 19, 20251 hr 5 min

AI can't even turn on the lights

This episode features Neelay Patel's return, diving into Apple's latest M5 chip announcements for the iPad Pro, MacBook Pro, and Vision Pro, questioning their relevance and the Vision Pro's heavy, confusing direction. The discussion shifts to the pervasive AI bubble, arguing its unreliability in basic smart home functions and the disconnect between AI hype and real-world utility. Finally, they explore OpenAI's controversial decision to allow AI erotica and the broader implications of tech companies avoiding moral responsibility while social media drowns in AI-generated slop.

Oct 17, 20251 hr 43 min

Announcing an ad-free Vergecast feed for Verge subscribers

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 ...

Oct 15, 202551 sec

Google's gadgets, ranked

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...

Oct 14, 20251 hr 3 min

Version History: BlackBerry Messenger

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 thin...

Oct 12, 20251 hr 2 min

Maybe it's real, maybe it's Sora

This episode delves into OpenAI's developer day, discussing the shift towards an app store model within ChatGPT and the debate between agentic AI and API integrations. It also covers the unexpected popularity and ethical concerns surrounding the Sora AI video app, including its content moderation challenges and long-term viability. The hosts conclude with a lightning round, touching on Google Pixel's celebrity endorsements, an iOS audio fix, Verizon's acquisition of Starry, Intel's new chips, Apple's age-gating compliance, and Facebook's TikTok-inspired transformation.

Oct 10, 20251 hr 30 min

Google's extreme smart home makeover

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 Ver...

Oct 07, 20251 hr 23 min

Version History: Hoverboards

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...

Oct 05, 20251 hr 7 min

The real price of a free TV

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 ha...

Oct 03, 20251 hr 52 min

My other car is a cargo bike

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 s...

Sep 30, 20251 hr 6 min

Tick Tock, TikTok

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 a...

Sep 26, 20251 hr 37 min

YouTube wants you to go live

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 me...

Sep 23, 20251 hr 31 min

Meta's quest to own your face

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 b...

Sep 19, 20251 hr 32 min

Who is the iPhone Air really for?

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 P...

Sep 17, 20251 hr 21 min

Our hottest takes on AI's wild summer

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, mo...

Sep 12, 20251 hr 40 min

The orange iPhone stole the show

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 te...

Sep 10, 20251 hr 39 min
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