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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This episode delves into the dramatic history of the iPhone 4, from its infamous leak to the Antennagate controversy. Hosts David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and Walt Mossberg explore the phone's revolutionary design, its impact on smartphone aesthetics, and Steve Jobs's fervent response to the leak and subsequent antenna issues. They discuss how Apple navigated these challenges and cemented the iPhone 4's place as a truly seminal device, ultimately expanding its reach to new carriers like Verizon and Sprint.
This Vergecast Holiday Spectacular unravels the mysteries of Random Access Memory (RAM), detailing its fundamental function, historical evolution, and modern ubiquity. The hosts and special guest Dylan Patel from SemiAnalysis explain why RAM has become a precious commodity due to insatiable demand from AI data centers, the concentrated nature of its manufacturing, and the industry's conservative capacity expansion. The episode also includes fun RAM-themed games and speculates on future market dynamics and potential technological breakthroughs.
Google didn't invent the concept of smart glasses, but it was one of the first companies to actually put them on people's faces. It was a revolution, and also a problem: Google made face computers extremely uncool, and its early user base was so off-putting they became collectively known as “Glassholes.” The Verge’s Victoria Song and Waveform’s David Imel break down why Glass failed — despite being shockingly right about the future of technology. If you like the show, follow the Version Histo...
Åhead of our last Friday episode of 2025, FCC Chairman Brendan Carr did The Vergecast an enormous favor: he went in front of Congress and said a bunch of wild things about regulation. So, of course, Nilay and David have to talk about them. For a really long time. After that, the hosts look at all the ways YouTube and Netflix are becoming more like one another, and then update the Go90 Scale of Doomed Streaming Services to round out the year. Finally, in the lightning round, there's talk of web a...
Who's going to win the Super Bowl? What about the latest season of Survivor? Or the race to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve? Who will be Portugal's next president? How many times will Elon Musk tweet in the next week? On Polymarket, and other prediction markets, you can bet on all these things and more. Are we entering a world in which everything is gambling and gambling is everything? Bloomberg's Joe Weisenthal joins the show to explain the rise of prediction markets, what's betting an...
Hosts David Pierce, Joanna Stern, and Nilay Patel engage in their annual prediction episode, reflecting on their mostly missed 2025 forecasts. They then make "mild, medium, and spicy" predictions for 2026, discussing the prospects of a foldable iPhone, the resurgence of the EV market, and the monumental success of GTA 6. The conversation also delves into the battle against AI-generated content on social media, the potential for a significant Waymo incident, and provocative takes on the future of OpenAI, a radically improved Siri, and Apple's most challenging year in decades.
Technically, the Netflix / Warner Bros. news is almost a week old, but what a week it has been! And so, after some follow-up on smart shades and CES, Nilay and David talk through all that’s at stake in the fight between Paramount and Netflix — and whether it’s even possible for someone to win this deal. After that, Charlie Harding, co-host of Switched on Pop and honorary Vergecast intern, explains how AI is taking over the country music scene in Nashville. He also makes us a song, and it’s a jam...
Well, friends, it's been a year. And before we turn the page to 2026 and all the stories of 2025 begin to blur together, we decided to take stock of things. Nilay and David are joined by Wall Street Journal senior tech columnist Joanna Stern to debate the best products of the year, the biggest policy moves, the people who broke bad, the good AI things, the bad AI things, and much more. It's been a vibe-everything kind of year, and there's a lot to discuss. Subscribe to The Verge for unlimited ac...
AI models are very good at summarizing things, finding other things like those things, and helping you find those things again. But does that mean we should leave all the work of finding and understanding to those models? Sari Azout, the founder of an app called Sublime, doesn't think so. For this episode, the second in our two-part series about how developers are using AI and building models into their products, Azout explains how Sublime tries to balance being a thoroughly human-focused app wi...
First things first: David and Nilay are both having some TV problems, and they need to talk it out. But then they get to the news of the week, including Samsung's new extra-foldy foldable phone, and a big change in the design departments at both Apple and Meta. What does it all say about the future of smart glasses? After that, the hosts talk through why Sam Altman declared a code red inside of OpenAI in order to redirect focus to ChatGPT — and whether the technology that has made all these prod...
Apple makes a lot of gadgets. You've probably heard of some of them. Most of them are very good! Few companies in tech, or anywhere, can claim a track record as impressive and consistent as the folks in Cupertino. But only one Apple product can be the best Apple product. The Verge's Victoria Song and Allison Johnson join David to rank Apple's nine product categories — iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Vision Pro, AirPods, AirTags, HomePod, and Apple TV — in order of their best-ness. The gang agree...
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 ap...
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 yo...
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. If you like the show, subscribe to the Version History feed to make sure y...
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...
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, ...
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 ...
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.
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.
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.
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...
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...
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...
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.
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,...
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...
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....
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,...
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...
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.