Episoder
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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.
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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.
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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
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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
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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 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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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.
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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
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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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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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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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