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Technically Working

Technically Working
Author: Damashe Thomas and Michael Babcock
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Description
"Welcome to 'Technically Working', the go-to podcast for tech enthusiasts and productivity seekers alike. Hosts Michael Babcock and Damashe Thomas take you on a journey through the ever-evolving world of technology and productivity. As Mac OS and iPhone users, they share their personal experiences and tips on staying productive while using these tools. But they don't stop there - they also explore other platforms like Android and Windows to bring you a comprehensive view of the tech landscape. Tune in each episode to hear them keep each other accountable, discuss the latest tools and strategies, and share their journey to reaching their goals. Whether you're a small business owner, freelancer, or simply looking to boost your productivity, 'Technically Working' is the perfect podcast for anyone looking to level up their tech skills and get things done."
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Episode Notes
This week's episode is part 1 of a multipart recording featuring Steven Scott of Double Tap.
Michael hears voices in his head, Steven and Damashe discuss the aftermath of coping with being in car wrecks, and how Steven got on as a camera man in his youth.
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Michael and Damashe are back with a mix of tech talk, audio experiments, and laughs. Michael tests out two Shure microphones live on air (can you tell which is which?), shares what he learned from running a hybrid event, and rolls out a smart new feature in his automation tool, Builder—because yes, user feedback really does shape updates.
They dive into why investing in your craft (and your gear) pays off, the art of delegation, and how small process fixes make big differences. Damashe also reveals why he’s paying for search with Kagi and what makes the Helium browser worth a look.
Whether you’re a gearhead, builder, or productivity nerd, this one’s for you.
💡 Plus: download numbers are up, vacation plans are brewing, and there’s a reminder that sometimes “no new features” is the best feature of all.
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In this episode, Michael and Damashe dive into a grab bag of experiments, frustrations, and a few eerie surprises in the world of AI and audio.
<h4>Topics Covered</h4>
🎤 Mic Talk & Audio Gear
Michael tests the Shure Beta 87A and debates keeping his wireless setup, while the guys swap stories about missing adapters, mic stands, and shock mounts.
🤖 AI Voices Gone Rogue
Things take a weird turn when one of Michael’s AI voices starts adding its own opinions. The duo tests multiple Google Gemini TTS voices—some sound scarily real, others... develop personalities.
🧠 New AI Tools: HUX, Lere, and Apple Intelligence
Damashe tries out HUX (an audio summary app from former Google Notebook LM engineers) and runs into some accessibility issues. They also chat about Apple Intelligence in Lere and how AI summarization is creeping into RSS reading.
🐍 Python + PySide6 on macOS 26
Michael shares how ChatGPT helped him build a Python GUI to manage Google AI Studio’s TTS system—and the quirks that come with macOS 26 compatibility.
💻 macOS 26, Homebrew Fixes, and Remote Screen Sharing
Damashe upgrades early to macOS 26.0.1, discovers improved screen sharing, and finds creative ways to connect remotely with Tailscale.
🧩 Gravity Forms, Gravity Wiz, and Building Tools the Smart Way
From API connectors to booking add-ons, the pair geek out over how Gravity Forms’ ecosystem can (almost) run an entire business website—if you can afford all the plugins.
💬 Closing Thoughts & Listener Shoutouts
The hosts thank their Tip Jar supporters, remind listeners not to spend money they don’t have (even if it’s tempting), and share a good laugh about accidental listener spending sprees.
<h4>Mentioned Tools & Topics</h4>
Shure Beta 87A, SM58, SM7B
Google Gemini 2.5 Pro TTS
PySide6 + Keyring for Python
HUX app (by ex-Google team)
Lere RSS Reader
Gravity Forms, Gravity Wiz, Gravity Kit
macOS 26 screen sharing with Tailscale
Bedrock Innovations IVR experiment
<h4>Episode Summary</h4>
From AI voices that argue back to macOS updates that move your Safari tabs, this episode is a mix of practical tinkering and unpredictable AI fun. Whether you're into audio gear, accessibility, or the future of digital voices, TW131 brings laughs, lessons, and a reminder: always double-check what your AI is saying.
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Show Notes
Michael and Damashe dig into real-world audio and workflow upgrades—why Cleanfeed’s aux routing can quietly reset, how the DJI wireless kit performs (32-bit float, monitoring quirks, accessibility gaps), and when handheld SM58s beat Beta 58s for live/hybrid rooms. Damashe talks through pre-ordering the Meta Oakley Vanguard (and why the Seeing AI partnership nudged him), then shares first-hand notes from flashing GrapheneOS on a Pixel—eSpeak’s direct-boot advantage, practical setup caveats, and who this is actually for. Plus: Zoom H6 Studio vs. H6 Essential (hello, physical gain knobs), Windows 10 life support via ZeroPatch, and a simple plan to keep UTM links consistent when you reshare site content.
Highlights
Cleanfeed gotcha: Aux output mapping can revert when a guest reconnects—double-check before relying on a backup/stream path.
DJI Wireless notes: dual TX, on-unit recording, 32-bit float, line-out monitoring; menu accessibility is limited.
Live sound choice: SM58 handhelds for forgiving pickup and crowd control; add disposable windscreens for shared mics.
Zoom H6 Studio: larger XY mics, physical gain knobs, 32-bit float or 16/24-bit mode, clearer layout for quick tweaks.
GrapheneOS on Pixel: open-source, stronger posture; you’ll need sighted help during install; eSpeak enables speech at boot.
Meta Oakley Vanguard: interest driven by Access API and Seeing AI tie-in—buy for what it does now, not just potential.
Remote event tip: Always get an off-site listener to sanity-check your mix; in-room monitoring can mislead.
UTM consistency: Prefer a simple builder (inside WP or a script) so source/medium names stay uniform over time.
Win10 after EOL: Consider ZeroPatch if you must stay put—but be cautious online regardless.
Rough Chapters
00:00 Cleanfeed aux routing & backup recording
04:30 DJI Wireless kit: hardware tour & monitoring
17:45 Meta Oakley Vanguard pre-order & Access API musings
28:50 Zoom H6 Studio vs. H6 Essential
39:05 SM58 wireless set & live-room strategy
45:35 Remote sound-check best practices
47:00 Double Tap appearance & misc. follow-ups
50:00 Windows 10 options (ZeroPatch)
54:40 GrapheneOS setup, eSpeak, and security takeaways
1:08:15 UTM link-building idea for consistent sharing
Say hi: @damashe@technically.social • Follow updates: @tw@technically.social
Feedback: feedback@technicallyworking.show
(Thanks for listening—and extra thanks to Tip Jar supporters for keeping the mics on.)
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• Backup recordings that save the day: Audio Hijack vs. Reaper, why Cleanfeed still sounds great, and how one Safari input setting ruined a “perfect first take.”
• Smart glasses roundup:
– Meta Display now has a screen reader and an Access API. Why that could open the door to third-party apps and what it might mean for Envision and other niche devices.
– Real-world wants: trigger descriptions without saying “Hey Meta,” FaceTime/Zoom/Meet compatibility, and using glasses as a true external camera.
– Ray-Ban/Oakley interest: better cameras and battery life make them tempting. Ship dates and why Mike probably won’t have them for the cruise.
– Samsung rumors: watching the late-month event to see how XROS-based glasses might change the landscape.
• iPhone 17 Pro Max first impressions:
– Trade-ins, in-store luck, and day-one battery life that actually lasts.
– The new camera button (and ideas like mapping Seeing AI), plus the action button still set to ring/silent for now.
– USB-C is still the quality-of-life upgrade that changes everything.
– Apple Intelligence tied to ChatGPT: handy that Siri queries show up in your ChatGPT history… until they clutter it.
• AirPods and Apple Watch:
– Eyeing AirPods Pro (3rd gen) for smaller size, better ANC, and battery bumps.
– SE is a solid value; Ultra 3 is appealing for battery and the physical action button—no new sensors this year, lots of ML-driven insights.
• Privacy and platforms:
– Using AI where it’s strongest, keeping assistants in their lanes, and tying AI apps to shortcuts/action buttons for real device control.
• Domestic interlude:
– Potato-and-sausage crock-pot soup (Tabasco optional). Turkey or beef swap works.
• Quick bugs and fixes:
– macOS Calculator chatters “left-to-right mark” with VoiceOver. For quick math, use LaunchBar. For deeper work, try Soulver. Nerds: PCalc.
• Housekeeping and how to reach us:
– Tip Jar keeps the lights on (and maybe funds a pair of smart shades). If you’re enjoying the show, head to technicallyworking.show and chip in.
– Feedback: feedback@technicallyworking.show
– Mastodon: Michael = Payown @ dragonscave.space • Demasi = Demasi @ technically.social
– Follow the bot for episode posts: TW @ technically.social
• P.S.
– If you work at Meta (or any smart-glasses team) and want real-world feedback, we’re happy to test. Listeners picking up the Meta Display or new Oakleys—tell us how you’re using them.
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In this episode, Michael and Damashe kick things off by comparing recording setups with Cleanfeed, Reaper, and Audio Hijack before diving into a spontaneous story about nose injuries and streaming credentials.
The conversation shifts to gear talk, including Ben’s upcoming birthday gifts—a Sennheiser Profile microphone, boom arm, and windscreen—and why headset mics didn’t make the cut. Michael and Damashe share candid opinions on the Sennheiser Profile versus classics like the ATR2100X, with plenty of laughs about Amazon “streaming bundles” and discontinued favorites.
They also chat about e-bikes, Twitch streaming versus YouTube, and what makes an affordable but effective setup for creators just getting started.
If you enjoy a mix of tech banter, practical gear advice, and a dose of humor, this episode has it all.
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In this episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe dive into email management frustrations and fixes. From 1Password’s latest quirks with VoiceOver on iOS to hidden keystrokes in Mac Mail, they share practical tips to keep your inbox manageable. Michael experiments with Keyboard Maestro to make the delete key archive instead of trash, while Damashe drops shortcuts you probably didn’t know existed.
They also chat about UPS shipping tricks, buying gear on eBay without getting burned, and whether Apple is overreaching—or finally catching up—in AI. With Apple’s September event on the horizon, the guys weigh in on what’s coming with new iPhones, Watches, and maybe even AirPods with health tracking.
Got a take on the next iPhone or a favorite automation trick? Reach out and let us know what’s working for you.
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Michael hunts down a mystery whining noise in his studio and walks through a clean, step-by-step troubleshooting plan: strip the setup to basics, test the Vocaster solo, then re-introduce the mixer and cabling one piece at a time. We talk about when gear isn’t designed for how screen reader users actually use it, and what to do when a board might be internally crosstalking. Backup plan if the mixer’s down? Michael may swap to a Soundcraft; Damashe offers a loaner.
TipJar bonus this week: a concise Reaper tutorial from Michael on saving projects the smart way—defaults, folder structure, and why it’s always FLAC.
We compare render times (Intel Windows vs Apple silicon), touch on Windows on ARM machines and battery life, and swap notes on iZotope tools (D-Verb love, when Dialog Isolate shines). Then we nerd out about real-time translation: Google’s call demo, Microsoft’s past Skype magic, and Michael’s hands-on with Meta Ray-Bans translating Spanish in the wild.
iOS 26 chatter: a friendlier Phone app, voicemails in the calls list, and the delightfully simple “Set as Ringtone” from an audio message. Also: SharePlay memories, dictation auto-capitalizing hashtags, and Mastodon clients we like.
Shout outs to Garth (ReaProducer, Reaper wiki crew), Jacob, Robin, and Sean. Thanks to every listener spreading the show. If your podcast app lets you rate, that helps a ton. Want to go the extra mile? Add “Technically Working” to your email signature or share a link on social—tag #TechnicallyWorking with the T and W capitalized for screen reader clarity.
Get in touch
Email: feedback@technicallyworking.show
Mastodon: Michael is payown at dragonscave.space, Damashe is damashe at technically.social
Follow the bot for new episode posts: twatecniche at technically.social
TipJar
Subscribers get the Reaper “Save Projects Like a Pro” mini-episode and notes. Not a member yet? You’ll get early, practical extras that make your audio life easier.
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In this episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe dig into the messy world of search, messaging apps, and productivity tools:
Search and Safari Limits – Why Safari won’t let you set a truly custom search engine and how paid options like Kagi might be worth a look for cleaner, ad-free results.
Keyboard Maestro Adventures – Michael finally convinced a friend to try Keyboard Maestro. The two share tips on disabling default macros, using ChatGPT for macro ideas, and avoiding the “Command+Tab hijack” surprise.
Ad Overload and Usability Woes – A candid rant on how ads and cluttered websites break the browsing experience, and why many sites are losing trust with readers.
Playing With Android – Michael activates a Samsung phone and runs headlong into AT\&T’s frustrating two-factor process, sparking a bigger conversation on usability and accessibility.
VoIP and Short Code Roadblocks – Damashe shares insights from Doug on handling SMS for 2FA with VoIP numbers, SIM card workarounds, and forwarding solutions.
Signal vs. WhatsApp – A deep dive into what works and what frustrates in both apps, from voice message playback speeds and call quality to cluttered interfaces and cross-device limitations.
Beeper and Consolidation – Exploring how Beeper (now owned by Automattic) tries to unify messaging apps like Signal, WhatsApp, Google Messages, and more.
BSI Braille Input – Michael and Damashe trade notes on Braille Screen Input across iOS and Android, including iOS 18’s expanded command mode.
Passwords and Productivity – From being locked out after updates to GitHub’s new AI agents, the duo talk about tools that make workflows smoother—and the risks when they don’t.
Community Thanks – A shout-out to tip jar supporters, reminders to rate the show in your favorite podcast app, and a call for listener feedback on search engines, messaging apps, and accessibility quirks.
Feedback is always welcome at feedback@technicallyworking.show, or connect on Mastodon:
Michael: @payown@dragonscave.space
Damashe: @damashe@technically.social
Bot updates: @tw@technically.social
Hashtag your thoughts with #TechnicallyWorking so we can join the conversation!
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In this episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe cover a mix of retro tech, cutting-edge wearables, and coding experiments:
Perkins Brailler Talk – Michael’s newly repaired Perkins returns home, and the guys reminisce about fixing braillers, paper jams, and carrying them through school hallways.
Smart Glasses Showdown – A deep dive into Solos, Ally, Envision, Meta Ray-Bans, and even AGIGA. They discuss features, battery life, pricing, accessibility concerns, and why customization matters for blind users.
Prompt Injection & AI in Glasses – Michael raises questions about prompt customization, injection risks, and the possibilities of tailoring AI outputs in wearable tech.
Home Networking & Automation – Damashe’s new Ubiquiti gear sparks talk about segmenting networks, smart homes, and moving toward Home Assistant.
Builder Saga – Michael shares progress (and setbacks) with rebuilding his scheduling tool, working through PRDs, Supabase, and GitHub remote agent experiments.
Vibe Coding & Rubber Duck Debugging – They unpack what “vibe coding” really means, why talking through problems often reveals solutions, and how collaboration (or even a rubber duck) helps.
Community Feedback – Listeners weigh in on show length preferences and using BlindShell Classic to tune in.
As always, they wrap with laughs, real-world coding tips, and appreciation for listeners supporting the show.
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Michael and Damashe are back on CleanFeed, comparing its quirks to past recording tools and sharing detailed backup recording setups using Loopback, Reaper, and Audio Hijack. They swap tips for reliable audio capture, even without pro gear, and reflect on painful experiences re-recording lost segments. The conversation shifts to the launch of GPT-5, how it’s performing in GitHub Copilot, and strategies for using AI to clean up and streamline code without breaking functionality. Then they dig into messaging—debating Apple’s role in RCS adoption, privacy concerns around WhatsApp’s encryption claims, and the dream of a truly unified messaging world. Along the way: vending machines, hotel check-ins with remote staff, loyalty points that don’t add up, and why sometimes it’s worth trimming episodes to a tighter runtime.
TW122: Pocket Casts Juggling, Audio Experiments & Building a Tech‑Savvy Team
In this episode of Technically Working, Damashe and Michael dive into practical experiments, tool comparisons and community announcements. Here’s what you’ll hear:
🧪 Audio experiments with Zoom H5 and iPhone 15 Pro
Portable recording setup – Damashe connects a Zoom H5 Studio recorder to an iPhone 15 Pro running an early iOS 26 beta and discovers that multi‑track mode causes the phone to hear VoiceOver but not his microphone. Switching the recorder from multi‑track to stereo resolves the issue.
Why it matters – They discuss how important it is to test gear before critical recordings and remind listeners that mobile interfaces may behave differently across iOS and Android.
🎧 Pocket Casts deep‑dive and cross‑device realities
Trying out a new player – Michael compares Pocket Casts to his long‑time favourite Castro/Overcast. He likes the statistics (hours listened vs. saved) and subscribes to 56 shows after trimming his massive OPML file.
Filters and queue management – He uses the “New” filter to see fresh episodes and explains how the “Up Next” tab tells you how long it will take to finish your queue. Michael also notes you can enable Play on tap in Settings to start an episode immediately from the queue.
Sync quirks across devices – Pocket Casts doesn’t consistently resume playback when switching between the iPhone and Pixel. Damashe observes that about 40 % of the time it works correctly; otherwise the episode restarts. They hope future updates will improve background syncing.
Accessing trials – Michael shares a tip for redeeming a two‑month Premium trial: if Apple’s store blocks the offer because of a previous subscription, open the link in Android’s Play Store instead.
👥 Hiring, training and generative AI
Building a team – Damashe is hiring a new employee and realizes he needs to keep recruiting rather than stop after filling one slot. He recounts meeting drivers through Uber who might become part‑time helpers.
Generative AI training – They joke about clipping an Insta360 camera to record vending‑machine maintenance and using ChatGPT or other models to generate training videos. Michael even sets a reminder in Agent‑mode to revisit the idea and tries to track his TikTok follower count using transcripts.
Agent‑mode notifications – The hosts appreciate how ChatGPT’s agent mode can run deep research tasks and send notifications when the work is done.
🛠️ Tools, coding & accessibility
Command‑line companions – Damashe uses Anthropic’s Claude and GitHub Copilot on the command line for documentation and merges. He notes that putting special characters in VoiceOver’s pronunciation dictionary stops the screen reader from announcing arrows and pipes.
Terminal apps – He asks if there are better macOS terminal apps than the built‑in Terminal and mentions that I‑Term 2 didn’t click for him previously.
Tools menu improvements – Michael describes updates to his event‑scheduling tool, including generation shortcuts, data‑quality checks and a more streamlined interface for removing Zoom links before publishing.
📢 Community announcement: BITS VS Code crash course
Free crash course – Michael announces that BITS (Blind Information Technology Specialists) will hold a free four‑hour Visual Studio Code crash course on August 16. The session focuses on configuring VS Code for screen‑reader users and leveraging GitHub Copilot.
How to join – Details will appear at bits‑acb.org or joinbits.org. The course is open to everyone and Michael encourages listeners to become a BITS member or life member.
🌐 Stay connected
Follow the show on Mastodon: @tw@technically.social.
Follow the hosts: @payon@dragonscave.space (Michael) and @damashe@technically.social (Damashe).
Send feedback to feedback@technicallyworking.show – they would love to hear from you.
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In this episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe dive into:
🎛️ Michael’s adventures debugging his custom scheduling tool, lovingly named Builder—including the moment it completely broke everything… and how that led to several much-needed fixes.
🧠 A look at PromptBoost.dev, a slick VS Code extension site to supercharge your AI prompts.
🤖 Comet, the AI-powered browser from Perplexity, surprises us by editing Gravity Forms on the fly—even clicking the save button!
🎤 CSUN 2026 prep: hotel vs Airbnb debates, hallway networking, and conference value tradeoffs.
🚐 Damashe shares his progress training a new vending route driver and the eternal rollercoaster of finding dependable help.
💻 Rediscovering old domains and deciding what to do with long-running podcast archives (including Your Own Pay).
🧹 Tools for cleaning up bloated WordPress installs and abandoned plugin tables.
Plus:
A shared moment of reflection on why some people listen to podcasts on YouTube 🤔
Uber cash, Lyft discounts, and the return of late-night dev spirals
💬 Got thoughts, tips, or questions?
Email us at feedback@technicallyworking.show
Or find us on Mastodon:
Michael: @payown@dragonscave.space
Damashe: @damashe@technically.social
Hashtag: #TechnicallyWorking
Support the show by sharing it with a friend, sending in a clip, or hitting that tip jar if you’re feeling generous. Thanks for listening!
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In Episode 120, Michael and Damashe are back with fiber internet, fresh gear, and a deep dive into all things technically messy and wonderfully geeky. Here's what you'll hear in this jam-packed episode:
Apple’s Hidden Reminders Feature: Michael experiments with setting reminders from the Phone app and discovers a hidden section in the call screen. Does it actually work? Kind of.
Damashe’s New Setup: From hanging mics on invisible selfie sticks to testing out the Zoom H5 Studio, he shares what’s working (and what’s not) in his portable podcast rig.
Gadget Talk: We talk HomePods, Pelican cases, and the quirks of the Vocaster Hub mute button. Plus, shoutouts to Harper.bog and Tamir from Sweetwater.
Android Adventures: Damashe digs into the quirks of managing CalDAV and CardDAV on Android, switching to GrapheneOS, using Google Messages on iPhone via Beeper, and trying to assign custom ringtones by phone line—not contact.
Accessibility Wins and WTFs: Hear why Google’s calendar app needs help, why Gmail on Android frustrates, and why Michael still prefers LaunchBar’s clipboard manager over everything.
Community Builder Project: Michael gives an update on his work automating ACB's community event scheduling—from Forms to Sheets to dreams of push-button approvals.
Apple Support FTW: A weird clicking noise from the HomePod? Apple’s support team jumps into action with diagnostics and follow-up calls.
Pixel vs iPhone: From earbuds doing double duty across ecosystems to automatic switching woes and notification syncing between macOS and iOS—this is a cross-platform conversation at its finest.
Debugging Life: Michael solves a PySide6 selection bug thanks to Copilot’s debug log, and Damashe finds peace with his PowerBeats working across Apple and Android. Small wins, big impact.
Stick around for laughs, rants, shoutouts, and—of course—reminders that may or may not show up.
Links & Mentions:
Follow Michael on Mastodon: @payown@dragonscave.space
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Email: feedback@technicallyworking.show
Use the hashtag #TechnicallyWorking (capitalize the T and W for screen readers!)
Support the show:
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In this episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe catch up after what feels like forever—and dive right into Damashe’s chaotic travel story. From missing a train in New Orleans to unexpectedly booking a sleeper car, he shares how one late-night nap and a Pixel alarm mishap turned into an impromptu hotel stay and a free breakfast.
They recap recent tech conference experiences, including hands-on impressions of the Giga AI Glasses (spoiler: they’re still a little too chatty), vibration-based navigation shoes from Japan, and the impressive multi-line Dot Pad display with near-instant braille refresh.
Michael shares some behind-the-scenes tech wins from running hybrid ACB Convention events—including Gravity Forms automations, Lisi scripting magic, and a FedEx shipping lesson that cost him $81. They also nerd out over gear like the Zoom H5 Studio, run through Damashe’s audio setup powered by a Pixel 9 Pro hotspot, and trade thoughts on why sliders beat knobs on audio mixers.
Plus:
Why ChatGPT lied about Zoom recorder layouts
Updates on the BITS AI class recordings
Selling Lisi to pay off a car (yes, really)
Using walkie-talkie on the Apple Watch in a hallway sprint
Tips on cheaper shipping using Pirate Ship
AccessibleAndroid.com and a mystery screen reader named Prudence
And a push to keep the podcast under 58 minutes for distribution deals
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Thanks for listening
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In this episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe dive into everything from broken safe keys and unexpected tech closets to streamlining code with AI and fighting Gravity Forms. Michael shares updates on the upcoming BITS AI course and his automations for scheduling Zoom events, while Damashe reveals his quiet move to the closet for better acoustics (and less heat).
They discuss:
Why more BITS members are tuning in—and how to join the AI course
Using Google Classroom effectively vs. bloated school tech platforms
Damashe’s safe disaster and impromptu locksmith plan
Michael’s TikTok growth and Gravity Forms pet peeve
Recording setups, GitHub Copilot agent mode, and code workflows with ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini
How Lisi's AI integration streamlines tasks right from JAWS
The behind-the-scenes of automating newsletter audio with Azure voices
Prime Day skepticism, API usage surprises, and tip jar shout-outs
It's an episode filled with laughs, tech experiments, and just a touch of closet-based podcasting.
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In this time-shifted episode of Technically Working, Michael and Damashe dive into a pile of long-overdue listener feedback. They kick things off with a detailed voice message from Lord Robin Christofferson about Cal Studio (formerly PFMM.ai), a platform for building and monetizing custom AI tools. Then it’s on to GrapheneOS—Damashe shares updates on accessibility, eSpeakNG’s new direct boot support, and what it takes for blind users to flash the ROM.
They also respond to Scout’s questions on ProtonMail, network gear placement, and smart home setups—complete with temperature sensors and leak detectors. Michael wonders how far he can push smart home automation, and the duo get inspired by a wild idea involving a Bluetooth toothbrush starting a car.
Plus: Reolink doorbell app accessibility, the ongoing debate between Ubiquiti vs. Reolink, and Damashe’s slow march toward buying a Synology NAS.
Got feedback? Email feedback@technicallyworking.show or toot it with #TechnicallyWorking.
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Michael got his MacBook back and shares the apps and tools he immediately reinstalled—including Audio Hijack, Raycast, Hazel, and Little Snitch—plus what didn’t quite make the cut. Damashe walks through Homebrew tips, Markdown Service Tools setup, and how to fix symlink issues for missing binaries. They also dive into Mac App Store automation with mas, speaker setup logistics for live events, and whether to send signal to a subwoofer first or last in the audio chain.
They also cover:
Autoplay and accessibility considerations in web players
Comparing Raycast, LaunchBar, and Alfred for Mac navigation
The realities of editing audio with a giant powered speaker in your office
Speaker feedback issues with the Shure Beta 87A and experiments with the Q2U
Why most apps shouldn't request local network access—and when it's okay
Little Snitch vs. BlockBlock for app-level firewall protection
Homebrew cleanup, Hazel automation, and uninstall tips
Using Perplexity and GPT for real-world tech support and research
Frustrations with Gemini on Android and Google's assistant transitions
GitHub Copilot changes, Claude for coding, and the fading GitHub Pro tier
Ubiquiti Device Bridge, mesh Wi-Fi fixes, and fiber dreams
The dangers of not running a backup audio recording
An idea to revisit old episodes and reflect on how far they’ve come
Whether they’ll ever do a feedback episode (spoiler: maybe tomorrow)
And yes—there’s KFC grease jokes, egg prices, Flipboard flashbacks, and why the Technically Working bot is the real one to follow on Mastodon.
Follow the Show:
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Email: feedback@technicallyworking.show
Mastodon:
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Michael and Damashe are back with a full update after a few hectic weeks. Damashe shares how recent life events impacted work and how his new employee
got thrown into the deep end early. They talk through ongoing audio adjustments, including Michael’s Mac OS beta install on a separate APFS volume and
Damashe’s experience with the iOS beta leading to voiceover issues — and how Braille saved the day.
The conversation shifts to Damashe’s ongoing Pixel 9 Pro experiment, using dual eSIMs, RCS messaging, Android accessibility, and the ongoing challenge
of cross-platform messaging. Michael shares his first steps into creating a Personal Voice for VoiceOver while fighting some failed attempts.
They dive into smart home updates: Damashe has Home Assistant hardware sitting in boxes ready to be deployed alongside his POE-powered setup, a Home
Assistant Yellow, Tailwind garage opener, and some highly recommended Matter-compatible smart bulbs. Michael discusses HomeKit updates, smoke alarm detection
on HomePods, and explores some new VoiceOver features for iOS 18, like resetting VoiceOver settings and sharing VoiceOver profiles across devices.
They wrap up with future plans for home automation content after convention season, shout-outs to listeners, Tip Jar supporters, and a reminder to share
the show or follow the bot account on Mastodon for updates.
Send your feedback:
feedback@technicallyworking.show.
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This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-431b7d for 40% off for 4 months, and support Technically Working.
In this episode of Technically Working, it’s a quick catch-up packed with gear decisions, GPT frustrations, and accessibility discoveries.
Things kick off with some behind-the-scenes updates about live streaming improvements—including why ads are gone and how latency might get better with a little server tinkering. Then it’s time for a scanner showdown. After testing models from Brother, Epson, and ScanSnap, one portable scanner wins out thanks to battery life, duplex scanning, and microSD support (plus a healthy dose of velcro).
The conversation shifts to recent AI weirdness:
Struggles with inconsistent GPT model behavior
Tips on preserving your writing style before resetting memory
Voice mode quirks like excessive filler words
Model-switching experiments to improve output
Also covered:
Why some interfaces make or break AI tools
Mac accessibility wins and workarounds for scripting and coding with VoiceOver
An ongoing Mac setup experiment: LaunchBar vs. Alfred
Finishing things off, there's a quick reflection on podcast automation bots, a reminder about using the #TechnicallyWorking hashtag, and appreciation for listeners and Tip Jar supporters who keep the show going.
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Send us your feedback online: https://pinecast.com/feedback/technically-working/7d8d84a1-bee1-42da-a2f8-4408a3366c92
This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-431b7d for 40% off for 4 months, and support Technically Working.