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The Vergecast

The Vergecast
Author: The Verge
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The Vergecast is the flagship podcast from The Verge about small gadgets, Big Tech, and everything in between. Every Friday, hosts Nilay Patel and David Pierce hang out and make sense of the week’s most important technology news. And every Tuesday, David leads a selection of The Verge’s expert staffers in an exploration of how gadgets and software affect our lives – and which ones you should bring into yours.
913 Episodes
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One thing you should know about the iPhone launch is that there’s... not usually a lot of other tech news around the iPhone launch. So David and Jake start this episode with some more information about the iPhone launch, including some controversial details we missed about the AirPods Pro 3 and the argument in favor of the crossbody strap. After that, with David back on the mic, it’s time for a round of AI-focused hot takes with The Verge’s Hayden Field. The gang talks ChatGPT, Claude, money, more money, and what counts as a real friend. (And money.) Finally, in the lightning round — yes, once again the LIGHTNING ROUND — the three co-hosts talk about Canon’s confusing new camera, the future of Reddit, Claude’s spreadsheet-y future, and much more.
Further reading:
Apple isn’t packing a charging cable in with the AirPods Pro 3
Apple’s misunderstood crossbody iPhone strap might be the best I’ve seen
Apple says the iPhone 17 comes with a massive security upgrade
New Beats earbuds leak hours before Apple’s big event
Nothing’s Ear 3 earbuds have a microphone and ‘talk’ button on their charging case
Google pulls the Pixel 10’s Daily Hub to ‘enhance its performance’
David Zaslav thinks HBO Max is ‘way underpriced’
Exclusive | Paramount Skydance Prepares Ellison-Backed Bid for Warner
Reddit is dropping subscriber counts on subreddits
Reddit is testing a way to read articles without leaving the app
Canon is bringing back a point-and-shoot from 2016 with fewer features and a higher price (it’s viral
Spotify adds lossless streaming after 8 years of teasing
Anthropic’s Claude can now make you a spreadsheet or slide deck.
The MechaHitler defense contract is raising red flags
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Fresh off a day filled with new Apple products, The Verge’s ground team reports back on everything they’ve seen — and touched. Allison Johnson walks us through the new iPhone Air, iPhone 17, and iPhone 17 Pro lineups, making sense of all the new camera features and wondering just how thin a phone really can be. After that, Victoria Song talks about why the AirPods Pro 3 may have been the big hit of the day, plus all the details on the three new models of Apple Watch. Finally, Jake Kastrenakes tells us about his first experience live at an Apple event, explains the appeal of a crossbody strap, and has a theory about why an orange phone is such a big deal.
Further reading:
The eight biggest announcements during Apple’s iPhone Air event | The Verge
All the news from Apple’s iPhone 17 event | The Verge
Apple announces the ultra-slim iPhone Air | The Verge
iPhone Air hands-on | The Verge
Apple iPhone 17 hands-on | The Verge
Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro has the biggest battery of any iPhone | The Verge
Apple’s iPhone 17 drops the Plus, but gains a bigger, faster display | The Verge
iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max: our initial hands-on impressions | The Verge
The 2TB iPhone 17 Pro Max costs $1,999. | The Verge
The iPhone 17 comes with Apple’s new in-house networking chip | The Verge
Apple’s new iPhone Air accessories include a slim MagSafe battery, TechWoven case, and crossbody strap
Apple’s new MagSafe battery is only designed for the new iPhone Air | The Verge
All right, what new Apple stuff are we buying? | The Verge
The new iPhones all have Center Stage front-facing cameras | The Verge
Apple announces AirPods Pro 3 with ‘world’s best ANC’ and heart rate sensing | The Verge
The Apple Watch Ultra 3 has 42 hours of battery life and satellite connectivity | The Verge
Apple announces new entry-level $249 Apple Watch SE 3 with always-on display | The Verge
The iPhone Air’s battery pack is slim, but not as slim as the iPhone Air
Apple’s new MagSafe battery is only designed for the new iPhone Air
Phone 17 Pro “clear” case that is MOSTLY NOT CLEAR
Apple barely talked about AI at its big iPhone 17 event | The Verge
iOS 26 is out on September 15th | The Verge
Apple’s macOS Tahoe 26 update releases September 15th | The Verge
Apple reveals iPadOS 26 release date | The Verge
Apple will launch watchOS 26 on September 15th | The Verge
Apple’s using more recycled materials in its iPhones and watches
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It's a big week for the smart home. Jake, Vee, and Jen sit down to chat about all the new tech out of IFA, from robots that carry robot vacuums up stairs to upgrades that turn 10-year-old Hue bulbs into motion sensors. Then, Lauren joins the show to talk about the Google antitrust remedies ruling and what Google is going to have to do to allow more competition in the search market. Finally, the Thunder Round is back and better than ever. We're talking $2,000 smart watches, Amazon yanking a major Prime perk, the Pixel 10 Pro's 100x AI zoom, Instagram for iPad, and drama at the FTC.
Further reading:
Eufy built a stairlift for its robovacs
Inside Philips Hue’s plans to make all your lights motion sensors
Philips Hue responds to cheaper competitors with major product overhaul
SwitchBot has ambitions to be the AI that powers your smart home
Samsung’s Galaxy S25 FE and Tab S11 are thinner, lighter, and otherwise about the same
Google gets to keep Chrome, judge rules in search antitrust case
Google critics think the search remedies ruling is a total whiff
Here’s what Google and the DOJ had to say about the search remedies ruling
The tech antitrust renaissance may already be over
Garmin’s Fenix 8 Pro series finally lets you leave your phone at home — sort of
Instagram is coming to iPad, 15 years later
Amazon ends shared Prime free shipping outside your home
Ousted Democratic FTC commissioner can return (again) for now
Here’s how the Pixel’s AI zoom compares to a real 100x lens
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11. We love hearing from you.
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Hooked on LinkedIn’s Queens? Gotta extend your Wordle streak in the New York Times games app before you start your day? You’re in good company on today’s Vergecast episode. Allison Johnson is joined by Simon Anthony and Mark Goodliffe, world-class puzzle champs and hosts of the delightful Cracking the Cryptic, a YouTube channel where they solve a puzzle on camera every single day.
They specialize in Sudoku — and not just the classic number games you might be familiar with. Simon and Mark tackle mind-bending, seemingly impossible puzzles, working through it all in realtime, sometimes over the course of several hours. What happens when you get stuck? How can you tell the difference between a puzzle made by a human and a computer-generated one? Why are we addicted to puzzle games all of a sudden? They help us crack the clues.
Then Allison sits down with Marc Levoy, one of the pioneers of computational photography, to talk about his new camera app: Project Indigo. Levoy is known for his earlier work on the Pixel camera, and was a driving force in shaping phone photography into what it is now. We last caught up with him in 2020 when he left Google for Adobe, so we got up to speed on what the heck he’s been doing for the last five years — and the important difference between HDR and an HDR-ish photo.
Finally, Allison takes a hotline question from someone who is not particular about their phone camera’s image quality, but does have a beef with camera bumps.
Cracking the Cryptic — YouTube
This 25-minute video is the most riveting sudoku puzzle you will ever watch
The Atlantic is making a big push into games
I regret to inform you that LinkedIn’s games are very fun
The mastermind of Google’s Pixel camera quietly left the company in March
The brain behind the Google Pixel camera is building a universal camera app for Adobe
Marc Levoy on the balance of camera hardware, software, and artistic expression
Adobe launches a new ‘computational photography’ camera app for iPhones
Adobe’s new camera app is making me rethink phone photography
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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The Pixel 10 is in the house, and we’ve been testing them for over a week now. Allison and Vee sit down with Jake to discuss their tests — the good, the bad, and the poorly translated. They demo the Pixel 10's live phone call translations and dive into Pro Res Zoom, which uses AI to enhance photos zoomed in up to 100x. Then, it’s time to talk Dish, Intel, and Elon. Dish is giving up on being a major mobile carrier, Intel is now partially owned by the US government, and Elon has filed a questionable lawsuit against Apple. Finally, we wrap up with a Thunder Round to discuss K-Pop Demon Hunters, YouTube Shorts’ secret “AI,” Android’s registration requirement for developers, Taco Bell’s drive through AI attempt, and a delivery locker on wheels.
Further reading:
Google Pixel 10 Pro review: AI, Qi2, and a spec bump too
Apple’s iPhone 17 launch event is set for September 9th
Dish gives up on becoming the fourth major wireless carrier
The Trump administration promised a fourth wireless carrier — America got a hot mess instead
US government takes 10 percent stake in Intel in exchange for money it was already on the hook for
Elon Musk’s xAI is suing OpenAI and Apple
Elon Musk’s xAI quietly dropped its status as a public benefit corporation
My new beat is K-Pop Demon Hunters
Taco Bell AI Drive thru sna-fu
Is YouTube’s Shorts experiment using AI or just upscaling? | The Verge
This new delivery robot will bring the entire grocery store to you
Google will verify Android developers distributing apps outside the Play store
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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This week on The Vergecast, Chris Niccolls and Jordan Drake of PetaPixel’s YouTube channel join The Verge’s Allison Johnson and Vjeran Pavic to geek out about the last half-decade of camera advancements — the good, the bad, and the Sigma BF of it all.
Then, Allison is joined by Verge News Editor and fellow phone nerd Dominic Preston to help answer a boatload of listener questions from people contemplating which smartphone to buy next. They help navigate the intricacies of living in a mixed iOS/Android household to the best options for someone who wants a headphone jack (spoiler alert: there aren’t many).
It’s a mega-hotline-turned-therapy session for iPhone Mini owners reluctant to let go of their tiny phones in a world where phones come in two sizes: big and bigger.
Further reading:
Sigma BF review: Beautiful Foolishness — PetaPixel
The Fujifilm X half is Just Plain FUN! — PetaPixel
Fujifilm X Half hands-on: whimsical, refreshing, and simply fun
Sigma BF review: the perfect camera for a minimalist
In pursuit of a viral, five-year-old compact camera
Samsung Galaxy S25 review: incredibly iterative
Nothing Phone 3 review: flagship-ish
If you really want a smaller phone, try the tiny Jelly 2
Oppo Find N5 review: the final evolution of foldables
Honor launches the ‘world’s thinnest’ foldable
Motorola spoiled a good budget phone with bloatware
The Xperia 1 VII is a greatest hits of Sony R&D
The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra isn’t so ‘ultra’ anymore
The Fairphone 6 no longer feels like a compromise (except in the US)
My first DIY phone fix made me a self-repair believer
Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold review: in great shape
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: stunning, bendy, and spendy
Ditching my phone for an LTE smartwatch was a humbling experience
I took my own advice and bought a last-gen iPhone — I regret nothing
How Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip failed me without actually breaking
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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It’s Pixel week. Jake, Vee, and Allison are chatting about all things Google. First, there’s the Pixel 10, 10 Pro, 10 Pro XL, and 10 Pro Fold, which get a mix of hardware upgrades (dust-proofing on a foldable!) and downgrades (a worse camera on the Pixel 10?) and a ton of new AI features, including Magic Cue and Pro Res Zoom, which puts AI right inside the camera app. Next, there’s the Pixel Watch 4, Fitbit’s AI fitness coach, the Pixel Buds 2A, and a tease of Google’s next smart home speaker. Finally, we wrap it up with the Thunder Round and a discussion of Hank Green’s Focus Friend, Ricoh’s GR IV, Netflix’s new content strategy, Masimo’s attempt to sue over the Apple Watch again, and most importantly, Chipotle’s drone delivery.
Further reading:
The Made by Google event felt like being sucked into an episode of Wandavision
The Google Pixel 10 and 10 Pro come with magnets, a new chip, and AI everywhere
The Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold is the first fully dust-resistant foldable
Google says the quiet part out loud: IP68 protection doesn’t last
The best new features of the Pixel 10 lineup
The Pixel 10 Pro puts generative AI right inside the camera
The magnets are the coolest thing about the Pixel 10
Google is launching its first magnetic wireless charging accessories
Building a more empathetic big phone.
The Pixel Pro 10 phones include a certified Thread radio.
Google’s Pixel Watch 4 has big ideas — and an even bigger focus on AI
Fitbit’s AI health coach is the first I might actually be interested in
The unbearable obviousness of AI fitness summaries
Google’s Pixel Buds 2A add Gemini, noise cancellation, and a replaceable battery
Google’s Pixel Buds Pro 2 are getting new AI-powered features in September
Gemini for Home is Google’s biggest smart home play in years
Is that a new Nest smart speaker I spy?
Hank Green’s Focus Friend swapped my screen time for bean time
Now Masimo is suing US Customs over Apple Watch imports
Ricoh GR IV will cost $1500
It's Raining Chips & Guac: Chipotle Is Testing Drone Delivery
YouTuber Mark Rober is getting a Netflix series
YouTube star Ms. Rachel is coming to Netflix
The Duffer Brothers are joining the Paramount family
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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This week on The Vergecast, the co-founder and former CEO of iRobot, Colin Angle, joins The Verge’s smart home reviewer, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, to discuss what the ideal home robot is. Are we close to creating a Rosie the Robot — an all-in-one humanoid robot that can take care of our homes, or should we take an entirely different approach to home robotics? They dive into the advances in technology powering this shift and ponder what purpose robotics in the home should really serve.
Then, Jen takes a journey back into smart home history to help us understand its future. Grant Erickson, Principal of Nuovations, a former Apple, Nest, and Google engineer who was part of the team that developed Thread, joins the show.
He shares the story of how and why, back in 2011, the Nest team, led by Tony Faddell and Matt Rogers, decided to create a smart home protocol. It involves a thermostat, fragmented ecosystems, and one of the best smart home products ever made.
They discuss how Thread became the foundation of the Matter smart home standard — an unprecedented industry collaboration with a herculean task — to make the smart home simpler.
To close out the show, Grant sticks around to help answer a Vergecast hotline question (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com) about how Matter manages your data.
Further reading:
Maybe I don’t want a Rosey the Robot after all
Amazon left Roomba with a huge mess to clean up
Figure will start ‘alpha testing’ its humanoid robot in the home in 2025
Amazon Astro review: too much Alexa, not enough arms
Samsung is finally releasing Ballie
This Pixar-style dancing lamp hints at Apple’s future home robot
iRobot’s founder is working on a new kind of home robot
iRobot OS is the newest ‘brain’ for your Roomba
Amazon bought iRobot to see inside your home
I tested a robot vacuum with an arm, and my dog may never forgive me
Inside the Nest: iPod creator Tony Fadell wants to reinvent the thermostat
Nest CEO Tony Fadell on Google acquisition
Fire drill: Can Tony Fadell and Nest build a better smoke detector?
How big companies kill ideas — and how to fight back, with Tony Fadell
Situation: there are too many competing smart home standards
Matter’s plan to save the smart home
Nest’s home security system costs $499 and comes with magnetic door sensors
Google says Matter is still set to fix the biggest smart home frustrations
Thread is Matter’s secret sauce for a better smart home
Nanoleaf launches a smart switch after eight years of trying
Thread count: Ikea is stitching together a smarter home
Why Thread is Matter’s biggest problem right now
The four changes in Thread 1.4 that could fix the protocol
It could be 2026 before all your Thread border routers work together
Matter will be better in 2025 — say the people who make it
The Nest Learning Thermostat gets its biggest upgrade in over a decade
killedbygoogle.com
Google’s ADT partnership finally has a new home security product to show for it
Google discontinues Nest Protect smoke alarm and Nest x Yale door lock
Google discontinues its Google Nest Secure alarm system
Appliance makers are teaming up to reduce your electricity usage — and save you cash
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GPT-5 is here, and it’s not going so well. This week on The Vergecast, Jake, Vee, and Hayden discuss the bumpy launch of OpenAI’s latest model and why GPT-5 isn’t as big of a leap as GPT-4.
Then, everyone shares their vibe coding projects and the bumpy journey to making anything usable. After that, our newest segment: Corporate Shenanigans, where we rate the week in strange corporate moves on a scale from “actually serious” to “total joke.”
Finally, the Thunder Round returns, new and improved, to discuss ditching your phone for a smartwatch, doctors relying too much on AI, AOL dial-up shutting down, the Pebble Time 2, and why you shouldn’t trust what AI chatbots say about themselves.
Further reading:
ChatGPT won’t remove old models without warning after GPT-5 backlash
OpenAI will update GPT-5’s “personality” after user backlash
ChatGPT is bringing back 4o as an option because people missed it
Sam Altman shared more about what went wrong with those GPT-5 graphs
OpenAI gives some employees a ‘special’ multimillion-dollar bonus
Anthropic just made its latest move in the AI coding wars
Anthropic’s Claude chatbot can now remember your past conversations
Perplexity offers to buy Google Chrome for $34.5 billion
Apple is suing Apple Cinemas
Apple Cinemas responds to Apple lawsuit
Apple returns blood oxygen monitoring to the latest Apple Watches
Elon Musk says he’s suing Apple for rigging App Store rankings
Ditching my phone for an LTE smartwatch was a humbling experience
Here’s a look at the final Pebble Time 2 design
Some doctors got worse at detecting cancer after relying on AI
Google’s healthcare AI made up a body part — what happens when doctors don’t notice?
Chatbots aren’t telling you their secrets
AOL is finally shutting down dial-up
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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This week on The Vergecast, we enter the Jen-era of Hot Girl Vergecast Summer, with a deep dive into the business of the smart home. The Verge’s smart home reviewer, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy (aka Jen), chats with Ken Fairbanks, a longtime customer of Insteon who ended up buying the smart lighting company when it went into bankruptcy.
Ken shares the story of how one of the original smart lighting protocols, founded in the post-X10 era when home automation moved from wired to wireless, floundered, and how he and a band of users brought it back from the dead. He dishes what he’s learned about how to keep the lights on — from customer loyalty and the value of subscriptions, to what tariffs are doing to the industry and how some hardware companies are just pyramid schemes.
Then, in a special supersized (and we mean SUPER) Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com), Jen is joined by smart home expert Richard Gunther, co-host of The Smart Home Show, to tackle a bunch of your burning smart lighting questions. They answer everything from how to move your smart home to which Thread border router you should buy for your Matter setup. Plus, they run down their own smart lighting set-ups.
Further reading:
Insteon’s troubles are a smart home tale as old as time
Insteon Raises the Curtain for the Next Act
Someone turned Insteon’s lights back on
Insteon customers turned Insteon’s lights back on
Thread count: Ikea is stitching together a smarter home
Smart switches or smart bulbs? How to choose the right smart lighting for your home
Controller for HomeKit
Philips Hue Play sync box and gradient lightstrip review: wholly unnecessary, totally delightful
Taming Wi-Fi in the Smart Home:
Leviton’s new smart light switches don’t require a neutral wire
Every smart home device that works with Matter
Aqara’s new seven-inch home control tablet can replace a light switch
These smart lights could solve the kitchen cabinet problem
Hue launches a pricey new sunrise lamp
Smart string light showdown: Nanoleaf versus Lifx
The best floodlight camera to buy right now
How to move a smart home
Moving a smart home - The Smart Home Show
Living with the ghost of a smart home’s past
Smart ceiling light showdown: Aqara T1M versus Nanoleaf Skylight
Binding should be the next big thing for smart home devices
Aqara adds support for 50 new Matter device types
Flic is ready to control all your Matter devices
Thread is Matter’s secret sauce for a better smart home
Google Nest Thread border routers
Google TV Streamer review: smarter than your average set-top box
Google Nest Hub (2nd-gen) review: sleep on it
Why Thread is Matter’s biggest problem right now
The four changes in Thread 1.4 that could fix the protocol
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In this bonus episode of The Vergecast, Senior Reviewer Victoria Song sits down with a bunch of Verge staffers to talk about how they use AI tools in their everyday lives. Not all of it went smoothly — we definitely get into the ways these tools fall short — but we explore how AI can be used to help bedtime go more smoothly for parents, plan big cross-country moves, supplement your internet searches (always double-check!), and even vibe code an app for your next tabletop role-playing game.
If you have any examples where AI was useful to you, we’d love to hear them. (For what it’s worth, we’d also love to hear stories where it spectacularly failed.) Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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It’s a huge week in AI, with OpenAI releasing GPT-OSS and GPT-5, Grok getting deeply problematic again with its “spicy” video generator, and Tim Cook admitting that Apple may need to cut some deals. Then we talk the age gating of the internet and how you might soon need an ID card to get just about anywhere online. Finally, the Lightning Round gets re-rebranded. Adi Robertson and Alex Heath join the show to discuss.
Further reading:
GPT-5 is being released to all ChatGPT users
OpenAI releases a free GPT model that can run on your laptop
Why open-source AI became an American national priority
Mark Zuckerberg promises you can trust him with superintelligent AI
xAI’s new Grok image and video generator has a ‘spicy’ mode
Grok’s ‘spicy’ video setting instantly made me Taylor Swift nude deepfakes
I tested Grok’s Valentine sex chatbot and it (mostly) behaved
Tim Cook says Apple ‘must’ figure out AI and ‘will make the investment to do it’
Tim Cook says Apple is ‘open to’ AI acquisitions
Ready or not, age verification is rolling out across the internet
The UK is now age-gating the internet
The UK is slogging through an online age-gate apocalyps
The UK’s new age-gating rules are easy to bypass
Reddit and Discord’s UK age verification can be defeated by Death Stranding’s photo mode
Reddit rolls out age verification in the UK to comply with new rules
Five EU states to test age verification app to protect children
The EU approach to age verification
Commission presents guidelines and age verification app prototype for a safer online space for children
Porn age-gating is the future of the internet, thanks to the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court just upended internet law, and I have questions
Florida Sues Huge Porn Sites Including XVideos and Bang Bros Over Age Verification Law
“Over the last two and a half years, 19 states – home to more than a third of Americans – have passed laws that require pornography websites to confirm a user’s age by checking a government-issued ID or scanning their face, among other methods.”
Google is using AI age checks to lock down user accounts
Today's Supreme Court Decision on Age Verification Tramples Free Speech and Undermines Privacy
Age Verification Harms Users of All Ages
Blocking Access to Harmful Content Will Not Protect Children Online, No Matter How Many Times UK Politicians Say So
Zero Knowledge Proofs Alone Are Not a Digital ID Solution to Protecting User Privacy
Age Verification in the European Union: The Commission's Age Verification App
RFK Jr. pulls $500 million in funding for mRNA vaccine contracts
Epic just won its Google lawsuit again, and Android may never be the same
Google has just two weeks to begin cracking open Android, it admits in emergency filing
Instagram adds a reposts feed and rips off Snap Maps
OpenAI charts crime
OpenAI gets caught vibe graphing
Nintendo raises the Switch 1 price from $299 to $339
Apple says Trump’s tariffs are adding another $1 billion to its costs
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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This week on The Vergecast, guest host Mia Sato talks to YouTube fitness pioneer Cassey Ho (better known as Blogilates) about the well-oiled machine that is the dupe economy. Ho shares her experience creating her own line of athletic wear that sooner or later gets ripped off by countless copycats — and how she tries to fight back.
Then, Mia brings an audio diary from a visit to Fabscrap, a textile recycling facility in Brooklyn, that is working to save fabric and other materials from the landfill. Fashion is a wasteful industry, not unlike tech — luckily, there are people like Fabscrap staff and volunteers who are working towards solutions.
Finally, Victoria Song swings by to help answer a hotline question about how to make the high-tech Clueless closet a reality. If you have a question for us, call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com.
Further reading
How dupes turned online shopping upside down
Lululemon sues Costco over viral alleged “dupes”
The US finally acknowledges textile waste in new report
Your stuff is actually worse now
Ghana becomes dumping ground for the world’s unwanted used clothes
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It’s time. The public betas for iOS 26, iPadOS 26, macOS 26, and more are finally out for everyone to try. Jake Kastrenakes, Vee Song, and Antonio G. Di Benedetto give their takes on Apple’s Liquid Glass design language after two months of living with it. Antonio shares his experiences with macOS and the upgraded Spotlight, and Vee dives into the ups and downs of watchOS’s AI fitness coach. Then, Andy Hawkins and Eater's Matthew Kang talk about Tesla’s rough quarter, the new Tesla Diner, and what Epic Bacon has to do with it all. Finally, the Thunder Round returns, and we all learn what Labubus are.
Further reading:
Apple releases public betas of its new software updates with Liquid Glass
How to install the iOS 26 public beta
The biggest changes coming to your iPhone with iOS 26
Liquid Glass is fine, I guess
Apple’s Liquid Glass redesign is shaping up to be a snoozer on Macs
You can actually multitask on an iPad now and it’s the best new feature in 15 years
watchOS 26 preview: a subtler take on AI
Apple launches $20 subscription service to protect your gadgets
Tesla’s earnings hit a new low, with largest revenue drop in years
Elon Musk finally admits the new, more affordable Tesla is just a stripped down Model Y
Undeterred by limits, Elon Musk plots a big robotaxi expansion
Everything Eater Editors Ate at the Tesla Diner in Los Angeles
The Full Tesla Diner Menu, Revealed
The Tesla Diner Will Track When Guests Are Nearby to Prepare Their Orders
Inside the New Tesla Diner in Los Angeles
Anti-Elon Musk protesters are coming for Tesla’s new diner
Faraday Future is back with another wild EV that probably will never get made
Amazon buys Bee AI
Jake: AppleCare One is a good deal, but not for everyone
Uber’s making it easier for women riders and drivers to find each other
The frenzied, gamified chase for Labubus
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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Summer blockbusters like the new Superman and Jurassic World movies may be doing great at the box office, but promoting them is more complicated than ever. The old celebrity playbook of magazine profiles, TV chat shows and press junkets isn’t enough in an era of audience fragmentation. Publicists now have to strategize which podcasts to make time for, and whether their clients will eat chicken on YouTube with Amelia Dimoldenberg or Sean Evans.
This week on The Vergecast, guest host Mia Sato talks to Vulture’s Fran Hoepfner to break down the ever-changing new media circuit, whether you’re a beloved A-lister, a formerly-beloved A-lister, or an aspiring A-lister.
Then, we take a deep dive with Sarah Fackrell into a controversial legal tactic brands are using to go after online sellers hawking everything from grumpy cat T-shirts to closet hooks.
Finally, Victoria Song joins Mia to answer a Vergecast hotline from a listener wondering whether an AI translator will be able to keep up with his partner’s Colombian mother. If you’ve got a question for us, call 866-VERGE11 or e-mail vergecast@theverge.com.
Further reading:
Box Office: ‘Superman’ Surpasses $400 Million Globally, ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ Nears $650 Million Milestone
The Celebrity Press-Tour Road Map
Fame and Frustration On the New Media Circuit
Sydney woman who sold a cartoon cat T-shirt told to pay US$100,000 in Grumpy Cat copyright case
How Does a Mom Get Slapped With a $250,000 Judgment Over $380 of Homemade Luke Combs Merch? Experts Cite ‘Cottage Industry’ of Mass Counterfeit Suits in Illinois
A SAD Scheme of Abusive Intellectual Property Litigation
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Would you like Siri more if it had a face? This week on The Vergecast, we’re talking about AI assistants getting smarter… and uncomfortably personal. The Verge’s Jennifer Pattison Tuohy joins the show to talk about her early tests of Alexa Plus, which is finally AI-powered and a lot more capable. Jake shares his uncomfortable first interaction with Grok’s anime girlfriend. And Waveform cohost David Imel is here to talk about Sony’s RX1R III and other premium “compact” cameras.
Finally, the THUNDER ROUND is back. New, improved, and still loud.
Further reading:
24 hours with Alexa Plus: we cooked, we chatted, and it kinda lied to me
Alexa Plus launches to “small number” of people More than a million people now have Alexa Plus
Elon Musk’s AI bot adds a ridiculous anime companion with ‘NSFW’ mode
I spent 24 hours flirting with Elon Musk’s AI girlfriend
System prompt dump of xAI / Grok’s new AI anime girlfriend
Elon Musk teases AI anime boyfriend based on Edward Cullen
“We will, of course, have another character inspired by Mr. Darcy”
xAI has open roles for building AI “waifus.”
US government announces $200 million Grok contract a week after ‘MechaHitler’ incident
Grok will no longer call itself Hitler or base its opinions on Elon Musk’s, promises xAI
Sony’s pocket-sized RX1R camera returns with its first update in 10 years
Original RX1R
RX1R II
Google exec: ‘We’re going to be combining ChromeOS and Android’
Our biggest questions about ChromeOS and Android merging
Ikea goes all in on Matter/Thread
Eric Migicovsky
Texts.com
Google Nest subscription
The next batch of emoji includes Bigfoot
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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On this episode of The Vergecast, we’re going to dive deep into why accessible design is universal design. First, guest host Victoria Song will chat with Jason Valley, a visually impaired Verge reader. Jason initially reached out to Victoria after her Live AI hands-on, challenging the notion that the feature was a “solution looking for a problem to solve.” Jason shares how the tech has helped him live a more independent life, what he’s hoping to see improve, and how the blind and low-vision community has enthusiastically embraced the technology.
After that, Victoria sits down with Be My Eyes CEO Mike Buckley. Be My Eyes is an app that pairs blind and low-vision users with sighted volunteers to help them go about their day. Buckley gives his thoughts about how accessible tech design benefits everyone, why smart glasses and AI are a natural combo, and what challenges and opportunities in this space remain.
And finally, we have features reporter Mia Sato on to answer a spicy question about smart glasses from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com). Specifically, do smart glasses belong in the bedroom?
Further reading:
Live AI on Meta’s smart glasses is a solution looking for a problem
Meta’s smart glasses can now describe what you’re seeing in more detail
The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses actually make the future look cool
Be My Eyes AI offers GPT-4-powered support for blind Microsoft customers
The principles of wearable etiquette
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Summer phone season kicks off with Samsung’s latest launch. Jake, Vee, and Allison talk about Samsung’s new lineup of foldables, including the very thin new Z Fold 7 and Allison’s disdain for the Z Flip 7 FE. Vee has impressions of Samsung’s new Galaxy Watch 8 lineup and its squircle-y new redesign. Then, it’s time to talk Big Tech shakeups. Apple’s COO is leaving, Zuckerberg is buying himself an AI dream team, X’s CEO is out — and its chatbot Grok is on a rampage. Finally, big things are in store for the Lightning Round… which shall henceforth be known as the THUNDER ROUND. Lots to talk about, including Lorde’s CD problems, Apple’s Liquid Glass changes, and HBO Max finally becoming HBO Max again.
Further reading:
Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2025: Everything announced at the July event
Galaxy Z Fold 7 hands-on: Samsung finally made the foldables we’ve been asking for
Samsung cuts price of its foldables with the Z Flip 7 FE
Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 series hands-on: squircle squad
Samsung seems to have leaked its own trifold phone design
Samsung says its trifold phone should launch ‘this year’
Samsung snuck a trifold tease into (January) Unpacked
One of Tim Cook’s possible successors is leaving Apple
Sabih Khan
Apple’s design team will report to Tim Cook
A close look at who could succeed Tim Cook
Mark Zuckerberg announces his AI ‘superintelligence’ super-group
Meta is paying $14 billion to catch up in the AI race
Meta’s ‘superintelligence’ hiring spree adds an AI leader from Apple
Pay packages of up to $300 million over four years
Meta is trying to win the AI race with money — but not everyone can be bought
X CEO Linda Yaccarino is stepping down after two years
X’s CEO is out after failing at basically everything she claimed she wanted
Threads is catching up to X on mobile
X has a new head of product
Elon Musk’s xAI buys Elon Musk’s X for $33 billion on paper
xAI updated Grok to be more ‘politically incorrect’
Grok stops posting text after flood of antisemitism and Hitler praise
“In other posts it referred to itself as “MechaHitler”.
Musk makes grand promises about Grok 4 in the wake of a Nazi chatbot meltdown
Adobe’s new camera app is making me rethink phone photography
Ikea’s latest speaker lamp ditches Sonos for Spotify and inexpensive Bluetooth
Ikea ditches Zigbee for Thread going all in on Matter smart homes
Perplexity launches Comet web browser
OpenAI’s next big launch could be an AI web browser
E Ink is turning the laptop touchpad into an e-reader for AI apps
Lorde’s new CD is so transparent that stereos can’t even read it
I tried playing Lorde’s new CD
Appeals court strikes down ‘click-to-cancel’ rule
Nothing’s ‘first true flagship’ phone plays it a little safe
Adding calendar events with a screenshot is AI at its finest
The government’s Apple antitrust lawsuit is still on
Apple just added more frost to its Liquid Glass design
Apple’s second-generation Vision Pro might launch this year
Nvidia briefly became the first $4 trillion company on Wednesday
The makers of Cameo just launched... a birthday-tracking app?
Nintendo is ending its cost-saving Switch game vouchers
HBO Max is officially HBO Max again
Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you.
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On this episode of The Vergecast, we kick off Hot Girl Vergecast Summer with a classic Vergecast segment: the mic test. Guest host Victoria Song is joined by Vergecast producers Andru Marino and Erick Gomez to see how the Nothing Headphone 1, Sony WH-1000XM6, Apple AirPods Max, and Bose QuietComfort Ultra hold up against what’s possibly the noisiest street in Brooklyn.
After that, Victoria is joined by Ladder CEO Greg Stewart to talk about what it takes to build a successful strength training app — especially for people just starting out. As it turns out, it’s quite challenging, between curating playlists, accommodating users’ different access to equipment, skill levels, and preferences for coaching styles. (And maybe, some occasional beef with Peloton?)
Lastly, we answer a question from the Vergecast Hotline (call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com) about AI fitness summaries, whether people actually like them, what’s frustrating about them, and what scenarios they might actually be useful for.
Want to learn more about the topics in this episode? Here are some handy dandy links for your reference:
Nothing Headphone 1 review
Sony WH-1000XM6 hands-on
Apple AirPods Max review
Bose QuietComfort Ultra review
A lazy person’s guide to getting into shape
Ladder isn’t done trolling Peloton
The unbearable obviousness of AI fitness summaries
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One way to think about the tech industry is just as a series of people trying to build stuff they saw in movies and on TV. Some of that tech is great, some of it is deeply dystopian, and most of it would make the world a very different place if it suddenly existed. In this episode, a bunch of us try to figure out which tech we actually want to use. David is joined by The Verge’s Allison Johnson, Jennifer Pattison-Tuohy, Mia Sato, and Victoria Song — aka the hosts of Hot Girl Vergecast Summer — to draft their way through the movie, show, and game tech they’d want to make real. Some of the picks you’ll expect, and some we bet has never crossed your mind. And some big-name tech goes undrafted!
Once you've finished the show, make sure you take the poll and tell us who won: https://forms.gle/Q1wFhpzCdM3B5bqj9
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The one thing that’s always kinda bothered me about vr is that you can never fully forget you’re in vr. Like, no matter what, you can still tell, ‘cause the graphics aren’t quite there yet for total immersion. But the games I found on https://braindancevr.com/ actually surprised me. Everything on the site looked impressive, of course, and at first, I thought it was just marketing hype. But then I tried it myself, and it turned out to be just as amazing in action! So yeah, if you’re looking for a top-tier, high-quality, and super realistic vr project and don’t mind adult content, I totally recommend giving it a shot.
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