#143 – Testing Our Audio Stack and Rethinking Support for 2026
Description
TW 143 Show Notes
Testing Our Audio Stack and Rethinking Support for 2026
This episode is a wide-ranging, very on-brand Technically Working conversation that starts with audio workflow testing and ends with bigger-picture decisions about the future of the show.
We spend time digging into what actually happens when we record with the Zoom Podtrack P4Next, , how computer audio is handled, and why VoiceOver and other system sounds can be harder to separate than people expect. A key takeaway is that once audio leaves your computer, it is just stereo audio, and whatever comes out is what gets recorded unless you do very intentional routing ahead of time.
From there, we revisit the idea of switching from Cleanfeed back to Zoom. The main driver is flexibility. If one or both of us are away from a computer and need to record from an iPhone or iPad, Cleanfeed is not an option. Zoom gives us more freedom, removes a extra subscription, and opens the door to potential YouTube livestreams. We also talk about Zoom’s Original Sound setting and why it finally feels usable.
Michael shares ongoing Raspberry Pi frustrations, including re-imaging systems, adding hardware based on advice from others, and why using separate microSD cards for different projects can be the right call. This turns into a broader conversation about hobby projects, learning by doing, and knowing when to ask for help.
Damashe walks through discovering damage to his MacBook Pro screen in a very real-world way while trying to complete an ID verification process. That discovery leads to a plan involving AppleCare, backups, wiping machines, storage limitations, and the general annoyance of migrating between Macs with different capacities.
We also talk about Bluetooth audio switching, why Apple’s automatic device switching is often more frustrating than helpful, and how shortcuts and third-party tools can give you back control over where your audio goes.
Later in the episode, we read and respond to listener comments and reviews. We talk candidly about the structure of the show, why it does not follow a traditional format, and who it is actually for. We acknowledge critic
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