The Vergecast

The Verge
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111 snips
Apr 3, 2026 • 1h 45min

Apple's best product ever

They rank Apple’s 50 greatest gadgets and software, with big debates over the iPhone, iPod, Mac OS X, AirPods, and QuickTime. There’s also a sharp detour into AI’s shift toward enterprise tools, a look at the fediverse through Flipboard Surf, an iMac display resurrection project, and rising gadget prices caused by supply chaos.
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161 snips
Mar 31, 2026 • 1h 29min

Apple at 50: the good and the bad

Jason Snell, veteran Apple journalist and Six Colors publisher, weighs Apple at 50 through hardware highs, software stumbles, cautious design, and the power of its ecosystem. Anil Dash, blogger and open web advocate, dives into why video podcasting could become more closed and why Apple’s approach matters. Plus, a fun debate on replacing your phone with a watch, tablet, or maybe a foldable.
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302 snips
Mar 27, 2026 • 1h 41min

Meta's court losses could be just the beginning

Courtroom fights over social media design take center stage, with big consequences for algorithms, notifications, and liability. There’s also a strange router ban, AI-powered music fraud, and a look at why chatbots are turning back into apps. Plus, Grammarly sparks questions about likeness and attribution.
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138 snips
Mar 24, 2026 • 59min

Welp, I bought an iPhone again

Allison Johnson, The Verge’s senior phone reviewer, joins for a lively phone-switching showdown. They dig into why moving between phones is still such a mess. Foldables and flip phones get put on trial. Android and iOS face off over apps, notifications, spam calls, and assistant smarts. Then the conversation turns to AI tools that can actually operate your phone for you.
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366 snips
Mar 20, 2026 • 1h 46min

Why people really hate AI

Allison Johnson, a Verge reviewer covering phones and gadgets, joins a lively chat about why AI keeps turning people off, from missing must-have uses to backlash over jobs, creativity, and hype. Then things get weird with Samsung’s vanished trifold phone, an eBay hunt, tampered hardware, and the bigger question of whether foldables solve anything at all.
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356 snips
Mar 17, 2026 • 1h 7min

The future of code is exciting and terrifying

Paul Ford, writer and technologist behind Ftrain and Aboard, talks about AI coding tools, software built by swarms of agents, the return of personal web projects, and the tension between exciting new tools and big fears about jobs and tech power. Dominic Preston, Verge journalist covering smartphones, joins for a tour of global phone markets, giant camera hardware, foldables, and quirky phone features the US rarely gets.
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255 snips
Mar 15, 2026 • 1h 49min

The MacBook Neo's a winner

They gush over the surprisingly affordable MacBook Neo, its hardware, repairability, and how it feels like an iPhone with a keyboard. They debate whether the Neo could replace iPads and how Apple’s pricing shook PC makers. They unpack Project Helix and the idea of Xbox becoming a Windows gaming layer. Lightning topics include FCC drama, studio mergers, and an AI identity scandal at Grammarly.
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100 snips
Mar 10, 2026 • 1h 10min

The twist in the Ticketmaster antitrust fight

Lauren Feiner, courtroom reporter covering antitrust and Live Nation/Ticketmaster, breaks down the surprising DOJ settlement and what it means for ongoing state actions. Hayden Field, senior AI reporter, outlines Anthropic and OpenAI’s tangled ties to the Department of Defense and the stakes for AI contractors. Short, punchy conversations on legal twists, military AI deals, and whether foldable phones are worth it.
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65 snips
Mar 8, 2026 • 1h 15min

Version History: Furby

Sean Hollister, senior consumer tech reporter with gadget chops, and Vee Song, technology reporter focused on cultural tech trends, chat about Furby. They explore Furby as an early social AI, its eerie mechanical charm, the engineering and manufacturing scrambles behind the craze, debates about what animal it resembles, Furbish and the illusion of learning, and the toy’s legacy in hacking and design.
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185 snips
Mar 6, 2026 • 1h 44min

This phone starts fires on purpose

Dominic Preston, technology journalist who covered Mobile World Congress with hands-on phone reports. He walks through wild MWC hardware: a phone that intentionally starts fires, Honor’s gimbal-style Robot Phone and AI companion, modular and foldable innovations, Xiaomi’s Leica‑tuned camera moves, and the oddball accessories and repairs shaping overseas phone design.

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