

The Vergecast
The Verge
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.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 13, 2018 • 1h 12min
Updated Macbook Pros, Microsoft Surface Go, and this week in Elon
This week on The Vergecast, Nilay and Dieter discuss an Apple event they were invited to this week for Apple’s updated MacBook Pros. Along with Paul, they dive into how creatives are using these machines, and what these new specs are.
Another laptop announcement from this week is Microsoft’s Surface Go. The crew runs through their demo with the computer and discuss how it compares to the other Surface devices.
And continuing with our trend, we also have a new edition of “This week in Elon Musk,” hosted by science editor Liz Lopatto.
There’s a lot more in between that — like Paul’s newly sponsored segment “Hearrings” — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
01:36 - 10 years of app store
05:12- Apple’s new MacBook Pros have the latest Intel processors and quieter keyboards
21:58 - Apple worked with Blackmagic on a new external GPU
33:09 - This week in Elon Musk with Liz Lopatto
38:20 - Microsoft’s $399 Surface Go aims to stand out from iPads or Chromebooks
45:49 - Magic Leap is shipping its first headset this summer
51:56 - Justice Department appeals ruling in attempt to block massive AT&T–Time Warner merger
57:24 - Paul’s weekly segment “Hearrings”
1:00:23 - YouTube TV goes down (again) during World Cup
1:02:43 - Xbox One is getting Dolby Vision support
1:03:32 - Apple will end its photo printing operation in September
1:06:55 - This amazing new web tool lets you create microsites that exist solely as URLs
1:08:09 - This app reads Wikipedia to teach you about the cities you’re driving through Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jun 29, 2018 • 1h 3min
macOS Mojave beta, Microsoft Surface USB-C dongle, and this week in Elon Musk
The Vergecast starts off this week in a traditional fashion with a talk about dongles — Microsoft’s $80 USB-C dongle to be exact. But there’s a whole bunch of little things that also happened this week that Nilay, Dieter, and Paul discuss. We’ve got Apple acknowledging the problem with its MacBook keyboards, Google demoing Duplex, and Apple releasing the Mojave public beta.
Also this week, we bring you two new rotating segments on the show. First we have transportation reporter Sean O’Kane with “This Week in Elon Musk” — a rundown of the news that happened this week in the Elon Musk canon. Second, culture reporters Megan Farokhmanesh and Bijan Stephen run though their favorite “Culture Headlines” on The Verge this week.
And of course we’ve got Paul’s weekly segment that he does every week, “Rhymes With What’s Poppin’,” so if you listen to the whole show, you’ve got a stew going.
02:20 - Microsoft’s Surface USB-C dongle launches on June 29th for $79.99
09:15 - Apple acknowledges faulty MacBook and MacBook Pro keyboards with new repair program
15:00 - macOS Mojave is now available in public beta
20:59 - Intel now faces a fight for its future
29:06 - This week in Elon Musk with Sean O’Kane
33:41 - Google Duplex really works and testing begins this summer
42:03 - BlackBerry Key2 review: a keyboard with a phone
42:59 - LG says screw everything, we’re doing five cameras for the V40
43:57 - The Galaxy Note 9 hits the FCC, with launch of Samsung’s next flagship presumably on the horizon
45:51 - AT&T more than doubles ‘admin fee’ for every wireless customer
48:31 - Culture headlines with Megan and Bijan
52:58 - Honda retires its famed Asimo robot
53:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “Rhymes with whats poppin”
55:58 - Amazon adds voice control to its Alexa iOS app
59:19 - Sonos Beam review: living room upgrade Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jun 22, 2018 • 1h 26min
Recode's Kara Swisher, AT&T - Time Warner, and IGTV
Instagram announced on Wednesday a standalone app called IGTV, a place for watching long-form vertical video. Casey and Ashely — who went to Instagram’s event that announced the app — talk with Nilay, Dieter, and Paul about their initial feelings about the platform and predict how it will fit into the social mediasphere.
Also, Nilay Patel sits down with Kara Swisher to talk about the recent AT&T and Time Warner merger. Kara published a book in 2003 about the AOL and Time Warner merger There Must Be a Pony in Here Somewhere (the merger split off in 2009) so the two discuss the similarities and differences between the two mergers and what they can potentially mean when distribution companies own content.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment (now up for sale) “Shaavoop” — so listen to it all and you’ll get it all.
01:54 - Instagram announces IGTV, a standalone app for longer videos
19:33 - AT&T launches new WatchTV streaming service at aggressive $15-per-month price
27:26 - Tinder parent company buys anti-Tinder dating app Hinge
35:51 - Kara Swisher talks AT&T - Time Warner merger
1:07:12 - Paul’s weekly segment “Shaavoop”
1:11:51 - What happens if Apple loses its Supreme Court App Store antitrust appeal?
1:19:27 - Apple’s AirPower charging mat rumored to ship in September following ‘technical hurdles’
1:19:48 - Apple and Oprah are teaming up to make videos Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jun 15, 2018 • 1h 44min
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence, E3, and net neutrality ends
In addition to our classic Nilay, Dieter, and Paul trio, we’ve added a few things this week.
To give you the best coverage of E3, culture editor Laura Hudson gives us a quick rundown of the news from the expo to start off the show
In the second half of the show, Nilay sits down with Sonos CEO Patrick Spence.
Don’t worry, there’s plenty of other classic Vergecast — some gadget talk, Paul’s weekly segment (you know, “How big is the Moon?”), and some deep dives into net neutrality, antitrust law, and Comcast’s $65 million bid on 21st Century Fox.
02:06 - Laura Hudson’s E3 roundup
07:13 - Sony issues weak response to Fortnite cross-play controversy on PS4 and Switch
11:26 - Microsoft is getting ready for the next Xbox vs. PlayStation console war
16:33 - Joseph Gordon-Levitt is defending a controversial plan to crowdsource Beyond Good and Evil 2 art
25:01 - Interview with CEO of Sonos Patrick Spence
1:02:49 - Paul’s weekly segment “How big is the moon?”
1:06:28 - I picked up a Boring Company Not-A-Flamethrower and it’s mine now
1:07:04 - The Boring Company’s Chicago project seems awfully cheap for something so big
1:11:18 - HTC U12 Plus review: fixing what didn’t need to be broken
1:12:54 - Samsung upgrades the Chromebook Plus with a second camera and new processor
1:13:44 - Eero promises not to brick routers if you don’t pay a subscription
1:17:47 - Net neutrality is dead — what now?
1:19:48 - Comcast makes $65 billion offer to steal 21st Century Fox away from Disney Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jun 8, 2018 • 1h 13min
WWDC, Sonos Beam, and Microsoft buys Github
Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference happened this week, and Nilay, Dieter, Jake, and Ashley are on top of it.
Second half of the show, we’ve got Dieter’s exclusive look at the Sonos Beam, Microsoft buying GitHub, a new Fire TV thingy, and breaking news for Essential.
There’s a whole lot more in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment (hosted by Jake Kastrenakes) “Hey look at this thing I just found on theverge.com“ — so if you listen to it all, you’ll get it all.
02:48 - Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference
04:35 - Siri will soon be able to pull off multistep routines through Shortcuts
15:40 - Walkie-Talkie on the Apple Watch is a clever riff on FaceTime Audio
19:01 - Apple’s Memoji lets you create an Animoji of yourself
23:35 - Apple CarPlay will soon let you use Google Maps, Waze, and other third-party maps
25:21 - Apple will let developers port iOS apps to macOS in 2019
33:51 - The Apple TV is finally getting Dolby Atmos support
38:56 - The Essential Phone’s first new module since launch is a magnetic headphone jack
41:02 - The Beam is Sonos’ ambitious attempt to win the living room
50:40 - Amazon’s Fire TV Cube is an Echo, streaming box, and universal remote in one
55:05 - Paul’s weekly segment “Hey look at this thing I just found on theverge.com” by Jake
57:30 - Microsoft confirms it’s acquiring GitHub for $7.5 billion
1:00:07 - Facebook accused of giving over 60 device makers inappropriate access to user data
1:06:06 - Instagram might soon let you post videos up to an hour long
1:09:48 - California’s net neutrality bill could set a national standard Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jun 1, 2018 • 1h 6min
Code Conference, Pixel 3 rumors, and WWDC preview
The Vergecast is here once again to fulfill the weekly prophecy of illuminating tech news. This week, Dieter is at Recode’s Code Conference, but he still calls in to talk to Nilay, Natt, and Paul about what he saw and heard.
Also, Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference is next week, so the crew runs through what to expect.
There’s a whole lot in between that — like Paul’s weekly segment “Embarrassingly parallel,” rumors about the next Pixel phone, and some deep philosophy about whether a phone is a tool or an instrument — so listen to it all, and you’ll get it all.
00:41 - Code Conference 2018
5:32 - Evan Spiegel on Facebook: ‘We would really appreciate it if they copied our data protection practices’
11:56 - AT&T and Verizon both want to run massive ad-tracking networks to rival Facebook
21:03 - Apple’s WWDC 2018: iOS 12, macOS, and what else to expect
27:31 - Apple’s AirPlay 2 with multiroom audio streaming and stereo
37:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “Embarrassingly parallel”
40:24 - Cryptocurrency mining rigs are just PCs — so why won’t Stripe let you sell them?
44:04 - Google reportedly planning Pixel 3 for October, and the XL model will have a notch
48:26 - 2018 O’Reilly AI Keynote, Thomas Reardon, CEO, CTRL-labs
53:02 - Your phone is an instrument, not a tool Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

May 25, 2018 • 1h 11min
Elon Musk, Red Hydrogen, and Zuckerberg in the EU
Are you driving somewhere for the holiday weekend? Here at _The Verge_ we'd like to encourage you to use a car that's wholly or at least primarily powered by dirty fossil fuels. On this week's episode of _The Vergecast_, Nilay, Natt, Casey, and Paul discuss how we're financially beholden to Big Car, and what to do about it now that Elon Musk has called us out on our bias.
We also got a chance to discuss Nilay's insane theory about Apple's dongle suppression campaign, Mark Zuckerberg's wacky trip to the EU, and spoke with unearned confidence about Dieter's hands-on with the Red Hydrogen One. Paul's weekly report on robots that do backflips is, of course, also something that happened.
01:50 - Elon Musk
27:54 - Red Hydrogen One hands-on
32:34 - RIP Essential?
36:37 - BlackBerry KEY2
41:19 - Dongle suppression EXPOSED
47:15 - Paul’s weekly segment “Robot backflip weekly update”
51:08 - GDPR is happening
55:54 - Mark Zuckerberg in the EU
1:03:51 - Casey shamelessly plugs Converge
1:06:35 - What’s happening in the rest of tech Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

May 18, 2018 • 1h 4min
The Selfish Ledger, YouTube Premium, and One Plus 6
The Vergecast trio comes together this week to discuss an internal Google video that was obtained by The Verge titled “the Selfish Ledger.” That topic takes up a good chunk of the show, but there’s a lot more after that.
Nilay, Paul, and Dieter jump into other Google-related topics, like what’s happening to YouTube Red, Google Duplex theories, and a list of gadget news.
They were able to fit in Paul’s weekly segment he does every week “Don’t block my chain,” so if you listen to it all, you’ll get it all.
04:04 - Google’s Selfish Ledger is an unsettling vision of Silicon Valley social engineering
19:02 - Apple Watch behavioral science
19:47 - Google Duplex demo, or say whether the calls were edited
23:56 - Google Chrome is removing the secure indicator from HTTPS sites in September
28:12 - Entire Nest ecosystem of smart home devices goes offline
30:16 - YouTube Music and YouTube Premium announced as YouTube Red replacement
39:28 - OnePlus 6 announced with a glass back and a notched 6.3-inch display
41:42 - The RED Hydrogen One is coming to AT&T and Verizon this summer
44:16 - Onkyo’s receivers will work with Sonos, thanks to upcoming June firmware update
46:33 - A new Wi-Fi standard could let different mesh routers work together
48:41 - Paul’s weekly segment “Don’t block my chain”
52:46 - Microsoft’s Surface Hub 2 is designed for an office of the future
53:29 - Microsoft reportedly working on $400 Surface tablets to compete with the iPad
53:44 - The desktop belongs to Electron
1:01:38 - Uber CEO: our future won’t just be cars Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

May 11, 2018 • 32min
Bonus: Ctrl-Walt-Delete special edition - iMac 20th anniversary
Ctrl-Walt-Delete returns for a special episode all about the iMac 20th anniversary. Walt Mossberg and Nilay Patel reminisce on the introduction of Apple's iMac, and how it influenced the open web and computers going forward. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

May 11, 2018 • 1h 19min
Google I/O and Microsoft Build
So much happened this week in the world of The Verge. Both Google and Microsoft hosted their annual developer conferences and announced a whole bunch of stuff, so Nilay, Paul, Natt, and Dieter gather to break it down and give you the highlights.
And this wouldn’t be an episode of The Vergecast without the segment Paul does every week, “Kick flip the kickstand script.” It’s a big one, so listen to the whole episode to get everything you need for this massive week in tech news.
01:28 - 10 Biggest announcements from Google I/O
03:45 - The selfishness of Google Duplex
21:09 - Android P
26:41 - At I/O Google showed its willingness to change and shape our lives
34:33 - JBL’s Android-powered soundbar does a lot of things right
38:43 - Volvo’s native Google integration is the next level for Android Auto
44:06 - Six new Google Assistant voices, including John Legend
47:49 - Nadella’s Microsoft
56:51 - What is edge computing?
1:08:16 - Paul’s weekly segment “Kick flip the kickstand script”
1:10:38 - Net neutrality, mergers, AT&T, and Michael Cohen: what we know so far Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices


