By John Gruber
Special guest Andru Edwards joins the show. Topics include Googleâs Pixel 10 event and the Pixel 10 family of devices, AIâs effect on computational photography, foldable phones, and some speculation on Appleâs September 9 âAwe Droppingâ event.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include 007 logo creator Joe Caroffâs death at 103, Googleâs weird âMade by Googleâ event hosted by Jimmy Fallon, the UK supposedly dropping its demand for an iCloud encryption backdoor, and Appleâs workaround for the Apple Watch blood oxygen sensor patent stalemate.
Special guest Louie Mantia joins the show to talk about Liquid Glass, the various OS 26 updates, and the worrisome state of Appleâs UI design overall. Also: sandwiches.
Jason Snell returns to the show to talk about the early PC platform rivalries of the 1980s, iOS 26 leaks (and Apple suing YouTuber Jon Prosser), the various Apple OS 26 public betas and the state of Liquid Glass, and more. (Where by âmoreâ I mean a little baseball and keyboard nerdery.)
Special guest David Smith returns to the show for a developerâs perspective look at WWDC 2025.
Chance Miller returns to the show to discuss the news and announcements from WWDC 2025.
Recorded in front of a live audience at The California Theatre in San Jose Tuesday evening, special guests Joanna Stern and Nilay Patel join me to discuss Appleâs announcements at WWDC 2025.
Patrick McGee joins the show to discuss his must-read new book, Apple in Chinaâââone of the best books about Apple anyone has ever written.
Stephen Hackett, proprietor of 512 Pixels and co-founder of Relay.fm, joins the show. Topics include: IO (or if you will, io), the new joint venture of OpenAI and Jony Iveâs LoveFrom; the sheer fantasy of âMade in Americaâ iPhones; and Fortniteâs return to the US App Store.
Craig Mod returns to the show to discuss his splendid new book, Things Become Other Things. Other topics include creating with AI tools (including programming), social media permanence vs. ephemerality, and more.
Special guest Glenn Fleishman returns to the show for episode 420 on 4/20, but everyoneâs sober, I swear. Topics include Trumpâs dumb tariffs and Glennâs smart new edition of his book Six Centuries of Type & Printing.
MG Siegler returns to the show to talk about the drama surrounding Siri and Apple Intelligence.
Craig Hockenberry returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs new hardware this weekâââM3 iPad Airs, A16 regular iPads, M4 MacBook Airs, and the M4 Max and surprising M3 Ultra Mac Studios. And we go deep on The Iconfactoryâs years-in-the-making new app, Tapestryâââa universal timeline for the Internet.
Special guest: Paul Kafasis. Special topics: Siri/Super Bowl nonsense, âGulf of Mexico/Americaâ nonsense, the iPhone 16e gets announced, and a veritable Bond villain buys the rights to the James Bond movie franchise.
Kagi founder and CEO Vlad Prelovac joins the show to talk about the business of web search, the thinking behind Kagiâs own amazing search engine, and their upstart WebKit-based browser Orion.
Special guest Allen Pike joins the show to talk about the state of generative AI and how Apple Intelligence measures up (so far). Also: some speculation on Appleâs pending acquisition of the ever-difficult-to-pronounce Pixelmator.
Joanna Stern returns to the show to talk about our new best friends, AI chatbots, and I chime in with how the Voight-Kampff test got it all wrong.
This again. Jiminy. Well, once more, letâs talk around another election, and try, by doing so, to maybe express something about it.
Dan Moren returns to the show to discuss this weekâs introductions of the first M4 Macs: iMac, Mac Mini, and MacBook Pros.
Tyler Stalman joins the show to discuss the iPhone 16 lineupâs cameras, and the state of iPhone photography.
Jason Snell returns to the show to discuss Appleâs September product announcements, and Metaâs Orion prototype AR glasses. Absolutely no baseball talk, almost.
Nilay Patel returns to the show to consider the iPhones 16.
Special guest Taegan Goddard, longtime writer and founder of Political Wire, joins the show to talk about the past, present, and future of independent media.
Chance Miller, ace reporter (and editor-in-chief) for 9to5Mac, joins the show to talk about the latest changes to Appleâs DMA compliance plans with iOS, expectations for the September Apple event, and more.
Christina Warren (a.k.a. âMary Brownâ) returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs new iOS 18.1 and MacOS 15.1 betas (featuring Apple Intelligence), a little reminiscing about Gil Amelio and Steve Jobs, and the bizarre saga of TUAW, resurrected as a zombie AI slopsite.
Special guest Hunter Hillegas, author of the excellent Vegas Mate app, joins the show to discuss euphemistic emoji, the CrowdStrike fiasco, and the closing of the iconic Mirage resort in Las Vegas.
John Moltz returns to the show for a holiday-week look at the best of recent prestige streaming content, particularly Apple TV+. And, yes, a bit on the latest Apple/EU/DMA drama.
Quinn Nelson, renowned host of Snazzy Labs, returns to the show to recap the highlights of WWDC: Apple Intelligence, platform updates, and the latest salvos from the EC regarding Appleâs compliance with the DMA.
Recorded in front of a live (and lively) audience at The California Theatre in San Jose Tuesday evening, special guests John Giannandrea, Craig Federighi, and Greg Joswiak join me to discuss Appleâs announcements at WWDC 2024.
Craig Hockenberry returns to the show. Topics include the upcoming Daylight DC-1 monochrome âe-paperâ tablet, more thoughts on the new iPad Pros, and what we expect/hope for from Apple at WWDC. Also: a one-button keyboard.
Special guest M.G. Siegler returns to the show to talk about the new iPad Pros, the iPadOS/MacOS functional gulf, the OpenAI/Scarlett Johansson controversy, and M.G.âs new blog Spyglass.
Federico Viticci returns to the show to discuss MacStoriesâs 15th anniversary, Appleâs upcoming âLet Looseâ keynote for new iPad hardware, and more.
The one and only John Moltz returns to the show to talk about the relative dearth of original content for Vision Pro, WWDC rumors and guesses, and, yes, a wee bit about Appleâs regulatory/antitrust tribulations.
Jason Snell returns to the show to talk about the DOJâs antitrust lawsuit against Apple. And sports gambling.
Special guest David Barnard joins the show. Topics include the App Storeâââpast, present, and post-DMA futureâââand the excellent new update to his app Weather Up.
Adam Lisagor returns to the show to discuss, while wearing, Apple Vision Pro.
Matthew Panzarinoâââproprietor of the excellent new website/newsletter The Obsessorâââreturns to the show to talk aboutâââwhat else?âââthe Vision Pro.
Marco Arment returns to the show. Topics include the Apple-Masimo patent dispute over Apple Watch blood oxygen sensors, the new External Payment Links entitlement for the App Store, and more.
Appleâs 2023 year in review, with Callsheet developer Casey Liss.
Special holiday guest: John Siracusa. Special holiday topics: the Apple/Masimo patent dispute over the blood oxygen sensors in Apple Watches, the ongoing Beeper Mini/iMessage saga, iOS 17.3âs upcoming Stolen Device Protection feature, Appleâs new Journal app. Also, an ode to big-ass tower desktops.
Nilay Patel returns to the show. Topics include the iPhones 15, journalism in the age of AI, and what itâs like to have Barack Obama on your podcast.
Special guest Gabe Rivera, founder of the indispensable news aggregator Techmeme, joins the show to talk about the state of news and social media.
Christina Warren joins the show to talk about Appleâs âScary Fastâ event, introducing the new M3 MacBook Pros and 24-inch iMac.
Special guests Sebastiaan de With and Ben Sandofsky, co-founders of Lux, join the show to talk about their apps (Halide, Spectre, and Orion) and speculate about next weekâs âScary Fastâ Apple event.
Special guest John Moltz joins the show to discuss the various iPhone 15 â-gatesâ, rumors of Jony Ive working with OpenAI on an âAI deviceâ, and more.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show to talk about the new iPhones 15.
Flexibits co-founder Michael Simmons returns to the show to talk about his experience at Appleâs developer lab for Vision Pro, and his enthusiasm for the future of spatial computing.
Jason Snell, come on down. Youâre the next contestant on The Talk Show. Special topics: John Warnock and Adobe, Disney and Apple, the iMacâs 25th anniversary, and more.
Craig Hockenberry, the special guest with the special fleshy palms, returns to the show. Topics include Twitter/X, foldable phones, and our favorite features in iOS 17 now that itâs in public beta.
Joanna Stern returns to the show. Topics include the launch of Threads, Appleâs Vision Pro, and iPhone/iCloud device security.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show for a post-WWDC discussion about Vision Pro and VisionOS.
Christian Selig, developer of the excellent apps Apollo and Pixel Pals, joins the show to talk about Redditâs Twitter-fication, along with highlights from WWDC 2023.
Back in San Joseâs historic California Theatre for the first time since 2019, special guests John Ternus, Mike Rockwell, Craig Federighi, and Greg Joswiak join me to discuss the news and announcements from WWDC 2023.
Guy English returns to the show to talk about the live show from WWDC, Mac Pros past and future, Marathon and Mac gaming, and Appleâs seemingly imminent XR headset. And definitely not to talk about Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.
Neil Jhaveri, founder and lead developer of Mimestream, the terrific new native Mac email client for Gmail, joins the show to talk about email, Mac apps, and indie software development.
Special guest: Jason Snell. Topics: Headset, headseat, headset. And no baseball talk other than how games might look in VR. Also: Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro for iPad, and GMâs dumb decision to drop CarPlay.
John Moltz, ace reporter from The Daily Planet, returns to the show. Topics include Apple pushing ads through its own built-in apps, car shopping, and the burgeoning Twitter alternative Bluesky.
Special guest Quinn Nelson joins the show to talk about Appleâs rumored AR/VR headset, Apple silicon, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to discuss generative AI (and what Apple might soon do with it), iPhone passcodes and iCloud device security, HBO Max turning into just plain Max, and Make Something Wonderfulâââone more thing from Steve Jobs.
Daniel Jalkut returns to the show to talk about AI chat, new emoji, and Apple Music Classical.
Jason Kottke returns to the show to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Kottke.org.
Marco Arment returns to the show to discuss some genuinely startling revelations regarding iPhone and Apple ID security; the new HomePod 2; and our favorite electric vehicle maker. Also: coffee.
Special guest Dan Moren joins the show to talk about the new M2 MacBook Pros and Mac Minis, and the triumphant return of the full-sized HomePod.
Craig Hockenberry returns to the show to talk about the demise of third-party Twitter clients, the overall Twitter shitshow, touchscreens on the Mac, and the perils of autocorrect when you have a clever username.
Glenn Fleishman returns to the show to talk about reported setbacks in Appleâs silicon division, the LastPass vault leak and password management, and the frontiers of social networking. Also, the joys of modern air travel during the holidays.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about recent news (Twitter, Freeform, iCloud Advanced Data Protection, the EUâs new Digital Markets Act) and Appleâs 2022 year in review.
Friend of the show John Moltz returns to talk about Elon Musk steering Twitter into a multi-issue spat with Apple, Mastodon, and some streaming TV recommendations.
Christina Warren returns to the show to talk about the drama at Disney, tumult at Twitter, and how the hell to score Taylor Swift tickets.
Special guest: Anil Dash. A little about last weekâs U.S. midterm elections, and a lot about whatâs going on at Twitter under Elon Musk.
Federico Viticci returns to the show to talk about iPads, Stage Manager, and Appleâs ill-considered foray into expanding ads in the App Store.
Jason Snell returns to the show to talk about the new 10th-gen iPad and M2 iPads Pro.
Merlin Mann returns to the show to talk about AI image generation (along with a few asides).
Paul Kafasis returns to the show to talk about the iPhone 14 Pro, Apple Watch Ultra, AirPods Pro, and Rogue Amoebaâs 20th anniversary.
Nilay Patel returns to the show to talk about Appleâs âFar Outâ event, the iPhones 14, and The Vergeâs redesign.
Special guest Rosemary Orchard joins the show to talk about her new book, Take Control of Shortcuts, and the state of automation on iOS and MacOS.
Daniel Jalkut returns to the show. Topics include a serious discussion about CSAM detection at major cloud storage providers and messaging services. Also, a deep dive regarding the new iOS-UI-style rewrite of System Settings on the still-in-beta MacOS 13 Ventura, and thoughts on SwiftUI in general.
Very special guest John Moltz returns to the show to talk about Center Stage, Stage Manager, and all the other stages.
Special guest Michael Steeber joins the show to discuss his new project, The Apple Store Time Machineâââan intricately-detailed explorable walkthrough of four of Appleâs original retail stores.
Marco Arment returns to the show to talk about the new M2 MacBook Air and stuff.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show for more on Appleâs announcements from WWDC 2022, locking devices out of Face ID and Touch ID, passkeys, and more.
Jason Snell returns to the show to discuss the biggest threads from WWDC 2022âââin particular, Stage Manager and the M2 MacBook Air and 13-inch MacBook âProâ. No sports talk (unless you count soccer).
Special guests Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak join me to discuss the news from WWDC 2022, in front of a live audience at the new Apple Developer Center at Apple Park.
Very special guest: John Moltz. Very special topics: flat Apple Watches, USB-C iPhones, and more.
Special guest Tripp Mickle joins the show to talk about his new book, After Steve, reporting on the last decade at Apple.
Zach Gage joins the show to talk about game design and creativity, including his new game Knotwords.
Michael Simmons returns to the show to talk about the Studio Displayâs camera (and this weekâs beta firmware update to tweak its quality), how things have gone two years into Flexibitsâ move to subscription pricing for Fantastical and Cardhop, and Panicâs now-shipping Playdate.
Glenn Fleishman returns to the show to talk about Elon Muskâs impending acquisition of Twitter, Appleâs credibility problem when arguing against being required to allow sideloading on iOS, and Glennâs new (and much-needed) book, Take Control of Untangling Connections.
Paul Kafasis returns to the show to talk about Friday Night Baseball, Rogue Amoebaâs new Audio Hijack 4 release, and a bit of speculation on WWDC.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show to talk about Appleâs new Mac Studio and Studio Display.
Special guest Casey Liss joins the show to talk about Appleâs new Studio Display and what makes a good martini.
Special guests Tom Watson and Daniel Agee join the show to talk about Glass, their upstart photo sharing app and community.
Special guest Ken Kocienda, author of Creative Selection, joins the show to talk about his years at Apple and the creation of the original iPhone.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about unwanted AirTag tracking, and what we expect from Appleâs rumored March product event.
Jason Snell returns to the show to dissect the Six Colors 2021 Apple Report Card. Also: the care and feeding of mechanical keyboards.
Special guest: John Moltz. Special topics: Appleâs record-breaking but somehow yawn-inducing quarterly results, new features in the upcoming releases of MacOS 12.3 and iOS 15.4, the Neil YoungâJoe Rogan Spotify saga, and more.
Guy English returns to the show to talk about video games, the cold, the Heat, and the state of streaming video services.
Dieter Bohn joins the show to talk about his excellent new documentary, Springboard: The Secret History of the First Real Smartphoneâââa history of Handspring and the creators of the original PalmPilot.
Appleâs 2021 year in review, with special guest Rene Ritchie.
Emmy Award-winning Joanna Stern returns to the show. Topics include: Appleâs new iCloud âlegacy contactâ feature, the current state and future of VR headsets, Elon Musk, and more.
Merlin Mann returns to the show to discuss two brief topics (with a few asides): my dream of opening a steakhouse, and Peter Jacksonâs Beatles documentary Get Back.
Special guest Jim Dalrymple returns to the show to discuss the past and future of Apple-centric reporting.
Special guest David Smith returns to the show to talk about Apple Watch Series 7 and the state of WatchOS, Apple suing NSO Group, and more.
Dithering CEO Ben Thompson returns to the show to go deep on the concept of the metaverse.
Special guest Daniel Jalkut returns to the show to talk about the new MacBook Pros.
Very special guest John Moltz returns to the show to discuss the products Apple has released this week.
Special guest: Nilay Patel. Special topics: the iPhones 13, Apple Watch Series 7, kids today and the file system, the Lightningâ/âUSB-C debate, and, of course, our speculation about next weekâs âUnleashedâ Apple event.
Jason Snell returns to the show to talk about the new iPhones 13, new iPad Mini, Safari 15âs craptacular new tab UI, and the insightful questions posed to Kevin Durant on the Brooklyn Netsâ media day from Basketball Digestâs best NBA reporter.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show to talk about the new iPhones 13 and their camera systems.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show for a recap of this weekâs âCalifornia Streamingâ Apple Event: the iPhones 13, Apple Watch Series 7, and new iPads. Also, last weekâs decision in the Apple v. Epic lawsuit.
MG Siegler returns to the show to talk about last weekâs surprise announcement from Apple settling a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of U.S. App Store developers, and the various reactions to it. Also, a bit on App Store payment processing, and some speculation on who might succeed Tim Cook.
Christina Warren returns to the show to discuss Appleâs controversial child safety initiatives, the tumultuous summer of Safari 15 beta UI designs, and a bit more on MagSafe battery packs.
Special guest: John Moltz. Special topics: Playdate preorders, MagSafe battery packs, iPad keyboard covers, Facebook and NSO Group, Safari 15 betas, and Loki.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include: Appleâs new MagSafe Battery Pack, the Amnesty-International-Led exposĂŠ of NSO Groupâs state-sponsored phone hacking, Safari 15âs controversial new UI and Appleâs response, and a look back at year one of Apple silicon for Macs. Also: pizza.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about the nuances of sideloading, Appleâs antitrust pressures, and a look back at the announcements from WWDC 2021.
Special guests Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak join me to discuss the news from WWDC 2021: the all-new multitasking interface in iPadOS 15, on-device Siri, new privacy controls in Safari and Mail, MacOS 12 Monterey, and more.
Special guest: the one and only Joanna Stern. Topics: new iMacs, Touch ID vs. Face ID, remote controls, surveillance advertising, and people who want to make everything a video call when a good old-fashioned voice call would do.
Marco Arment returns to the show to talk about the new Apple TV remote control. (Also, the new M1 iMacs and iPad Pros.)
Glenn Fleishman returns to the show to talk about last weekâs âSpring Loadedâ product announcements from Apple: subscription podcasts, AirTags, Apple TV, colorful Apple Silicon iMacs, and the M1 iPad Pros.
Craig Mod joins the show to talk about writing, designing, filmmaking, what makes for good software, and building a successful membership program to support independent art. And: pizza toast.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to speculate about pending Apple product announcements and events. Lots of guessing, no wagering.
Special guest Jason Snell joins the show to reminisce over 20 years of Mac OS X. I mean OS X. Sorry, MacOS. Also: HomePod, Apple TV, and Intelâs awkward new ad campaign.
The state of the Mac, with special guest John Siracusa.
Christina Warren returns to the show to talk about Apple Car, Apple TV, Clubhouse, and Bloomberg hamfistedly revisiting âThe Big Hackâ.
John Moltz returns to the show to give stock market investment advice.
Mike Monteiro returns to the show to talk about the Capitol insurrection and riot, Twitter and Facebook permanently banning Donald Trump, the shutdown of Parler, the fate of liberal democracy, and Mikeâs new book, The Collected Angers.
As per holiday tradition at The Talk Show, a brief chat about Star Wars: The Mandalorian, with a cavalcade of special guests, including, but not necessarily limited to, Guy English and John Siracusa.
A look back at one hell of a year.
Matthew Panzarino joins the show to talk about Appleâs new AirPods Max headphones and the future of the Mac on Apple Silicon.
Nilay Patel returns to the show and we have nothing to talk about. You know, other than the M1 Macs and entire iPhone 12 lineup.
Joanna Stern returns to the show to talk about the new M1 MacBook Air and 13-inch MacBook Pro.
Another election. A different result. Letâs talk around it.
Jason Snell returns to the show to talk about the iPhone 12 and 12 Pro, the new iPad-Pro-style iPad Air, the remarkable state of the Mac, and David Lettermanâs battery-shopping trip to CVS.
MG Siegler returns to the show to talk about Apple Watch, the future of premium TV and movies, and a preview of next weekâs âHi, Speedâ Apple event.
Special guest âUnderscoreâ David Smith joins the show to talk about iOS 14 widgets, WatchOS complications, sleep tracking, and his App Store chart-topping hit Widgetsmith.
Special guest Michael Simmons joins the show. Topics include the release of iOS 14, widgets and home screen customization, pricing models for indie apps in the App Store era, and, of course, flying robot cameras.
Peter Kafka returns to the show to discuss the news from Appleâs âTime Fliesâ eventââânew Apple Watches, new non-Pro iPads, and particularly the Apple One services bundle.
John Moltz returns to the show. Poodles are great dogs. Windows stinks worse than ever. Everyone should watch Ted Lasso.
Special guest Anil Dash joins the show. Topics include the 25th anniversary of Windows 95, and the parallels between the cyber era of computing and todayâs App Store controversies.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include Phil Schiller advancing to Apple Fellow, Microsoftâs simmering spat with Apple over Xbox Game Pass and the App Storeâs ban on game streaming services, and Epicâs sizzling spat with Apple over, well, the entire concept of iOS as we know it.
Nilay Patel returns to the show to discuss this weekâs House antitrust hearing featuring testimony from Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos, Sundar Pichai, and Mark Zuckerberg.
Special guest Christina Warren joins the show. Topics include the App Store and antitrust, the general crumminess of video streaming service UIs, and historical examples of when Apple gets something wrong.
Adam Lisagor returns to the show. Topics include the cinematic and presentation style of Appleâs WWDC keynote, some post-production details on The Talk Showâs WWDC episode, the tribulations of producing professional videos during COVID-19, and the new sounds of MacOS 11 Big Sur.
Dan Frommer returns to the show for more analysis of WWDC 2020, including App Clips and the Macâs transition to Apple silicon.
Special guest Matthew Panzarino joins the show to talk about WWDC 2020.
John Gruber is joined by Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak to discuss the news from WWDC 2020: the Macâs transition to Apple Silicon, MacOS 11 Big Sur, iOS and iPadOS 14, and more.
Ben Thompson returns to the show and thereâs no sports talk because thereâs no sports. Instead: temperature scales, Joe Rogan and Spotify, and Dithering.
Special guest Adam Engst joins the show to celebrate 30 years of TidBITSâââthe only publication going strong today that started as a weekly HyperCard stack.
Dieter Bohn joins the show to talk about the iPad Magic Keyboard, the new iPhone SE, and the state of Android flagship phones.
Joanna Stern returns to the show to talk about working from home, the utter suckitude of laptop webcams, the new MacBook Air, and Face ID in our new world of face-mask-wearing.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about going independent after 11 years at iMore. Topics include the new MacBook Air and iPad Pros, and we answer questions sent by listeners.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include the brand new MacBook Air and iPad Pros, and, you know, global pandemics in the internet age.
Jason Snell returns to the show. Life during the COVID-19 pandemic, WWDC going online-only, Appleâs in-person on-campus workplace culture, speculation on upcoming Apple product releases, and more.
First-time guest Federico Viticci joins the show. Topics include how the coronavirus outbreak might affect WWDC, speculation on a possible March Apple event, the state of iPad keyboard (and trackpad) support, and iPadOS multitasking.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include Larry Tesler and his âno modesâ mantra for UI design, the state of malware on the Mac, third-party default apps on iOS, Apple and the coronavirus outbreak, and a record number of tips and tricks.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the iPad, and pay tribute to Kobe Bryant and Clayton Christensen.
Special guest Glenn Fleishman returns to the show. Topics include iPhone encryption, the privacy implications of widely-available reverse image search for faces, deep-learning-powered algorithmically-generated faces, and Jeopardyâs âGreatest of All Timeâ tournament.
Special guest Merlin Mann returns to the show. Topics include the renewal of U.S. law enforcement officialsâ disingenuous campaign against iPhone encryption, the Houston Astros cheating scandal, how that cheating scandal relates to the Trump impeachment saga, and Catalyst and the art of Mac software design. But mostly we talk about finding a good pair of slippers.
Itâs the last show of the decade. Special guest: Rene Ritchie.
For your holiday listening enjoyment, very special guest Rich Siegel joins the show to talk about BBEditâs past, present, and future, the state of developing for the Mac, and more.
Special guest Jason Snell returns to the show for a brief chat about the new Mac Pro and Pro Display XDR, which are bothâââdare I sayâââfinally available for ordering. Also: Ming Chi Kuoâs intriguing rumors on the 2020 and 2021 iPhone lineups.
Very special guest Matthew Yglesias joins the show to talk about Tim Cook cozying up to Trump for tariff relief and more.
Very special guest Casey Johnston joins the show to talk about the butterfly MacBook keyboard saga and the just-released 16-inch MacBook Pro, with its all new scissor-switch keyboard design.
Special guest Dave Mark joins the show for a discussion mostly about AirPods Pro and partly about the 2019 World Series.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include the just-released AirPods Pro (and the pluralization thereof), the history of remote controls, the impending launch of Apple TV+, and the undisputed highlight of the 2019 World Series.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include Googleâs new Pixel 4 phones, Appleâs travails in Hong Kong and China, whether there will be another Apple event this year, and MacOS 10.15 Catalina.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include the latest Surface hardware announcements from Microsoft, the state of the iPhone, and bulk purchases of charcoal.
Very special guest Joanna Stern returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs event earlier this month, the iPhone 11 and 11 Pro, iOS 13, and how we go about writing (and shooting) our product reviews.
Special guest Dan Frommer returns to the show for a preview of this weekâs Apple event.
Special guest Brent Simmons returns to the show to talk about NetNewsWire 5.0, the state of the Mac, and more.
Special guest Jim Dalrymple returns to the show. Topics include Apple Card and the latest rumors on Appleâs upcoming product announcements.
Special guest John Siracusa finally returns to the show. Topics include the Siri voice recording fiasco, Siracusaâs epic Mac OS X reviews, and making good ice.
Special guest Marco Arment returns to the show. Topics include MacBook Pro rumors, breakfast cereal, Siri frustrations, and more.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show for a mid-summer Q&A episode, answering actual questions from actual listeners.
Special guest Daniel Jalkut returns to the show. Topics include app notarization, nonconsensual technology (including Zoom, Dropbox, and Superhuman), and more.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show to talk about Jony Iveâs departure from Apple.
Special guest Jason Snell returns to the show. Topics include everything announced at WWDC: SwiftUI, Catalyst, and all the new features in iOS, iPadOS, MacOS, WatchOS, and tvOS.
Recorded in front of a live audience at The California Theater in San Jose on Tuesday, 4 June 2019, John Gruber is joined by Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak to discuss the news from WWDC 2019: the new Mac Pro and Pro Display XDR, MacOS 10.15 Catalina, iOS 13, iPadOS, SwiftUI and Catalyst, and more.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show for a look at what we expectâââand hopeâââto see from Apple at WWDC next week.
Special guests Cabel Sasser, Steven Frank, and Greg Maletic join the show to talk about Playdate, Panicâs exciting and surprising new handheld gaming system.
Very special guest Merlin Mann returns to the show. Topics include sleep and sleep-tracking (with Apple Watch), regional fast-casual dining, the nature of podcasting, and, of course, more.
Very special guest MG Siegler returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs original content strategy and a general look at the state of the company.
John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include AirPods 2, Samsungâs Galaxy Fold debacle, the trove of iOS 13 and MacOS 10.15 leaks reported by Guilherme Rambo, and the future of iTunes.
Special guest Peter Kafkaâââexecutive editor at Recode and longtime reporter in the fields of media and technologyâââjoins the show to discuss the announcements at last weekâs âShow Timeâ event: Apple News+, Apple Card, Apple Arcade, and Apple TV Channels and TV+.
Special guest Paul Kafasis returns to the show. Topics include last weekâs Apple product releasesââânew iPads, iMacs, and AirPodsâââand the de-Steve-ification of Wynn Las Vegas.
Matthew âHondoâ Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include WWDC 2019, the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web, Apple and privacy, the Boeing 737 Max, and Disneyâs upcoming Star Wars: Galaxyâs Edge theme park lands.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include, but are not limited to, privacy concerns with apps from the App Store, Googleâs payments to Apple to keep Google Search the default in Safari, Appleâs Shot on iPhone contest winners, and speculation about Appleâs purported March 25 media event.
Glenn Fleishman returns to the show. Topics include: rumors of new Mac hardware and Marzipan at WWDC, Samsungâs new phones unveiled at their âUnpackedâ event, 5G networks, Appleâs purported foray into the credit card business, and moreâââincluding Glennâs âTiny Type Museumâ Kickstarter project.
Special guest Rich Mogull joins the show. Topics cover a range of security and privacy-related issues: the Jeff Bezos/National Enquirer saga, laptop webcams, abuse of Appleâs enterprise developer program to enable sideloading of iOS apps, Amazonâs acquisition of Eero, and more.
John Moltz makes his long-awaited return to the show. Three big topics this week: the Facebook VPN app fiasco (and the companyâs pattern of ethical violations), the Group FaceTime bug that allowed callers to listen to audio before the call was answered, and Appleâs quarterly results.
Joanna Stern returns to the show. Topics include the iPhone XR (and the argument that it might be the best phone in Appleâs current lineup), Appleâs new Smart Battery Cases, Apple Watch, and, of course, the new MacBook Air.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs horrible no good very bad earnings warning, the Chinese market, Appleâs push toward services for revenue growth, antitrust issues regarding the App Store, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show for a year-in-review look back at Appleâs 2018: the Mac, iPad, iPhone, Apple Watch, Siri and services, and more.
Special guest Jason Snell returns to the show. Topics include BBEditâs 25th anniversary, the saga of Word 6 for Mac in the 1990s, Mac iOS user interface differences (including an extensive discussion of Mojaveâs craptacular âMarzipanâ apps, and a few varying theories on what those apps portend), Photos on Mac and iOS, and, of course, keyboards.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include recent blockbuster movies, motion smoothing on TVs, iPhone demand rumors, Appleâs Made For iPhone (MFi) program, and more. Recorded live from The Overlook Hotel in Sidewinder, Colorado.
Special guest Dieter Bohn joins the show to talk about Googleâs new Pixel Slate Chrome OS tablet/laptop, the Pixel 3, Googleâs fascinating new Night Sight camera mode, speculation on how Apple might move the Mac to ARM chips, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about iPad Proâââthe new Pencil, the new amazing new hardware, keyboard options, and the OS that in many ways still feels meant for a phone. Also: the state of Appleâs MacBook lineup, and a plea to Apple to pleaseâââpleaseâââmake the small Magic Keyboard in space gray.
Special guest Merlin Mann returns to the show. Topics include the new iPad Pro and the state of iOS as a work platform, the mid-term election results, and holiday parties of yore.
You wanted more Moltz, you get more Moltz. Our thoughts and observations on Appleâs âThereâs More in the Makingâ event at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and the products they announced: new MacBook Airs, Mac Minis, iPad Pros, and Apple Pencil.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show (finally). Topics include the iPhone XR, next weekâs Apple event at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and more.
Dan Frommer returns to the show. Topics include Apple Watch Series 4 and the notion of third-party watch faces, Googleâs Pixel 3 phones and Pixel Slate two-in-one tablet/notebook, and Bloombergâs disputed âThe Big Hackâ story.
Nilay Patel returns to the show to talk about the iPhone XS and XS Max. We got so caught up talking about cameras, we never even mention headphone jacks.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show for a deep dive into what was revealed (and what wasnât) by Guilherme Ramboâs release last week of product marketing images of the apparently-named iPhone XS and Series 4 Apple Watch.
Special guest Jason Snell returns to the show. Topics do include mechanical keyboards, but do notâââI swearâââinclude baseball. Also: speculation on what Apple might do with the non-Pro MacBook lineup.
Answering actual questions from actual listeners.
Special guest Marco Arment returns to the show for a brief discussion about the new MacBook Pro models and the state of Appleâs MacBook lineup.
Special guest Matthew Panzarino returns to the show to talk about his exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the new maps coming to Apple Maps, Googleâs project Duplex, and the MacBook keyboard repair program.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show for a post-WWDC wrap-up discussion. Topics include iOS 12, Memoji, Siri Shortcuts, Screen Time, Apple Books, MacOS 10.14 Mojave, dark mode, UIKit apps on the Mac, and more.
Recorded in front of a live audience at The California Theatre in San Jose, John Gruber is joined by Greg Joswiak and Mike Rockwell to discuss the news from WWDC: ARKit 2, the new USDZ file format, iOS 12, MacOS 10.14 âMojaveâ, UIKit apps on MacOS, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include MacBook keyboard failures, iOS passcode security, Googleâs odd Duplex âdemoâ, Steam Linkâs curious rejection from the App Store, AirPlay 2, and, of course, conjecture about next weekâs WWDC.
Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs quarterly results, the discontinuation of Appleâs AirPort product line, and more.
Special guest Jim Dalrymple returns to the show. Topics include the litany of problems with MacBook keyboards, speculation regarding why Appleâs AirPower multi-device charging mat still isnât shipping, Googleâs proposal to replace SMS with a new protocol that isnât encrypted, and more.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show to talk about his exclusive behind-the-scenes profile with Appleâs Pro Workflow Team and state of Appleâs professional Mac hardware and software.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show to talk about Appleâs education-focused event last week in Chicago.
Finally. Jason Kottke is on the show to talk about 20 years of writing his eponymous website.
Jason Snell returns to the show. Topics include Apple and China, the 10th anniversary of the iPhone SDK, the future of the MacBook Air, and more. No baseball talk, except a little.
Special guest Marco Arment returns to the show for a brief discussion. Topics include Appleâs OS development strategy, HomePod and Siri, the sad state of Apple TV apps, where to get a good cheesesteak, how to boil water, and more.
Special guest Paul Kafasis returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs new HomePod, Farrago (Rogue Amoebaâs new soundboard app for the Mac), the Philadelphia Eaglesâ triumph over the âNew Englandâ Patriots in Super Bowl 52, and we stir up a controversy regarding a 10-year-old cocktail devised by the boys at You Look Nice Today.
John Moltz returns to the show. We talk about the HomePod, the âcancellationâ of iPhone X, Steve Jobs and the orange button, and Super Bowl 52. And a surprising amount of talk about dates.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about HomePod, clickbait, the Spectre/Meltdown security exploits, and a look back at Appleâs 2017 in review.
As per holiday tradition at The Talk Show, a brief chat about Star Wars: The Last Jedi, with a cavalcade of special guests, including Guy English and John Siracusa.
Special guest Jason Snell returns for the penultimate episode of 2017. Topics include the iPhone battery performance-throttling saga, Google Maps vs. Apple Maps, new versions of iOS running slow on older iPhones, the new iMac Pro, iOS file management, and more.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show to talk about Appleâs new iMac Pro lineup: gaming, VR, medical use, software development video, and more. Also: a spoiler-free preamble on Star Wars Ep. 8: The Last Jedi.
John âWith an Hâ Moltz returns to the show. Topics include the ongoing deluge of sexual harassment scandals, our beloved SodaStreams, the Mac OS 10.13 High Sierra root login fiasco, App: The Human Story, and more.
Merlin Mann returns to the show for a Thanksgiving-week holiday spectacular. Topics include the history of Markdown, nerding out with Keyboard Maestro, kids today and the computers they want to use, caring about idiomatic native UI design, a look back at last yearâs election, and more.
Ben Thompson returns to the show to talk about the iPhone X.
Jim Dalrymple returns to the show to talk about the iPhone X, which is now in the hands of reviewers and just days away from the hands of customers.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show on the eve of iPhone X pre-orders opening. Topics include iPhone X (duh), Googleâs Pixel 2 and the goofy OLED display on the âXLâ version, Face ID FUD, and more.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show. Topics include watches, the problems with the current MacBook keyboards, iOS 11 battery life, my massive windfall from the iBooks antitrust settlement, and more.
Special guest Joanna Stern returns to the show. Topics include Apple Watch Series 3, our mutual fear of heights, Velcro, and more.
Matthew Panzarino joins the show for an in-depth look at last weekâs Apple event in the Steve Jobs Theater at Apple Park. We talk about iPhone X, iPhone 8, Apple Watch Series 3, Apple TV 4K, and the new Apple Park campus and Steve Jobs Theater.
Very special guest Craig Federighi returns to the show to talk about Face ID, the perils of live demos, Appleâs approach to designing the iPhone X, privacy, security, and more.
Jim Dalrymple returns to the show for a preview of next weekâs Apple event. We speculate on the naming of the new iPhones, facial recognition in lieu of Touch ID, third-generation Apple Watches, Apple TV, HomePod, and more.
Special guest Jason Snell returns to the show. Topics include Daring Fireballâs 15th anniversary, fruit fly infestations, clicky keyboards, sandwich cookies, the birth of Markdown, iOS 11âs new âcop modeâ, favicons in Safari, Appleâs Project Titan, last weekâs total solar eclipse, and Jerry Lewis.
Special guest Glenn Fleishman returns to the show. Topics include China forcing Apple to remove VPN apps from the Chinese App Store, Wi-Fi vs. LTE networking, the open workspaces in Apple Park, Glennâs new letterpress project, the HomePod OS leak and iPhone D22, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to talk about the rumors and speculation regarding this yearâs upcoming new iPhones.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include more follow-up from WWDC 2017, the iPad Pro models and ProMotion, Scott Forstallâs interview with John Markoff regarding the 10-year anniversary of the original iPhone, the ongoing shitshow at Uber, quick thoughts on the Nintendo Switch, and more. Also: guess which John enjoys throwing babies into the air.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show to talk about WWDC 2017âââiOS 11, the new iPad Pro models, MacOS 10.13 âHigh Sierraâ, updated Mac hardware and a tease at the upcoming iMac Pro, where Apple might go with VR and AR, San Jose as the venue for the event itself, and more.
Recorded in front of a live audience at The California Theatre in San Jose, John Gruber is joined by Phil Schiller and Craig Federighi to discuss the news from WWDC: new Mac hardware, the new iPad Pro, Mac OS 10.13 âHigh Sierraâ, iOS 11, the upcoming HomePod, and more.
Manton Reece and whisky-soaked baritone Brent Simmons join the show to talk about JSON Feed, the new spec they co-authored for syndicating things like blog posts and podcasts. We talk about their longstanding mutual interest in Userland FrontierâââDave Winerâs groundbreaking scripting environment from the early â90sâââand how that background and their mutual love for publishing on the open web and the democratization of technology ultimately led to the creation of JSON Feed, as well as their other new projects: Mantonâs Micro.blog publishing platform, and Brentâs new open source Mac app, announced for the first time right here on the show. And of course a brief look ahead to next weekâs WWDC 2017.
Special guest Jim Dalrymple returns to the show to speculate about what Apple might announce at the upcoming WWDC 2017: Apple Watch, iPad, iOS, updated MacBooks, Apple TV, and more. Also: a celebration of the great Roger Moore.
Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include Microsoftâs announcements from Build 2017, search engines, Amazonâs new (confusingly-named) Look and Show devices, the need for HAL 9000, Appleâs WeChat problem in China, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs Q2 2017 financial results, the iPhoneâs decline in China over the past two years, Microsoftâs new Surface Laptop and Windows 10 S, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick getting called to Tim Cookâs office regarding Uberâs surreptitious âfingerprintingâ of iPhones, judging Apple Watchâs success, Huluâs entry into the cord-cutting âlive TVâ subscription market (and Appleâs conspicuous absence from that same market), and more.
Special guest Lisa JacksonâââAppleâs vice president of Environment, Policy, and Social Initiativesâââjoins the show for an Earth Day discussion of the state of Appleâs environmental efforts: climate change, renewable energy, responsible packaging, and Appleâs new goal to create a âclosed-loop supply chainâ, wherein the companyâs products would be manufactured entirely from recycled materials.
MG Siegler returns to the show. Topics includes Virgin Americaâs sad fate as a subsidiary of Alaska Airlines, the Touch Bar on the new MacBook Pros, âdoing workâ on an iPad Pro, Walt Mossberg, the absurd bloat of iOS apps, Clips, Netflix and Amazonâs spending on video, and more.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show for an in-depth discussion of last weekâs âfuture of the Mac Proâ round table discussion between a handful of Apple executives and journalists who cover the company. We talk about what went wrong with the 2013 Mac Pro design, speculate on the timeline of when Apple made this decision, why touchscreen Macs are almost certainly a bad idea even though a lot of people think they want one, and more.
Special guest Dan Frommer returns to the show. Topics include the end of The Deck ad network, my weird story about getting kicked out of Amazonâs affiliate program, Appleâs new products announced last week (Red iPhone 7 models, larger-capacity iPhone SEs, the new 9.7-inch just-plain iPad, and Appleâs excellent new Clips app), Samsungâs new Galaxy S8, Twitterâs new reply system, CarPlay getting its ass kicked in a head-to-head comparison with Android Auto, ISPs and Privacy, and more.
The one and only Merlin Mann returns to the show. Topics include modern plumbing technology and product marketing, the intricate ordeal of switching from iCloudâs old two-step authentication to the modern two-factor authentication, and the future of voice-driven UI/AI. Also, a wee bit of follow-up on our post-election November 9 Holiday Party.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show. Topics include the Best Picture fiasco at last weekâs Academy Awards, Tim Cook speaking vaguely of âthe pro areaâ at Appleâs shareholders meeting, the conflict between Appleâs culture of secrecy and the glaring embarrassment that is the 1,100-day-old Mac Pro lineup, new iPad Pro rumors and our ruminations on tablet vs. notebook hardware form factors, The Wall Street Journalâs seemingly goofy report on new iPhones replacing Lightning with USB-C ports, and the garbage fire that is Uberâs corporate culture.
Special guest Marco Arment returns to the show. Topics include WWDC moving back to San Jose, the latest rumors about this yearâs new iPads and iPhones, and the thinking behind the design changes in the just-released Overcast 3.0.
John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include: đŠđ¨, iPad vs. Mac for productivity (and why the iPad isnât a self-sufficient platform), nostalgia for System 7, speculation on this yearâs upcoming new iPhones, and more.
Alternative title for this episode: đ˘đ.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs Q1 2017 financial results (including record iPhone sales and continuing cooling iPad sales), issues with LGâs new 5K UltraFine display (not so fine if you use it near a Wi-Fi router), the tech industryâs response to Trumpâs immigration ban, and the highlights at this yearâs Sundance Film Festival.
Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include the state of the Mac (and our shared belief that its death has been greatly exaggerated), the NFL playoffs, Chris Lattner leaving Apple for Tesla (and the general problem of talent retention), ruminating on the origins of the word âpodcastâ, and more.
Jim Dalrymple returns to the show for the first episode of 2017. Topics include New Yearâs Eve, Siri/Alexa/Google Assistant, Appleâs aging AirPort and Mac Pro lineups, the future of desktop Macs, Apple Watch battery life, and rumors of upcoming new iPads.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include Siri vs. Alexa, and whether Wynn Las Vegasâs announcement that theyâre putting Amazon Echos into their 4,700+ guest rooms is a sign that Amazon is building a meaningful long-term lead in the nascent voice assistant market; Mark Gurmanâs week-ago piece for Bloomberg, âHow Apple Alienated Mac Loyalistsâ; Consumer Reportsâs bizarre but widely-publicized battery test results for the new MacBook Pros; and a brief year in review look at our favorite new Apple products from 2016.
Craig Hockenberry returns to the show with his gigantic fleshy palms. Topics include Donald Trumpâs highly publicized meeting with a handful of U.S. tech company leaders (including Tim Cook), the release of Nintendoâs Super Mario Run for iPhone, Uberâs autonomous car that was caught cruising straight through a red light in San Francisco, and Craigâs excellent new book, Making Sense of Color Management.
Glenn Fleishman returns to the show. Topics include indoor plumbing, a spoiler-free discussion about HBOâs excellent âWestworldâ, our favorite beverages, Appleâs AirPods launch debacle, Apple TV single sign-on, and more.
Joanna Stern returns to the show to talk about the new MacBook Pros (and their keyboards), stockpiling old MacBook Airs, dongles, Touch ID, SnapChat Spectacles, and more.
Jason Snell returns to the show to talk about the new MacBook Pros and the Touch Bar, and Appleâs new book chronicling the last 20 years of their industrial design, Designed by Apple in California.
Merlin Mann returns to the show to discuss the election, by which I mean we mostly talk around the election. I hope we never do another show again with such heavy hearts, but whatever you think about this election, I think youâll like this show.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include what we expect from this weekâs Apple Event for new Mac hardware, and my impressions of the Google Pixel phone after a week using one.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include voice control with AirPods, how to get your entire music library onto an iPhone while using iCloud Music Library, Apple Watch durability, the Dash/App Store controversy, the disappointing and frustrating state of Siri and voice-driven AI assistants, Googleâs new Pixel phones and the strategy behind them, Snapâs (nĂŠe Snapchat) Spectacles (and why theyâre nothing like Googleâs ill-fated Glass), and more.
Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include Googleâs âMade by Googleâ hardware announcements (the Pixel phones, Google Wi-Fi routers, their Amazon Echo competitor Google Home), mobile photography, Samsungâs acquisition of Viv, and more.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show to discuss Appleâs new stuff: the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, Apple Watch Series 2 (and the semi-new Series 1), iOS 10, MacOS Sierra, and more.
Jim Dalrymple returns to the show, to discuss last weekâs Apple event in San Francisco, the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, Apple Watch Series 2, and more.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show to discuss what we expect to see at Appleâs upcoming event in San Francisco: new iPhones (without headphone jacks, and with a radical new two-lens camera on the Plus-sized model), Apple Watch 2 (and a new fall lineup of watch bands). We also discuss Samsungâs recall of the Galaxy Note 7 (because of exploding batteries), when weâll see new Mac hardware and new iPads, and more.
Special guest Guy English returns to the show. Topics include Tim Cookâs five year anniversary as Apple CEO, Steven Levyâs behind-the-scenes look at Appleâs AI and machine learning efforts, Appleâs decision to change the pistol emoji from a realistic revolver to a toy squirt gun, and the demise of Vesper. Also: our favorite Looney Tunes characters.
Jason Snell returns to the show. Topics include the latest rumors regarding the upcoming new iPhones and MacBook Pros, Rick Tetzeliâs cover story for Fast Company on Tim Cookâs Apple, and the connection between baseball and mechanical keyboards.
Wall Street Journal columnist Joanna Stern returns to the show. Topics include media gossip on Eddy Cue negotiations with cable TV companies, Appleâs aging notebook lineup, Appleâs upcoming product announcement event, the Windows 10 upgrade fiasco, and our sweaty feet.
Special guest Glenn Fleishman returns to the show. Topics include security vulnerabilities on MacOS and iOS, ransomware, counterfeit products and outright fraud on Amazon, and online harassment and âfree speechâ.
John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include parenting thoughts on controlling the amount of time our kids spend playing games and watching YouTube and Netflix, why Googleâs apps for iOS are better than their apps for Android, Chromebooks in schools, Windows Phoneâs bright future, Pokemon Go, and more. We also insult the driving abilities of people from Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Canada.
Special guest Nilay Patel joins the show. Topics include The Verge and Recode (and the state of the media industry at large), whatâs going on with the lack of updates to professional Mac hardware, and, of course, Appleâs purported removal of the headphone jack on the upcoming new iPhones.
Marco Arment returns to the show. Topics include WWDC 2016, Phil Schiller and Craig Federighiâs appearance on the live episode of this show during WWDC, the purported removal of the standard headphone jack from the upcoming new iPhones, and more.
Recorded in front of a live audience in San Francisco, John Gruber is joined by Phil Schiller and Craig Federighi to discuss the news from WWDC: WatchOS 3, MacOS 10.12 Sierra, iOS 10, and more.
Dan Frommer returns to the show. Topics include Jeff Bezosâs and Elon Muskâs appearances at last weekâs Code 2016 conference, Appleâs changes to the App Store (subscriptions for all app categories, search ads, and huge improvements to app review approval times), and, of course, our expectations for WWDC 2016 next week.
Merlin Mann returns to the show to talk about artificial intelligence and Eddy Cueâs flip-flops.
Special guest MG Siegler returns to the show. (Finally.) Topics include rumors of an upcoming Siri SDK and an Amazon Echo-like device from Apple, the future of the MacBook lineup, Peter Thielâs secretive role as the financial backer of Hulk Hoganâs lawsuit against Gawker, and my hatred of Roman numerals.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics include Appleâs new flagship retail store in San Francisco, recent improvements to App Store approval times, and Googleâs announcements at I/O this weekâââGoogle Home and Google Assistant, Allo and Duo, and Android âNâ and Android Instant Apps.
Ben Thompson returns to the show to talk about Appleâs recent quarterly results, what we think is going on with iPhone sales, Tim Cookâs misleading guidance, Apple Music, and a lot more.
Special guest Guy English returns to the show. Topics include Ben Thompsonâs argument that Appleâs functional organizational structure is hindering their efforts in online services, recalling our first Apple computers and the elegance of the classic Mac OSâs conceptual design, Prince (and his early use of Macs for creating music), emoji and exclamation marks, WWDC 2016, and yours trulyâs youthful foray into on-the-job vandalism.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show. Topics include the new 9.7-inch iPad Pro, using an iPad for âworkâ, podcasting microphones, the damn Siri Remote for the new Apple TV, the Star Wars: Rogue One teaser, and more.
Jason Snell (Six Colors, The Incomparable, Upgrade) returns to the show for an in-depth look at last weekâs Apple Event, and the two products that were introduced: the iPhone SE and the 9.7-inch iPad Pro. Other topics include the ongoing FBI/Apple encryption soap opera, whatâs wrong with the Apple Watchâââand our appreciation for the late great Garry Shandling.
Glenn Fleishman joins the show. The primary topic: Appleâs legal battle against the FBI regarding the iPhone and encryption. Other topics include Aaron Burrâs resurgence in popularity, the U.S. founding fathersâ use of cyphers and codes in their correspondance, next weekâs Apple event, USB battery packs, and more.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include the Apple/FBI encryption fight, Appleâs upcoming event and the products theyâre expected to announce. And Campo Santoâs fantastic new video game Firewatch.
Special guest Jim Dalrymple joins the show to talk about the Apple/FBI legal showdown, the debate over Apple software quality, and more.
Very special guests Eddy Cue and Craig Federighi join the show. Topics include: the new features in Appleâs upcoming OS releases (iOS 9.3 and tvOS 9.2); why Apple is expanding its public beta program for OS releases; iTunesâs monolithic design; how personally involved Eddy and Craig are in using, testing, and installing beta software; the sad decline of Dukeâs menâs basketball team; and more.
Some scoops too, including: the weekly number of iTunes and App Store transactions, an updated Apple Music subscriber count, peak iMessage traffic per second, and the number of iCloud account holders.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include last Sundayâs Super Bowl 50 (and its mostly terrible commercials), Tim Cookâs tweet with a photo he took from the sidelines post-game, Twitterâs algorithmic timeline and the state of todayâs Google- and Facebook-dominated online advertising industry, Yahooâs dismal prospects, and more.
Special Guest Matthew Panzarino. Topics include Appleâs quarterly financial results, rumors of Apple working on VR handsets and âwirelessâ charging for iPhones, Bezos charts, and more.
Merlin Mann returns to the show. Topics include Winter Storm Jonas, the politics of sick kids, sweating out a fever, people going insane over the rumors that the next iPhones will omit the standard headphone jack, the seven-hour The Godfather Epic, and more.
Special guest Dan Frommer returns to the show to deliver his first-hand report from last weekâs CES in Las Vegas. Other topics include Periscope, Peach, why Apple never participated at CES, El Chapoâs re-capture, iOS 9.3, Apple Watch, Appleâs finances (and stock price), and self-driving cars.
A brief holiday chat about Star Wars: The Force Awakens, with a cavalcade of special guests, including Guy English and Amy Jane Gruber.
Rene Ritchie returns to the show for a look back at the Apple year that was: the new one-port MacBook, Apple Watchâs launch, WWDC and Apple Music, the iPhones 6S, iPad Pro, Apple Pencil, Apple TV, iPad Mini 4, iOS 9, Mac OS X 10.11, and, of course, the most important new product of the year, the Smart Battery Case.
This episode contains absolutely no Star Wars talk, except for a little.
Apple senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi joins the show for a wide-ranging half-hour discussion about SwiftâââAppleâs new programming language that just went open source.
Next, John Siracusa returns to the show to follow up on Federighiâs segment on Swift. Other topics include Appleâs new Smart Battery Case for the iPhone 6/6S, and our mutual (and perhaps futile) desire to head into this weekâs premiere of Star Wars: The Force Awakens knowing as few spoilers as possible.
Joanna Stern returns to the show to talk about the iPad Pro, Microsoftâs Surface Pro 4 and Surface Book, whatâs going on with Yahoo (spoiler: not much), how best to sell old iPhones when upgrading, and Mark Zuckerberg promising to donate 99 percent of his fortune to charitable causes.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show to discuss rumors that the iPhone 7 might not have a standard headphone jack and that Apple is working on new MacBook Airs. Also: a parenting guide to the Star Wars and James Bond franchises.
Special guest Jason Snell joins the show to talk about iPad Pro, Apple Pencil, how iOS still feels like iPhone OS at a fundamental level, and Don Norman and Bruce Tognazziniâs overwrought âHow Apple Is Giving Design a Bad Nameâ article for Fast Company. Also: the new membership program at Six Colors.
Special guest Adam Lisagor returns to the show. Topics include the new Apple TV (why we both love it, despite several 1.0 flaws), 4K video, 3D movies, and Adamâs excellent new series âComputer Showâ.
Special guest Guy English returns to the show for an in-depth discussion about the new Apple TV.
Serenity Caldwell returns to the show. Topics include this weekâs new iMacs; the new âMagicâ mouse, trackpad, and keyboard; an overview of Apple Music and iCloud Photos; Facebookâs outrageous background battery usage on iOS; Elon Muskâs gibes on Apple getting into the car industry; and my take on the new Steve Jobs movie.
Marco Arment joins the show for a brief chat on ad blockers, advertising in general, and the new iPhones 6S.
Rene Ritchie joins the show to discuss last weekâs blockbuster Apple Event and the products that were announced: Apple Watch updates, the iPad Pro (and Smart Keyboard, and Apple Pencil), the all-new Apple TV, and the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus. Also: iOS 9.
Special guest John Moltz is back. Topics include Googleâs new logo, the Tacoma Tahomas, and our speculation regarding what to expect at this weekâs Apple event in San Francisco.
Special guest Ben Thompson returns to the show. Topics include: our top complaints about Apple Watch, Apple making a car, the New York Timesâs profile of Amazonâs work culture, and more.
Special guest Matthew Panzarino returns to the show. Topics include Twitter (their musical chairs game at CEO, the @MagicRecs feature, and whether their declining stock price makes them an acquisition target), the end of Google Plus, why the new Photos app for Mac is inadequate as a replacement for Lightroom for us, Appleâs new San Jose real estate acquisition, Apple Car speculation, and Appleâs spree of hiring writers from the Apple media.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include bluetooth headphones, Apple Music and iCloud Photo Library, phone sizes (including speculation on the lineup of new iPhones in September), El Chapoâs social media intern, Appleâs stock price, Alex Gibneyâs upcoming Steve Jobs documentary, and the new trailer for Spectre.
Jason Snell returns to the show, with a lot to talk about: Pebbleâs new Pebble Time smartwatch, the âSafari is the New IEâ argument, the state of web advertising (and its adverse effects on performance and privacy) and monetization, and more.
Special guest Horace Dediu joins The Talk Show for the first time. Topics include the state of the maps industry, Appleâs functional organizational structure, what the WWDC keynote said about the state of the company today, and more.
Guy English returns to the show, and we make a valiant but failed effort to cover all of the technical/developer news from last weekâs WWDC. Among the topics we did hit: app thinning, Bitcode, WatchKit 2.0, CloudKit (and opening it up to web developers), Swift 2.0, Metal coming to the Mac, accessibility and low-level support for right-to-left languages, iOS 9âs new low-power mode, and more.
Recorded in front of a live audience at Mezzanine in San Francisco, John Gruber is joined by Phil Schiller to discuss the news from WWDC: OS X 10.11 El Capitan, iOS 9, the new native app SDK for Apple Watch, Apple Music, and the 2004 American League Championship series.
Prelude to WWDC 2015 episode, featuring special guest Mark Gurman. We cover anything and everything youâd want to know heading into WWDC.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show. Topics includes Jony Iveâs promotion to Chief Design Officer and the implications for Apple; the differences in Appleâs internal design culture now that industrial and user interface design are under one roof; Googleâs announcements at their I/O developer conference last week in San Francisco, including Google Photos; âmachine learningâ; Apple replacing the much-maligned discoveryd with good old mDNSResponder in the latest Yosemite developer beta; our thoughts on the space black Apple Watch with link bracelet; and more.
Special guest Dan Frommer returns to the show. Topics include David Letterman, iPhone docks, the space black steel Apple Watch, whatever happened to the Edition collection, San Francisco as the new system font for iOS and Mac OS X, and more.
Special guest David Sparks joins the show for the first time. Topics include âpower usersâ, Markdown, Apple Watch, the new MacBook, iCloud Photo Syncing and the new Photos for Mac, WWDC, and wearing slippers as âworkâ shoes.
Special guest and longtime friend Adam Lisagor returns to the show. I donât know anyone whoâs more excited about Apple Watch than Adam, except, maybe, my son. Itâs easy to lose sight of the fact that Apple just released a brand-new thing, and they donât do that very often. This episode, we just had fun. Some keen observations about the future of the platform, too.
John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include Gruberâs retina, Apple Watch backorders and the watch itself, news from Microsoftâs Build conference, how to introduce yourself to people youâve publicly branded a âjackassâ, and more.
Special guest Joanna Stern of The Wall Street Journal joins the show to talk about Apple Watch and the new MacBook (and her reviews thereof).
Special guest Ben Thompson returns, with the intention of not talking about Apple Watchâââand so of course we spend two hours talking about Apple Watch. Other topics include the launch of Jay Zâs streaming music service Tidal, audience ceilings faced by different types of dedicated TV devices, and Meerkat-vs.-Periscope and the nascent revolution of ubiquitous live-streaming video. We make some NCAA menâs basketball Final Four picks, too.
Special guest Serenity Caldwell joins the show. Topics include last weekâs âSpring Forwardâ Apple media event; the new Force Touch Trackpad for MacBooks, and the prospects for force touch in future iOS devices; and of course, Apple Watch.
Special guest Matthew Panzarino joins the show. After some brief chitchat on Meerkat and monocular vision, we get into the obvious topic this week: Appleâs âSpring Forwardâ media event in San Francisco. Sub-topics therein: ResearchKit; FaceTime and open standards; accessibility and Tim Cookâs refusal to measure the ROI of such things; Jeff Williamsâs first on-stage appearance at an Apple keynote; Angela Ahrendts; the new single-port MacBook; San Francisco as the new keycap font on the MacBook keyboard; the Taptic trackpad; the timing of this event; and more.
Oh, and something called âApple Watchâ.
Special guest Paul Kafasis returns to the show. Topics include the new Pebble Time watch, the imminent arrival of Apple Watch, Paulâs clever new doorbell (and unfortunate refrigerator situation), a little bit of baseball, and why Iâm not attending next weekâs Apple event in San Francisco.
Special guest John Moltz returns to the show. Topics include Apple Watch; rumors that Apple is working on a secret car project; our love of old Mac hardware; and a long discussion on Ian Parkerâs extraordinary New Yorker profile of Jony Ive and his design team at Apple.
Merlin Mann returns to the show to talk about movies and shit.
MG Siegler returns to the show, reporting from London. Topics include last weekâs blockbuster earnings report from Apple, the increasingly imminent Apple Watch, phone display sizes, the impact of China on sales, rethinking the intended purpose and success of the iPhone 5C, speculation on Appleâs 2015 product roadmap, and whether Bluetooth is the future for mass market earbuds and headphones.
Topics include Appleâs pseudo âsabbaticalsâ (employees who leave the company but then return after a year or two); Googleâs cultural similarities to Microsoft; the ways that Apple (and iOS users) might miss Scott Forstall; accessibility as a high priority for Apple; Instagramâs success (and how they effectively ate Hipstamaticâs lunch); a debate on just how âsimpleâ Twitter is; Boxâs successful IPO, and Dropboxâs support for Yosemiteâs official Finder integration for such services; MIT economist Jonathan Gruber pissing in my Google juice; Chromebooks; Amazonâs overall strategy, and the colossal failure of their Fire Phone; and, lastly, a good chunk on Microsoftâs Windows 10/HoloLens event last week.
Special guest Marco Arment returns to the show. Topics include microphones; Marcoâs much-publicized article last week on Appleâs seemingly declining software quality; talking to the press and agreeing to interviews; Appleâs relatively tiny developer relations team (and how that pertains to the aforementioned segment on Appleâs perceived software quality); the purported new 12-inch MacBook Air and its dearth of peripheral ports; and more.
A brief chat about the Star Wars movies, with special guests John Siracusa and Guy English.
Special guest Jason Snell joins the show for a year-end extravaganza. Topics include Jasonâs first three months writing (and podcasting) as an indie at his new Six Colors; a look back at his 20-year career at MacUser and soon thereafter Macworld; tricky edge cases when booking sponsorships, and the whole situation with separating advertising sales from editorial integrity when youâre running a one-person publication; the Sony/North Korea hacking and The Interview, and iTunesâs slightly belated release thereof; and we pour one out for good old Movable Type.
Special guest Rene Ritchie returns to the show for a special Apple 2014 year-in-review episode. Just a few of the many topics covered: Appleâs Beats acquisition; WWDC 2014 in hindsight; an aside speculating on the alternate universe where Google acquired WebOS instead of Android; the similarities between the âprojected UIâ nature of AirPlay, CarPlay, and WatchKit; UI fonts (Helvetica Neue in Yosemite, Apple Sans, and the Watchâs San Francisco (a.k.a. âDINveticaâ)); Appleâs growing ability to design and bring to market its own hardware internals and components; recent controversies and confusing rejections at the App Store (and the need for a public-facing App Store ombudsman); and what weâre looking forward to in 2015.
Special guest Dan Frommer joins the show to talk about prop bets in Vegas, more Star Wars, some follow-up on James Bond, what Apple should do with its mountain of cash, speculation on why iPad sales growth has stagnated, and more. Also, some in-depth segments on Instagram and the concept of âinstitutional tasteâ.
Special guest Dave Wiskus joins the show to talk about the new teaser trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and just-announced title and cast for the 24th EON Productions Bond movie, Spectre. Other topics include the untapped potential of podcasting and YouTubing, cutting babies in half, turtle copulation, and kangaroo genitalia.
Special guest Christa Mrgan joins the show to talk about Yosemite UI design, Apple TVâs aesthetics (and its shitty IR remote control), Apple Watch speculation (including using it as an Apple TV remote), the Watchâs new San Francisco font, bling in icon design, and more. Itâs a Thanksgiving week design-focused spectacular.
Who else but very special guest John Moltz to ring in The Talk Showâs centurial episode. Topics include iPhone display sizes (and in particular, our mutual preference for the old 5S 4-inch size over the 4.7-inch iPhone 6); the new book Moltz co-wrote, The Visual Guide to Minecraft; writing tools, including word processors and Markdown; shopping for gaming PCs as a Mac person; Microsoft Office going free on mobile platforms; Twitterâs stilted strategy statement; President Obamaâs statement on Net Neutrality; and Tim Cookâs eloquent essay announcing that heâs gay.
Very special guest Merlin Mann returns to the show to talk about Comcast customer service, cable-cutting, Marlins Man and his showboating-spectator predecessors, and the state of podcasting today. Also: daylight saving time and Roman numerals.
Special guest John Siracusa returns to the show to discuss last weekâs Apple event (introducing the iPad Air 2), and OS X Yosemite (and his review thereof).
Special guest Guy English returns to the show to talk about iOS 8 quality concerns, and whether Appleâs annual software cycle is stretching the company too thin. Then things devolve into a bitter argument over the merits of file name extensions.
Special guest Ben Thompson joins the show for an Apple Watch discussion: what itâll cost, what itâll do, how it will be sold, and more. Other topics include âBend-gateâ, Appleâs growing prowess in mobile chip design, and Derek Jeter.
What else? The iPhones 6, iOS 8, and last weekâs special event at the Flint Center in Cupertino.
Special guest Jason Snell joins the show on the cusp of Appleâs September 9 event, where the company will purportedly introduce two new iPhones and a breakthrough wearable device. Topics include the purpose and advantages of a 5.5-inch iPhone, why only the 5.5-inch iPhone will (I think) get an @3Ă retina display, speculation on the nature and purpose of an Apple wearable/watch, the intrigue surrounding the eventâs venue, and more.
Speculation on the purportedly-imminent new 4.7- and 5.5-inch iPhones, and the rise of adaptive user interface layout and design on iOS. @3Ă, here we come.
Topics include Joannaâs recent review of over 20 laptops; the HTC One M8 for Windows Phone; why Windows Phone is still struggling to gain traction; the role of Microsoft Office in todayâs world; and speculation on Appleâs upcoming iPhone event.
Topics include speculationâââseriously, just speculationâââon Appleâs purported upcoming wrist wearable thing, Appleâs fall event schedule, polarized sunglasses, market share in the post-PC era, and Beatsâs integration into Apple (including a clever idea from Dan about the potential for a Beats Music channel on Apple TV).
Topics include Appleâs quarterly results, how much Appleâs cable and peripheral prices contribute to the popular conception that their products are âexpensiveâ, presbyopia and large-screen phones, and more.
Topics include the design and development of Marcoâs new iOS podcast player, Overcast, custom UI fonts, the difficulty of low-level audio programming, and pricing strategyâââwith digressions on U.S. politics and other non-controversial subjects.
Topics include Samsung getting pinched from Apple on the high end and Xiaomi (at least in China) on the low end, Android and the importance of software differentiation, wearable devices, and more.
Topics include the new look and feel in OS X Yosemite (10.10), Googleâs new âMaterial Designâ look and feel for Android, smartwatches (including the new ones Google showed at I/O last week), and Daveâs new behind-the-scenes role at The Talk Show.
Topics include the ongoing World Cup and the sport of soccer, Google Glass, mockups of devices in rumor reports, Amazonâs Fire Phone, the New York Timesâs profile of Tim Cook last week, Appleâs growth, and the agonizingly slow death of Blackberry. Lastly, Paul brings up a devilishly tricky question regarding whether Apple will support a particular new addition to the Emoji specification.
Special guest Guy English. Topics center on WWDC 2014, particularly how XPCâââinterapplication communicationâââis playing a fundamental but largely behind-the-scenes role in many of the new features for iOS and OS X. The new much-improved WebKit API (which brings third-party apps the faster Nitro JavaScript engine), third-party keyboards, Sharing menu extensions, and Notification Center widgetsâââall these things are built on XPC. Other topics include Apple TV, Swift, and the apparent happiness not just of third-party developers, but Apple employees, too.
Recorded in front of a live audience of 500 people on Tuesday, 2 June 2014 at Mezzanine in San Francisco. John Gruber is joined by the ATP trioâââMarco Arment, Casey Liss, and John Siracusaâââto discuss the news from WWDC: OS X 10.10 Yosemite, iOS 8, Swift, and more.
Then, Scott Simpson joins the show to discuss theme songs and the future of higher education.
Special guest Dan Frommer. Topics include Danâs new gig as senior tech editor at Quartz, tablets as a form factor for full-featured PCs (and the now-aging design of the MacBook Air), WWDC rumors, the rumored iOS-style redesign of Mac OS X, previous Mac OS visual designs, and more.
Special guest John Moltz joins the show for a discussion regarding Appleâs still-only-rumored acquisition of Beats, WWDC rumors, the ringer switch on the iPhone, the ZTE Open C Firefox OS phone (spoiler: itâs a turd), and the transition of The Talk Show from Mule Radio to its new home here at Daring Fireball.