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ou may know me from my podcast miniseries with friends Marco Arment and John Siracusa, called Neutral. It ran from January through April of 2013. After we stopped recording Neutral every week, we found ourselves often times talking about technology, as three developers tend to do. Those casual post-show conversations became the Accidental Tech Podcast, which unofficially began in February of 2013, but formally began in March of that year. ATP continues to release episodes weekly to this day.
In August of 2014, my friend Myke Hurley and I started recording Analog. This show aims to explore the feely bits rather than the think bits of our lives — both online and off. As the tagline says, “There’s space between zero and one”. You can find Analog on the podcast network Myke and Stephen Hackett created, Relay FM. We record monthly. Source
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| Language | English |
| Country | United States of America |
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Recent Articles
Search ArticlesAppearance: Clockwise 665
This week I was also on Clockwise. On the episode, I joined Aleen Simms, Dan Moren, and Mikah Sargent to discuss Apple’s recently-released public betas of 𝓍OS 27, how we read for pleasure, embracing multicolored smart lighting, and how we prepare for disaster both physically and digitally. Copyright © 2014-2026 Limitliss LLC
Appearance: The Incomparable 825
Affiliate links abound below. Make both of us rich by buying these books: your soul and my wallet. I’ve become a prolific Goodreads user over the last several years. Reading a book is a commitment, and I like to record the completion of that commitment. Goodreads does that for me. Goodreads also lets you rate books, on a ☆☆☆☆☆ → ★★★★★ scale. My personal rating system seems to be… stingier… than most: ★☆☆☆☆ A truly terrible book that I regret reading.
Callsheet Year in Review
Callsheet nears its its third birthday, and as such, it’s time for me to post another Year in Review. I started doing this at the end of year one, and repeated it last year. I started making these posts mostly as a marketing/retention exercise. However, they quickly became posts I’m also writing for me, to remind myself of all the progress I’ve made over the last year. To begin, it’s worth noting that pricing remains the same as it was in 2023, when things seemed… quite a bit more stable.
CarPlay is Additive
Back in March, Rivian’s Chief Software Officer, Wassym Bensaid, was interviewed by the excellent Nilay Patel for Decoder. If you’re not a Decoder listener, you should be. If you’re not a subscriber of The Verge, you should be. But that’s not what I’m here to talk about. In this interview — which I greatly enjoyed! — Nilay grills Wassym on all manner of issues. The whole time, though, I was waiting for one topic: CarPlay. CarPlay is a way to interact with your phone via your car’s infotainment.
Appearance: Uses This
Way back in January of 2024, Daniel at uses this asked if I would be willing to be interviewed for the site. Nearly immediately, I told him I’d love to. In February of this year, I finally responded to Daniel’s [very easy] questions. 🥴 While I — thankfully — did not eclipse the all-time record, I do feel badly. Thankfully, Daniel never put any pressure on me, and was a tremendous sport about the whole thing.
Callsheet 2026.5
Callsheet versoin 2026.5 is slowly rolling out in the App Store. I wanted to take a moment and highlight some changes; particularly those around Plex integration. First, some great bug fixes. Due to ✨ reasons ✨, mostly of the self-created variety, Callsheet would often show an error message with the not-particularly-actionable message cancelled.
An Old, Familiar Feeling
My job, nominally, is to have opinions about things. I struggle to reach a strong opinion about AI. The other portion of my job is to write code. This part of me has no such issues reaching a conclusion. I write this on vacation, today taking a break from the beach, and more concretely the sun’s punishing rays. During this week, I’ve been checking in on feedback from users of Callsheet from time to time.
Callsheet 2026.4
Available now on visionOS, and rolling out slowly for iOS/iPadOS, is Callsheet version 2026.4. The changelist is not long, but it is mighty: All-new iPad landscape layout that makes far more efficient use of the space. This also applies to macOS and visionOS. Support for Jellyfin in the Now Playing view. Note that this does require authenticating with your Jellyfin server; see the Callsheet website for details.
My Home Screens in Installer
Last week was spring break, which included a brief trip to show my family my old stomping grounds. As such, I didn’t have a chance to call out this fun appearance I made on The Verge’s and David Pierce’s excellent newsletter, Installer. My two home screens were featured; as mentioned here a while ago, I have started using only two, and searching for anything else I may need. I’m really honored to have been asked; I’m also pleased with how it turned out.
A History Lesson
An exceptionally odd thing happened for me this week: my work became the subject of others’ work. My work was the subject of a history lesson. A while back, Robert McGinley Myers interviewed me as a part of a piece he was producing for his show, Phonograph. I knew he was looking into podcast advertising, and had a keen interest on the toaster reviews, but wasn’t 100% sure where this was all going to end up.