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Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.

Brad Shoemaker, Will Smith · Nice Segue, LLC

355 episodesEN

Show overview

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod. has been publishing since 2019, and across the 7 years since has built a catalogue of 355 episodes. That works out to roughly 430 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run an hour to ninety minutes — most land between 1h 3m and 1h 19m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language Technology show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 6 days ago, with 26 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Nice Segue, LLC.

Episodes
355
Running
2019–2026 · 7y
Median length
1h 11m
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

Each Sunday, Brad Shoemaker and Will Smith discuss a new technology topic. Come for the long-form conversations about virtual reality, space travel, electric cars, refresh rates, and a whole lot more. Support the pod on Patreon: http://patreon.com/techpod

Latest Episodes

View all 355 episodes

345: I Covered This On My Livejournal

Jun 28, 20261h 12m

344: A Fistful of Videogames

Jun 21, 20261h 5m

343: Siri Lives on Dynamic Island

Jun 14, 20261h 13m

342: Faster Thinner Quieter Cooler Cheaper

Jun 7, 20261h 18m

341: F2 Is My Most Used F

May 31, 20261h 20m

340: Like a Bong for Your CPU

May 24, 20261h 10m

339: Billionaires Versus Dinosaurs

May 17, 20261h 22m

338: Everything for Everything

May 10, 202658 min

337: They're 3D-Printing Shoes Now

May 3, 20261h 15m

336: When Triple Redundancy Isn't Enough

Apr 26, 20261h 27m

335: With Craft and Focus

Apr 19, 20261h 16m

334: We Nailed the Math!

Apr 12, 20261h 11m

333: I Used To Do a Podcast

Apr 5, 20261h 4m

Ep 332332: Shout Out to the 1979 Lady Kenmore

Is it time for another Q&A again already? How the months just fly by. This month we address everything from auto-generated podcast chapters and episode links to computer class-action lawsuits, corporate remote administration of your personal devices, how to move a PC across the ocean, the dream of permanent standard time, why you probably still shouldn't clean your computer with a vacuum cleaner, and a bunch more. Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Mar 29, 20261h 20m

Ep 331331: More Teddy Ruxpin, Less Chucky

It's been a while since we got down to brass tacks with a tips and tricks episode, so that's what we're doing this week with a new list of tech that's making our lives a little more pleasant lately. Will extols the tiling window manager once again -- not just in Linux, but also what's going on with this unique workflow in Windows and MacOS -- and talks over his brute-force strategy for iMessaging in Windows and making his Nest thermostat less evil. And Brad talks about why everyone should buy a $20 USB video capture dongle, how recent additions to PowerToys are making Windows 11 just slightly less crappy, and urges us all to stock up before the grim, optical disc-less future arrives. Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Mar 22, 20261h 12m

Ep 330330: Our E-Cores Are Better Than Your P-Cores

There's kind of a mountain of hardware news from the last week, so we're rounding it up this week, starting with Microsoft's Project Helix (a.k.a. the next Xbox), interrogating what exactly that box is going to look like inside and out, how much machine learning is going to factor in, and more. There's also the tiny, cheap MacBook Neo (and a surprising theory about future tiny iPhones), Intel's refreshed Arrow Lake CPUs, upscaling improvements on PS5 Pro (and Sony's anything-goes history of system settings), DLSS 4.5, Valve's continued supply-chain struggles, and more. That's a lot of podcast! Links for this episode: From GDC: Building the Next Generation of Xbox - Xbox Wire GDC 2026: Announcing new tools and platform updates for Windows PC game developers - Windows Developer Blog Upgraded PSSR upscaler is coming to PS5 Pro – PlayStation.Blog Say hello to MacBook Neo - Apple Intel's cheaper, faster new Core Ultra CPUs still have a lot to prove | PCWorld NVIDIA DLSS 4.5 Delivers Major Upgrade With 2nd Gen Transformer Model For Super Resolution & 6X Dynamic Multi Frame Generation | GeForce News | NVIDIA Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Mar 15, 20261h 33m

Ep 329329: A Plaid Decade

We just passed the 25th anniversary of the GeForce 3, which felt like a good reason to dust off the April 2001 issue of Maximum PC. We reflect on both a quarter-century of programmable pixel shaders -- the tech that's defined 3D rendering ever since -- and Will's cover story on the new GPU, including the secretive trip to Nvidia to benchmark it, a random Tim Sweeney interview, and more. There's also plenty of other fun retro tech to dish about in here, including super-early home wi-fi devices, the reveal of Windows XP, Pentium 4 RD-RAM weirdness, some classic Gordon Mah Ung hijinks, and more. The Maximum PC issue for this episode: https://archive.org/details/maximum-pc-the-nearly-complete-collection/Maximum%20PC/2001/031%20Maximum%20PC%204-1-2001/page/n1/mode/2up A clip of the Jack Matthews Metroid Prime interview (full interview also on the channel): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0oiIm5Ymu6s Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Mar 8, 20261h 28m

Ep 328328: Shared Resources, Shared Problems

It's another glorious bounty of listener questions for the monthly Q&A, touching on a bunch of subjects like modern HDMI switchers, enormous turn-of-the-century TVs, MikroTik network gear, Pluribus, why the PCIe retaining clip exists (and how to defeat it), Unix on the desktop, our wishlist ESP32 projects, and the exact moment when cell phones became widespread -- and whether phone numbers are increasingly useless, at least in the US. Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Mar 1, 20261h 19m

Ep 327327: Two Hours of War

There's... a lot going on lately, so we're rounding up some of that news this week, starting with Discord's forthcoming age verification policy rolling out globally, with cursory discussion of some of the alternative platforms starting to assert themselves out there. We also touch on the targeting and compromise of Notepad++ by state-level actors, and the latest effects of the computing supply crisis on hard drives, the Steam Machine, and the PlayStation 6. Lastly, we talk about the bizarre case of the autonomous AI agent that started a flame war against an open source maintainer that... well, you really need to just hear/read about that one yourself. Discord's age verification announcement: https://discord.com/press-releases/discord-launches-teen-by-default-settings-globally Notepad++ compromised: https://notepad-plus-plus.org/news/hijacked-incident-info-update/ An AI Agent Published a Hit Piece on Me: https://theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-published-a-hit-piece-on-me/ (Much more has emerged about the AI agent story since we recorded, including contact with the agent's operator, all described at the link above.) Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Feb 22, 20261h 4m

Ep 326326: Quantumly Entangled Keyboard Switches

Magnets have been replacing potentiometers in a variety of places for a while now, especially as Hall effect and TMR joysticks have started popping up in fancy game controllers. Now magnetic switches are becoming more common in mice and mechanical keyboards, and Will has spent some time with new products in both of those categories, so we figured it was a good time to lay out how these kinds of switches work, how resistant to wear and electrical "bouncing" they are, what the heck a transducer is, whether there's quantum mechanics involved or not, and what effect these new switches are going to have on the input devices of the future.Show notes for this episode: https://tinyurl.com/techpod-326-mag-switches Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Feb 15, 20261h 9m
2019 Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.