Technically Working cover art

Technically Working

Technically Working

By: Damashe Thomas and Michael Babcock
Listen for free

"Welcome to 'Technically Working', the go-to podcast for tech enthusiasts and productivity seekers alike. Hosts Michael Babcock and Damashe Thomas take you on a journey through the ever-evolving world of technology and productivity. As Mac OS and iPhone users, they share their personal experiences and tips on staying productive while using these tools. But they don't stop there - they also explore other platforms like Android and Windows to bring you a comprehensive view of the tech landscape. Tune in each episode to hear them keep each other accountable, discuss the latest tools and strategies, and share their journey to reaching their goals. Whether you're a small business owner, freelancer, or simply looking to boost your productivity, 'Technically Working' is the perfect podcast for anyone looking to level up their tech skills and get things done."Copyright 2026
Episodes
  • #169 – Apple's Price Hikes, Smart Glasses, and AI Policy Whiplash
    Jun 29 2026
    What We Cover This Week Earshot Development Progress and the Claude Workflow Michael walks through where the Earshot podcast app stands after another round of Claude-assisted development. The improvements keep landing, the test loop is tightening, and Michael shares what's working in the build process. If you want to kick the tires yourself, the public TestFlight link is below. Damashe on the New Siri Beta The capabilities are genuinely impressive — but the limitations around third-party app integration are exactly where the friction shows up. Damashe gets into what's working, what isn't, and why the third-party gap matters more than Apple seems to think. FloType for Blind and Low-Vision Users We promised we'd point listeners to FloType, the new VoiceOver-first keyboard from developer Rocco. It picks up the eyes-free typing approach that Fleksy pioneered and FlickType refined — tap roughly where the keys would be on a QWERTY layout, swipe right to commit the word, swipe down to cycle suggestions. The public beta opened in June 2026 and is actively under development. Links below. Apple's Price Increases — and the Refurb Math Damashe and Michael unpack Apple's recent price increases across the lineup. Damashe wasn't surprised that they happened — supply chain pressure plus expired component pricing made it inevitable — but he was surprised by how fast they hit after Tim Cook's announcement. We get into why the iPhone is conspicuously absent from the increases (Damashe's read: Apple is holding that lever for the September refresh). The MacBook Neo Touch ID Refurb Michael flags that the MacBook Neo with Touch ID is now in Apple's refurb store at $679 — but the savings versus the previous refurb price are only about $20. That sparks a broader conversation about when Apple's refurb store actually wins. Our take: the included AppleCare tips the value calculation in Apple's favor versus Amazon, B&H, or other retailers — even when the headline price doesn't. Pirate Ship for Cheap, Sane Shipping Quick recommendation for anyone shipping on eBay or otherwise: Pirate Ship integrates cleanly, the rates are hard to beat, and the workflow is straightforward. Both of us use it. Smart Glasses: Echo Vision from AGIGA, Meta Ray-Bans, and Why Damashe Is Holding Off Michael received a free pair of Echo Vision smart glasses from AGIGA and is starting a head-to-head against his Meta Ray-Bans. He'll be reporting back as testing continues. Damashe explains why, despite putting money down on the Echo Vision earlier, he hasn't pulled the trigger on a purchase. The delayed shipping timeline, ongoing concerns about real-world functionality versus price, and a frustrating experience with his current Oakley Vanguards (uncomfortable fit, lens color issues) have all stacked up. The plan: let Michael run the gauntlet first, then decide. This leads into a broader technical point about smart glasses generally — the importance of a separate compute device versus trying to cram everything into the frames themselves, and what that means for where the category is actually heading. AI Policy Whiplash and Why It Matters Damashe gets candid about his frustration with the rapid policy shifts and government restrictions in the AI space — specifically around Anthropic's Fable model and the Mythos security tool. The deeper concern isn't any single rule; it's the inconsistency. Building a business on a platform whose ground rules change month to month is hard. The tech industry needs stability to plan, and right now it isn't getting it. Behind the Scenes We also work through some audio gremlins at the top of the episode (microphone swap, settings adjustments, phone static) — par for the course, and resolved before things really get going. Links and Apps Mentioned Earshot TestFlightFloType keyboard TestFlightFloType beta tester WhatsApp groupPirate ShipApple Refurbished StoreAGIGA Echo Vision smart glassesMeta Ray-Bans Connect With the Show Follow Technically Working on Mastodon: @TW@technically.social Reach Damashe at @damashe@technically.social Follow Michael @payown@dragonscave.space Send feedback, questions, or topics for future episodes our way, feedback@technicallyworking.show — we read everything. Support Technically Working by contributing to their tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/technically-working Find out more at https://technically-working.pinecast.co Send us your feedback online: https://pinecast.com/feedback/technically-working/9c098f14-de7d-4974-b5ad-8d692288a766 Check out our podcast host, Pinecast. Start your own podcast for free with no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-431b7d for 40% off for 4 months, and support Technically Working.
    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 2 mins
  • #168 – Multi-Agent Madness: Rebuilding Earshot the Hard Way
    Jun 23 2026
    Recorded on Father's Day, episode 168 opens with Michael and Damashe wishing each other a happy Father's Day before diving into everything going on in the world of AI, coding agents, Earshot, and more. Support the Show If you enjoy Technically Working, you can make a one-time tip or set up a recurring subscription at technicallyworking.show. Click the support link to get started. The Big Earshot News: Flutter is Out, SwiftUI is In Michael reveals he has switched Earshot from Flutter to SwiftUI after a day and a half of intense work. The reason: he wanted to add a feature that lets users customize and reorder their in-app actions. In Flutter, the only reliable way to rebuild that UI was to background the app or force-quit it, and neither of those felt acceptable. SwiftUI wins because it gives Michael a better path to features like Apple Shortcuts integration and data sync through Apple CloudKit, without requiring users to create an account. Build 113 on TestFlight will be SwiftUI. A phone overheating bug during playback is being fixed before that build ships. Damashe suggests delaying cross-platform work until the iOS version is solid, and floats using AI to translate SwiftUI to Kotlin for Android down the road. Michael is focused on option B: get it done, get it out, get people testing. Earshot TestFlight Beta The public TestFlight link is available. If you found it, you can use it. No need to ask for permission. TestFlight supports up to 10,000 testers, so there's plenty of room. A few early users have already switched from Castro and canceled their subscriptions, and Damashe removed Downcast while giving Earshot a real look. Upcoming features mentioned: auto-add to queue with options for add-to-end or add-as-next, and an Overcast-style theme for users coming from that app. The $100 Claude Plan and the Multi-Agent Setup Michael upgraded to the $100/month Claude plan because he kept hitting usage limits. The reason: he built a full multi-agent system in Claude Code specifically for Earshot development. Here's how it works: A planning agent pulls issues from GitHubIt decides which of the other nine specialized agents should handle the workAgents include: security, accessibility, UI, and othersThe planning agent creates a plan, sends it with the issue to the assigned agentThat agent completes the work, then passes results to a test agentIf tests pass, the planning agent opens a pull requestMichael reviews and merges Agents live as Markdown files in the ~/claude/agents/ folder. You can tag a specific agent directly, like @earshot-security, or run the whole loop through the planning agent. Michael got the idea from watching short-form video about loop-style AI workflows versus single prompts. He built the agent set by talking to Claude in the web interface, asking it to build out agents one question at a time. Anyone who wants to see what the agent files look like can email the show. Claude for Chrome: Damashe's Accessibility Workaround Tool Damashe has been using Claude for Chrome regularly, about a couple times a week. His main use case is getting around inaccessible web elements that VoiceOver can't interact with. Things like broken sliders, forms that throw vague error messages, or pages where he can't find a button to complete a task. He grants Claude permission to access the page, tells it what he's trying to do, and it figures it out. He noted it works in Helium, a Chromium-based browser, even though Claude officially only supports Google Chrome. Claude Cowork: One Use So Far Michael tried Claude Cowork once to order 50 flyers from a major national print chain. He uploaded the flyer file, told Claude to pick the right paper and add 50 copies to the cart. It got to the checkout page, picked glossy paper instead of the matte Mallory wanted, and even suggested adjusting the text color for better contrast. Not perfect, but impressive for a first try. Damashe plans to try Cowork this week to order business cards through Vistaprint, since there's something on that page he hasn't been able to get through accessibly. Codex Check-In: Damashe Plans a Revisit Damashe is going to give OpenAI's Codex another look in the terminal. When he tried it early on, he preferred how Claude worked and found Codex too noisy in the terminal. He acknowledges that in AI tools, things change fast enough that checking back in occasionally is worth doing, unlike, say, trying out a new calendar app. Spoiler: he doesn't expect to switch, but wants to see what has changed. Siri AI and Apple Intelligence in Beta 1 Michael is running the first beta of the new Siri with Apple Intelligence and has been impressed. He thinks if it ships on by default, it will surprise a lot of people. His comparison: asking Google Assistant on his Pixel 9 Pro to make a phone call still gets a refusal. Siri is actually doing things. He wants Siri to eventually handle appointment scheduling the way X.ai's Amy and Andrew did back in 2017 and 2018, where you ...
    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 1 min
  • #167 – We're Going to Atlanta
    Jun 15 2026
    This week, Mike and Damashe dig into Earshot build 99, react to WWDC 26, and ask the big question: are AI agent devices actually ready to replace your phone? Spoiler: your ride might end up in the wrong city. What We Talked About Earshot Update - Build 99 The new alphabetical library picker is live, with a count of how many podcasts are under each letterPer-podcast playback speed is now working: set a default speed, override it for individual shows, and it remembers your preference automaticallyThe database migration bug from builds 88-95 is fixed; if your app was spinning and crashing, update to build 99The app now gives you a useful error message instead of just failing silently if something goes wrong with the databaseIf you are on TestFlight and want to send feedback, email feedback@technicallyworking.show - do not use the TestFlight feedback form, because Mike cannot reply to you thereTo get on the beta, find Michael on Mastodon Apple Deals Worth Knowing AirPods Pro 3 spotted at $179 on Amazon, Best Buy, and possibly WalmartAirPods 4 at $99Apple Watch Series 11 (42mm GPS) at $299 WWDC 26 Impressions Mike went in with low expectations and came out a little underwhelmedDamashe has not watched the keynote but has listened to everyone talk about itApple showed features live and uncut, which seems intentional - they want to prove the demos are realCertain AI features require M3 Pro or better on Mac, M4 or better on iPad, and iPhone 17 ProiOS 26 and 27 compatibility stays the same - if your device runs 26 it will run 27, you just may not get all the local AI capabilitiesDamashe called the OS unification direction, and he would like you to use the hashtag DamasheWasRight accordingly iOS 27 Safari Notify Apple Intelligence can now watch a Safari tab and notify you when something changesSteven Robles used it to get notified when the Unify travel router came back in stockBoth Mike and Damashe immediately thought: Ubiquiti restocks Touchscreen MacBook Speculation Mark Gurman is pointing toward a high-end OLED touchscreen MacBook Pro at a significant price premiumDamashe's alternate theory: what if Apple makes a detachable touchscreen MacBook Neo instead of going ultra-premiumThe Neo already runs macOS on an A18 Pro chip at $600; a touch-capable detachable version aimed at schools and everyday users could make more sense than a $3,200 pro machineBoth agree: a MacBook with cellular would be an instant buy, no questions asked Are AI Agent Devices Ready to Replace Your Phone? OpenAI is rumored to be working on a new form factor device built around voice interactionDamashe's argument: not yet, for several reasons - apps, authentication, companies not wanting to be commoditized, and the lack of strong local computeUber and Amazon are not going to sit still while an agent turns them into a background APIThe local vs. cloud routing problem is real: you need a local model to manage where requests go, and we are not there on mobile yetBoth see 2029-2030 as a realistic window for local compute on personal devices being good enough for most tasksThe Plaud Pin has been sitting on a nightstand for months as evidence Siri and Third-Party Mail Siri can now surface airline reservations when you call airlinesOpen question: does it work if your reservation is in Gmail or Outlook instead of Apple Mail Shortcuts Getting Smarter The new AI-assisted Shortcuts builder could be the most useful thing in iOS 27 if it actually worksFederico Viticci's hope: get Sherlocked properly this time Links and Contact Send feedback: feedback@technicallyworking.showTestFlight beta for Earshot: find Michael on Mastodon at payown@dragonscave.spaceDamashe on Mastodon: damashe@technically.socialBot: tw@technically.socialSupport the show: technicallyworking.show, click Support Us Support Technically Working by contributing to their tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/technically-working Find out more at https://technically-working.pinecast.co Send us your feedback online: https://pinecast.com/feedback/technically-working/3240cfe1-07d0-4cdc-b340-9d4131f7c84e This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-431b7d for 40% off for 4 months, and support Technically Working.
    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 16 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet