Avsnitt

  • Photo by Michael Martine: The Bean in Millennium Park, Chicago, IL, June 2019

    Published 25 May 2026

    e555 with Andy, Michael and Michael – Ploopy’s The Bean and Lenovo’s TrackPoint, The Guild, The Movie, AI in commencement speeches, AI in podcasts, Virtual Worlds and Virtual OS museums and a whole lot more!

    Andy, Michael and Michael get things started with an appreciation of Andy’s work to migrate the Games at Work hosting site to a new service in uninterrupted fashion for our listeners.  Next, a new piece of open source hardware that Andy’s purchased, the Ploopy The Bean.  After the cohosts wax poetic on the awesome sauce that is the TrackPoint, they turn their attention to The Guild.  Felicia Day and the team from The Guild are planning to launch a movie.  Andy, Michael and Michael are very excited about this!  

    Switching to AI, and all of the recent stories about how university commencement audiences have been booing speakers extolling the virtues of AI, the team considers Woz’s take on AI being “Actual Intelligence”.  This reference is cheered and not booed.  Continuing on the theme, the cohosts discuss a recent play by Spotify of providing an authentication for podcasts recorded by actual humans (with actual intelligence).  This spurs a lively conversation on what that validation might entail, and what it means, especially given the prevalence of AI generated audio content.  

    The team wraps up the show with a couple of virtual museums – one shared by friend of the show Ian Hughes – the Virtual Worlds Museum.  The cohosts all agree that Ian would make a fantastic spokesperson for this museum.  The other is a virtual OS museum.

    Finally, Andy shares a tremendous social networking graph that traces letters sent between 285 cities during the years from 1363 to 1412,  Check it out, and give a listen to the song from Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 for how the Russians would write letters in the links below.

    What would be a good name for AI generated podcast content?  Podslop?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksShiny new things

    Updated GamesAtWork.biz courtesy of Andy – you rock, Andy!

    Ploopy, The Bean

    Lenovo ThinkPad TrackPoint Keyboard II

    The Guild

    The Guild: The Movie

    Photo of Felicia Day by Michael Rowe, June 2011

    Games at Work e415: Pushing our Buttons (for The Guild)

    Games at Work e96: The Professional Line Sitter (for the Guild’s Zaboo’s seat saving network idea)

    AI

    Fast Company article: This sentence about AI got Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak applause—not boos—for his commencement speech

    Variety article: Spotify Officially Bans AI-Generated Podcasts That Impersonate Someone Else, Adds Verification Badges for Podcasts

    Playlist Push blog post: How Spotify’s New Verification System Works for Artists

    TechCrunch article: Google goes for the glitter with disco-ball icons: ‘Are y’all sure you still want this?’

    Variety article: Spotify Says Disco-Ball Icon, Which Prompted Massive User Backlash, Will Go Away Next Week as Planned

    The Verge article: Amazon Alexa Plus can now create AI-generated podcasts

    Google’s NotebookLM

    TechDirt article: Amazon Gets Into The AI Podcast Slop Business

    Sixcolors post: New Apple accessibility updates focus on Apple Intelligence

    The Atlantic article: Everything You Do Is Being Recorded

    Virtual Worlds

    Kickstarter project: Virtual Worlds Museum™

    The Virtual OS Museum

    Real World

    Datini Letters Geospatial Explorer

  • Photo by Valérie Ungerer on Unsplash

    Published 18 May 2026

    e554 with Michael and Michael – stories and discussion on LLM phone number lookups, proctors returning to Princeton, lavish LEGO, LOTR and a whole lot more!

    While Andy is away, Michael and Michael get things started with a discussion on the changing nature of sensitive and private information.  What was once published in a phonebook is now a central identify hub.  While Jenny most certainly had to change her phone number from 867-5309 and have the new one unlisted, she likely posts what would have been very personal photos on Insta, Mastodon or any number of social media services.  Michael R points out that while a phone book was available for a municipality, it was not available at a country level, preserving a degree of anonymity.

    Continuing on the theme of social implications of technology, Michael and Michael consider the Atlantic’s article about the demise of Princeton’s honor code process.  Check out the link below for some fantastic quotes from the Daily Princetonian – sadly the newspaper online archives only go back to 2001.

    Next up is an article from Thinking Machines’ full duplex capabilities for natural voice interaction with agents.  

    LEGO is in focus for this episode (surprise!) with two intriguing sets.  First, a super cool LEGO Ideas Tetris arcade game cabinet with a hidden room.  This reminded Michael M of the set he built that also has a cool hidden room inside.  Then, Michael R shares a bit on the new Minas Tirith set – which has many elements from the movies, and includes the opportunity for a GWP (gift with purchase) of the battering ram Grond if you’re one of the first to plunk down your gold pieces for this build.

    The fact that this is up on the Internets on 18 May is due to the hard work from Andy.  He migrated our hosting over the weekend, and this is the first post on the new service.  Hurrah, Andy!  

    Do you still have a copy of your city’s phonebook?  Have your bots (or agents!) 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAI

    Gizmodo article: ChatGPT Gave Out My Address and Phone Number

    The Atlantic article: How AI Killed a 133-Year-Old Princeton Tradition

    Princeton University The Undergraduate Honor System

    Venture Beat article: Thinking Machines shows off preview of near-realtime AI voice and video conversation with new ‘interaction models’

    Thought Machine

    Android

    Engadget article: Everything announced at The Android Show: I/O 2026 edition

    The Verge article: Android Auto is now one (screen) size fits all

    LEGO & LOTR

    Retrododo article: Playable Tetris Arcade Set With Secret Room Arrives On LEGO Ideas

    LEGO Arcade Machine 40805

    Slashfilm article: LEGO Reveals A Massive, Expensive Lord Of The Rings Set For Minas Tirith

    Brickfanatics article: LEGO The Lord of the Rings: Minas Tirith was ‘the right choice creatively’

    LEGO Icons Minas Tirith 11377

    Gizmodo article: ‘Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’ Is Returning in November

    Games at Work e382: Know it when I see it (for Rings of Power discussion and cool flying toaster screensaver)

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  • Stories and discussion on a robot monk, the Dead Internet Theory, agentic autonomy, Happy Net Box, the Artemis II minifig.me crew and a whole lot more!

  • Photo by Shannon Potter on Unsplash

    Published 4 May 2026

    e552 with Andy, Michael and Michael – stories and discussion on AI, life on Mars, life of the Vision Pro, retro C64s and a whole lot more!

    Andy, Michael and Michael get things started with a brace of AI articles dealing with with a wide variety of topics. First up is Meta’s use of employee activities on their corporate computers to train their AI models. Then, a discussion on the SpaceX and Cursor business deal. Next, a conversation on a breach to access the Claude Mythos model. Interspersed with these is a discovery by NASA’s Curiosity rover finding organic molecules on Mars.

    With a number of articles claiming, and paraphrasing here, that the Vision Pro is bereft of life, shuffled up its mortal coil and joined the choir invisible, Michael Rowe shares his perspective on the subject. His says his Vision Pro is not an Ex-Vision Pro.

    The cohosts go retro – as they are wont to do – with a flock of posts about all things Commodore. Links below if you are curious and want to see what these devices look like.

    While no Artemis II image for this week’s episode, do check out the minifigs.me offering of the crew, along with the jar of “Studella” in the links below. There are a couple of additional bonus links that the cohosts didn’t have time to include in the episode that prove that we can have nice things.

    What is your quest? What is your favorite Monty Python sketch? Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know!

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot. All rights reserved. That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAI

    The Verge article: Now Meta will track what employees do on their computers to train its AI agents

    Futurism article: Your Former Employer Is Selling Your Slacks and Emails to Train AI

    Anthropic news post: Introducing Claude Design by Anthropic Labs

    The Verge article: SpaceX cuts a deal to maybe buy Cursor for $60 billion

    kottke.org post: NASA’s Curiosity rover has detected organic molecules on Mars

    Wikipedia article: Marvin the Martian

    The Verge article: Anthropic’s most dangerous AI model just fell into the wrong hands

    Apple Vision Pro & more

    Mac Rumors article: Apple Has Given Up on the Vision Pro After M5 Refresh Flop

    Six Colors article: The Vision Pro: Not quite dead yet

    Wikipedia article: Dead Parrot Sketch

    lifewinning.com post: Alchemy Studies

    Will It Blend

    Games

    Retrododo article: Factory 95 Sees Players Building PowerPoint Factories In Windows 95

    Ravensburger Labyrinth

    The Verge article: The Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum have been turned into retrofuturistic handhelds

    Commodore C64 Ultimate

    Games at Work e223: CES and C64 (for the Commodore

    retrogames.biz

    Bonus Links

    minifigs.me Artemis II Crew with Studtella!

    People Magazine article: How Tiny Vending Machines Have Created a Resurgence in Popularity of Richard Scarry’s Busytown Universe (Exclusive)

    FastCompany article: KitKat’s newest product is … a Faraday cage?

    Slashfilm article: Ted Lasso Season 4 Trailer: Apple TV’s Comedy Series Returns With A New Football Team

  • Photo from the International Space Station 1 April 2026 of the exhaust plume from Artemis II in Earth’s atmosphere – NASA ID: iss074e0431736

    Published 20 April 2026

    e551 with Michael, Michael and Andy – a tour of the Atmosphere with ATProto, Sifa, Eurosky, Leaflet, a LEGO cacophonous karaoke of “Mad About Me” and a whole lot more!

    Michael, Michael and Andy get things started with a series of applications powered by ATProto, the protocol powering Bluesky and many more.  Andy shares his experimentation & experiences with several of these applications, including a set curated on portal.Eurosky.tech such as Leaflet, Popfeed and Sifa.

    Andy also shares Anisota, which is a gamified approach to Bluesky social media browsing where you may collect photos of moths and start expeditions.  Andy learned of Aetheros from from whitep4nth3r.com and takes Michael and Michael through it.  There is a nice capability in this service called Deckard, which provides a columnar view of Bluesky posts.

    Rounding out the episode for this week, the co-hosts take a look at Aadam Jacobs’ collection of recordings on the Internet Archive. This is an impressive set of hundreds of live music recordings from 1984-2019. Check it out in the show notes below. And for a little more contemporary musical example, have a listen to a cacophonous karaoke of “Mad About Me” created with 7 of the Mos Eisley Cantina SMART Brick sets. And to continue to set the mood for the upcoming #StarWarsDay, give a listen to the original via the YouTube embed. Also, managed to get in an Artemis II reference for the third straight episode with the hero image.

    What is your favorite Figrin D’an and the Modal Nodes song?  Have your droids 🤖 drop our droids 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAT Protocol

    AT Protocol

    AT Protocol post: Understanding Atproto

    The ATmosphereConf 2026

    Bluesky

    Wikipedia article: Personal Data Service (PDS)

    Equals Drummond blog post: The Difference Between a Personal Cloud and a Personal Data Store

    Smoke Signals

    leaflet.pub 

    Eurosky Portal

    Eurosky’s Introducing Portal blog on leaflet

    sifa.id 

    Andy’s sifa.id post: https://sifa.id/p/andypiper.me 

    anisota.net 

    Aetheros.computer via (https://whitep4nth3r.com/)

    Media

    James Kottke blog post: Now Online: a Treasure Trove of 1000s of Secret Concert Recordings

    Internet Archive: Aadam Jacobs Collection at the Live Music Archive

    Brick Fanatics post: What can you do with £750 worth of LEGO SMART Play sets?

    CBC article: 5 things you didn’t know about the Star Wars Cantina band (unless you are a total Star Wars nerd)

    BBC article: LEGO’s new smart brick

    Games at Work e546: Smart Play Doom Brain Brick (for the new LEGO SMART Brick)

  • Mashup of photo by Victor Serban on Unsplash & images-assets.nasa.gov/image/art002e009287/art002e009287~orig.jpg

    Published 13 April 2026

    e550 with Michael, Andy and Michael – celebrating Moon Joy with the Artemis II crew, Nutella in space, AI, an isomorphic reboot of Wolf3D and a whole lot more!

    Michael, Andy and Michael get things started for this episode with stories Artemis II mission, recorded just a few hours ahead of the splashdown off the California coast. The Artemis II mission has captured the attention of many and reignited interest in space and space exploration. NASA has leaned into the Moon Joy and the celebration of the Artemis II crew has inspired and touched the co-hosts. Check out the Artemis II moon wallpaper, and the LunarWall shortcut courtesy of Federico Viticci. In addition to the Rise mascot floating around the Artemis capsule, the world certainly took note of the floating Nutella jar. This was not the only COTS product aboard. In addition to the photos shot on iPhone and Nikon D5, Jessica Alba’s Honest lotion also had its moment.

    NPR had an entertaining story about all of the Moon movies – at least those that had Moon in the title.  This of course missed examples such as the Austin Powers film (with Moon Unit Alpha and Moon Unit Zappa).  Fortunately, Wikipedia has a set of movies set on the Moon.

    In the AI section, which persisted throughout the episode, actually – “AI!” – the co-hosts talk about the 3D models created by Google’s Gemini.  They also take a moment to consider the reported cybersecurity vulnerability discoveries from Anthropic’s project Glasswing.

    Rounding out the episode for this week, the crew takes a look at the Android XR capability for turning 2D websites, apps and more into 3D experiences.  And a fun reboot of Wolfenstein 3D in  isomorphic form – though a bit of a challenge without remapping the keys.

    What #MoonMovies can you think of that do not have moon in the title?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksArtemis II Splashdown & Morehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfhDuOHMp0A

    Mashable article: How NASA made ‘moon joy’ a space-age catchphrase

    Cult of Mac article: How to put stunning Artemis II moon wallpapers on your iPhone, iPad or Mac

    Futurism article: Lone Jar of Nutella Drifts Around Cabin of Moon Spacecraft

    Nutella at Costco

    NPR article: The most memorable moon movies aren’t even about space

    Wikipedia article: Category:Films set on the Moon

    Games at Work e549: Dark Side of The Moon (for discussion & show notes on Artemis II)

    AI

    The Verge article: Google’s Gemini AI can answer your questions with 3D models and simulations

    The Verge article: A new Anthropic model found security problems ‘in every major operating system and web browser’

    Le Chat by mistral.ai 

    3D

    The Verge article: You can now turn 2D apps into 3D while using the Galaxy XR headset

    Isowulf Wolfenstein 3D Mod

    Wikipedia article: Wolfenstein 3D

  • NASA photo art002e009057, 4 April 2026

    Published 6 April 2026

    e549 with Andy, Michael and Michael – boldly go into a deep set of space discussions featuring Artemis II, ways to keep track of the historic flight, COTS software and hardware aboard the spacecraft, Bernie Sanders conversation with Claude, TU Wien’s mini QR code and a whole lot more!

    Andy, Michael and Michael boldly go into a deep set of space discussions focusing on the launch of Artemis II.  Mission Control starts off with the Artemis II Tracker built by Jakob Rosin for Jakob Rosin, and as he says, every other space nerd who stayed up for launch night.  The tracker is a fantastic assembly of data related to the mission, and is well worth bookmarking to keep up to speed on the progress of the astronauts as they approach the Moon and make their return journey to Earth.  

    Andy, Michael and Michael take a look at an article describing how COTS (commercial, off the shelf) technology are used in space missions, and the steps needed to ensure such technologies are appropriate for the mission.  It is no surprise that iPhone use aboard Artemis II caught the co-hosts’ attention, and after recording the episode, they found even more insight on how the iPhone 17 Pro Max was cleared for use. Another COTS technology used aboard the spacecraft was email – and also needed some glitches to be resolved.

    Other interesting stories came from the Gizmodo article, such as the pre-launch card game which continues until the mission commander loses, and the challenges with the Universal Waste Management System that were initially resolved in Earth orbit, through another issue surfaced later in the voyage with the vent line.  At time of this writing, all systems to go with the Universal Waste Management System were rated as ‘go’.  The Moon plush named Rise, which acts as a zero gravity indicator, was designed by a second grader named Lucas Ye.

    In the non-space portion of the episode, the team discusses browsergate, Bernie Sanders’ conversation with Claude and a mini QR code from the TU Wein that could help store up to 2TB of data on an A4 sized page!

    Wrapping up the episode, Andy shares his contact information through his aggregation site of andypiper.me 

    Do you think that the orange color of the iPhone 17 Pro Max matched the uniform color of the Artemis crew?  Have you placed your order for a copy of Rise?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksArtemis II

    Artemis II Tracker

    Digital Trends article: Artemis II crew videos show astronauts goofing around with an iPhone in space

    9 to 5 Mac article: Here’s how NASA cleared the iPhone 17 Pro Max for astronauts on Artemis II

    Gizmodo article: 5 Things You May Have Missed During NASA’s Historic Launch of Artemis 2

    CNN article: More than half way to the moon, the Artemis II astronauts grappled with a toilet problem

    Tom’s Hardware article: Artemis II astronaut finds two Outlook instances running on computers, calls on Houston to fix Microsoft anomaly — puzzled caller describes ‘two Outlooks, and neither one of those are working’

    ABC News article: 8-year-old watches his plush toy rocket to the moon with Artemis II mission

    Games at Work e430: that’s no moon, it’s the Moon! (for the India Moon landing in 2023)

    Security & Privacy

    https://browsergate.eu

    AI

    Techdirt article: Bernie Sanders “Interviewed” A Chatbot To Expose AI’s Secrets. It Has No Secrets. It Just Agrees With You.

    Ars Technica article: Here’s what that Claude Code source leak reveals about Anthropic’s plans

    Tamagotchi

    Connect with Andy

    https://andypiper.me

  • Photo by NEOM on Unsplash

    Published 23 March 2026

    e548 with Michael and Michael – Stories and discussion on uncomfortable valley & uncanny valley, Nintendo’s Talking Flower, 8bit Pixel Agents for AI orchestration and a whole lot more.

    Michael and Michael get things rolling while Andy is away on an article discussing the animated emojis in Microsoft Teams.  Fast Company article author Rebecca Heilweil describes these emojis as the ‘uncomfortable valley’ due to the animations that imbue the emojis shared in Teams with potentially unintended additional meaning.  Check out the link for a comparison graphic showing the similarities and differences between the uncanny and uncomfortable valleys.

    Switching to robotic animation, Michael and Michael take a look at Nintendo’s Talking Flower, which reminds them of the Alarmo alarm clock.  Next, a digital camera that provides mini quests that are satisfied by taking a picture of “a tiny thing” or “a hidden face”.

    Turning to AI, the co-hosts check out Pixel Agents, an 8bit representation of agents allowing the human orchestrator to monitor all the agents performing their tasks in a concurrent manner.  Michael R highlights a Mac local orchestrator called Osaurus.  Rounding out this week’s episode is a Washington Post about jobs that AI may take on, a story about ChatGPT assisting with cancer research, and an intriguing video about Devo.

    Which Pixel People professions would you want to have in your Pixel Agent virtual office?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksTech

    Fast Company article: The uncomfortable valley: Microsoft Teams emoji faces have got to go

    Wikipedia article: Uncanny Valley

    Games at Work e308: Feline Filters (for discussion on the Uncanny Valley)

    The Verge article: Weird Nintendo never went away

    Nintendo Talking Flower

    Nintendo Alarmo

    Games at Work e485: Barbarians at the Rhubarb Bar (for the Alarmo clock)

    hackster.io article: This Camera Turns Your Day Into an RPG

    Games at Work e195: Augmented Audio (for Monopoly City Streets)

    AI

    Github: pablodelucca/pixel-agents

    Pixel People wiki

    https://osaurus.ai

    Washington Post article: See which jobs are most threatened by AI and who may be able to adapt

    The Verge article: ChatGPT did not cure a dog’s cancer

    The Verge article: Go watch this video about an AI system that can predict how proteins fold

    Devo
  • Photo by Michael Martine, Chapel Hill, NC March 2026

    Published 16 March 2026

    e547 with Michael and Michael – Stories and discussion on bot to bot communications, 50 years of Apple, LEGO SmartPlay SmartBricks and a whole lot more.

    Michael and Michael get things rolling while Andy is away on an article about Meta’s acquisition of Moltbook.  This agent to agent conversational environment reminds the pair of the Google Homes chatting with one another from back in June 2017.  Have a look at the short description in the YouTube video below and hear the conversation from 2017 in e173: Babel Fish.  

    Next up: Apple’s announcement on the celebrations surrounding their 50th anniversary.  The intersection of technology and the liberal arts continues to resonate across the years.  A tremendous hack by Paul Staal’s design for a Mac mini case that mimics the 2×2 sloped computer brick.

    This, of course, allows the co-hosts get into the heart of this episode: LEGO!   First, a Duke alumni magazine article about Ruthie Chen Ousley, who works at LEGO Education.  Then, a discussion about the battery and new uses for the SmartBrick.  A video from Brick Fanatics highlights who these sets and bricks are really for (spoiler, not AFOL) and how this provides a new degree of play with surprises and future possibilities as new sensors and experiences are unlocked.  

    How do you imagine these SmartBricks may be used in the future?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAI

    Ars Technica article: Meta acquires Moltbook, the AI agent social network

    Games at Work e173: Babel Fish (for two Google Homes talking with one another @seebotschat)

    HEADLINE: "Study Finds That Execs Are Outsourcing Their Thinking to AI"

    ALT HEADLINE: "Execs Worry They'll Be Replaced By AI, But They're Doing It Themselves"

    https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-executive-thinking-survey

    — Mike Elgan (@[email protected])2026-03-08T18:20:28.916Z

  • Published 9 March 2026

    e543 with Andy, Michael and Michael – Stories and discussion on LEGO’s new Smart Play brick, this is a human brain (cells) on Doom, orc audio for vibe coding, Liquid Death’s Spotify urn for playlist immortality and a whole lot more.

    Michael, Michael and Andy get things rolling with Michael M’s delivery of the newest innovation from LEGO, the Smart Play brick!   While Michael’s only had a little bit of time to play with the new brick, it is already sparking some interesting ideas.  Check out the show notes below for what others are doing with it, now that the Smart Play brick is out and in the wild!  And of course the audio of the podcast for some of the sounds from the brick!

    An article about a biocomputing success to play Doom with human brain cells, reminds the cohosts of other biocomputing examples from e504.  The Ars Technica article about identifying anonymous users through LLMs likewise reminds the team of other examples for triangulating identity.  After a story about using the audio from Warcraft III in vibe coding experiences “work, work”, the team takes a look at “Humanity’s Last Exam”, which likely has already been handled by an enterprising AI research team.  

    Turning next to a Norwegian PSA (that is NSFW and funny) on the slippery slope of digital products and services getting worse and worse, the team then considers a story about a partnership between Epic and Google for a new set of metaverse applications.  In yet another back to the future experience, the Niantic gaming functionality may provide a roadmap to how this partnership may grow.

    The team wraps up with a Liquid Death promo for how you may achieve musical immortality with a custom Spotify playlist played via a bluetooth urn.

    What songs would be on your postmortem playlist?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksLEGO Smart Play

    r/LegoSmartBrick post: I disassembled a smart brick (note the comments about running Doom on a SmartBrick!)

    Adafruit post: Some LEGO Smart Brick – BLE Reverse Engineering

    #LEGO #SmartPlay hacking continued: as the Smart Minifigs and Smart Tiles comply with standard ISO 15693 NFC, they can be copied. So this had to be done. The clone works totally fine with the original #SmartBrick.

    ➡️ https://youtube.com/shorts/kbI0hHGysUM

    — Mäh W. (@[email protected])2026-03-08T19:14:04.937Z

    AI

    New Scientist article: Human brain cells on a chip learned to play Doom in a week

    Games at Work e504: Can You Digg It? for biocomputing

    Ars Technica article: LLMs can unmask pseudonymous users at scale with surprising accuracy

    PC Magazine article: Sick of Babysitting Claude? 100K Coders Are Asking an Orc to Do It

    Texas A&M Stories: Don’t Panic: ‘Humanity’s Last Exam’ has begun

    Digital Products & Services

    https://www.sheetz.com

    The Verge article: Epic and Google have signed a special deal for a new class of ‘metaverse’ apps

    Games at Work e98: Something Sweet in Your Neighborhood (for Niantic examples)

    Boy Genius Report article: Keep Playing Your Spotify Playlists After You Die With Liquid Death’s New Bluetooth Urn

    Games at Work e26: Business Process Management and Immortality (for digital immortality well before LLMs came on the scene)

    Michael Martine
  • Photo by Marc-Olivier Jodoin on Unsplash

    Published 2 March 2026

    e545 with Andy and Michael – Get to talk about mostly non-AI topics this week, as we look at a cool kickstarter, Titan, that is building out a futuristic gauntlet. Do you want a forearm mounted drone? Is so, go check it out, along with the opportunity for community modules. Very cool!

    We then dip back into the world of AR and VR, as people speculate how Apple’s rumored AR glasses may benefit from the recent acquisition of Q.AI. We spend some time thinking of how a new App can help identify if you are around someone who has smart glasses on. (Even if Michael get’s the TV show reference wrong – and after an exhaustive search he can’t find the right one). We also discuss Disney’s deal to relaunch the Muppets in VR Ride as a VR app.

    Moving on to some cool artistic visions we look at both video and photographic way of seeing the world. Before moving back to tech with amazing upgrades to robots on Mars. Millions of miles away NASA is repurposing a chip on a robotic helicopter to improve the location information of a rover. While closer to home, robots are fixing potholes.

    We end with a story about a fellow geek accidentally hacking over 7,000 home based vacuum robots.

    Selected Links

    Electronic Gauntlet Kickstarter

    AR / VR

    Apple AR GlassesApp warns you if someone is wearing smart glassesMuppets in VR

    Art

    https://mastodon.social/@sheepfilms/116132499996224901https://www.youtube.com/embed/ctPqNSrmknA?si=M9ThvKmyB8YuLBykOlympic from a different perspective

    Robots

    Upgrades on MarsPot hole Robots Vacuum Army
  • Photo by Masahiro Naruse on Unsplash

    Published 23 February 2026

    e544 with Andy, Michael and Michael – Stories and discussion on rumoured AI devices, addictive predictives, listening through bananas (or mud), and what happens when VR platforms die? Plus the usual assortment or other things.

    This week’s episode kicks off with a check in on which tech giants are working on what devices, now? Apple stepping back from headsets but working on glasses and pendants, and OpenAI making some kind of smart Pod for your dumb Home?

    Then, there’s discussion of the challenges of privacy when LLMs get access to private email and chats. Oh, and if you’re not sure if your AI is an LLM or a sentience, then Anthropic can’t answer that.

    We hope you’re listening to the show in perfect digital quality, but we’re also interested to know if you’ve tried piping it to your ears through any kind of fruit – let us know.

    Meta’s fully backing away from VR for Horizon Worlds, and in case Blizzard ever stops making the client software for World of Warcraft, Michael tried an open source version.

    Finally, don’t let hackers get hold of your brainwaves! (it could happen)

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot. All rights reserved. That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAIApple AI Glasses OpenAI and Jony Ive device

    Thank god Microsoft is shoving Copilot AI crap into everything. One gets the sense this isn't going to be an isolated occurrence. From Bleeping Computer:

    "Microsoft says a Microsoft 365 Copilot bug has been causing the AI assistant to summarize confidential emails since late January, bypassing data loss prevention (DLP) policies that organizations rely on to protect sensitive information."

    https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-says-bug-causes-copilot-to-summarize-confidential-emails/

    — BrianKrebs (@[email protected])2026-02-18T18:24:34.707Z

    HEADLINE: "Prediction Markets Are Sucking Huge Numbers of Young People Into Gambling"

    ALT HEADLINE: "All Our Incentives Lead to Bad Outcomes, and Prediction Markets Are Just One Example"

    https://futurism.com/future-society/prediction-markets-gambling

    — Mike Elgan (@[email protected])2026-02-16T17:06:59.555Z

    Episode 80 on prediction marketsClaude isn’t sure what it isI gave Claude access to my pen plotterAudioAudiophiles can’t tell mud from bananas?AR/VRMeta ditching VR for Horizon WorldsOpen Source WoW clientMakersReverse engineering a sleep mask

    Bonus link

    Trek-o-rama

  • Photo by Viktor Keri on Unsplash

    Published 16 February 2026

    e543 with Andy, Michael and Michael – Stories and discussion on Agentic AI and the changing nature of work, agents renting humans, real time translation, artistic roads, e-bikes for your feet and a whole lot more.

    Andy, Michael and Michael get things rolling with several AI articles.  First up, is a Mastodon post by Alan Pringle that called attention to a HBR article on the influence of AI on productivity.  This then led to a post on productivity acceleration technologies from years past – from COBOL, which was designed to enable business people to write programs, to 4GLs to case tools. 

    Then, the team discusses a detailed post from Matt Shumer entitled Something Big Is Happening.  The entire post is well worth reading, not only for how history is unfolding in real time, also for the recommendations that Matt makes for people to take onboard right now.  Among the recommendations are to begin the habit of adapting, and experimenting with multiple tools to build resiliency and experience.

    Wrapping up this section is a new version of taskrabbit that provides an API for Agents to rent humans for specific work called rentahuman.ai .  The future is certainly coming in fast.

    In the AR VR section, there is a story from Tom’s Guide where the author used her Ray Ban Meta glasses to translate the Super Bowl halftime video in real time.  This feels like the precursor to the next logical step, a dynamic version of the Amazon X-Ray feature where further context can be personalized and served up to the user if they wish.

    After touching on the assembly of Game Poems and the art of roads in games, the team sprints to the end of the episode with Nike’s Project Amplify, which is an ankle exoskeleton to augment humans running abilities. Looping back to the start of the episode, Andy highlights a BBC show featuring Chris McCausland.

    What’s been your experience with AI productivity?  What are you experimenting with? Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAI

    "For instance, #engineers, in turn, spent more time reviewing, correcting, and guiding #AI-generated or AI-assisted work produced by colleagues. These demands extended beyond formal #code review. Engineers increasingly found themselves coaching colleagues who were 'vibe-coding' and finishing partially complete pull requests."

    https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it

    — Alan Pringle (@[email protected])2026-02-10T13:47:23.853Z

  • Photo by Mihai 👑 on Unsplash

    Published 9 February 2026

    e542 with Michael, Andy and Michael – Stories and discussion on programming language localization, Virtual Boy hardware & emulation, LEGO terrestrial & orbital dwellings and a whole lot more.

    Michael, Andy and Michael get things rolling with an article on programming language localization, specifically using the Welsh language as syntax.  Next, the co hosts consider Matt Ballentine’s thoughtful post about the the speed of technological change, and the recommendations to capitalize on the innovation that is happening.

    Then, the team takes a look at the Virtual Boy hardware, newly made available by Nintendo for the Switch and Switch 2.  This reminds Michael R of the View-Master and a Vision Pro emulator for the Virtual Boy.  Next up is a story about a Quest 3 virtual keyboard.  The experience Michael R had back in 2017 with a laser keyboard was a good reference, as is his more recent VR experience in using a hardware keyboard with his Vision Pro.

    Rounding out this episode are a pair of LEGO stories – the first, a replica of a 1799 house and a of the Project Hail Mary spacecraft.  Check out the links below for the awesomeness.

    How are you and your team taking the greatest advantage of the speed of change in 2026?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAI

    Hackaday article: YSGRIFENNU CÔD YN GYMRAEG (WRITING CODE IN WELSH)

    Raku

    Sacha Chua blog post: Sketchnote: Fun With Dead Languages: Damian Conway

    Matt Ballentine blog post: Is it really happening that quickly? 2025 edition

    Wikipedia article: Connections

    Game & VR Technology

    The Verge article: Nintendo’s new Virtual Boy is more fun to look at than to play

    Virtual Boy for Nintendo Switch

    Wikipedia article: View-Master

    9 to 5 Mac article: This Vision Pro emulator brings Nintendo’s Virtual Boy back to life

    TechCrunch article: Roblox’s 4D creation feature is now available in open beta

    Gizmodo article: Meta’s Quest 3 Has the First VR Keyboard That Doesn’t Totally Suck

    Karrello Laser Keyboard

    Games at Work e164: Addictive AR

    LEGO

    Reddit r/lego post: My brother and I collaborated on a 17,000-piece model of a family home

    Slashfilm article: New Project Hail Mary LEGO Set Gives Ryan Gosling A Close Encounter In Space

    Web 11.0 mashup junkie, and co-founder / co-host of the GamesAtWork.biz podcast. My views are my own.

    Michael Martine

  • edited picture from Lars H Knudsen: https://www.pexels.com/photo/a-close-up-shot-of-a-llama-7845603/

    Published 2 February 2026

    e541 with Michael and Michael – Stories and discussion on AI with local Claude (and Clawdbot, Moltbot & openclaw), collaborative agents, 25 cent physical microtransactions ( quarters ), invisibility cloaks, LEGO SmartPlay and a whole lot more.

    Michael and Michael get things rolling with a series of intriguing innovations in local AI.  First up is a local instantiation of Claude via Ollama – see notes below for the installation instructions if you care to give this a shot.  Then, the team checks out Trae for it’s orchestration capabilities. Michael M makes the mistake of trying out one of these innovations while recording the show and nearly crashes his machine.  Then a discussion on the startup Humans& and how this company is planning for how human + digital combinations will power the future.  The post from Thomas Ricouard illustrates how agents are collaborating with one another.  Michael and Michael stay at the surface level on the whole clawdbot —> moltbot —> openclaw story which has been rapidly evolving this past week while still marveling at the speed of movement.

    Switching then to the makers making things, there is a fantastic example of how to enable the original microtransaction for current software.  How?  Implementing the hardware mechanism for accepting a quarter to allow the game player to continue.  Next, from MIT, a significant improvement on the umbrella by using a quadcopter and computer vision tracker to create a flying mobile shelter that protects the user from the elements.  And then, a story about an invisibility cloak from Duke in the news this week, which harkens back years – check the show notes below for prior discussions on this capability.

    LEGO has announced a new innovation – the SMART Play system, replete with SMART Bricks, SMART Tags and SMART Minifigures.  It will be so intriguing to see how this fits in with the LEGO robotics, FIRST LEGO League and more.  The longer arc going back to LEGO Serious Play may provide some hints.

    Michael and Michael wrap things up with another long arc from the show – Doom running on a plethora of devices and screens.  This time?  Doom on earbuds.  Check out the links and discussion for more.

    Are you considering trying out openclaw.ai ?  Why or why not?  Have your openclaw (or other) bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksAI

    Tessl blog: Ollama helps Claude Code run locally on open-weight models

    trae.ai 

    ollama.com 

    “ollama run slekrem/gpt-oss-claude-code-32k:latest”

    TechCrunch article: Humans& thinks coordination is the next frontier for AI, and they’re building a model to prove it

    Agents are now brainstorming on how to be proactive instead of passive

    https://www.moltbook.com/post/562faad7-f9cc-49a3-8520-2bdf362606bb

    — Thomas Ricouard (@[email protected])2026-01-30T14:23:57.561Z

  • Photo by Aneta Pawlik on Unsplash

    Published 26 January 2026

    e540 with Michael, Andy and Michael – Stories and discussion on mobile controllers, AI playing Anchorhead, Zork & Roller Coaster Tycoon, an isometric NYC, human artistic creativity and a whole lot more.

    Michael, Andy and Michael get things clicking with some mobile controllers.  Starting with one of Andy’s latest technology acquisitions, the team enjoys hearing about Andy’s experience with the MCON.  And they especially like the “saucer separation” functionality.  The featured image from Unsplash was selected because there were very few TNG images – if you want to see the saucer separation that inspired this week’s show title, have a look at the YouTube video below.  After discussing the Anbernic controller, which has some interesting features like a screen and heart rate monitoring, the team moves forward with AI.

    Claude features in a couple of the stories – first with an article from Fernando Borretti who details how he hooked Claude into the text based adventure Anchorhead.  The co-hosts have been intrigued by this kind of thing for years, and were reminded of the recent open sourcing of Zork.  Ramp Labs also used Claude with Roller Coaster Tycoon, which struck the team as a great way to run optimization routines across a multitude of data points that make us the game.  Next up was a story about using AI to create a SimCity-style rendition of New York City (New York City!) with astounding detail.  There were a couple of jumping off points of note from this story – Nvidia’s Omniverse digital twin, traffic optimization routines and another being the language in SimCity called Simlish – and a translator is included below for the listeners to enjoy.

    After all the news on AI – it is refreshing though unsurprising that Hermès selected human creativity, complete with the imperfections that make the artwork more real.  Wrapping up the episode, the team closes with Netflix’s foray into social engagement.

    What game would you like to have AI set up to play?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksHardware: Mobile Controllers

    Kickstarter: MCON: The Switchblade of Mobile Controllers by Ohsnap

    The Verge article: Anbernic’s next wireless controller adds a screen and heart rate monitoring

    AI

    boretti.me blog post: Letting Claude Play Text Adventures

    Wikipedia article: Anchorhead

    Games at Work e534: Hiding in Plain Sight (for Microsoft’s open sourcing of Zork)

    Ramp Labs blog post: We Put Claude Code in Rollercoaster Tycoon

    atari.com Roller Coaster Tycoon

    cannoneyed.com Isometric NYC (click the ℹ️ in the upper right for description)

    PC Gamer article: Software engineer creates classic SimCity-style map of NYC—and argues that AI will be good for creatives, actually

    Nvidia’s Omniverse

    Games at Work e316: Omni Metaverse (for Nvidia’s Omniverse)

    The Sims Wiki: Simlish

    lingojam.com English to Simlish translator

    Inc article: Hermès Just Made a Bold Statement in the Age of AI

    acquired.fm Season 12, Episode 2: LVMH

    Art

    This is Colossal post: Pam Connolly Weaves Family Snapshots on Vintage Potholder Looms

    Everything is Social

    TechCrunch article: Netflix to redesign its app as it competes with social platforms for daily engagement

    Web 11.0 mashup junkie, and co-founder / co-host of the GamesAtWork.biz podcast. My views are my own.

    Michael Martine

  • Michael R brings back Ian Hughes to discuss the recent changes with Meta’s VR investments, cool content on Apple’s Vision Pro, the new Creator Studio bundle, and 25 years of Wikipedia.

    While Andy and Michael M are not available we look at how large companies cutting back on innovation can allow new startups and companies to flourish. With Meta refocusing more on wearables, perhaps we will see an uptick in innovative uses for VR. Which is a perfect sequel way for Michael to given his review of the NBA’s recent basketball game on the Vision Pro. The experience seemed to him to be the perfect onramp for Michael M, if it were college basketball.

    We then review a few older games (Civilization VII and RetroCade), coming to Apple Arcade, before looking at the Board Tabletop Gaming Console. With all this cool tech, Michael introduces Ian to the Apple Creator Studio. Is it worth it? Ian, having recently built an AI server at home via ComfyUI, thinks it may be cheap enough for his pocketbook.

    Finally we get to Wikipedia’s 25th anniversary, and what Ian did on the Cool Stuff Collective for Wikipedia’s 15th Anniversary.

    Showlinks:

    Meta:

    Shutting studios – https://daringfireball.net/linked/2026/01/14/meta-three-vr-studios Shifting to Wearables – https://www.theverge.com/news/861295/meta-reality-labs-layoffs-shift-to-wearables Discontinuing Metaverse for work – https://www.theverge.com/tech/863209/meta-has-discontinued-its-metaverse-for-work-too

    Vision Pro:

    NBA on the Vision Pro – https://www.macstories.net/news/immersive-lakers-game-now-widely-available-on-apple-vision-pro/ RetroCade – https://techhub.social/@ellenich/115894673956399018

    Games:

    Board Table Top – https://www.wired.com/review/board-tabletop-game-console Civ VII – https://www.theverge.com/news/861816/civilization-vii-apple-arcade-launch

    Creators:

    Creator Studio – https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/01/introducing-apple-creator-studio-an-inspiring-collection-of-creative-apps/

    Wikipedia:

    25th Anniversary – https://www.theverge.com/news/861935/wikipedia-25th-anniversary-2026Wikipedia 25th site – https://wikipedia25.org

    Cool stuff collective – https://citv.fandom.com/wiki/Cool_Stuff_Collective 

    Comfy UI – https://comfyui.org/en/what-is-comfyui 

    These show notes were lovingly crafted by a human.

  • Photo by Michael Martine, Blowing Rock, NC 2022

    Published 12 January 2026

    e538 with Michael, Michael and Andy – Stories and discussion on CES2026, EuroTech, PhoneTech, AI playing your games for you so you can watch and a whole lot more.

    Andy, Michael and Michael take a look at many of the announcements from CES, and share a few of their favorites.  CES is the annual Consumer Electronics Show held in Las Vegas, Nevada.  In the phone technology arena, there are several MagSafe examples that magnetically snap onto an iPhone, such as charger that looks kind of like a floppy disk.  Another example is a keyboard, with tactile buttons you can type with in portrait or landscape mode.  The keyboard creates a form factor that is reminiscent of the Danger Hiptop / Sidekick.  Between these examples and others (like a second screen e-reader that snaps to the back of a phone), the cohosts mull what it would be like to stack several of them in sequence.

    After discussing the Punkt phone, and the Proton suite enabled by the AphyOS, the team turns their attention to several other innovations shared at CES.  Lollypops that play music, a vibrating chef’s knife, and the Lepro AMI AI companion all caught their eye.  The Lepro AMI seems similar, at least in the form factor, to the Gatebox, which was first discussed on Games at Work back in 2017.

    Next, the team takes a look at a fork of a decompilation of SuperMario 64, where the developer added a physical coin slot and updated the code to allow for micro transactions with physical money.  Then, following on a post from Mike Elgan, the co-hosts consider an article about Sony’s patent to take over a player’s avatar in case they get stuck and want help to continue their game.  It’s kind of like your own personal AI Twitch channel.  The Games at Work team considered a similar story about Microsoft’s gaming Copilot in 2025.

    Speaking of Microsoft, Michael M got excited about the potential triumphant return of Clippy, only to realize that it was clickbait.  

    Would you like to have an AI show you how to get past a tricky game boss, or play through it for you?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksCES2026

    www.ces.tech The Consumer Electronics Show

    Retrododo article: This Adorable Floppy Disk MagSafe Battery Pack Is My New EDC Fave

    KBDcraft.store Kit Shamshel Mouse

    Liliputing article: Clicks Power Keyboard is a magnetic thumb keyboard & wireless power bank for your phone

    ohsnap.com: MCON, the magnetic transforming gaming controller

    Vice article: The Sidekick Was Pop Culture’s Most Stylish and Innovative Cellphone

    Belkin iPhone Mount with MagSafe for Mac Notebooks

    punkt.ch blog post: Punkt. unveils MC03, latest version of its unique smartphone offering giving users full control over personal data and usage.

    AphyOS

    Mashable article: The weirdest tech of CES: It gets very weird, very fast

    Games at Work e520: Cold Fusion Gaming (for the Gatebox virtual companion)

    tech.eu article: CES 2026 showcases Europe’s hardware renaissance

    Reverse Engineering Microtransactions into Retro Games

    Hackaday article: Super Mario 64, Now With Microtransactions

    AI

    Sony AI plays video games, so you don't have to! https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/sony-patents-ai-plays-video-games

    — Mike Elgan (@[email protected])2026-01-09T01:30:33.730Z

  • Photo by Scott Gruber on Unsplash

    Published 4 January 2026

    e537 with Michael M and Andy – ringing in the new year with the amazing power of music to move and heal, LEGO and retro builds and a whole lot more.

    Andy, Michael and Michael would like to wish all of our listeners a very happy 2026!

    Michael M and Andy start off 2026 on a good note – or perhaps better said – a series of good notes.  Michael shares some of his vacation reading, beginning with the book, I Heard There Was a Secret Chord by Daniel Levitin.  In this book, Levitin highlights the power of music to move and heal, and provides a Linktree to listen to the songs featured in the book, which is included in the show notes below.  One particular example from the book was the Ella Fitzgerald recording of Mack the Knife in Berlin, and the magic she created in the moment when she forgot the lyrics.

    Andy highlights an amazing musical creation moment with Jacob Collier’s improvisation with the National Symphony Orchestra.  This reminded Michael of Rosamund Stone Zander & Benjamin Zander’s book, Art of Possibility, and maestro Zander’s TED talk on the power of classical music.  Michael also brought up David Byrne’s book, How Music Works, and his learning in Puerto Rico on how dancers conduct the musicians as they perform together.

    Byrne discussed mixtapes in his book, and the modern equivalent of them are the playlist, which is exactly what Levitin’s Linktree leads to. Michael created a mixtape to express musically what he was trying to say in words for his NCSSM convocation speech at the start of the 2025-26 school year. Andy shares a couple of intriguing ways to create music through retro devices and common household products – all of these are in the links below.

    Moving to the building part of the episode, Andy and Michael start off with LEGO, and this is about to be a banner year for the company with so many new sets coming on the market.  There’s a new LEGO Icons building, which has in it a music store and includes a sousaphone player minifig.  The cohosts touch on the Star Trek Enterprise set which was also just launched, which includes a minifig of Commander Riker with his trombone.  Andy describes the awesomeness that is the LEGO GameBoy with the inventive buttons on the device, and the team then touch on a couple of retro consoles such as the Commodore 64 reboot.

    The team wraps up this episode with a mention of Andy’s grumpiness on the year end Tech Grumps podcast.

    What music has inspired you in 2025?  What builds (LEGO, retro or otherwise) are you planning for 2026?   Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @[email protected] (our home for now) and let us know! 

    These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

    Selected LinksReading

    I Heard There Was a Secret Chord by Daniel J Levitin

    Kurt Weill Foundation for Music, Die Driegroschenoper – listen to the “Moritat von Mackie Messer” excerpt sung by Bertholt Brecht in the Featured Audio & Video section

    Games at Work e485: Barbarians at the Rhubarb Bar (for flow, and of course Barbara’s Rhabarberbar)

    Art of Possibility by Rosamund Stone Zander & Benjamin Zander

    Benjamin Zander’s TED talk: The transformative power of classical music

    Games at Work e9: Reality is Broken (for Jane McGongial’s book, and Benjamin Zander’s Ode to Joy)

    How Music Works by David Byrne

    Listening

    Wikipedia article: Mixtape

    Listen to the songs featured in A Secret Chord – https://linktr.ee/secretchord

    Michael M’s Apple Music Mixtape for NCSSM’s convocation

    Michael M’s Spotify Mixtape for NCSSM’s convocation

    Making of Boléro by Linus A Kesson

    Building LEGO and more

    LEGO Icons Shopping Street #11371, with sousaphone musician (see picture 13 in photo gallery)

    LEGO Icons Star Trek: U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D™ #10356 with trombone player Commander Riker

    minifigs.me 

    LEGO Gameboy #70246 build and additional new Retro Console #31380

    Wired article: Review: Commodore 64 Ultimate

    The Lost Outpost blog post: Retro-tastic!

    Other Stranger Things

    Woe Industries game 

    TechGrumps 3.3.5: – Bless The TechGrumps (Special holiday special) 

    Web 11.0 mashup junkie, and co-founder / co-host of the GamesAtWork.biz podcast. My views are my own.

    Michael Martine

  • Photo by Alexander Grigoryev on Unsplash

    Published 22 December 2025

    e536 with Andy, Michael R, and guest host newly-retired Ian “Epredator” Hughes – a dive into gaming in 2025, retro computing and games, how to fix old paintings, and what’s coming to the public domain on January 1st.

    The show kicks off with a number of gaming topics, discussing what the hosts have been playing lately, including the results of the Steam Replay for 2025. There’s also a chat about Commodore (joysticks, and the new Commodore 64 Ultimate), ZX Spectrum, and other retro machines. Netflix has been making acquisitions in the gaming space, where will they lead?

    Michael is fascinated by the process of restoring old paintings; Andy and Ian have seen a lot more of this on TV in the UK!

    In the wrap, the hosts cover an incident of apparent smart glasses-induced rage on the subway; and briefly talk about what’s coming into the Public Domain on January 1st 2026.

    Wishing all our listeners a happy and peaceful break to close out 2025, and we’ll be back with new episodes in 2026.

    Selected LinksGamingOpen Source Cannon Fodder Engine Steam Replay shows high interest in older gamesAndy’s Steam year in review Michael’s Year in review Uber Eats spoofed by SNLOld new Commodore 64 JoystickHackster review of Commodore 64 UltimateESP32 Rainbow (ZX Spectrum Re-created)Picocomputer 6502 boardNetflix buys Ready Player MeMakersA satisfying painting restoration on YouTube UK alternatives:Hidden Treasures of the National TrustThe Repair ShopMediaSmashed smart glassesPublic Domain Day 2026