e560 — Sweating the Small Stuff

stainless steel drilled by blue hand tool
Photo by nik biziuk on Unsplash

Published 6 July 2026

e560 with Andy, Michael and Michael – stickshift & phone handsets with Ian Bogost, camping at EMF Camp 2026 & Mountain Quest 2026, brain cooling, dwarf lemurs, World Cup 2026, USMNT, ThreeLions, the tokenpocalypse and a whole lot more!

Andy, Michael and Michael get things started with a TechCrunch interview with Ian Bogost on his about to be published book, The Small Stuff.  Building on the success of his article on the demise of the stick shift, Ian wrote a book that focuses on the details of life that make a difference.  The cohosts harken back all the way to episode 17 in August of 2012 when Ian was a guest on the podcast.  Part of the discussion from the article focused on the nature of the telephone handset, which brought the EMF Camp telecommunications setup to mind for Andy.  Electromagnetic Telecom allows anyone attending EMF to register a phone number on the network and communicate with other participants.  Speaking of camping, Michael M shares an overview video of Mountain Quest 2026, where he was a participant the prior weekend in the mountains of North Carolina.

It’s hot in the UK and in North Carolina – so the maker article about the brain turbocharger looked to be a welcome relief from the heat.  This modified construction helmet recognizes when the user has been thinking hard and signals multiple fans built into the helmet to cool things down so the user’s brain does not overheat from overclocking.  

Recent discussions on the podcast about the Steam hardware made the BC250 an intriguing topic.  Michael R recounts his recent trip to the Duke Lemur Center to see the small Fat-tailed dwarf lemur.  And in the small and cool category, the team considers the “Impossible Watch” from D1 Milano.

The cohosts then take a brief World Cup interlude from the tech discussions.  While neither Michael is what you may consider a ‘bandwagon’ fan for the World Cup, the Lay’s potato chip television commercial is pretty funny.  Check out the embedded video below.  At the time of recording and writing, both England and the USA are still in the hunt for the cup – best wishes to both national teams! 

Wrapping up the episode, the team discusses the tokenpocalypse.  The 404 Media article highlights how companies are have gone from tokenmaxxing to tokenhoarding as the price point for AI is soaring.

Have you been impacted by restrictions on your token usage?  Have your bots 🤖 (if you can spare the tokens!) drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz (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 Links

Beating the heat by sweating the small stuff

TechCrunch article: Writer Ian Bogost says ‘The Small Stuff’ can help us reclaim our lives from too much convenience

Small Stuff Book by Ian Bogost

The Atlantic article: The End of Manual Transmission

Games at Work e17: Things Are Weirder Than Expected (for special guest Ian Bogost)

Electromagnetic Telecom plc (phones at EMF Camp)

Are the North Carolina mountains a rainforest?  Yes.

Makers (staying cool with cool stuff)

Arduino blog post: Brain hot from serious thinking? This helmet automatically cools your head

Aftermath article: Bless The BC250, The Budget E-waste Steam Machine

Photo by Michael Rowe at the Duke Lemur Center, Durham North Carolina July 2026
Photo by Michael Rowe at the Duke Lemur Center, Durham North Carolina July 2026

Wikipedia article: Fat-tailed dwarf lemur

Duke Lemur Center

Gear Patrol article: This May Be the First Kickstarter Watch I’d Actually Consider Buying

World Cup – England and US still in at recording time!

Data Guessr site: Who wins if not football decides?

Token Throttling

404 Media article: Companies Are Throttling Employees’ AI Use Because It’s Too Expensive

e559 – Welcome to the Matrix

Photo by Francis Painchaud on Unsplash

Published 29 June 2026

e559 with Michael R and Andy – it’s a catch-up and geek out on things we’ve been doing, games we’ve been playing, and topics we’ve been thinking about… including Apple history, Retro Computing, and self-hosting services.

A slightly different show format this week, as Michael R and Andy decide not to cover the weekly news stories and links… and instead catch up with one another, across a range of topics.

Michael has backed a new Kickstarter, for a podcast talking about Apple’s background and history in California. Andy talks about his recent visit to the Retro Computer Museum in Leicester, UK.

Then, there’s a discussion of Andy’s latest work project, a new role at the Matrix.org Foundation. There’s a dive into what the Matrix protocol is and how it is used; Michael is considering whether it might be worth trying as an alternative to existing tools for our podcast workflow.

They also stop to discuss Markdown; Michael traces it back to Waterloo Script on IBM 3081 and WordPerfect’s Reveal Codes. Andy brings up Google Cloud’s “Open Knowledge Format” (essentially Markdown + YAML front matter) as an AI-readable standard.

The gaming section covers Michael ordering the D&D-themed Demeo game. Andy has neglected his Meta headset for six months but has been hooked on Forza Horizon 6.

Finally Michael wants a single “home page” for all of his communities (Slack, Discord, RSS, forums). Andy uses Glance on his homelab for a dashboard, with Uptime Kuma monitoring the show’s infrastructure.

Thanks for joining our one-to-one this week! Let us know what you thought!


Selected links

e558— Exploding Bananas

exploded banana on a black background
Photo by Gabriel Meinert on Unsplash

Published 22 June 2026

e558 with Michael M and Andy – slowing things down with games where you walk, fly, sail, throw bananas and play ball, along with 3D printing innovation, a new flip phone from Commodore and a whole lot more!

Michael M and Andy get things started while Michael R is away with cornucopia of games. First up is StonkRider, which bills itself as “motocross meets wall street” where you ride a motorcycle up and down a stock ticker.  Then, from the makers of Untitled Goose Game, is a new title called Big Walk, where, as the title suggests, you go out for an unstructured walk.  This harkens back nicely to the discussion between Ian and Andy in last week’s episode.  And it reminds Michael of a story he saw recently about Google’s take on Flight Simulator using Google Maps.  Next, the pair discuss TinyWind, a pixel pirate sailing game, where you might charter an accountant and sail the wild accountancy.  Then, an even more retro game appears – Gorilla.JS.  This DOS game has gorillas throwing exploding bananas at one another from across a cityscape where you can choose the angle and force to throw.  Both cohosts promptly thew their bananas with such little force that it went up in the air and exploded on their own gorilla.  

Batter up!  Andy and Michael’s next set of topics take them to America’s pastime, and the adjacent sport of cricket.  After checking out the game visualization of Ribbie, the pair get into a discussion on what 8-Bit really means.  Michael remembers the SmallBall game, and was disappointed to learn that this game is no longer maintained.  On the other hand, he is happy about his university playing in the College World Series.  Baseball and cricket really lend themselves well to games because of all of the stats that are kept about each player and the games themselves.  Andy shared the story of the Wisden Cricketers Almanack which chronicles enormous details in it’s 1,500 pages!

After turning to innovations in 3D printing and visionOS collaboration, the cohosts consider the slow tech movement using the example of the new Commodore Callback flip phone.  This phone features the promoted ability to run 99% of Android apps while completely blocking social media and browsers.  

Andy and Michael wrap things up with a new LEGO Ideas set – a playable LEGO space themed pinball machine.  

Links to all of the fun are below – check them out!  

What do you think the Commodore Callback model number 8020 means?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz (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 Links

Games

StonkRider

This Is Colossal article: ‘Big Walk’ Is a New Video Game about … Walking and Talking

Games at Work e557: The British are Coming!

Google Maps Platform Documentation entry: Fly around the world (Experimental)

Why I 🧡 the web:

TinyWind is a "pixel pirate sailing game" with real wind physics. Even has a leaderboard.

tinywind.io

🏴‍☠️

— David Bisset (@davidbisset)2026-06-15T23:16:22.396Z

TinyWind

Retro Computer Museum post: Awesome World Famous Legendary Gathering* 20/06/26

GORILLA.JS, a web port of QBasic GORILLAS with online multiplayer:
gorillas.zone/

— Anatoly Shashkin💾 (@dosnostalgic)2026-06-16T19:01:37.978Z

Gorilla.JS, a recreation of the classic DOS game

Baseball and Baseball adjacent

kottke.org blog post: Watch Baseball Games in Realtime in 8-Bit View

ribbie.tv 

GoHeels.com College World Series Central

Wikipedia article: List of Atari 8-bit computer games

Fandom Aesthetics Wiki: 1980s 8-Bit Game Design Aesthetics

Reddit r/SmallBall – sadly the game is no longer available

TinyTeams Baseball

American Baseball Coaches Association: Charts & Documents

Wikipedia article: Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack

AR / VR / Replicators

hackster.io article: Layer-Free, Ultra-Fast 3D Printing Is Now Available to You

Apple Developer video: Collaborate on structured 3D models in visionOS

TechCrunch article: Snap finally debuts its long-awaited AR glasses, Specs, and, oof, they aren’t cheap

SlowTech

TechCrunch article: The smartphone era created an attention crisis — slow tech is fixing it

Android Police article: Commodore, the 80s computer legend, has made a flip phone, and it’s hugely exciting

The Commodore Callback

LEGO

Retrododo article: LEGO Officially Reveals New Playable Pinball Set

LEGO Icons Arcade Pinball Machine 11374

e557 – The British are Coming!

Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

Published 15 Jun 2026

It’s an all-Brits episode, as Andy welcomes Ian “epredator” Hughes back to the show as co-host, while both Michaels are away.

We take a dive into some recent and current triple-A games as Ian talks through many hours of playtime in Crimson Desert, Forza Horizon 6, and 007 First Light. Although the new open-world Forza Horizon is set in Japan, Andy and Ian enjoy noting that these are games from UK-based studios or with British elements (like the legendary James Bond). Along the way, they talk about a WWDC video shared by Michael Rowe, which brings foveated streaming to the Vision Pro headset, although Ian notes that Varjo has been in this space for several years already.

There’s a second round of gaming conversations that includes the latest XBox Games Showcase, featuring an older game (Sea of Thieves) from another British studio, and a yet-to-be-released game (Fable) with British voice talent and acting, that was also originally from the UK. There’s also a quick nod to an easter egg in the latest LEGO Batman game.

The episode wraps up with a discussion of the recently fully-funded Kickstarter for the Virtual Worlds Museum, that we last talked about in episode 555. Ian mentions some of the recent video content that has been released by the project.

Many thanks to Ian for joining the show this week, bringing a deep focus on games and virtual worlds!

As usual, Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz@mastodon.social with any comments or ideas! 

Selected Links

Here's an easter egg in the new Lego Batman that I think all of you will REALLY appreciate. It's so good, I had to make a video.

[image or embed]

— Cabel Sasser (@cabel.panic.com) June 7, 2026 at 9:06 PM