

Chit Chat Across the Pond
Allison Sheridan
Chit Chat Across the Pond is a weekly interview show talking technology. It was originally part of the NosillaCast podcast (for the first 406 shows!)
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 2, 2024 • 36min
CCATP #800 – Adam Engst on Limiting iPhone Charging to 80%
In this week's episode of Chit Chat Across the Pond, Adam Engst of TidBITS joins us to join in the fun conversation about limiting your iPhone's charging to 80%. He wrote up an article entitled Does Limiting an iPhone’s Battery Charging to 80% Increase Lifespan? in which he references an article by Juli Clover of MacRumors. Juli used her iPhone 15 Pro Max for a solid year with charging set to a max of 80%.
Juli freely admits this was not a terribly scientific effort to determine whether it helps because there are far too many variables at play and not enough data points to form any conclusions. That doesn't stop me and Adam from pretending to do science with her results, Adam and my results charging normally, and even more anecdotal data collected by Nick Heer on Pixel Envy. I even threw around a pivot table I made with this "data" which is well known to turn anecdotes into scientifically derived proof. On top of that, I nerdily referenced Battery University that sheds a wee bit of light on the subject.
Before we kicked into that topic, we spent a few minutes revisiting our topic from last time, the annoying monthly popups to allow recording of your screen and microphone. Since we last talked, people have hacked the plist that contains the timing of the nagging, and Jordi Bruin has even written an app called Amnesia to help you hack it. I suggest this proves it's security theater if you can bypass it.
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_10_02
Join the Conversation:
allison@podfeet.com
podfeet.com/slack
Support the Show:
Patreon Donation
PayPal one-time donation
Podfeet Podcasts Mugs at Zazzle
Podfeet 15-Year Anniversary Shirts
Referral Links:
Parallels Toolbox - 3 months free for you and me
Learn through MacSparky Field Guides - 15% off for you and me
Backblaze - One free month for me and you
Setapp - One free month for me and you
Eufy - $40 for me if you spend $200. Sadly nothing in it for you.
PIA VPN - One month added to Paid Accounts for both of us
CleanShot X - Earns me $25%, sorry nothing in it for you but my gratitude

Sep 8, 2024 • 46min
CCATP #799 – Adam Engst on Apple's Screen Recording Permissions in Sequoia Beta
Adam Engst joins me again, this time to talk about the patently wrong decision by Apple to include repetitive permissions requests for screen recording in the macOS Sequoia beta. As he explains in his article on TidBITS.com entitled Apple Reduces Excessive Sequoia Permission Requests, Shifts to Monthly, changing from weekly permissions requests to monthly is 4 times less wrong, but still 12 times per year wrong.
We discuss the types of applications this will affect, from screenshot utilities like CleanShot, to menu bar modifiers like Bartender and Ice, as well as apps like Photoshop that simply use an eye dropper to let you choose colors outside of the app interface.
Adam has a no whining policy in his community, so this isn't just a big complaint conversation, he explains some ideas he has the Apple could implement which might give users the desired security protections without causing them permissions fatigue.
Even in this rather fist-shaking episode, Adam is a delight and we had a lot of fun chit chatting.

Aug 7, 2024 • 56min
CCATP #798 Adam Engst on Troubleshooting
This week our guest is the venerable Adam Engst of TidBITS.
Adam wrote an article recently about his solar inverters that ended up being a story about troubleshooting. That inspired me last week to tell you our troubleshooting story about our home network. We thought it would be fun to go through Adam's story and pick out ideas for troubleshooting and where our own weaknesses are.
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_08_06

Jul 9, 2024 • 43min
CCATP #797 – Adam Engst on His Quest for Alarming Notifications
CCATP #793 for July 9, 2024, and I'm your host, Allison Sheridan. In case you missed the announcement, Adam Engst of TidBITS is now a member of the Podfeet Podcasts family as a continuing contributor to Chit Chat Across the Pond.
In this week's episode, we talked about why Adam believes we need persistent calendar and reminder notifications. Adam is hyper-focused and when he's writing it's not uncommon for him to easily dismiss a notification of an upcoming event.
Articles referenced in the conversation:
* A Call to Alarms: Why We Need Persistent Calendar and Reminder Notifications.
* In Your Face Provides Persistent Notifications for Events and Tasks
* Just Due It: Persistent Notifications for Tasks - TidBITS
* CalAlarm app Adam is testing for iOS
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_07_09
Join the Conversation:
allison@podfeet.com
podfeet.com/slack
Support the Show:
Patreon Donation
PayPal one-time donation
Podfeet Podcasts Mugs at Zazzle
Podfeet 15-Year Anniversary Shirts
Referral Links:
Parallels Toolbox - 3 months free for you and me
Learn through MacSparky Field Guides - 15% off for you and me
Backblaze - One free month for me and you
Setapp - One free month for me and you
Eufy - $40 for me if you spend $200. Sadly nothing in it for you.
PIA VPN - One month added to Paid Accounts for both of us
CleanShot X - Earns me $25%, sorry nothing in it for you but my gratitude

Jul 7, 2024 • 2min
You May Need to Resubscribe to the NosillaCast
So ... I made a wee mistake this morning when I accidentally told the NosillaCast feed to move to the Chit Chat Across the Pond feed! I thought I fixed it right away, but then Louis Trapani told me that he was seeing all of the NosillaCast content slopped into Chit Chat Across the Pond! Evidently, the fix didn't "stick".
Overcast subscribers are fine because the RSS feed is ok, but Apple Podcasts subscribers may not ever get the NosillaCast again unless you resubscribe.
I can't believe I did this on the day before my 1000th episode and I'm very sorry and sad! I sure hope you see this and you'll resubscribe and get all that NosillaCast goodness - especially the 1000th episode!
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_07_06

Jul 5, 2024 • 2min
What happened to Chit Chat Across the Pond Lite?
Well hello there, this is Alison Sheridan and I have a very special announcement for July 5th, 2024, to the Chit Chat Across the Pond light audience and the Programming By Stealth audience.
If you were subscribed to the Lite feed, you may have noticed that your Chit Chat Across the Pond Lite logo changed into the Chit Chat Across the Pond logo and that you see a whole pile of recent episodes that are all Programming By Stealth. As a Programming By Stealth learner, you won't have noticed a difference yet, but you also care about this.
I've decided to make some changes to the podcast, which I'm pretty sure will benefit everyone. There will be a full explanation of all of the changes in the NosillaCast on episode 1000, but let's talk about you first.
The first change is that we've stopped publishing Programming by Stealth as part of Chit Chat Across the Pond. If you want the Programming By Stealth content, then you'll need to subscribe to the standalone podcast that we've always had.
Since Programming By Stealth won't be in the regular Chit Chat Across the Pond feed, that means it IS the Lite feed.
I've done a fancy redirect thingy that folded the Lite audience into the "full fat" Chit Chat Across the Pond feed so you don't have to do a thing to get your regular Lite content. I will be publishing Lite episodes more often with a HUGE guest! If you want to read about the new guest and all of the changes and why, check out this post: Changes Coming to the Podcasts — All Good News!
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_07_05

Apr 27, 2024 • 50min
CCATP #792 – Bart Busschots on Rethinking Weather Apps for Privacy and Functionality
In this episode of Chit Chat Across the Pond Lite, Bart Busschots joins us to talk about weather apps. He's a serious weather nerd by necessity, living in Ireland and being an avid bike rider. As he walks through the apps he'll explain which ones fall down on privacy, which ones have good apps for everything from the watch to iOS to the Mac. He'll even go through how he uses different widgets to help him decide how much rain gear to wear.
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_04_26
Join the Conversation:
allison@podfeet.com
podfeet.com/slack
Support the Show:
Patreon Donation
PayPal one-time donation
Podfeet Podcasts Mugs at Zazzle
Podfeet 15-Year Anniversary Shirts
Referral Links:
Parallels Toolbox - 3 months free for you and me
Learn through MacSparky Field Guides - 15% off for you and me
Backblaze - One free month for me and you
Setapp - One free month for me and you
Eufy - $40 for me if you spend $200. Sadly nothing in it for you.
PIA VPN - One month added to Paid Accounts for both of us
CleanShot X - Earns me $25%, sorry nothing in it for you but my gratitude

Apr 14, 2024 • 35min
CCATP #791 – Bart Busschots on Submarines, Lasers, and Vacuum Cleaners???
In this episode of Chit Chat Across the Pond Lite, Bart Busschots joins us to talk Dyson vacuums. I know that doesn't sound too technical but you'd be surprised how advanced the tech is in the new devices. I share a few of my Dyson stories too and we both talk about our love for everything Dyson. Hide your pocketbooks before listening because all Dyson products are super expensive!

Feb 4, 2024 • 1h 1min
CCATP #785 — Helma van der Linden on Porting XKPASSWD from Perl to JavaScript
This week's Chit Chat Across the Pond Lite is a stretch to the word "Lite". I'd call it a crossover episode of Lite and Programming By Stealth. Helma van der Linden joins me to tell the story of how she has successfully started the new version of Bart's fabulous xkpasswd password generation service. xkpasswd.net was written in perl ages ago and depends on very old and outdated libraries. Bart spent many months teaching the Programming By Stealth students the tools we (and he) would need to port the code over to JavaScript. His plan all along was to have students help him make the new version of XKPASSWD a reality.
It turns out that Helma is an extraordinary student and has done most of the work to make it a minimal viable product, all without Bart's help. In this conversation, we'll talk about how she did this without getting _too_ nerdy. Some nerdy but not too nerdy.
If you'd like to give the very beta version of the new tool a try (without knowing any coding), check it out at bartificer.github.io/xkpasswd-js/. In a few days, Bart will have it up as the beta version of the _real_ xkpasswd at beta.xkpasswd.net. This beta version is not feature-complete, but it allows you to create 1-10 passwords that use the default preset from the original xkpasswd. You can't choose different presets, and you can't make customized passwords, but at least it does create long, strong, memorable, and typable passwords. And it's REALLY pretty!
We end with the call for others to come help work on the code. The GitHub repo is at github.com/bartificer/xkpasswd-js. If you have or create a GitHub account, you can contribute to the project. If you don't have programming skills but you have feature requests, it counts as contributing if you use the "issues" tab for the GitHub project to post your feature request.
Helma is great fun and we had a blast talking about what she's accomplished so I think you'll enjoy the conversation no matter how nerdy you might be.
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript with chapter marks: CCATP_2024_02_03

Dec 5, 2023 • 1h 2min
CCATP #780 — Jason Howell on Using Android with a Mac
In this week's episode of Chit Chat Across the Pond Lite, Jason Howell, podcaster and producer for the TWiT network, and musician joins me to talk about what it's like to use an Android phone with a Mac. I live in an Apple-centric bubble, so I am very curious about how he works with these two operating systems.
We talk about his origin story on the Mac and his Android hardware of choice. We talk a lot about how he manages his photos, and what messaging is like in this mixed blue-bubble/green-bubble environment.
Jason is great fun and introspective and we had an absolute blast chatting. If you'd like to find everything Jason does, go to raygun.fun - it rhymes _and_ it's fun (as Jason pointed out).
Read an unedited, auto-generated transcript: CCATP_2023_12_04