My lucky day
What are the odds?*
*The odds are 1 in 1.7 million

What are the odds?*
*The odds are 1 in 1.7 million
Apple is finally selling PSVR2 controllers for use with VIsion Pro… for $249.
I bought a barely-used PSVR 2 headset + controllers for $170 off eBay a couple months ago apple.com/xc/product/HS8H2ZM/A
Wayne Ma and Qianer Liu say we'll have to wait to see a sequel to iPhone Air, but The Information provides literally nothing beyond this headline outside their paywall:
Apple Delays Release of Next iPhone Air Amid Weak Sales
But does one truly need to fork over $399 to know exactly what the body of the article is going to say?
All you need to know is that Justin Searls loving an Apple product is effectively the kiss of death in the Tim Cook era:
2015: 12" MacBook, my all-time favorite Mac, cancelled after two revisions
2018: HomePod, of which I bought six at launch, never sold through its initial manufacturing run
2020: iPhone mini, my all-time favorite iPhone, cancelled after one revision
2024: Vision Pro, which I rely on daily, received one revision under duress
2025: iPhone Air, which is exactly what I asked for, had even its one revision cancelled
I don't know what I'm doing wrong here.
I've been using Tahoe since July and I've really, really tried to like the new Spotlight because I'm encouraged by the direction it's taking, but I'm giving up and going back to Raycast. It's just WAY TOO SLOW.
If you set up quick keys and then type them "too fast," it'll always do something else instead. Same goes for launching apps by name. Just typed "1p", but Spotlight spent 3 seconds assuming that meant I wanted to open a product page for a Ring camera in Safari.
Video of this episode is up on YouTube:
I'm back and I'm angry. My power went out, which caused my Internet to go down, which broke my favorite mug. And that's just the shit that happened before 7 AM. By 9 AM my doorbell was continuously chiming for no fucking reason.
Join me in the struggle. We shall persevere. Tell me how your morning went by writing in to: podcast@searls.co.
Here 4 U:
I can confirm that visionOS 26 and the new 20 Gbps Developer Strap supports network connections via USB-C ethernet adapters—very cool! amazon.com/dp/B08HQBC678?ref_=ppx_hzsearch_conn_dt_b_fed_asin_title_14&th=1
My grandpa left me a tiny 1-inch portable TV growing up. It felt like you were watching TV… until you put it next to the real thing.
Sandwich's new ad gave me the same feeling—seeing it in the context of immersive video is an incredible experience. sixcolors.com/post/2025/10/hello-robot-sandwich-launches-immersive-commercial/
Fantastic write-up by Nowfal comparing AI's current moment to the Internet's dial-up era. This bit in particular points to a cleavage that far too few people understand:
Software presents an even more interesting question. How many apps do you need? What about software that generates applications on demand, that creates entire software ecosystems autonomously? Until now, handcrafted software was the constraint. Expensive software engineers and
theirour labor costs limited what companies could afford to build. Automation changes this equation by making those engineers far more productive. Both consumer and enterprise software markets suggest significant unmet demand because businesses have consistently left projects unbuilt. They couldn't justify the development costs or had to allocate limited resources to their top priority projects. I saw this firsthand at Amazon. Thousands of ideas went unfunded not because they lacked business value, but because of the lack of engineering resources to build them. If AI can produce software at a fraction of the cost, that unleashes enormous latent demand. The key question then is if and when that demand will saturate.
Two things are simultaneously true:
It's long been my view that the appropriate response to the current moment is to ride this walrus and leverage coding agents to increase the scope of our ambitions. By the time software demand has been saturated and put us out of jobs, the supply of programmers will already have tapered off as the next generation sees the inflection point coming.
In the short term, the only programmers actually losing their jobs to "AI" are those who refuse to engage with the technology. Using coding agents effectively is a learned skill like any other—and if you don't keep your skills current, fewer people will want to hire you.
The single most destructive metric is a key performance indicator that improves for reasons the business doesn't understand. When it inevitably goes back down, people panic because nobody understands why it went up in the first place. news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45807775
Watching Becky explore the world of bodybuilding, all I know is I would really struggle with my body being scrutinized by others. Surprisingly, though, I'm actually most impressed with the vegan bodybuilders—somehow they all seem to maintain a really healthy self-esteem. Maybe it's because they never whey themselves.
For stupid reasons, I had to downgrade my Vision Pro from visionOS 26.1 to 26.0.1 today. Here's how to put Vision Pro into Device Firmware Update ("DFU") mode and downgrade.
Here's how to restore a Vision Pro in 9 easy steps:
Good luck, have fun. 🕶️
Seems like there's a bug in visionOS 26.1 where the first time you connect the new Developer Strap you get a glorious 20 Gbps connection, but then all subsequent connections are stuck at USB 2 480 Mbps speeds. Neat. reddit.com/r/VisionPro/comments/1ok1lye
Excited to engage with the Orlando developer community for the first time tonight. Going to do a hotseat Q & A on agentic coding and what it means for your weekend. meetup.com/orlandodevs/events/310925222/
A nonstop Orlando-Tokyo route is absolutely HUGE. Zip Airlines may be a budget airline, but the lowest-tier of Japanese service is frankly a superior experience to United/Delta/AA. Becky flew them to NRT earlier this year and it was great—lie-flat seats from SFO for like $1100! wesh.com/article/first-nonstop-flights-connecting-orlando-to-tokyo-announced/69177387
Video of this episode is up on YouTube:
This may be the version 45 release of Breaking Change, but when you factor in its Hotfixes and Feature Release entries, this is somehow the 50th episode of the show!
Why? Why are we still doing this to ourselves? Write in your answer and how you feel about yourself as a result to podcast@searls.co. Seriously, I need some new material.
The web runs on links, so have some: