Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 9 days 16 hours 3 minutes
This episode should probably carry various disclaimers and trigger warnings. We hereby offer a blanket apology for all insults, insensitivities, and outright injustices perpetrated on this episode, both during and surrounding discussion of various tech...
Christina and Brett catch up on bits of pop culture as well as various cool, new things in Brett's life. Sometimes, going back to design school principles brings everything into perspective and focus. Sometimes, all you need is Swift...
Christina and Brett welcome Ars Technica's Lee Hutchison to discuss the "glory days" of Amiga and BeOS, working retail at Best Buy, and digital hoarding.
This is the strangest, most ransom-note-like episode you will ever hear. We begin as usual, segue into a talk with the roommates who successfully Kickstartered a Nancy Kerrigan/Tonya Harding Museum (housed in their apartment),
Our first-ever guest, CNET & Tomorrow Daily's Ashley Esqueda joins Christina and Brett to talk movies and TV, from Clueless and Heathers to Star Wars and Furious 7 to King of the Hill and RuPaul's Drag Race. This episode is..."so very".
Christina and Brett talk about HBO Now, changing habits, tech as fashion, and more.
Welcome to Christinapedia™. You may experience feelings of shock and awe at the extensive amount of information that will be flying at your brain. ALSO: learn about the common signs of being overtired: Stress overload, waking dreams,
Join us in the joy of sleep deprivation, getting high completely accidentally, the new MacBook keyboard and trackpad, and another round of Christina and Brett on the Movies.
After recording a full episode that plunged too far down the wrong rabbit hole, we fire up our secret time travel tech to replace half of an episode with one recorded in the future (of the first one) and Frankenstein it together.
In light of recent revelations from and surrounding both Edward Snowden and Lenovo, Christina and Brett talk about information security. As a concept, is "InfoSec" for regular humans, or only the chosen few like InfoSec Taylor Swift?