Weeknote: 12 April 2026 – old iPods, infinite Brian Eno, Android gaming, Apple I, smartphone backups and more

I resurrected an iPod shuffle (Stuff). Go me, etc. But there was a point behind this. Having returned to buying CDs and been inspired by Russ Crandall’s five-game retro doodad, I figured I could make the same sort of focused experience with an old iPod. Getting there was a pain, but I’m happy with the result.
Infinite Brian Eno! That’s what Brian Eno : Reflection gets you, across a range of devices. For Swipe/TapSmart, I chatted with co-creator Peter Chilvers about how (and why) he and Brian Eno created this superb generative art and music app.
Please help us keep the lights on by downloading Swipe for iPhone, checking out the free trial, and maybe lobbing us a couple of bucks per month.
The Apple I is 50. The week after the company itself hit the big five-o, its first piece of hardware followed suit. And it didn’t even have a keyboard. Read my piece for Stuff here.
Android has become my main gaming platform. For the longest time, it was iPhone, but that’s shifted due to the Retroid Pocket 6. Which made me think it was about time to update Stuff’s Android game roundups. So I added fab ‘Asteroids if it was more than shooting at rocks’ roguelike blaster Nova Drift to the best Android games list. As for freebies, oddball single-finger shoot ’em up Ponchorado made the cut.
Smart glasses aren’t always evil. Lots of idiots are recording people without their consent, but as this Bluesky post notes, smart glasses are a lifeline for many. As ever, with tech: 1) it’s complicated, 2) much of the narrative ignores accessibility benefits, and 3) tech bros mess everything up for the rest of us by having no moral compass whatsoever.
Apple locks out another user. As reported by The Register, a Czech user with an alphanumeric password discovered that Apple has dropped support for the caron/háček (ˇ) on the Lock Screen. Because he’d used that as part of his password and didn’t use Face ID, he’s stuffed. Apple’s response: wipe the device and start from scratch. The snag? It contains data that hasn’t been backed up. Zero marks to Apple on this, but also a warning that you should always back up data you care about. If not to a cloud service, at least to a local drive. That’s been trivial on iPhone for a long time now. By coincidence, backing up smartphones is the subject of my tips column in the latest issue of Stuff.



