Fallthrough [Extended]

A deep and nuanced conversational podcast focused on technology, software, and computing.

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  1. Supply Chain Reaction

    HÁ 2 DIAS • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    Supply Chain Reaction

    After last week's "Another Spectre In The Shell" episode, we felt we needed a follow up! This week Kris is joined by returning co-host Jamie Tanna, with Ian arriving fashionably late. They pick apart the post-Mythos announcement hype cycle, cover counter-narratives from the security community, and examine why our supply chain is already so broken that more powerful LLM barely changes the threat model. The conversation builds toward Jamie's unpop: "a little copying is better than a little dependency" is wrong, we should have more dependencies and then into practical supply chain defense. The episode closes on an infinite-mindset note: supply chain security will never be done and we'll always have things to improve. Supporter content? This episode has a ton of it! If you haven't become a supporter yet, this is the episode to do it! In this week's extras we've got a critique of the "37,000 lines of code a day" claim, Kris's argument that we've squandered most productivity gains in history so why would AI be different, Claude Code fatigue and learning versus delegating, a deep yak-shave into why Kris hates Markdown and is building his publishing platform in raw HTML, a love letter to the web as the best technology we have, a merchant-of-record tangent on VAT and why Stripe isn't enough, Jamie's proposal for a Fallthrough bingo card, and a tangent on Anthropic having a therapist talk to Claude for twenty hours. If you aren't a supporter already, head over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Jamie Returns: Weather and Mythos Recap (00:01:11) * Chapter 2: Post-Mythos Developments and Counter-Narratives (00:03:11) * Chapter 3: $20K Tokens, Wrench Attacks, and Log4J Toasters (00:08:46) * Chapter 4: 37,000 Lines of Code a Day [Extended] (00:10:54) * Chapter 5: Token Costs and the Unsustainable Hemorrhage [Extended] (00:16:06) * Chapter 6: Claude Code Fatigue: Learning vs. Delegating [Extended] (00:27:13) * Chapter 7: Batch Processing, Prompt Caching, and the GarageBand Analogy [Extended] (00:30:45) * Chapter 8: Offshoring to the Digital Land (00:34:16) * Chapter 9: Publishing Platform Yak-Shave: Markdown, Bike, and HTML [Extended] (00:42:15) * Chapter 10: LaTeX and the Case for HTML [Extended] (00:54:48) * Chapter 11: The Web as the Best Technology We Have [Extended] (01:01:51) * Chapter 12: Front-End Difficulty vs. Back-End Snobbery [Extended] (01:09:25) * Chapter 13: Meta: Supporter Content, Shorter Episodes, and Break [Extended] (01:14:51) * Chapter 14: Merchant of Record, VAT, and Why Stripe Isn't Enough [Extended] (01:19:08) * Chapter 15: Verbund: BASF's Byproducts-as-Inputs Philosophy [Extended] (01:30:34) * Chapter 16: Jamie's Unpop: The Go Proverb Is Wrong, Use More Dependencies (01:32:45) * Chapter 17: More Dependencies, Bad Infrastructure, and Author Signing (01:38:04) * Chapter 18: The Go Module Proxy Doesn't Understand Its Place (01:42:20) * Chapter 19: Cooldowns and Minimum Release Age in Renovate (01:56:18) * Chapter 20: Hype Cycles, Security Professionals, and End-User Responsibility (02:06:20) * Chapter 21: Hackathons Ruined by LLMs [Extended] (02:17:30) * Chapter 22: LLMs Can't Replace Humans: Archivists, Discovery, and Osmosis [Extended] (02:22:27) * Chapter 23: Thinky ADHD and the Fallthrough Bingo Card [Extended] (02:30:59) * Chapter 24: 1905, Anthropic Therapizing Claude, and Democracy [Extended] (02:35:02) * Chapter 25: Life Finds a Way: T-Rex Leather and Infinite Mindset (02:47:14) * Epilogue (02:51:19) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Hosts: Ian Lopshire and Jamie Tanna Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: *...

    2h53min
  2. Another Spectre In The Shell

    10 DE ABR. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    Another Spectre In The Shell

    It's Kris, Matt, and Steve this week. It's also Matt's last episode before becoming a father. The conversation opens with Claude Mythos, Anthropic's unreleased model that found 147 zero-days in Firefox's JavaScript engine and a 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD. Steve, who's lived through before, puts it in context. The panel also discusses cooldown periods for package upgrades, the implications of nation-state hacking capability becoming available to anyone, and using AI for good. Supporter content? We've got it! This week it includes a dive into post-quantum security and state-sponsored social engineering attacks. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Matt's Last Episode Before Fatherhood (00:01:09) * Chapter 2: The Supply Chain Crisis and Claude Mythos (00:03:18) * Chapter 3: The Implications of Democratized Hacking (00:08:43) * Chapter 4: The Cooldown Period Debate (00:13:00) * Chapter 5: Steve's Rails Zero-Day War Story (00:18:54) * Chapter 6: Post-Quantum Security and State-Sponsored Threats [Extended] (00:22:57) * Chapter 7: Trust, Deepfakes, and Critical Thinking [Extended] (00:31:42) * Chapter 8: Debt, Gift Economies, and How Society Actually Works [Extended] (00:36:21) * Chapter 9: Using AI as a Personal Life Assistant (00:44:14) * Chapter 10: Matthew's Linear Epiphany and Tool Consolidation [Extended] (00:50:15) * Chapter 11: Gaming Nostalgia and Platform Choices [Extended] (00:53:20) * Chapter 12: Steve & East River Source Control (01:03:48) * Chapter 13: Git's Design Limitations and the Stack Diffs Model (01:14:03) * Chapter 14: The Original Sin of Pull Requests [Extended] (01:19:52) * Chapter 15: Paxos, Raft, and the Distributed Systems Parallel [Extended] (01:23:13) * Epilogue (01:30:58) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Hosts: Matthew Sanabria and Steve Klabnik Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    1h 32min
  3. Snake Oil Has an Expiration Date

    3 DE ABR. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    Snake Oil Has an Expiration Date

    It's Kris and Matt this week, and the conversation goes places. It starts with Matt going all-in on Apple and a leaked Claude Code source dump, then pivots into AI companies repeating social media's diversity-of-thought mistakes and why LLMs still can't beat "better than the average human" as a goalpost. The episode closes with a surprise detour into accounting, finance, and why double-entry bookkeeping is one of the original distributed systems. We've got supporter content, of course! This week that includes a home lab infrastructure rant about terrible BMC/IPMI systems, a nuanced deep dive into corporate DEI and code-switching, Matt's chocolate shop tax war stories, LLC vs S-Corp tradeoffs, and why engineers who dismiss finance are worse engineers. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Matthew Goes All In on Apple (00:01:10) * Chapter 2: Home Lab Infrastructure Needs an Oxide Pill [Extended] (00:08:26) * Chapter 3: The Claude Code Source Leak (00:14:47) * Chapter 4: AI Companies and the Diversity of Thought Problem (00:20:37) * Chapter 5: Corporate DEI, Code-Switching, and Real Diversity [Extended] (00:23:41) * Chapter 6: LLMs Are Not Better Than Humans (00:34:15) * Chapter 7: AI Hype, Big Data Deja Vu, and Snake Oil (00:38:16) * Chapter 8: Serial Founders Are Deadbeat Fathers (00:40:31) * Chapter 9: The Hidden Heroes Who Run Companies (00:49:59) * Chapter 10: Matthew's Chocolate Shop Tax Odyssey [Extended] (00:51:46) * Chapter 11: Engineers Need to Respect (and Learn) Finance (01:04:53) * Chapter 12: Business Structure Deep Dive: LLC vs S-Corp [Extended] (01:20:29) * Chapter 13: Double-Entry Accounting Is an OG Distributed System (01:22:40) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Host: Matthew Sanabria Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    1h 29min
  4. Who's Afraid of Superintelligence?

    29 DE MAR. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    Who's Afraid of Superintelligence?

    We've got a full panel! In this episode, Kris, Matt, Steve, and Ian have a deep dive into superintelligence, AGI, and why the fear around them might say more about us than about AI. Steve draws a line from colonialism anxiety to alien invasion movies to superintelligence panic. Kris argues that a truly rational superintelligence would see that oppression consistently fails and cooperation wins. The conversation moves through whether AI is already oppressive, what it means for AI to be a subtle overlord, and why the real threats are mundane failures of leadership, not robot uprisings. We've got supporter content, of course! This week that includes a philosophical tangent on whether referencing external knowledge counts as knowing, a heated debate about whether humans are hierarchical by nature, Matt's island thought experiment about hierarchy inevitably emerging, and Ian's argument that not everyone needs to be a builder. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Meet the Panel (00:00:54) * Chapter 2: Defining AGI and Superintelligence (00:03:00) * Chapter 3: The Spicy Takes: Has AGI Already Arrived? (00:11:37) * Chapter 4: What Does It Mean to Know? Memory vs. Intelligence [Extended] (00:18:00) * Chapter 5: A Black Perspective on Power and Intelligence (00:27:03) * Chapter 6: Did They Actually Win? Dominance Hierarchies and Revolution (00:34:26) * Chapter 7: AI Is Already Oppressive: Why Aren't We Worried About That? (00:42:01) * Chapter 8: Are Humans Hierarchical by Nature? [Extended] (00:57:03) * Chapter 9: The Island Experiment: Will Hierarchy Always Emerge? [Extended] (01:07:59) * Chapter 10: AI as the Subtle Overlord (01:18:23) * Chapter 11: Tools, Mindset, and the Myth of Upward Mobility [Extended] (01:28:28) * Chapter 12: What We Should Actually Be Worried About (01:37:07) * Chapter 13: Intelligence, Eugenics, and What the Word Even Means (01:46:03) * Chapter 14: Naming the Machines: AI Identity and Claude's Constitution (02:00:30) * Chapter 15: We vs. Me: Language, Identity, and Collective Pronouns (02:03:12) * Epilogue (02:09:08) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Hosts: Ian Wester-Lopshire, Matthew Sanabria, and Steve Klabnik Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    2h14min
  5. The Joy of Building

    20 DE MAR. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    The Joy of Building

    This week Kris and Matt go full homelab. The conversation starts with Kris refreshing his dev setup: migrating NeoVim to 100% Lua, switching from ZSH to NuShell, and rethinking Tmux, all with the help of an LLM. The discussion then moves into hardware: Framework Desktop vs. Mac Studio, the RAM price explosion, 10G networking, WiFi with Private Pre-Shared Keys, and GPUs without display ports. The episode closes with a teaser for a future discussion on why Kris isn't worried about superintelligence. We've got supporter content, of course! This week that includes a mechanical keyboards deep dive, Kris's custom AI research system that runs 73 agent calls in parallel, the memory bandwidth gap between Mac Studio Ultra and datacenter GPUs, and the joy of discovering headless GPU cards. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Notes: * Lazy.nvim ( https://lazy.folke.io/ ) * Mason.nvim ( https://github.com/williamboman/mason.nvim ) * Tree-sitter ( https://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/ ) * Helix Editor ( https://helix-editor.com/ ) * Ghostty ( https://ghostty.org/ ) * Nushell ( https://www.nushell.sh/ ) * Zellij ( https://zellij.dev/ ) * ZMX ( https://zmx.sh/ ) Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Baby Prep and Desk Organization (00:00:59) * Chapter 2: Upgrading NeoVim with LLM Assistance (00:04:22) * Chapter 3: The Vim Journey: Why Terminal Editors Still Win (00:09:41) * Chapter 4: Terminal Emulators: Ghostty, Helix, and the Quest for Speed (00:17:12) * Chapter 5: LSP, TreeSitter, and the End of the M-to-N Plugin Problem (00:20:14) * Chapter 6: Customizing Key Bindings and Evaluating Your Tools (00:28:44) * Chapter 7: Mechanical Keyboards Deep Dive [Extended] (00:38:04) * Chapter 8: Switching to Nushell (00:45:19) * Chapter 9: Tmux, Session Persistence, and When to Drop Your Multiplexer (00:59:00) * Chapter 10: Claude Code's RAM Problem and Agent Permissions (01:10:33) * Chapter 11: Building Custom AI Research Tooling [Extended] (01:19:05) * Chapter 12: The "Nothing Matters in Six Months" Paradox (01:23:23) * Chapter 13: Hardware Dreams: Framework Desktop to Mac Studio (01:25:53) * Chapter 14: RAM Prices, Storage, and the Memory Bandwidth Wars [Extended] (01:33:19) * Chapter 15: 10G Networking and the Magic of Private Pre-Shared Keys (01:45:10) * Chapter 16: GPUs Without Display Ports and the Joy of Building [Extended] (01:53:10) * Chapter 17: AI, Superintelligence, and a Teaser for Next Time (01:57:34) * Epilogue (02:05:06) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Host: Matthew Sanabria Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    2h8min
  6. The Least Contentious Proposal in the History of Go

    13 DE MAR. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    The Least Contentious Proposal in the History of Go

    Dylan's back this week joining Kris and Matt to tackle Go's UUID proposal (#62026). What Dylan thinksshould have been the least contentious proposal in the history of Go. The panel digs into the proposed API's shortcomings, the flawed ecosystem survey used to justify it, and why the Go team's library design philosophy doesn't hold up. The conversation builds into a broader critique of community dynamics and code of conduct double standards. As always, we've got supporter content! This week that includes the psychological cost of dismissive governance and who actually gets heard, the opaque proposal review process, what the Go developer survey numbers really say about community trust, and a debate over whether GitHub is even the right platform for proposal discussions. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Notes: * proposal: uuid: add API to generate and parse UUID ( https://github.com/golang/go/issues/62026 ) Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Catching Up with the Panel (00:01:05) * Chapter 2: The UUID Proposal (00:03:07) * Chapter 3: GitHub as a Discussion Platform (00:08:33) * Chapter 4: The History of UUID Versions (00:12:08) * Chapter 5: The Flawed Ecosystem Survey (00:16:20) * Chapter 6: The Proposed API: New, NewV4, NewV7 (00:27:56) * Chapter 7: Library Design Philosophy vs. the Go Team's Approach (00:31:33) * Chapter 8: The Default Debate and the RFC's Intent (00:41:51) * Chapter 9: Code of Conduct Double Standards (00:50:51) * Chapter 10: The Psychological Cost and Who Gets Heard [Extended] (00:59:10) * Chapter 11: The Opaque Proposal Process [Extended] (01:10:18) * Chapter 12: The Survey Numbers and "Write It Yourself" Hypocrisy [Extended] (01:18:20) * Chapter 13: GitHub's Limitations and Alternative Models [Extended] (01:28:51) * Chapter 14: Cultural Communication and the Path Forward (01:35:30) * Epilogue (01:40:17) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Host: Matthew Sanabria and Dylan Bourque Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    1h 43min
  7. Deprecate the Error Interface

    6 DE MAR. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    Deprecate the Error Interface

    Another week, another Kris & Matt duo episode! This week, they're picking up where Bryan Cantrill's "Complexity of Simplicity" framework left off and asking what it means for Go's future. Kris argues Go is squarely rebellious (simple and emergent) and that the community needs to stop appealing to the Go team and start owning the ecosystem. The episode builds to a (potentially unpopular) proposal: deprecate the error interface. As always, we've got supporter content! This week that includes Oxide's counter-cultural approach to hiring, a riff on tech industry irony and title inflation, and a deep dive into why Go couldn't ship general-purpose coroutines. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. No episode of Break this week. We'll have more aftershow episodes soon! In the meantime, catch up on previous episodes at https://break.show. Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Catching Up and Guest Plans (00:00:56) * Chapter 2: Oxide's Counter-Cultural Approach [Extended] (00:06:02) * Chapter 3: Tech Industry Irony and Title Games [Extended] (00:09:48) * Chapter 4: Go as a Rebellious Language (00:15:49) * Chapter 5: Go's Coroutines and Runtime Complexity [Extended] (00:19:52) * Chapter 6: Go's Unique Position: Rebellious and Revolutionary (00:22:29) * Chapter 7: Modules, SemVer, and Where Go Missteps (00:25:44) * Chapter 8: Stop Appealing to the Go Team (00:28:50) * Chapter 9: Building a Community-Owned Ecosystem (00:37:36) * Chapter 10: Recapturing Go's Excitement (00:44:59) * Chapter 11: The Problem With the Error Interface (00:53:50) * Chapter 12: Multiple Returns and Deprecating the Error Interface (01:00:55) * Epilogue (01:09:02) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Host: Matthew Sanabria Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    1h 10min
  8. Package Hell

    28 DE FEV. • SOMENTE PARA ASSINANTES

    Package Hell

    Another week, another Kris & Matt duo episode! This week, we're digging into Go codebase structure, package design, and why the community keeps struggling with the same problems. The conversation starts with a Gopher Slack discussion about how to arrange Go code, moves through package hell and dependency cycles, and ends with a look at community health. As always, we've got supporter content! This week that includes Go's missing project boundary and why internal is a blunt instrument, real world package design patterns, and how modules broke the elegant simplicity of Go's database/sql driver pattern. Not a supporter yet? Fix that today by heading over to https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe ( https://fallthrough.fm/subscribe ) where you'll get not only extra content but also higher quality audio. Sign up today! If you prefer to watch this episode, you can view it on YouTube. This week's episode of Break continues the conversation. Kris and Matt dissect the magic underscore imports in database/sql, argue you should just test against a real database, and then spend the back half debating where Go lands in Bryan Cantrill's "Complexity of Simplicity" quadrant framework. Watch it on YouTube or listen with your favorite podcasting app! Learn more by going to https://break.show/ep/29 ( https://break.show/ep/29 ). Thanks for tuning in and happy listening! Table of Contents: * Prologue (00:00:00) * Chapter 1: Catching Up: Snow, Life, and Episode 60 (00:00:57) * Chapter 2: The Go Repository Structure Problem (00:05:50) * Chapter 3: Package Hell and Dependency Cycles (00:10:19) * Chapter 4: Go's Missing Project Boundary [Extended] (00:16:51) * Chapter 5: Real-World Package Design Patterns [Extended] (00:22:33) * Chapter 6: The Go 1 Compatibility Promise (00:26:58) * Chapter 7: Plugin Design Patterns [Extended] (00:35:06) * Chapter 8: The database/sql Side-Effect Problem [Extended] (00:42:30) * Chapter 9: The Community Must Lead (00:48:17) * Chapter 10: The Dying Gopher Slack and Community Fragmentation (00:59:56) * Chapter 11: "You're Holding It Wrong" (01:07:23) * Chapter 12: GopherCon vs. RustConf: The Energy Gap (01:15:36) * Epilogue (01:21:43) Host: Kris Brandow Co-Host: Matthew Sanabria Beats: Breakmaster Cylinder Fallthrough is produced by Kris Brandow. Socials: * Website ( https://fallthrough.fm/ ) * Bluesky ( https://bsky.app/profile/fallthrough.fm ) * Threads ( https://www.threads.net/@fallthroughfm ) * X/Twitter ( https://x.com/fallthroughfm ) * LinkedIn ( https://linkedin.com/company/fallthrough ) * Instagram ( https://www.instagram.com/fallthroughfm/ )

    1h 23min

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