Episode 157 opens with a VoiceOver volume bug on Michael's Mac that resets to 100 percent every time he command tabs. Damashe suggests the nuclear option: reset your VoiceOver settings. Back them up first. From there, Damashe gets into his Blindshell Classic 3 experiment. He's been using it as his actual work phone, which means carrying it when he leaves the house, taking calls on it, and finding out what it can and cannot do when theory meets reality. The short version: phone calls work fine, T9 input is usable with a tip Michael drops about the down arrow shortcut, Be My Eyes camera quality genuinely surprised him, and the dual SIM situation does not work. At all. Whatever is in SIM slot 2 does nothing. Switch the cards around and the other one works fine in slot 1. Damashe has a hypothesis. Blindshell, he is sending you this episode. He also paired a Bluetooth keyboard to the Blindshell, got his Meta Ray-Bans connected, and found out phone calls come through the glasses just fine. Screen reader audio does not, at least not by default. That test is still pending. A few other Blindshell notes worth knowing: there is no company name field in contacts, apps access your microphone without asking permission, and the lock screen keypad instructions are printed right on the lock screen, which is not exactly a security feature. Damashe is not bashing the phone. He is just reporting what he found. There is also a broader point he makes about what Blindshell missed. The community already named the product. They call it the shell phone. Blindshell should have listened to that, leaned into it, and used it to market the device beyond just the blind community. A well designed keypad phone with accessible Android underneath could appeal to a lot of people. Instead the branding closes the door before anyone outside the community even considers it. The Clix Communicator gets a mention here as a device that might actually do this right, if it ever ships. Then there is Graphene OS. Damashe has it running on a separate Android device, kept completely isolated, for reasons he will describe only as just in case. If that makes sense to you, run with it. If not, everything is fine. Messaging apps come up next. Damashe breaks down Signal versus WhatsApp in plain terms, including a genuinely useful explanation of metadata using a letter in the mail as the analogy. He also wants Signal to add device linking because it would make recommending it a lot easier. Michael mentions an ACB affiliate mailing list that uses Signal groups, which he did not know was a thing. Michael's OpenClaw setup gets a proper rundown. He is running the assistant named K on his Raspberry Pi, connected through Telegram, using three models depending on the task: OpenRouter free for simple back and forth, GPT-5.4 mini for emails and scheduling, and GPT-5.4 for deeper content work. He burned through $35 in a weekend before the API cut him off at negative two cents. The system now sends him a daily recap at 7:30 PM, manages its own memory, and archives previous days into markdown files. He has not set up the 1Password skill yet but it is on the list. Damashe spent the entire week not using AI and felt strange about it. Not unproductive, just strange. He also has thoughts about the Claude code leak and whether anyone is actually reviewing what gets pushed. He does not have answers. Neither does Michael. Proton Workspace gets a quick mention as a direct competitor to Google Workspace and Microsoft 365. If you use Proton Mail already and want to talk about it on the show, email them. The Keychron folding keyboard arrived. Damashe opened it, looked at it, and said it is not what he expected. He has not paired it to anything yet. Full report coming. Episode closes with a shout out to tip jar subscriber number six, whoever that is. Topics covered: VoiceOver volume reset bug and how to back up your VoiceOver settings Blindshell Classic 3 as a daily work phone: what works and what does not Dual SIM on the Blindshell Classic 3: broken, probably by design T9 input tip: down arrow shortcut to speed up letter entry Be My Eyes camera quality on the Blindshell Meta Ray-Bans paired to the Blindshell: calls yes, screen reader no Blindshell's missed opportunity: the shell phone name and broader market appeal Clix Communicator as a phone that might get this right Graphene OS: no further questions Signal vs WhatsApp: features, metadata, and why Damashe is on WhatsApp now Metadata explained with a mail analogy Michael's OpenClaw setup: three models, one budget, daily recaps GPT-5.4 mini, GPT-5.4, and burning through $35 in a weekend The Claude code leak and vibe coding concerns Proton Workspace as a Google and Microsoft competitor Keychron folding keyboard: first impressions, not great Send feedback: feedback@technicallyworking.show Support the show: technicallyworking.show Follow on Mastodon: Michael: @payown@dragonscave.space Damashe: @damashe@technically.social Show bot: @tw@technically.social Support Technically Working by contributing to their tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/technically-working Find out more at https://technically-working.pinecast.co Send us your feedback online: https://pinecast.com/feedback/technically-working/e519280c-f74a-4875-be3b-2dffe2b22ed0 This podcast is powered by Pinecast. 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