Dansday

My own mini-podcast

My own mini-podcast

Published on May 8, 2026

I have spent years building software and diving deep into code, but I have recently realized that my perspective on technology goes beyond the terminal. I have always been fascinated by the intersection of high-level development and the daily noise of the world. For a long time, I have been looking for a format that allows me to decompress, analyze news, and just talk through complex ideas without the constraints of a formal blog post or a repository readme.

That is why I am launching my own mini-podcast. It is not going to be another dry industry analysis or a corporate-sanctioned deep dive. I want this to be a space for raw, unfiltered conversations about the tech landscape and the shifting tides of world news. I am approaching this with a builder's mindset, treating the audio production and the accompanying visual elements as a new technical challenge to solve.

My background in multimedia is my biggest asset here. I am not just approaching this as a podcaster, but as someone who cares deeply about the aesthetic and the composition of content. I have spent a lot of time behind the lens and in post-production software, and I plan to apply that same level of rigor to how I frame my stories. I am currently focused on a few core pillars for this project.

    Focus on authenticity I want to keep the production lean. Over-produced content often loses the spark of genuine curiosity. My goal is to capture the conversation as it happens, treating the podcast as a way to process information rather than perform for an audience.
    Multimedia integration Since I work with video and photography, I am not interested in just dumping an audio file into a feed. I am developing a workflow that treats the podcast as a multi-format project. I want to build a visual layer that complements the technical discussions, leveraging my experience in visual storytelling to ground abstract tech news in real-world imagery.
    Technical experimentation I treat my media setup like a development environment. I am constantly iterating on my audio chain, my lighting setups, and my post-production scripts to ensure that the process of creating the content is as efficient as the content itself. If I can automate a piece of the editing or simplify the publishing pipeline, I will do it.

This project is still in its infancy, and I am currently working through the setup phase. I do not have a catalog of episodes to point to yet, and my specific technical setup is still a work in progress as I refine the workflow. However, I am excited to merge my technical background with this creative outlet. I am not looking to be a professional broadcaster; I am looking to be a voice that contextualizes the tech world from a developer's point of view, grounded in the realities of the tools and systems we build every day.