The program began when Laporte recorded a one-off round-table discussion between himself, Patrick Norton, Sarah Norton, Kevin Rose, David Prager, and Roger Chang at the 2005 Macworld Expo in San Francisco. After publishing the show on his blog to an enthusiastic public reception, Laporte decided to rename this discussion "episode 0" and turned the round-table concept into a weekly downloadable audio file, or "
podcast," featuring more cast members from his former
TechTV program
The Screen Savers. The first episode was posted on Monday, April 18, 2005, as
Revenge of the Screen Savers, but it was temporarily renamed "Return of the [BEEP]" and shortly thereafter changed in response to a
cease and desist letter sent to Laporte from
Comcast, owners of TechTV's intellectual property rights, arguing it too closely resembled the defunct show's name. (TWiT started using the Screen Savers trademark after Comcast allowed it to expire, and
The New Screen Savers was launched as a separate weekly program on May 2, 2015.) In episode 2, Laporte announced a contest in which listeners could suggest a new name for the show. One listener suggested
This Week in Geek, which inspired Laporte to create the eventual name,
This Week in Tech, or
TWiT. The weekly show was originally recorded with all of the hosts staying at their respective homes and talking via
Voice over IP (mostly using
Skype). Starting around episode 10, Norton began physically coming to Leo's Petaluma office during the taping. Upon Rose's announcement that he was moving to
San Francisco, Laporte started to gather the panelists for public live tapings in the San Francisco area, with most episodes being videotaped and released as a video podcast download. During the fall of 2005, several of the previously regular hosts began to move on to other projects, resulting in the format of the show changing, from being a show with a core group of hosts and occasional guests, into Laporte being the only regular host, and inviting in a variety of different guests each show. Around the same time, the people responsible for filming the shows, the Pixel Corps and their leader,
Alex Lindsay became more involved with the show, with many also contributing. During the first few years
TWiT episodes were made available in a variety of file formats for individual download or RSS subscription. These included a standard 64 kbit/s
MP3, a low-bandwidth 16 kbit/s MP3,
Advanced Audio Coding (AAC), and open source Ogg Vorbis. However, the Ogg Vorbis version of the show ceased to be offered in August 2009 with the AAC and low bandwidth MP3 versions ending in early November 2009. In response, Leo Laporte stated that he was a believer that his content should be made available to the widest audience possible in the format of their choice, as well as philosophically agreeing with the open source nature of Ogg Vorbis. However the time and effort the TWiT Staff needed to encode, upload, and distribute alternate audio formats in the limited time between recording and release each Sunday evening was not justified by the number of people choosing to listen to them. The final episode of
This Week in Tech recorded at TWiT's Eastside Studio was livestreamed on August 5, 2024. This was also the first ever spatial livestream which could be watched by
Apple Vision Pro users. The show recording is usually posted every Sunday evening. ==Awards==