308: ‘Peak Hubris’, With Christina Warren
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Ah, we got so much to talk about, I think.
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Yeah, we do.
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And here's one.
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We have well-prepared notes, which you helped prepare, which I forgot to add the big hack
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follow-up to, which is bizarre because it's my baby.
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I was going to say, this is your thing.
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You have a 50-word asterisk you have to attach to every Bloomberg story.
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Bloomberg breaks a lot of news.
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So do you have a macro that you insert that in when you're blogging it?
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It's not a macro per se, but I have it saved, obviously.
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I have to rewrite it now.
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I'm dreading the next time Bloomberg does something link-worthy because I have to write
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a new footnote because they are not done.
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This is the strangest thing.
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So I woke up one day, and of course I'm inundated with texts that they've followed up, and I'm
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like, "Wow!"
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And I'm not hung out to dry on this.
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I haven't said, I guarantee you that they're wrong.
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My point is, it certainly looks like they're wrong.
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Everybody says they're wrong.
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They've offered no proof, so they ought to retract it or prove it.
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And I thought maybe they've got it, right?
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And it's the same two reporters.
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And I start reading, and it's like, "This doesn't look like anything?"
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And I described it as sophistic—I forget the word—sophistry, horseshit.
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And it is, because it creates the illusion of something there being there, and they're
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very deft at using official journalistic language and seemingly well-credentialed sources, some
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of them on the record even, none of whom with any firsthand knowledge of this.
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Well, that's the thing.
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It's crazy, in my opinion.
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And it really, really seems like they've spun themselves out of—this is my take—that
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they've spun themselves out of control to avoid retracting the original story.
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I've been trying to figure this out too, because when it first hit, it was so damning, and
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I was like, "Okay, well, Bloomberg, because I know a lot of people who work there, and
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they're, for the most part, impeccable journalists and are held to extremely high standards and
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have very good sourcing."
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And so I didn't really have many reasons to doubt what was being reported.
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And then more, some of those doubts started to creep in.
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When every single company—if one company denies something, and if they do it in kind
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of a weaselly way, which is what companies usually do when they don't know exactly
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how exposed they may be, they'll deny it, but there will be wiggle room—the denials
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were pretty affirmative, right?
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There wasn't a lot of wiggle room.
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You'd just be like, "This hasn't happened."
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And that made my spidey sense go up a little bit first.
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And then seeing a lot of security professionals kind of push back and be like, "Are we sure
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does this make sense?"
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You know, has some questioning.
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But in the back of my mind, I was still like, "Okay, but Bloomberg has really, really
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good reporters, and they vet things really strongly.
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Their standards for publishing, based on my experience with people that I know they're
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going to talk to, are going to be higher than at a lot of other places."
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So it's this bizarre thing, right?
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There are these denials.
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There hasn't been a lot of conclusive proof.
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There are a lot of security professionals who are calling foul on it.
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And then this follow-up story comes up, which substantively you link to a really good takedown
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thread from "own all the things" that really kind of supply the fact that, yeah, there
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was a lot of nothing in the follow-up.
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Well, and it's so—what's the name of the game, Whisper Down the Alley?
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Where you have a bunch of kids lined up and—
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Yeah, like telephone?
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Yeah, telephone.
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You write something down, and you tell the first person, and then they're supposed
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to whisper it down to the next person.
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And then the last person says what they're told, and it's inevitably different.
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Even if—I always thought—the thing about that when I was a kid was that there was always
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clear—and you knew which kid in your class was going to do it.
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Somebody was going to screw it up on purpose.
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And it's like, "We're doing sociology here, David, you jerk."
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Because he'd have a smirk.
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It's like egg freckles, and it's like, "Oh, come on."
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But it doesn't work, you know?
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And it's all—you know, but everybody—all these sources are saying like, you know, "Well,
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you know, in 2016 I got this scary briefing from the FBI about a thing that they heard
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that might have happened was Super Micro."
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And it's like, nobody is saying, "Yeah, I saw a chip on a Super Micro board."
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No, I mean, the one thing that does always kind of give me flaws, though—and this is
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why it's such an interesting kind of conundrum to me—is that the one kind of thing, I guess,
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that they could have in their favor, but they don't have the evidence that happened in
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this case, but you know, you have Edward Snowden.
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And I think if a lot of us had heard the things that he was claiming, a lot of people would
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have said that that was not happening, right?
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It seemed like out of a Russian spy novel, right?
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We, as a species, are not good with stuff that we think isn't expected, right?
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I mean, did you expect to have a pandemic?
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And if you did, I mean, and if you did, did you expect it to go this way, right?
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Like that's one of the craziest things about the last 11 months is we have had a global
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pandemic and it is nothing like anybody's science fiction about how a pandemic would
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They either turn into zombies, which is better for the drama, or it's like Stephen King's
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The Stand and 95 percent, or plus, 95 percent plus of humanity gets killed.
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And there's only a handful of, you know, you're lucky if maybe one out of 20 people
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you know survives.
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And this was nothing like that.
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It was, you know, you just stay home.
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But it seemed like this couldn't happen.
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And literally a year ago right now, that was sort of my thinking about it, which was irrational.
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No, it was really my thinking.
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I was like, "Well, it won't happen here."
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I remember I had a podcast with Federico Vitticchi and you know, he was around this time.
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I think it might have been a little bit later in February, you know, and Italy got hit hard
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already in February.
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I don't think it's like, it's not some kind of, you know, America First-ism that
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I think America's magic.
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It's just the way human nature works where it's like, "Well, you know, these things
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happen, you know."
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But they don't happen here.
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They don't happen here.
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Yeah, no, I mean…
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And do you think that's what you think with Bloomberg?
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Yeah, I mean, that's very true.
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I mean, I'm actually kind of looking.
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I was, it was a year ago today, I think, that I was flying back, or I guess technically
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it would be tomorrow, but I was on an airplane at this point, that I was flying back from
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Australia for what would be my last International Trip of the Year.
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And I was originally supposed to go from Australia to Singapore for an event, and the Singapore
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event was canceled because they weren't doing events of a certain size, and that country
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was taking precautions really strictly.
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However, the airlines weren't canceling flights.
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So I, to get home without incurring a ton of fees, I flew from Sydney to Singapore.
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Then I had like a couple hour layover in the airport, and then I flew from Singapore to
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South Korea.
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Then I had like a six or seven hour layover where I got like a hotel room in the pod or
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whatever in the airport.
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And then I flew from South Korea to Seattle.
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So I was in the air for like 27 hours.
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It was kind of insane.
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And that was my last International Trip of the Year.
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And even though the Singapore stop of the event I was presenting at was canceled, I
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still had scheduled things for Zurich and for Israel and I think some other places and
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was expecting that to go forward.
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Was not anticipating that, "Oh yeah, the world is going to change and it's going to come
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Like, no concept.
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Seems unrelated, but I mean, that is sort of how you think about a publication like
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Yeah, it's true.
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And it's the burden and the benefit of the bureaucracy of something that's an institution.
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And it's not like reporters for Bloomberg get to just type into the CMS and hit publish
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and it pops up.
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I remember thinking, I remember being not opposed to, but thinking it wasn't going to
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happen that Apple would switch from PowerPC to Intel back in 2005.
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And then the rumors picked up a little bit, but it wasn't like this year where it was
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like, "Oh, months in advance, everybody knew it was going to happen."
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But then like the weekend before WWDC, the Wall Street Journal published a story that
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said Apple's going to announce that they're switching the Mac to Intel.
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And I had to square those two things in my head that I didn't think it was going to happen
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for various reasons, including the fact that I thought...
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One of the things that I thought went unsaid at the time was, "Well, wait, if they port
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the Mac to standard x86 hardware, then wouldn't that make what we now call Hackintosh is just
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run rampant?
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Wouldn't that be sort of like the clone days again, even without the clone licensing fees?"
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But I had to square my reasons x, y, and z for thinking Apple wouldn't do it with the
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fact that the Wall Street Journal said, "Oh, yeah, it's happening."
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And I came to the conclusion that, "Well, if the journal says it's happening, it's happening.
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Let's wait till Monday in the keynote and see why."
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Right, which was the correct thing because...
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And I think for a lot of people like that, I wasn't doing what you were doing back in
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2000, what was it, 2005?
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I was still in college, but I was watching those things, but I would have made the same
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assessment that you did.
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I would have been like, "Okay, if the Wall Street Journal is saying this, then this is
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Because that typically is, especially with Apple, like now Apple, the leaks tend to happen
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months in advance, but they were much more closely held then.
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But if you had a really big outlet, a really well-placed place like the Journal, then you'd
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be like, "Okay, my bet is going to be that this is happening because they're not going
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to risk their reputation on being wrong about something like this."
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And I mean, I think that that is part of, like with the Supermicro story, you know,
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part of me is like, "Would Bloomberg risk their reputation for being wrong?"
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And I mean, clearly they are.
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Clearly they think that they've got it, but I'm not convinced.
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You're not convinced.
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A lot of other people aren't convinced.
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There's a couple of ways, you know, I mean, number one, you never bet the house on any
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Anybody could be wrong, right?
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I mean, the most famous example I would say would be Judith Miller's reporting for the
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New York Times on The Iraq War, where she said, you know, and again, there's always
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the, "Well, how does this news reporter say they know what they say they know?"
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And the Wall Street Journal, with the Power PC story said, "According to sources familiar
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with the matter."
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And somebody at Apple who knew about it blabbed to the Wall Street Journal, whether deliberately
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or not, but the Wall Street Journal trusted that person enough to say, "This is good.
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Let's go with it."
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And, you know, Judith Miller back in the run up to the Iraq War quoted somebody in the
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US National Security apparatus who said, "We know that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction.
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It's a done deal.
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We're going to go in and get them."
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And it turned out, well, guess what?
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They didn't.
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And the New York Times still to this day, I don't think, for a generation won't recover.
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There's a lot of people who will never, never...
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No, I mean, it was that and Jason Blair happened at the same time or around the same time.
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It was kind of that one-two punch.
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And Blair being a fabulous is a little bit of a different thing, right?
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Oh, I agree.
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I think it was just the two happening, completing together, I think.
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That is true because they were so close in proximity where it's like, yeah, you can't
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trust the thing.
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There were so many people who wanted to say for years you can't trust anything in the
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New York Times.
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And then, you know, it was her who, you know, I don't even know, was she an opinion columnist
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at that point?
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I'm not sure.
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No, she was a news reporter.
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She changed beats a lot.
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But it was one of those things where she was not well respected.
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I read this book, I think it was called Page One Up.
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I'm going to find it.
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But I read this book that was written about what happened at the New York Times in the
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midst of those scandals.
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It's really interesting.
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And, you know, she had lost a lot of favor in the newsroom, but she had these impeccable
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sources, which we now know to be, you know, people like Scooter Libby and Robert Novak
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and other people that like were reputable sources.
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If somebody like that is telling you these things, I can understand even for someone
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like her who my only interaction with her was I was in the green room with her at a
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cable network once and she didn't know how to use copy and paste on her iPhone.
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Oh no, this is a great story.
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I had to show her how to use copy and paste on her iPhone.
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And this was like 2014.
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That to me says kind of everything you need to know.
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But like, you know, she lost a lot of favor in the newsroom, but she had those sources
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and they didn't have the proper checks.
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And like they went through a really big kind of reckoning, you know, like Howard Raines's
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like reign, you know, as, as editor kind of came to an end.
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Like they, they had to go through a pretty massive reckoning over that.
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And I think you're right.
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I think they, I don't know if they, I don't know if I would argue they haven't recovered.
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I think there's a certain generation of people who don't even remember that happening, you
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know, but I do think it tainted them in a way that even if people don't remember that
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happening probably are impacted by that without even realizing it.
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So like if you look at like journalism students today and younger news readers today who were
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children and don't remember that, the lasting impact of what that did to the Times's reputation
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carries through.
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And so they might not even, it's like the, the Devil Wears Prada scene where, uh, you
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know, Miranda is telling Andy that, you know, the sweater that she's wearing was, was, you
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know, that she thought was, was made with no, you know, decision whatsoever was like
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made was a decision that was predetermined for her by everyone in that room.
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I feel like it might be that sort of thing where younger news readers don't even understand
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why they might have a certain perception, but it does go back to that.
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I think you're probably right.
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But I mean, I think they've recovered a lot, but it certainly was like an incredibly painful
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time for, for the Times.
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The question always is if the only source is an unnamed source or even just a named
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source, but it's, you have to take the sources name for it.
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Where, where do you draw the line on the magnitude of the allegation, whatever you want to call
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it, you know what they're saying with, do we need more sources to say the same thing
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and where, when do you need to see the actual proof?
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I know we're mixing some big stories here, but it wasn't practical for the New York Times
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to expect to get their eyes on the actual weapons of mass destruction in Iraq before
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the war, right?
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That's right.
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That literally wasn't possible.
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With the Supermicro story, it is not, it wasn't ridiculous to think, given the accusations
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of the original 2018 story, that they would want to see one of these compromised motherboards
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with a chip or at least talk to a source who would say, yes, I saw one of the boards with
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one of these chips and identified that one of these chips was doing this.
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And they had neither.
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They didn't even have a firsthand source, let alone physical proof.
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And one of the things that always stuck out to me as like, okay, we'll see where this
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goes and that I can't believe that here we are two and a half years later and still doing
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it is that even one of the two reporters on the story, Michael Riley, tweeted like a day
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or two after the original story broke, he tweeted, "That's the unique thing about this
00:17:09
◼
►
Although the details have been very tightly held, there is physical evidence out there
00:17:13
◼
►
in the world.
00:17:14
◼
►
And because of the details are out, it will be hard to keep more from emerging."
00:17:19
◼
►
And yet no one's been able to follow up.
00:17:23
◼
►
That to me is the biggest thing.
00:17:24
◼
►
It's not even so much anything else.
00:17:26
◼
►
It's the fact that there hasn't been any follow up.
00:17:28
◼
►
Just for any listeners who might be interested, the book I was talking about is called Hard
00:17:32
◼
►
News, the Scandals at the New York Times and the Future of American Media.
00:17:36
◼
►
And it's by Seth Mnookin.
00:17:38
◼
►
It's a good read.
00:17:39
◼
►
Yeah, I think the fact there was no follow up, because the thing is, I would expect like
00:17:45
◼
►
for something like this, even if they got some of the details wrong, which I would expect,
00:17:50
◼
►
I wouldn't expect everything to be completely correct.
00:17:52
◼
►
But if parts of it were correct, I would expect that every major investigative publication
00:17:59
◼
►
on the planet would immediately be putting their own resources into trying to vet this
00:18:05
◼
►
And there hasn't been anything.
00:18:09
◼
►
Like you don't have to know how news organizations work to be a savvy, or maybe to be a savvy
00:18:17
◼
►
news reader you do, but to be a well read news reader.
00:18:24
◼
►
You don't have to know how movies are really made to enjoy movies.
00:18:32
◼
►
But when something interesting happens, it's good to know how it happens.
00:18:37
◼
►
And it can help explain why you're reading what you're reading.
00:18:40
◼
►
And one of the things that happens in the news industry is when somebody comes out with
00:18:44
◼
►
a scoop, competing news agencies, A, are pissed, because everybody loves the scoops.
00:18:51
◼
►
They love it.
00:18:52
◼
►
They're like, "Why didn't I get this?"
00:18:53
◼
►
Your editor is literally yelling at you and he is saying to you, "Why do they have this
00:18:56
◼
►
and why don't we?"
00:18:59
◼
►
And if they know who the source is, even if it's an unnamed source, and a lot of times
00:19:03
◼
►
they do because they're juiced into, they call the source and they're pissed.
00:19:07
◼
►
And they're like, "Why didn't you tell me this?"
00:19:09
◼
►
But then the immediate thing they do is they jump on the story too, to follow it up, and
00:19:14
◼
►
they have to put the, as originally reported by the Washington Post or as originally reported
00:19:19
◼
►
by whoever, but then what they want to do is add to it.
00:19:25
◼
►
So that the Washington Post comes out with a big scoop about X.
00:19:28
◼
►
The New York Times is mad.
00:19:30
◼
►
They come out with their follow up.
00:19:32
◼
►
They have to acknowledge that the first reported in the Washington Post, they don't have to
00:19:36
◼
►
like legally, they have to as a convention.
00:19:41
◼
►
But then what they want to do is add original reporting to the story and build on it.
00:19:46
◼
►
And I know firsthand, I've spoken to people at news organizations who worked on this story.
00:19:52
◼
►
Like, it is true.
00:19:53
◼
►
I know firsthand.
00:19:54
◼
►
I don't know everybody who worked on it, but I know that other major news publications
00:19:59
◼
►
put reporters on this story because it was so spectacular.
00:20:03
◼
►
No, I know that too.
00:20:04
◼
►
I know that too.
00:20:06
◼
►
I've never really found anything.
00:20:07
◼
►
And it is the allegations of the original story, which literally involved the surreptitious
00:20:13
◼
►
adding of chips to motherboards and super micro server components literally would have
00:20:22
◼
►
left behind physical evidence that couldn't be erased as opposed to, and this is sort
00:20:27
◼
►
of where they're sort of walking it back.
00:20:30
◼
►
And in some ways, this follow-up story last week is a broader allegation about the length
00:20:37
◼
►
of time and the degree to which super micro servers might have allegedly were compromised
00:20:43
◼
►
by government hackers from China.
00:20:51
◼
►
But it also seems to be, was definitely walking back the adding of chips and making more sort
00:20:58
◼
►
of hand-wavy motions about firmware, which, A, is a lot harder to prove because you can
00:21:08
◼
►
also, a clever piece of firmware could do its surreptitious business and then overwrite
00:21:14
◼
►
its naughty bits.
00:21:18
◼
►
No, I mean, we've seen that with SolarWinds, right?
00:21:20
◼
►
Like the SolarWinds hack is actually quite incredible in what it was doing and was a
00:21:25
◼
►
very difficult thing to uncover because it was purposely not attacking a lot of the,
00:21:32
◼
►
you know, it was targeting the SolarWinds systems and then those were changing the way
00:21:37
◼
►
certain updates were issued to the other systems.
00:21:41
◼
►
But it was a very difficult thing to kind of unravel because of how it was done.
00:21:49
◼
►
Sorry, go on.
00:21:50
◼
►
Yeah, well, it's a very casual person.
00:21:51
◼
►
You can just kind of see how a software attack is both easier to implement and install and
00:22:00
◼
►
easier to hide.
00:22:03
◼
►
The part of the blockbuster nature of the original 2018 Bloomberg report, the big hack,
00:22:09
◼
►
was that it was hardware and that the evidence would be out there.
00:22:12
◼
►
And they weren't saying like, oh, they got like three of these chips on three motherboards
00:22:16
◼
►
and one went to Apple and one went to this company that was acquired by Amazon and one
00:22:20
◼
►
went somewhere else.
00:22:21
◼
►
They said that there were like thousands of them and nobody found any of them, which really,
00:22:26
◼
►
really, I mean, at this point, it seems absolutely unbelievable that it actually happened.
00:22:35
◼
►
It's just, well, I mean, to me, the thing was actually, it was interesting that they
00:22:39
◼
►
did actually kind of use the SolarWinds hack, which is real and has been verified, to kind
00:22:45
◼
►
of bolster this kind of updated and sort of changed claim that this was BIOS code that
00:22:52
◼
►
was updated.
00:22:53
◼
►
And yeah, you know what?
00:22:54
◼
►
That does seem a lot more plausible.
00:22:57
◼
►
But it's, to me, some of it does feel undercut by the nature of what the earlier reporting
00:23:03
◼
►
was, which I think is a bad thing because if this did happen, then that's a problem
00:23:08
◼
►
for everyone, right?
00:23:09
◼
►
Like that's, I don't want this to be one of the situations where we ignore potential reporting
00:23:16
◼
►
that there's been malicious activity because the reporting on it was imperfect.
00:23:23
◼
►
But at the same time, the reporting is imperfect and doesn't seem to really go a long way
00:23:30
◼
►
to kind of explain itself or make a strong enough case for itself, whether it's because
00:23:36
◼
►
there are no on the record sources or because the people who are on the record don't have
00:23:41
◼
►
direct access or knowledge to things.
00:23:43
◼
►
Yeah, there's a lot of holes.
00:23:45
◼
►
I mean, and it just, and very specific allegations about Apple and Amazon in particular, which
00:23:53
◼
►
again, like you said, the two companies denied in no uncertain terms.
00:23:58
◼
►
I mean, a very-
00:23:59
◼
►
There were no weasel words.
00:24:01
◼
►
Very unusual statements.
00:24:02
◼
►
And I know there are so many people, not a majority, but I know there's a number of people
00:24:08
◼
►
who just disbelieve anything that comes out of official corporate comms if it's to cover,
00:24:13
◼
►
you know, to deny a negative story.
00:24:16
◼
►
And that's fine to be skeptical like that, but you have to acknowledge that it was not
00:24:20
◼
►
the typical weasel words that-
00:24:24
◼
►
That company, you know, there was no cover your ass aspect to it.
00:24:28
◼
►
Which to me was the first red flag when they were like unequivocal in the denial and there
00:24:33
◼
►
weren't those weasel words.
00:24:34
◼
►
That was when I went, "Okay."
00:24:35
◼
►
Because you know the lawyers have to go over every single line of that.
00:24:38
◼
►
And you're talking about two companies that have, you know, at that point they were closing
00:24:42
◼
►
in on a trillion dollar market share.
00:24:43
◼
►
Now they're both, you know, Amazon's a trillion and a half and Apple's a $2 trillion company.
00:24:49
◼
►
These are companies that, you know, if you were to be caught misleading and lying in
00:24:54
◼
►
any of your official communications this way would have massive, massive consequences.
00:24:59
◼
►
Like you want to talk about like not just fines, but regulation and all kinds of other
00:25:03
◼
►
Like this is not something that I could ever see the lawyers signing off on if they didn't
00:25:08
◼
►
have full faith that what they were saying was accurate.
00:25:14
◼
►
I was, I read her an interesting piece this week.
00:25:16
◼
►
All, I mean, just about everything she writes is interesting, but Zaina Tufekci wrote, she
00:25:22
◼
►
has a substack and she was writing about critical thinking and how to, like her upbringing in
00:25:33
◼
►
an authoritarian regime, she feels prepared her a lot better for the last year, both in
00:25:38
◼
►
terms of like, "Oh, okay, this is going to be bad.
00:25:40
◼
►
We should stock up on X, Y, and Z," long before everybody else made a run on the toilet paper
00:25:46
◼
►
But also sort of seeing through this sort of authoritarian slanted aspects of the Trump
00:25:55
◼
►
administration.
00:25:56
◼
►
And one of the points, just a small point she raised on the critical thinking was when
00:26:01
◼
►
Trump got COVID and she said, "Oh, he's way sicker than they're saying he is."
00:26:07
◼
►
And she, you know, she was like, "Oh, of course."
00:26:09
◼
►
And she was like, she linked to a tweet where somebody was, when his doctors gave a press
00:26:14
◼
►
conference outdoors and they asked, "Was Trump's oxygen level ever below 90?"
00:26:21
◼
►
This is the blood oxygen level that your Apple Watch can in fact read now.
00:26:26
◼
►
And basically, just as a baseline, if you should be above 95, anything like I think
00:26:34
◼
►
93 and below, if you have COVID is considered a problem.
00:26:38
◼
►
And 80s is, anything in the 80s is bad.
00:26:42
◼
►
So the press asked his doctor, "Was Trump's oxygen ever below 90?"
00:26:46
◼
►
And his doctor said, "We don't have any recordings here of that."
00:26:51
◼
►
But was it ever below 90 here or at the White House?
00:26:55
◼
►
And his doctor said, "No, it was below 94%.
00:26:58
◼
►
It wasn't down in the low 80s or anything."
00:27:02
◼
►
And she read into it.
00:27:03
◼
►
She was like, "Now I read this and I know how to read this."
00:27:06
◼
►
So when he's, you know, the operative words were his first answer when he said, "We don't
00:27:10
◼
►
have any recordings here of that."
00:27:13
◼
►
That means that when he was here, I think this was outside the hospital, they just don't
00:27:17
◼
►
have recordings of it, but it did drop below 90.
00:27:23
◼
►
And when he said it was below 94, but it wasn't down in the low 80s, that means it was definitely
00:27:29
◼
►
It just wasn't like 81.
00:27:32
◼
►
And lo and behold, a week ago, it turned out Trump was a lot sicker than they let on when
00:27:39
◼
►
And there's sources who told the New York Times that, yeah, his blood oxygen was like
00:27:42
◼
►
eight down to like 87.
00:27:44
◼
►
And that's when they panicked and took him to the hospital.
00:27:47
◼
►
And it's that that's weasel words, right?
00:27:50
◼
►
And that's exactly what Amazon and Apple did not do when this came out.
00:27:54
◼
►
And they weren't blindsided.
00:27:55
◼
►
That's the other thing too.
00:27:56
◼
►
When the original Bloomberg big hack story came out, it wasn't like they dropped the
00:28:00
◼
►
story on Amazon and Apple and knee jerk reaction.
00:28:04
◼
►
Does anybody know about this?
00:28:06
◼
►
Okay, let's just deny it.
00:28:08
◼
►
Like it contacted them in advance.
00:28:11
◼
►
Both companies like and I know I talked to people off the record at Apple who were like,
00:28:15
◼
►
oh, no, we did like we spent a ton of money and pulled people off real work and tore server
00:28:21
◼
►
place, you know, firm farms apart looking at this.
00:28:24
◼
►
We found nothing for weeks.
00:28:27
◼
►
And the other thing too, these weren't Apple products, right?
00:28:31
◼
►
It's not like Apple had was saying that like millions of Mac pros or Mac minis weren't
00:28:38
◼
►
compromised.
00:28:39
◼
►
These were just internal to Apple servers from this super micro company.
00:28:44
◼
►
And their denial just wasn't like that at all.
00:28:46
◼
►
There was nothing to read between the lines.
00:28:50
◼
►
And I don't know the thing and I wonder what your thought is on this.
00:28:54
◼
►
I don't know much about either, you know, of the reporters on the story.
00:28:57
◼
►
I think one of them is a cybersecurity reporter, and I'm not sure what the other person's
00:29:04
◼
►
focus area is.
00:29:06
◼
►
It seems like that's what he's gone into, but it seems like, you know, they seem more
00:29:12
◼
►
policy, more like, like, you know, wonk kind of, you know, DC kind of focus people.
00:29:18
◼
►
And I wonder if this is a similar thing in some cases to the Judy Miller thing.
00:29:24
◼
►
Now that was sloppy and that shouldn't have been published and they should have had better
00:29:28
◼
►
There's a lot of layers to that.
00:29:30
◼
►
But you know, they some of it couldn't come down to when you're an editor, if you don't
00:29:35
◼
►
know your subject matter and you trust your author to know it and to get some of those
00:29:40
◼
►
I wonder if this is one of those cases where these are people who know a lot about government
00:29:46
◼
►
and have a lot of contacts within government, but don't necessarily know enough about like
00:29:50
◼
►
actual security and about tech.
00:29:53
◼
►
I think that's exactly, I mean, because their sources are all national security officials,
00:29:57
◼
►
you know, quote unquote.
00:29:59
◼
►
And, you know, one guy, they make a big deal.
00:30:01
◼
►
He was a former Navy SEAL, which again, being a Navy SEAL is very prestigious, very difficult,
00:30:06
◼
►
upper echelon of the armed forces.
00:30:09
◼
►
Doesn't necessarily make you an expert on, you know, Chinese supply chain espionage.
00:30:15
◼
►
I mean, and I think that is also worth noting, like there is a difference between cybersecurity
00:30:18
◼
►
and national security, right?
00:30:20
◼
►
Like they're both security, but they're different ways.
00:30:22
◼
►
And so that's the only thing, only way I can kind of try to kind of parse this in my mind
00:30:28
◼
►
is to see, okay, maybe the reporters really do believe what they're reporting and really
00:30:34
◼
►
do think the data says what it says, but they don't have the subject matter expertise and
00:30:39
◼
►
aren't talking to the subject matter experts enough to really be able to ascertain, is
00:30:44
◼
►
this possible?
00:30:45
◼
►
Did this happen?
00:30:46
◼
►
Is this likely?
00:30:48
◼
►
Because they're coming at it from a different perspective and from a different place.
00:30:53
◼
►
Yeah, I, yeah, that's what I think happened.
00:30:57
◼
►
And I also think that, well, why would they go so long without just retracting it?
00:31:02
◼
►
You know, and A, I think it's just anathema to them that they could have gotten something
00:31:09
◼
►
And B, I think very cynically, they've looked at what this stinky pile of crap they were
00:31:18
◼
►
held left holding that was never backed up by any evidence, never backed up by anybody
00:31:24
◼
►
else's reporting, and looked at it and it's all sort of, well, you can't prove a negative,
00:31:31
◼
►
Like if I say, guess what, Christina, there's an invisible man who's standing behind you
00:31:37
◼
►
and he's been there your entire life and you can't see him because he's composed of dark
00:31:43
◼
►
I mean, it's, you know, probably I'm crazy, but you can't prove it, right?
00:31:48
◼
►
You can't prove that there isn't an invisible man from another dimension made of dark matter
00:31:52
◼
►
who's followed you around everywhere you go for your, you know, it's, you can't prove
00:31:57
◼
►
that there aren't, just because we haven't found the servers that Apple has that have
00:32:02
◼
►
these surreptitious microchips in them, you can't prove that they don't exist.
00:32:09
◼
►
You know, and I think that's what they're hanging their hat on with their refusal to
00:32:13
◼
►
Here's what I wrote back when the original report came out, and I feel like it really
00:32:18
◼
►
I see no way around it.
00:32:19
◼
►
"The Bloomberg's report is significantly wrong, at least as it pertains to Amazon and Apple,
00:32:25
◼
►
or Apple and Amazon have issued blatantly false denials.
00:32:29
◼
►
You can perhaps chalk up Apple's denial to it being written by Apple PR.
00:32:33
◼
►
I don't think this would happen, but hypothetically, this issue could be deemed so sensitive either
00:32:38
◼
►
within the company or as a national security issue that the people at Apple with knowledge
00:32:41
◼
►
of the situation lied to Apple PR and then Apple PR issued a false statement.
00:32:46
◼
►
But in my experience, Apple PR does not lie.
00:32:50
◼
►
Do they spin the truth in ways that favor the company?
00:32:52
◼
►
Of course, that's their job, but they don't lie because they understand that one of Apple's
00:32:56
◼
►
key assets is its credibility.
00:32:59
◼
►
There's nothing, they'd say nothing before they'd lie, right?
00:33:02
◼
►
That's the thing that they could have done is just said, "We have no comment on this."
00:33:07
◼
►
But Apple's CIO signing his name and writing his statement on Amazon's thing, that's Schmidt
00:33:13
◼
►
signing his name to Amazon's report is more telling.
00:33:16
◼
►
Presumably no one at Apple or at Amazon would be more familiar with the details of this
00:33:20
◼
►
breach than Schmidt, and he vouched for it personally.
00:33:24
◼
►
Anyway, I can't help but think that you're onto something too, that Bloomberg has been
00:33:32
◼
►
sort of waiting to sort of, "Let's just push this vague thing out there to make it seem
00:33:37
◼
►
like we were onto..."
00:33:38
◼
►
Because that's the weird thing about this follow-up.
00:33:42
◼
►
They acknowledged the old story, but they didn't acknowledge that they're the same two
00:33:45
◼
►
reporters who wrote it, and they didn't acknowledge that nobody else ever proved it with Amazon
00:33:52
◼
►
They just said, "Oh yeah, and by the way, two years ago, we said Amazon and Apple were
00:33:55
◼
►
affected by this, but it turns out we were onto a bigger story," or something like that.
00:34:00
◼
►
Right, right.
00:34:01
◼
►
And it's like, it sounds like, "Ooh, this is incredible."
00:34:04
◼
►
And then you read it and there's even less details.
00:34:08
◼
►
Now I got to write a new footnote.
00:34:10
◼
►
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That's flatfile.io for all of your data importing needs.
00:35:32
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Do you want to stick with the news for now before we get into more analysis?
00:35:38
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The Apple car thing, maybe.
00:35:40
◼
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What do you think of that?
00:35:42
◼
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Yeah, let's talk about the Apple car.
00:35:43
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There's a lot of news on that.
00:35:45
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There is a lot of news on that.
00:35:46
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And I'm finally at the point where, you know, I knew that they were working on the project.
00:35:51
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It seemed like they had stopped for a while.
00:35:52
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It does now seem like it is very much back up and running again.
00:35:56
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Forgive the puns.
00:35:58
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I liked your piece on what the Volkswagen CEO said, especially because we've talked
00:36:04
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before about your love of going after Ed Colligan.
00:36:09
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But I'm curious from your perspective, you know, and basically the news is that he kind
00:36:14
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of said that he came out and he's not concerned with any of their plans.
00:36:18
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There's also been rumors that they might be doing something with Hyundai.
00:36:22
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I did not realize that they're not quite the same company, but there's like Hyundai owns
00:36:27
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a big portion of IKEA or vice versa.
00:36:30
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But anyway, in your home state of Georgia.
00:36:34
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Interesting.
00:36:35
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Interesting.
00:36:36
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Although, yeah, I guess that they, I think I remember now that they built plans there
00:36:39
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or whatever, but cool.
00:36:41
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This is the one thing that I don't get about the Apple car.
00:36:44
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And I think at this point it's clear that they're doing something with an automotive.
00:36:47
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There are too many leaks and there's too many reports on this.
00:36:51
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I tend to agree with your analysis on the Volkswagen CEO.
00:36:55
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You know, he's not dismissing them, but he's also, I think it's fair for him to be skeptical.
00:37:00
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I don't, I don't know why Apple wants to be in this space.
00:37:05
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That's what I can't figure out.
00:37:06
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That's a good question.
00:37:07
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And I've thought about that from the origins of the rumor.
00:37:11
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One thing I remember, and again, you know, put a grain of salt in it because again, this
00:37:15
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is like whisper down the alley.
00:37:16
◼
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This is like third hand, but from like their first run through of this project, Titan,
00:37:23
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where they built it up and sort of specked out a car that they might've, could've maybe
00:37:28
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gone to market with.
00:37:30
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The story I've heard is that the price tag, it was something like $170,000.
00:37:36
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Like it was like the starting price.
00:37:38
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And that's where like Tim Cook was like, all right, well we need, we need to reset this.
00:37:42
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Let's get, you know, Bob Mansfield in there.
00:37:46
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And there was a lot of high level shuffling of priorities and they sort of reset and focused
00:37:54
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on the supposedly the core of the project for now on.
00:37:57
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Well, let's just get the autonomous stuff down and we'll rethink the car part.
00:38:03
◼
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You can't go wrong.
00:38:04
◼
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In general, you can't go wrong thinking that, okay, the Apple, Apple's going to make a blank.
00:38:09
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They're going to make a digital watch.
00:38:12
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How much is it going to cost?
00:38:14
◼
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Well, however much you think most digital fitness watches cost, Apple's is going to
00:38:19
◼
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You can't go wrong, right?
00:38:20
◼
►
So if they make a car, it's probably going to be expensive compared to regular, you know,
00:38:24
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average car.
00:38:27
◼
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No, that's, that's a lot of money.
00:38:30
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Well that's like when you sell a $10,000 digital watch, which didn't work.
00:38:36
◼
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By the way, just let me say this.
00:38:37
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Nobody should quote me on that $170,000 thing.
00:38:40
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That's not even what I heard.
00:38:41
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I don't know.
00:38:42
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I don't know what the number was, it was really high, but don't even quote me that it was 170,000.
00:38:46
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But it was some kind of, you know, back of the envelope math and it was a six figure
00:38:54
◼
►
Well, put aside the edition models, right?
00:38:57
◼
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Just forget that that's a wholly separate discussion, I think.
00:39:03
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Although it is, in my opinion, sort of embarrassing.
00:39:05
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I just wrote about it recently.
00:39:07
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Oh, I think it's completely embarrassing.
00:39:09
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I think it's one of their biggest failures ever.
00:39:11
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I have said this though, I think that one of the smartest and best decisions, like,
00:39:15
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the strength that Apple has had is when they pivoted the watch from fashion to fitness.
00:39:20
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When they made that pivot in that second year, that saved the watch and made it into the
00:39:26
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massive success that it is now.
00:39:28
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But the first year it was all about fashion and that was not the right way to go.
00:39:31
◼
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Well, they had the fitness there, right?
00:39:34
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And they really emphasized at the beginning that they had three, and I think we can tie
00:39:38
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this in with the car, but they had three.
00:39:40
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They were very clear that they had three models, the sport, the no name stainless steel one,
00:39:47
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and the edition.
00:39:49
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And I remember arguing with people, and I'm not saying this just to pick up my being right
00:39:53
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points, but there were people who were arguing that the sport ones would cost more than the
00:39:59
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no name ones.
00:40:00
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They're like, "Oh, the no name one means it's the cheapest and the sport one."
00:40:03
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And it's like, "No, I mean, how in the world would the aluminum one cost more?"
00:40:07
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Exactly, right.
00:40:08
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And they're like, "Yeah, it's ion glass, dude."
00:40:11
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And it's like, "No, that's just a fancy way of saying it's glass.
00:40:14
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The other one's made of sapphire.
00:40:16
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Sapphire's better than glass.
00:40:17
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Ion glass is just glass.
00:40:20
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They just put a word in front of glass."
00:40:24
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It's like, "You don't know what you're talking about."
00:40:27
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And then I remember too telling people, I even wrote a thing.
00:40:30
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I was like, "The gold ones are going to cost like $10,000."
00:40:34
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People are like, "You're out of your mind.
00:40:35
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You're going to..."
00:40:36
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No, I remember that.
00:40:37
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I remember you being right on that.
00:40:38
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And you were dead on.
00:40:39
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But it was insane.
00:40:40
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I was low, if anything, because they went up to like $18,500.
00:40:45
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No, it was insane.
00:40:48
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And it was completely...
00:40:50
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I think that was...
00:40:51
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Apple, I think, oftentimes is considered like a Hooper Stick company, and I don't think
00:40:56
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that's true.
00:40:57
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That, I do think, was like P. Cooper.
00:40:59
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Just think that you could sell an $18,000 watch.
00:41:01
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It had to be Johnny.
00:41:02
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I mean, and I...
00:41:03
◼
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Oh, totally.
00:41:05
◼
►
I hate to do that.
00:41:06
◼
►
I know somebody under the rug who's not even there anymore.
00:41:09
◼
►
But I mean, it had to be Johnny.
00:41:11
◼
►
I mean, it doesn't make any sense that it was anybody else.
00:41:14
◼
►
No, of course it was Johnny, because he's a watch guy, and he'd already done things.
00:41:17
◼
►
Like, he was making those art installation pieces with Mark, his buddy, his name I can't
00:41:23
◼
►
think of, last name I can't think of.
00:41:25
◼
►
They were already doing those sorts of really, really high-end, one-off kinds of things.
00:41:31
◼
►
They were already doing that kind of design work.
00:41:34
◼
►
So yeah, that was a completely Johnny thing, I have to think.
00:41:38
◼
►
But I also do think it was a little bit of kind of a Apple on top of the world thing,
00:41:41
◼
►
thinking, "Yeah, we can sell $10,000 watches that will be unable to get a software update
00:41:46
◼
►
in two years."
00:41:47
◼
►
I do think it's an embarrassment.
00:41:49
◼
►
I do think it's the, you know...
00:41:52
◼
►
Even if Apple wants to spin it now and be like, "Oh, we only claim to make a handful,"
00:41:56
◼
►
no, you productized it.
00:41:59
◼
►
You made it a part of your promotional thing.
00:42:02
◼
►
You had an assembly line for it, even if you didn't assemble a lot of them.
00:42:06
◼
►
You made this askew.
00:42:07
◼
►
This was not a thing that you made just a couple of variants of for very special people.
00:42:14
◼
►
This was something that was actually, you had to get an appointment and you had it in
00:42:20
◼
►
Like, this was a real thing, and I was completely out of touch with reality, in my opinion.
00:42:26
◼
►
It stands out to me because, in my opinion, it's a fundamentally dishonest product because
00:42:34
◼
►
if you buy a $10,000, $20,000, $30,000 or more...
00:42:41
◼
►
Watches cost a lot, but if you buy a $30,000 Rolex or a Patek, it is likely going to go
00:42:48
◼
►
up in value.
00:42:50
◼
►
Absolutely, in recent years, the high-end, fine watch market is skyrocketing.
00:42:57
◼
►
It's hard to get your hands on a lot of the most popular stainless steel watches from
00:43:02
◼
►
Rolex and Patek and other companies.
00:43:08
◼
►
You buy it now, you spend $10,000, you get a Rolex.
00:43:13
◼
►
Ten years from now, it's probably gone up in value, but at the very least, it is still
00:43:18
◼
►
just as good a watch as it was ten years before.
00:43:20
◼
►
Well, that's what I was going to say.
00:43:21
◼
►
It's going to last forever.
00:43:22
◼
►
Like, my parents both have, at this point, 20-something-year-old Rolexes that were very
00:43:29
◼
►
expensive then, and I think my mom even got the face of hers redone or whatever, but they
00:43:36
◼
►
still work exactly as they did.
00:43:39
◼
►
They're in fantastic shape, and as you said, my mom's might have even gone up in value.
00:43:46
◼
►
It's one of those things.
00:43:48
◼
►
You do have to, if you wear it regularly, you do need to get it serviced some number
00:43:52
◼
►
But an official Rolex, the place where you bought it, if you buy it from an official
00:43:56
◼
►
retailer, they'll take gold care of you.
00:44:00
◼
►
I mean, they'll come in, and if there's damage to it, if there's chips on the glass, on the
00:44:05
◼
►
sapphire or whatever, they'll ask you, "Do you want it replaced, or do you want to keep
00:44:10
◼
►
Because some people want to keep the original, even if it's damaged.
00:44:12
◼
►
They won't touch it without your permission, but if you do want, they'll replace parts
00:44:17
◼
►
and it'll work, and you can hand it down to the next generation.
00:44:22
◼
►
That's what you get at a $10,000, $20,000 watch level.
00:44:26
◼
►
The Apple Watch, like you said, literally within two years, it wouldn't even...
00:44:30
◼
►
Literally within two years, it was completely useless.
00:44:34
◼
►
And the first generation Apple Watch, the AKA Series Zero, was kind of crappy technically
00:44:40
◼
►
It was very much like the first iPad, right?
00:44:41
◼
►
Not enough RAM, a little bit slow processor.
00:44:47
◼
►
I would say it was the worst first generation product.
00:44:49
◼
►
I would say even the original iPad was a little better.
00:44:52
◼
►
Oh, no, I agree with that.
00:44:54
◼
►
I just meant in terms of the guts.
00:44:57
◼
►
No, I think the iPad was actually a fantastic first generation product.
00:45:02
◼
►
But yeah, I agree with that.
00:45:03
◼
►
I think it was probably the worst first generation product.
00:45:05
◼
►
I think it's the first one and the only one that really comes to mind where they do a
00:45:11
◼
►
They're obviously a company of perfectionists, and there's a part of them.
00:45:15
◼
►
Everybody works at Apple who would love to just go away for 20 years to work on something
00:45:19
◼
►
and then come out with it, but you can't.
00:45:21
◼
►
You have to ship, and they're very, very good at shipping.
00:45:24
◼
►
So you kind of have to ship a little too early because if you don't purposefully ship a little
00:45:29
◼
►
too early, you're going to ship a little too late, and that's very dangerous.
00:45:33
◼
►
I think that Apple Watch is the one where they shipped at least a year too early.
00:45:37
◼
►
And you can't blame them because it was the first product post Steve Jobs.
00:45:43
◼
►
The company was withering under Wall Street speculation that they'd never have another
00:45:48
◼
►
product after Steve Jobs.
00:45:50
◼
►
So you can't blame them for maybe—
00:45:53
◼
►
And it had been leaked so much, right?
00:45:55
◼
►
At that point too, it had been leaked so much.
00:45:57
◼
►
And it was too early.
00:45:58
◼
►
I felt that too.
00:45:59
◼
►
I felt like they didn't have the apps ready.
00:46:03
◼
►
They didn't have the SDK ready.
00:46:04
◼
►
They didn't have that story done.
00:46:06
◼
►
And they did—it was released in March, and then it came out in the fall.
00:46:10
◼
►
And March seemed late, like it seemed to me like they'd wanted to release it the previous
00:46:14
◼
►
fall, and it just wasn't even there.
00:46:16
◼
►
And it took until the following fall for it really to be viable.
00:46:22
◼
►
And yeah, it was too early.
00:46:27
◼
►
So the Series 1, or Series 2, I guess, right?
00:46:30
◼
►
Because Series 1 was the sort of—
00:46:35
◼
►
Yeah, they took the guts of the other one but gave it a better processor so you could
00:46:39
◼
►
actually upgrade it, right?
00:46:41
◼
►
The Series 0 was so bad that they wouldn't even do the typical Tim Cook era thing of selling
00:46:45
◼
►
the year-old version at a lower price, right?
00:46:47
◼
►
It was so slow.
00:46:48
◼
►
No, exactly, which for me is someone who spent $850 on a watch.
00:46:53
◼
►
I was pretty angry.
00:46:54
◼
►
I didn't get another one until a Series 3.
00:46:57
◼
►
I was like, "No, you're not getting my money because I'm mad."
00:47:01
◼
►
If you spent $400 to $800, $900, I think $1,100 got you the stainless steel one with the
00:47:09
◼
►
steel link bracelet.
00:47:12
◼
►
Yeah, I believe so.
00:47:14
◼
►
Which I bought.
00:47:15
◼
►
And my link bracelet from my original Series 0 is still impeccable.
00:47:19
◼
►
No scratches because I got the DLC coating, which is amazing.
00:47:23
◼
►
So it was proof that they could do a lot of things with watches really, really good.
00:47:28
◼
►
The thing that wasn't very good was the computer inside.
00:47:31
◼
►
And I remember—so you spent $400 to $1,000.
00:47:34
◼
►
Well, you got what you paid for.
00:47:36
◼
►
You were an early adopter, you bought the first one.
00:47:39
◼
►
If you spent $15,000 on the gold one, you got ripped off.
00:47:44
◼
►
Like, I would be—even if I had that much money, I would be pissed, I think, honestly.
00:47:49
◼
►
There'd be no way that I couldn't be.
00:47:52
◼
►
And I know that there were a lot of people when it—when I said it's going to cost
00:47:55
◼
►
like $5,000 to $10,000 for gold because that's just what gold, fine gold watches cost.
00:48:01
◼
►
People are like, "You're nuts.
00:48:02
◼
►
It's going to be outdated."
00:48:03
◼
►
And I'm like, "It might be outdated."
00:48:05
◼
►
I didn't tell them to make a gold watch.
00:48:07
◼
►
I'm telling you what good gold watches cost.
00:48:10
◼
►
And then when the prices did come out and I was right, people wrote to me and they're
00:48:14
◼
►
like, "Hey, good call.
00:48:16
◼
►
I'll bet what they're going to do is when you buy an edition watch, when they come out
00:48:20
◼
►
with new ones, you'll be able to take it to the Apple store and turn your Series 0
00:48:23
◼
►
into a Series 2 and then two years later, you could turn it into a Series 3 and drop
00:48:28
◼
►
it off and three days later, pick it up and it'll have new guts."
00:48:31
◼
►
And I was like, "No, computers don't work like that."
00:48:37
◼
►
No, they don't.
00:48:39
◼
►
And companies have tried.
00:48:40
◼
►
Like every time they've tried to do those upgrade things, like Samsung tried with their
00:48:43
◼
►
TVs and whatnot, like they usually abandon it after a couple of years.
00:48:46
◼
►
It's just not a way that you can really unfortunately make modern electronics.
00:48:51
◼
►
It just doesn't work.
00:48:52
◼
►
The tolerances are too small.
00:48:53
◼
►
So yeah, that's what I would just call it fundamentally dishonest.
00:48:57
◼
►
And everything they've done since to me has corrected it.
00:49:00
◼
►
Even the ones that they call edition, like the titanium one, which I bought a couple
00:49:05
◼
►
years ago for the Series 5 and which I love.
00:49:07
◼
►
The ceramic ones that they came out with, which I think were like, I forget how much
00:49:14
◼
►
They were like $1,000.
00:49:16
◼
►
Maybe 1,500, something like that.
00:49:18
◼
►
Reasonable as an upper bound for...
00:49:21
◼
►
And the other thing too is, especially once they got to Series 3, that the technology
00:49:26
◼
►
of them was good enough that they last for years.
00:49:30
◼
►
You could use it for three, four, five years, which again does not compare to a mechanical
00:49:36
◼
►
No, but it makes you feel...
00:49:37
◼
►
I mean, but it puts it in line with like a smartphone or an iPad or something else.
00:49:40
◼
►
You feel like you're still getting value out of it.
00:49:43
◼
►
I get a fitness credit that's now been expanded to some other things, but I get like a fitness
00:49:47
◼
►
credit every year through work.
00:49:49
◼
►
And I've used it to buy a new stainless steel Apple watch every year that I've been at Microsoft.
00:49:54
◼
►
And I haven't needed to actually upgrade, but I've just done it anyway and then given
00:49:58
◼
►
my old one to a friend or whatever.
00:50:02
◼
►
I'm probably not going to do that for the Series 6.
00:50:05
◼
►
I probably should have just kept the Series 5 to be honest, but I needed to...
00:50:09
◼
►
It's free money.
00:50:10
◼
►
I needed to use it.
00:50:11
◼
►
And this year I'm able to use the money for different things, so I'm more than likely
00:50:17
◼
►
But I feel like I could probably still be using...
00:50:20
◼
►
They were still, I think until recently, they might even still be selling the Series 3,
00:50:24
◼
►
Yeah, I think they are.
00:50:25
◼
►
Yeah, that's their low end price right now.
00:50:29
◼
►
So that is to me, and they make that super affordable.
00:50:31
◼
►
So to me, that is actually, okay, you buy this and you're getting four years out of
00:50:38
◼
►
That's pretty good, especially if you're not spending...
00:50:42
◼
►
If you're spending $350 for it or something like that and you wear it every day and it's
00:50:46
◼
►
this thing that's more than just your watch, but it's this health device too that is really
00:50:52
◼
►
indispensable for a lot of people, I feel like the value point is there.
00:50:55
◼
►
Because Fitbits and things like that, which aren't that much less expensive when you get
00:50:59
◼
►
into the higher end, especially if you look at the starting price of the lowest end Apple
00:51:05
◼
►
watches, people have the same things, where after a few years they need to get another
00:51:10
◼
►
So I think that's completely fine.
00:51:12
◼
►
It's just...
00:51:13
◼
►
And if you are that person who's spending stuff on the Hermes band or wanting to get
00:51:19
◼
►
one of the ceramic or the titanium ones or whatever the case may be, you go into that
00:51:25
◼
►
knowing, okay, this is not a forever thing, but I'm paying a premium because I like this
00:51:30
◼
►
styling or I want this type of band.
00:51:34
◼
►
Right now, just look, the Series 3 is the one that starts at $199.
00:51:37
◼
►
And I think you add 30 bucks to get the bigger size.
00:51:43
◼
►
And clearly it sticks out a little bit because the Series 4 is when they went to the slightly
00:51:47
◼
►
different form factor.
00:51:48
◼
►
And it's obvious what they're going to do come September.
00:51:51
◼
►
They'll come out with Series 7, the Series 3 goes away, and the Apple Watch SE becomes
00:51:58
◼
►
that low-end model.
00:51:59
◼
►
That's what SE means in Apple parlance.
00:52:01
◼
►
It means a low-end price based on two-year-old technology or 18-month-old technology, and
00:52:07
◼
►
it sticks around for two to three years at that low-end price.
00:52:13
◼
►
Like the phone that they call the iPhone SE right now, the iPhone SE 2, that's going to
00:52:18
◼
►
be here for years.
00:52:21
◼
►
Because the other SE was here for years.
00:52:23
◼
►
It was here for years, and I mean, yeah, and people are still sad that that form factor
00:52:28
◼
►
went away, actually.
00:52:30
◼
►
So, yeah, no, I think that now actually they are in a good place pricing-wise.
00:52:34
◼
►
But originally, yeah, it was a failure.
00:52:37
◼
►
But kind of going back to the car, I mean, I guess this is—
00:52:43
◼
►
I guess this is sort of like my question, though, is like, you know, you could understand,
00:52:46
◼
►
like, the rumors were there around like watches, and you could see that there was a lot of
00:52:50
◼
►
tech happening in the wearable space, and it makes sense for Apple to be there.
00:52:54
◼
►
And I guess there is a ton of tech happening in the self-driving space, but I still have
00:52:59
◼
►
a hard time, especially if we're talking about a potentially six-figure plus, like, starting
00:53:06
◼
►
Like, okay, Tesla does—most of their cars, once you get all in, are going to be around
00:53:13
◼
►
The same thing is going to be true for, you know, Mercedes or BMW.
00:53:16
◼
►
But those aren't their only options.
00:53:17
◼
►
Like, even Tesla now, you know, they have an option.
00:53:20
◼
►
Obviously, once you spec it out, you're not spending under $50,000.
00:53:23
◼
►
But, you know, on paper, you can get in for half of what, if we're being very generous,
00:53:29
◼
►
it seems like would have been your price to get into the Apple car ecosystem.
00:53:35
◼
►
I just don't understand—I think this is my struggle, is like, not that I don't think
00:53:40
◼
►
Apple could make a fantastic user interface for a car, and that it wouldn't be an amazing
00:53:47
◼
►
I just don't know why Apple as a company wants to be in the car business.
00:53:50
◼
►
Yeah, let me put it to you this way and see if you agree.
00:53:54
◼
►
Even the watch is primarily a computer.
00:54:01
◼
►
And you know, Apple put a lot of work—they've done—I mean, really, as a watch nerd outside
00:54:07
◼
►
Apple Watch, one of the most amazing things they've done is what they've done with band
00:54:11
◼
►
designs across the board, from the sport band that is sort of the default band to their
00:54:18
◼
►
link bracelet and the way that you can just adjust it and take links out with your fingernail
00:54:22
◼
►
instead of any kind of fancy tools.
00:54:24
◼
►
The leather stuff, they're really nice bands.
00:54:28
◼
►
Yeah, they are.
00:54:30
◼
►
The only criticism I have is I got the light pink, I guess, what the fancy buckle thing
00:54:38
◼
►
And that didn't hold up super well.
00:54:41
◼
►
It got dirty.
00:54:42
◼
►
I mean, I was able to clean it, but it just was one of those things that was like, "Eh."
00:54:46
◼
►
It should just wear.
00:54:48
◼
►
But still, fundamentally, the basic idea of the Apple Watch is it's a tiny computer on
00:54:54
◼
►
That's the main thing it is.
00:54:55
◼
►
And the watch parts of it, like buckling and telling the time, are all sort of secondary
00:55:02
◼
►
to the computer-type parts.
00:55:03
◼
►
Whereas a car, no matter how much of it is computerized—and Tesla has shown clearly
00:55:10
◼
►
led the way with putting a big, big computer display as the dashboard interface.
00:55:19
◼
►
You know, so the dashboard console, the whole thing, you could certainly imagine how Apple
00:55:26
◼
►
would want to design that and would enjoy designing that.
00:55:31
◼
►
But the main part of the car is not the dashboard, right?
00:55:36
◼
►
It's the actual driving of—it's the car car.
00:55:40
◼
►
And that is the big difference to me with the car, with every other product, both existing
00:55:48
◼
►
and rumored that Apple's ever made.
00:55:51
◼
►
All the VR/AR stuff is, to me, exactly like the watch, where it's fundamentally a computer
00:55:58
◼
►
and secondarily something else.
00:56:01
◼
►
Even the—especially the one that supposedly is coming first, the $3,000 according to the
00:56:09
◼
►
information VR headset with two 8K displays, it's a computer.
00:56:14
◼
►
And so put aside where they're, "Oh my God, $3,000, blah, blah, blah."
00:56:18
◼
►
It's a computer, and that's exactly what Apple's always made.
00:56:22
◼
►
They used to be called Apple Computer.
00:56:24
◼
►
And even the supposedly, after that, AR glasses that you would wear all day that would project
00:56:32
◼
►
some sort of heads-up display in front of you, it's a computer device.
00:56:36
◼
►
And fashion second, where whatever the Apple glasses look like, Apple's design prowess
00:56:42
◼
►
and taste would certainly, you would think, help in that regard in the same way it did
00:56:46
◼
►
with the watch, where people like wearing the Apple watch and think it looks good on
00:56:51
◼
►
their wrist.
00:56:52
◼
►
Car is very different.
00:56:54
◼
►
I don't know.
00:56:56
◼
►
So one idea would be—the cynical idea, why would they do this, is, "Well, there's
00:57:02
◼
►
a lot of money to be made making cars, so we should make a car."
00:57:08
◼
►
The nonsensical answer would be that they have one or more ideas to redefine the car
00:57:15
◼
►
market and think that they're onto something that no one else is thinking about or no one
00:57:23
◼
►
else could do, they might think, and therefore they're going to do it.
00:57:27
◼
►
But I don't know what those ideas are.
00:57:30
◼
►
They're not in my imagination.
00:57:34
◼
►
I mean, and I guess the hard thing I have to kind of square with it is, yeah, maybe
00:57:38
◼
►
they feel like they can do something.
00:57:39
◼
►
But if I look at what Apple's strengths are, and they have many, to be totally candid,
00:57:46
◼
►
transportation, navigation, not one of them, right?
00:57:49
◼
►
Like, AI in general, I don't actually think is one of their strengths.
00:57:54
◼
►
And I don't mean that with disrespect.
00:57:55
◼
►
It's just that the way that Apple cares about privacy and the things that they put forward
00:58:00
◼
►
work at a disadvantage to them, I think, with their systems compared to the models from
00:58:05
◼
►
the other big tech companies.
00:58:08
◼
►
I think I wrote about that recently with one of my continuing series of goofy instances
00:58:16
◼
►
with Siri giving nonsensical answers to things.
00:58:19
◼
►
I mean, the one I just posted the other day was, I said, "Hey, Dingus, remind me to pick
00:58:25
◼
►
up the dry cleaning Wednesday at three," which in fact was today.
00:58:32
◼
►
And Siri said a reminder for me at 3 a.m. to pick up the dry cleaning.
00:58:37
◼
►
And I posted what I said, which was, "Hey, Dingus, pick up the dry cleaning at three."
00:58:45
◼
►
And I wasn't trying to be obstinate, and I wasn't trying to stress test it.
00:58:51
◼
►
And, yes, most of the time when I speak to Siri, and I do speak to Siri a lot, it works.
00:58:59
◼
►
But every time it jumps out in a nonsensical way, it's the needle scratching on a record.
00:59:08
◼
►
And this one, it makes no sense.
00:59:10
◼
►
And I know, I think I wrote longer about it.
00:59:14
◼
►
I think it was Nilay Patel who had the thing about, "Hey, what time is it in London?"
00:59:20
◼
►
And it gave the time for London, Ontario.
00:59:24
◼
►
And my explanation of this was, look, the baseline is what would a human assistant do?
00:59:34
◼
►
And if you had a human assistant who you hired and you said, "Hey, what time...
00:59:40
◼
►
Can you find out what time it is right now in London?"
00:59:42
◼
►
And they gave you the time in London, Ontario.
00:59:47
◼
►
You honestly, and I don't mean this to exaggerate, you would immediately have to think, "I might
00:59:51
◼
►
have to fire this assistant because this person is too stupid to have the job."
00:59:58
◼
►
No, and the same thing for setting a reminder for you to get your dry cleaning at 3 a.m.
01:00:04
◼
►
Here's the funny part about that is there's a clip.
01:00:08
◼
►
Somebody sent me a clip, and they're like, "Do you remember Mitch Hedberg, the comedian?"
01:00:13
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:00:14
◼
►
Unfortunately, he died a few years ago.
01:00:17
◼
►
And he was on Letterman.
01:00:19
◼
►
And I'm not going to do it justice because he's so great, but he said, "I was walking
01:00:22
◼
►
down the street one night, and there was a dry...
01:00:28
◼
►
I walked past the...
01:00:29
◼
►
And literally a dry cleaner, and it was 3 a.m. and they had a sign on the door and it
01:00:34
◼
►
said, 'Closed.'"
01:00:36
◼
►
And I'm like, "You don't need to tell me that at 3 a.m.
01:00:40
◼
►
And it's like, holy cow.
01:00:43
◼
►
It wasn't just any business.
01:00:44
◼
►
It was a dry cleaner.
01:00:45
◼
►
The time was three.
01:00:48
◼
►
That's crazy.
01:00:51
◼
►
You would honestly think about a human being, "This person is mentally insufficient to do
01:00:57
◼
►
the job as my personal assistant.
01:01:00
◼
►
How can I trust this person if they're going to make mistakes like this?"
01:01:05
◼
►
And again, it's not a joke because they're talking about making a car, right?
01:01:09
◼
►
This isn't a joke.
01:01:11
◼
►
I mean, yes, exactly.
01:01:14
◼
►
And even though Apple Maps has gotten better, it's not as good as Google Maps.
01:01:22
◼
►
It's not even close.
01:01:23
◼
►
Well, it's not as good as a taxi driver, right?
01:01:26
◼
►
No, it's not.
01:01:27
◼
►
I mean, the baseline is you get into a Lyft or a taxi and you say, "Drive me to 30th Street
01:01:35
◼
►
Train Station."
01:01:36
◼
►
You expect to get a reasonable route directly to...
01:01:40
◼
►
I use Apple Maps and I think it's pretty good.
01:01:45
◼
►
But is it...
01:01:46
◼
►
Yeah, I use it too.
01:01:47
◼
►
Although it did get me stuck on a mountain once, but that's a whole other thing.
01:01:51
◼
►
Is it good enough?
01:01:52
◼
►
I don't know.
01:01:53
◼
►
Is it good enough to drive the car around?
01:01:55
◼
►
I don't know.
01:01:56
◼
►
Well, that's the thing.
01:01:57
◼
►
If I'm being completely candid, I mean, and I don't drive.
01:02:00
◼
►
So the idea of a self-driving car actually greatly appeals to me.
01:02:04
◼
►
And I would even be someone who would be willing to spend a premium on that if there was a
01:02:08
◼
►
truly self-driving car thing where I didn't have to be behind the wheel at all and do
01:02:12
◼
►
But I'm going to need to have trust in the system, that it's going to get me where I
01:02:16
◼
►
need to go, that it's going to understand things.
01:02:19
◼
►
And from a pure navigation standpoint, I don't have that in Apple Maps.
01:02:26
◼
►
And the sad thing is that I have no doubt that there are people and systems and engineers
01:02:32
◼
►
at Apple who could make a system that I could have full trust in.
01:02:36
◼
►
Just like how Siri is different on different devices.
01:02:39
◼
►
Like I find that it's actually quite good on Apple TV, but it's terrible in a lot of
01:02:43
◼
►
other places.
01:02:44
◼
►
It's highly kind of context dependent.
01:02:46
◼
►
But the problem is that it's always called the same thing.
01:02:49
◼
►
So if I'm in an Apple car that has Apple Maps in it with its Apple Drive system or whatever,
01:02:59
◼
►
I'm going to be pretty skeptical that I can trust it to get me from point A to point B
01:03:04
◼
►
without either taking me the wrong way, you know, that's going to waste me more time,
01:03:10
◼
►
or worst case scenario, get me stuck on a mountain.
01:03:15
◼
►
I'll take an aside here and say that I'm deeply skeptical about true self-driving cars,
01:03:21
◼
►
meaning that you could truly just get in the car, tell the car where to go, and fall asleep
01:03:26
◼
►
and not be completely cognizant as somebody being the driver cognizant, ready to go.
01:03:33
◼
►
And furthermore, I'm also very, very skeptical of Tesla style, current Tesla feature availability
01:03:41
◼
►
of you can mostly trust it.
01:03:44
◼
►
I actually think that's the worst, to be totally honest.
01:03:47
◼
►
Because it gives people, like they feel like they can trust it and they don't take the
01:03:51
◼
►
precautions that they should.
01:03:54
◼
►
I'm terrified of getting into car accidents.
01:03:57
◼
►
I'm perhaps even slightly phobic about it.
01:04:00
◼
►
I do drive, but I find the current rate of the number of people who get into either deadly
01:04:09
◼
►
or very, very seriously injured car accidents on a daily basis terrifying.
01:04:14
◼
►
I typically walk everywhere in Philadelphia.
01:04:18
◼
►
Every single time I see someone who is obviously on their phone while they're driving a car,
01:04:22
◼
►
I'm enraged.
01:04:23
◼
►
I would like to have an entire second police force whose job is to do nothing but identify
01:04:28
◼
►
people who are on their phone while driving because I'm terrified by it.
01:04:33
◼
►
Honest to God, I would rather have people drinking and driving than texting and driving
01:04:38
◼
►
because at least when you're drinking and driving, you're looking at the road and you're
01:04:42
◼
►
thinking, "Oh, shit, I've had too much to drink."
01:04:45
◼
►
Honest to God, that's how bad.
01:04:47
◼
►
I think you're more impaired.
01:04:48
◼
►
I don't think, I'm not trying to say you should drink and drive.
01:04:50
◼
►
I'm saying I think—
01:04:52
◼
►
I mean, well, studies have shown that you're right.
01:04:53
◼
►
I mean, studies have actually shown that maybe not more, but certainly as impaired, texting
01:04:58
◼
►
and driving has shown that.
01:05:00
◼
►
So I don't think you're wrong there.
01:05:02
◼
►
And I'm actually very critical of Tesla's model because it creates this false sense
01:05:07
◼
►
of trust that you don't have.
01:05:09
◼
►
You can't possibly keep your attention.
01:05:13
◼
►
And even worse, Tesla claims that they don't promote it, but they do.
01:05:18
◼
►
There's the wink and the nudge of all the things that you can do.
01:05:22
◼
►
And that I think is really dangerous because it's the same thing, like the reason that
01:05:25
◼
►
we have people who text and drive are because people felt like they can multitask and they
01:05:31
◼
►
can do those things.
01:05:32
◼
►
And it's become deadly.
01:05:33
◼
►
And millions and millions of people have died that way.
01:05:36
◼
►
And I worry—I'm with you, like, look, long-term, I think that we might get to a
01:05:42
◼
►
point where we get up to really self-driving cars.
01:05:44
◼
►
I don't know if we'll see it in our lifetimes or not, but I feel like it is a ways off.
01:05:49
◼
►
But I do have, like, actually, I think that the assisted but we're-so-good-you-can-trust-it-to-be-unassisted
01:05:58
◼
►
model is the most dangerous thing.
01:06:00
◼
►
Like, I much more prefer the models of the self-driving technology that require hands
01:06:06
◼
►
to be on the wheel and that require eyes to be focused on the road and that sort of thing
01:06:13
◼
►
for the systems to work than what Tesla does.
01:06:17
◼
►
I really do agree with that.
01:06:19
◼
►
One time, a couple years ago, I got invited to—I never ended up writing about it, or
01:06:24
◼
►
at least not much.
01:06:25
◼
►
I didn't write the feature that I probably should have.
01:06:27
◼
►
But I got invited to Mercedes—not a headquarters, but they're like—I forget if it was in
01:06:36
◼
►
Where's Yahoo's headquarters?
01:06:39
◼
►
I think that's where Mercedes has a big self-driving car installation in Silicon Valley.
01:06:45
◼
►
And I got invited there in the media to see their self-driving stuff.
01:06:49
◼
►
And I took a ride in a self-driving Mercedes vehicle.
01:06:54
◼
►
I was paired up with Mark Bergen, who's at Recode.
01:06:59
◼
►
And so Mark and I were in the backseat of a Mercedes.
01:07:02
◼
►
There was a press person in the passenger seat, and then there was one of their engineers
01:07:06
◼
►
behind the wheel.
01:07:07
◼
►
And it was very impressive.
01:07:09
◼
►
I mean, and the car really did do pretty much all the driving.
01:07:14
◼
►
And we went from the parking lot at their office to out on the highway for a bit and
01:07:20
◼
►
And the car did just about everything.
01:07:22
◼
►
It got confused on the on-ramp to the highway.
01:07:26
◼
►
It had to go a little bit uphill, and it was right into the sun.
01:07:29
◼
►
And it just sort of froze up.
01:07:32
◼
►
And the car braked, like, tended to brake everywhere like a student driver, meaning
01:07:37
◼
►
that your head would go forward, you know, like, it got stopped short.
01:07:42
◼
►
But the car really did do the driving, and it was impressive.
01:07:45
◼
►
But it's just, to not have somebody behind the wheel, forget about it.
01:07:50
◼
►
And I think that the industry will quickly get to the point where, in theory, you could
01:07:57
◼
►
have a closed circuit, like your own little city.
01:08:01
◼
►
And if you banned all human drivers and only allowed cars that were autonomous and talked
01:08:08
◼
►
to each other, that would work.
01:08:10
◼
►
I think we'll get there.
01:08:12
◼
►
They could do that today.
01:08:13
◼
►
The problem is mixing the autonomous cars with the human drivers.
01:08:17
◼
►
No, I agree with you.
01:08:18
◼
►
I agree with you.
01:08:20
◼
►
It was about four years ago now, but I actually made a very similar argument when I was at
01:08:23
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the New York Auto Show on a panel about self-driving cars.
01:08:27
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And I had to, you know, in front of all these corners, I was like, "I don't have a driver's
01:08:31
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license, but let me tell you my thoughts."
01:08:33
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And that was kind of exactly my thought, is that it's got to be the mixed thing.
01:08:38
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It's going to be really hard to make it truly autonomous and make it work, whereas if you
01:08:43
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mandated, you know, it can only be self-driving cars.
01:08:48
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And then you have, you know, like IoT run, you know, 5G, you know, whatever, running
01:08:53
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like traffic lights and sending other data signals and whatnot to control traffic flow.
01:08:59
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I think that could work pretty well.
01:09:02
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But the United States is not going to be the best place for that for lots of reasons, but
01:09:08
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it's possible we might see it in parts of Asia.
01:09:10
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I don't know.
01:09:11
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So part of that United States thing, we've learned this lesson over the last year.
01:09:15
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Americans tend to be very stubborn.
01:09:20
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I was going to say, yeah.
01:09:21
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I mean, yeah, look, our independence is our greatest feature and our greatest, like, weakness,
01:09:26
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to be totally honest, is our need for autonomy in that way.
01:09:30
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So part of the Mercedes thing, it was time well spent, and I was very interested, and
01:09:36
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it was a good presentation.
01:09:37
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But my question during one of the briefings was, okay, let's say we get to fully, you
01:09:44
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know, stage four.
01:09:45
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I forget what was, there's like a standard one, two, three, four, and maybe five, but
01:09:50
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four or five is like fully autonomous.
01:09:52
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It's Kit, right?
01:09:53
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It's Kit from Knight Rider.
01:09:54
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And you just say, "Kit, take me to the airport."
01:09:59
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And you could sit in the backseat and Kit will drive you to the airport.
01:10:05
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Even at the like stage below that, where it's like the driver can kind of like, you have
01:10:10
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to have a driver, but you can kind of like not pay attention.
01:10:14
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And it'll like beep at you if you need to take over and you have a couple seconds.
01:10:18
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Even at that stage, my question was, okay, you're in a car and you're behind the wheel,
01:10:25
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but the car takes over and you're going somewhere.
01:10:27
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Will you be allowed to exceed the speed limit?
01:10:31
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And it was, I knew I had a good question because they paused and they said, "No."
01:10:43
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That was the whole full answer.
01:10:46
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And you know, that is honestly, that alone is not going to fly in the United States.
01:10:52
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The idea that you're on a road with a 65 mile an hour speed limit and your car will not
01:10:58
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Well, and more to the point, there are places where even if the limit is 65, the flow of
01:11:03
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traffic is 75.
01:11:05
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And if you're going 65, it could actually be dangerous.
01:11:08
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Like if you're trying to get off the interstate or something, like it could actually be a
01:11:13
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I joke about driving fast on this podcast many times over the years.
01:11:17
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And when I do drive, I do like to drive fast on the highway.
01:11:22
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But that is true.
01:11:23
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And no joke about it, going the speed limit on a lot of highway with good, flowing traffic,
01:11:31
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it's dangerous.
01:11:32
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It is dangerous to go 65 on a lot of roads or 55 or whatever the speed limit is.
01:11:39
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But the cars won't end for logical reasons.
01:11:41
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And presumably, 50, 60 years from now, if we're still driving cars at all, they'll all
01:11:49
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be autonomous and they'll be able to go 120 miles an hour because it'll be fantastic.
01:11:54
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If you ever see little animations of what cars could do, if every car was autonomous,
01:11:59
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the way you'd be able to zip through intersections.
01:12:04
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Yeah, no, it'd be incredible.
01:12:06
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Well, I mean, I think that's kind of my secondary thing too, aside from maybe some of the logistical
01:12:09
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things or whatnot, is like, okay, I maybe get the appeal.
01:12:13
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I get the appeal for a lot of companies, not Apple investing in self-driving tech and maybe
01:12:18
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investing in the tech where you want to be the brains of what the self-driving cars are
01:12:24
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for other people if you're a very strong infrastructure play, right?
01:12:27
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Like where your whole thing is you want people using your stuff.
01:12:30
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That's typically not Apple's thing, though.
01:12:31
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They like to make their own things.
01:12:33
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They don't really like to power other people's stuff.
01:12:37
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As great as the M1 is and as amazing things that they've done with that, I don't really
01:12:41
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... And Intel is fucked for a lot of reasons, but I don't feel like Apple can take on Intel
01:12:47
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in volume, nor would they want to, right?
01:12:51
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So I look at the car and I think, okay, so why do this?
01:12:55
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This is going to be, we know, a high-price project.
01:13:01
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It requires engineering resources and expertise that not just say Apple couldn't hire for
01:13:06
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that, but certainly that is not part of their instinctive DNA.
01:13:11
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And then I look kind of long-term like, okay, if you're investing in this, it just seems
01:13:15
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to me, and I know I must be missing something, but I feel like would it not be better to
01:13:20
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be looking at high-speed rail or bullet trains or other types of transportation that way
01:13:27
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rather than cars?
01:13:29
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Why cars, which seem to be electric, EV aside, globally, it's going to be something that
01:13:38
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all predictions seem to indicate is going to be on the decline.
01:13:42
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I don't know.
01:13:43
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You know, it is, and again, I can see why they don't get into trains because trains
01:13:49
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require the government, right?
01:13:50
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You cannot, you can't build the train tracks.
01:13:52
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Although Elon Musk has tried to propose building a tunnel between Los Angeles and San Francisco.
01:14:00
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You have the hyperloop.
01:14:01
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Right, the hyperloop.
01:14:02
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Oh, I mean, I love it.
01:14:03
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I would too.
01:14:05
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Please, I hope he does it.
01:14:08
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Seriously, put me in the tube.
01:14:09
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I would love that.
01:14:10
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That'd be amazing.
01:14:11
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I know he's building, I know the rocket ships work.
01:14:14
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I mean, so I'm not laughing that it can't be done.
01:14:17
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Oh, no, I know.
01:14:18
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I know, yeah.
01:14:19
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But at least a car is something somebody, they could just sell and you meet the regulatory
01:14:25
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requirements and then people can just buy it and they can just drive on the road.
01:14:28
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But whatever it is, I guarantee you this.
01:14:30
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I mean, however wrong my pessimistic take on true autonomy is, if the rumors are true
01:14:36
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that they're looking at starting to build these three, four years from now or even less,
01:14:41
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but let's say three, four years from now, there's no way they're going to be autonomous.
01:14:44
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I mean, fully autonomous.
01:14:45
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No, there's not.
01:14:46
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Yeah, no, from a regulatory aside, yeah, they're not.
01:14:49
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So whatever their reason for wanting to do it, that's not it.
01:14:52
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Like the, you know, what is the, oh, we've got this thing and we're going to redefine
01:14:57
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the industry.
01:14:58
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It's not autonomy, not full autonomy.
01:15:01
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It says me now, you know, but I don't think so.
01:15:05
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I don't think it's possible.
01:15:07
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And even if it were, it wouldn't be legal.
01:15:10
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So I don't know.
01:15:12
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It's a very good question and I don't quite get it.
01:15:16
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But Volkswagen, they're not afraid.
01:15:18
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No, I mean, I do agree with you though, the way that they framed it.
01:15:21
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Like, I think that it probably would have been better to be like, we do the typical
01:15:25
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bullshit tech, you know, exact thing.
01:15:27
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We welcome our competition into the new space when really you're like, holy shit, we're
01:15:31
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watching our back.
01:15:32
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We don't welcome them, get out of here.
01:15:34
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But I also don't feel like this is a Ed Colligan thing where, you know, he says, you know,
01:15:40
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PC guys aren't just going to waltz in here.
01:15:42
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I do feel like there are a lot of things that are much more difficult about cars and a lot
01:15:47
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of things that go counter frankly to Apple's strengths, whereas the phone really spoke
01:15:53
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to all of their strengths even before they entered that space, you know.
01:15:59
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I would never bet against Apple to be very clear on that.
01:16:01
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I would never bet against them.
01:16:02
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It's just one of those things where I'm kind of like, why this versus some of the other
01:16:09
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areas you could go into.
01:16:10
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That's just always my question.
01:16:11
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I guess, you know, if we're just going to spitball, wildly spitball, I mean, if they
01:16:15
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have some kind of breakthrough that's in totally secret on batteries and electric drive trains,
01:16:28
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I could see that.
01:16:30
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Something like that.
01:16:33
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I mean, I know right now even like Teslas are super, super heavy because the batteries
01:16:37
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are so big and they handle weird.
01:16:39
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They're very funny.
01:16:40
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You know, I've never driven one, but I know that they accelerate like bad out of hell.
01:16:45
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They accelerate amazingly and then they'd make no noise, which is kind of incredible.
01:16:50
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Last thing before we move on to another thing if you want to, but maybe I actually think
01:16:54
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that you might be right on the batteries and maybe this would be a way for them to test
01:16:57
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their batteries because if they could nail battery tech in something like a car, think
01:17:02
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about how that could trickle down into all their other devices.
01:17:05
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And if it's something that's easier to make big first.
01:17:08
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Yes, exactly.
01:17:09
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Before it gets shrunk to your pocket, right?
01:17:13
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So maybe you start with that and then, you know, you kind of do, you know, like a wafer
01:17:17
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model sort of thing.
01:17:18
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It's like, okay, we nail this and then we can miniaturize it and put it in everything
01:17:23
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Here's the other question.
01:17:24
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I mean, think about this, this is, I feel like people aren't speculating on it enough,
01:17:29
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especially now that people are starting to say, hey, it's like two, three years out,
01:17:35
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Is where do they sell the cars?
01:17:38
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Yeah, that's a good point.
01:17:40
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I have never seen an Apple store that is ready to sell cars.
01:17:45
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I mean, some of the flagships, I'm trying to think, I was only in the new San Francisco
01:17:51
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flagship once, the one that took over the old Levi's building.
01:17:57
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That one's pretty big, you know, Fifth Avenue in New York.
01:17:59
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No way, right?
01:18:00
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Fifth Avenue in New York.
01:18:01
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No, there's no way.
01:18:02
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You have to go downstairs.
01:18:03
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Exactly, you'd have to go downstairs to show off the car.
01:18:06
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I mean, the thing is, is that you could do what Tesla does where, you know, you could
01:18:09
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have like the reservations and you could have that thing and you could have delivery.
01:18:12
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But yeah, where do people go to see it?
01:18:14
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Where do people go to potentially take a test drive?
01:18:17
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And Tesla struggled with that too, although they had to walk back, like they originally
01:18:20
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were going to close a bunch of their dealerships, or they don't call them dealerships because
01:18:24
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there's a legal thing around that, but they're stores, but then they kept some of them open.
01:18:29
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There are a number of them.
01:18:30
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I'm not sure what their state of opening is, given the pandemic, but in the Seattle
01:18:35
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area, there are like a lot of Tesla stores.
01:18:40
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I think Bellevue, which is a Seattle suburb, is second only to Palo Alto in terms of numbers
01:18:45
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of Teslas sold.
01:18:47
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So there are a number of places where people can go get them.
01:18:52
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But even that, like I will say Tesla definitely took from Apple and it's much more of an
01:18:56
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Apple experience where you go in and you place your order and you see a car, but it's not
01:19:00
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like you're going to drive off the lot with it.
01:19:02
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And it's, you know, like that's not the experience.
01:19:06
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It's not a car dealer.
01:19:07
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It's not a car dealer.
01:19:10
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I've been to a Tesla in a mall, the King of Prussian mall here in Philadelphia or the
01:19:14
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greater Philadelphia area.
01:19:15
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I think they closed though before COVID even, but they used to have a Tesla in the mall
01:19:20
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and you know, they had like one car in there and it was mainly like a place where you could
01:19:26
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just go and look at one and talk to somebody and then I guess make an appointment to get
01:19:31
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a real, you know, test drive a real one.
01:19:33
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But it's very strange.
01:19:34
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It would be very strange for Apple.
01:19:36
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I mean, and on a personal level, me, John Gruber, if they come out with a car, do I
01:19:43
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get a review unit?
01:19:45
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Like a car would be a crazy thing to get a review unit for.
01:19:49
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►
No, you would get a loan.
01:19:51
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You would, they would do it the same way that they do review units for other things.
01:19:54
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They would like let you, you would sign out an agreement and you would get it for a week
01:19:57
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or 10 days or whatever.
01:20:00
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How would I charge it?
01:20:02
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Like don't you need, won't you need like some kind of expensive thing in your garage?
01:20:07
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I mean, what happens if I don't have a garage?
01:20:09
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I happen to have a garage, but do I have room for an extra car?
01:20:14
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I'm trying to think.
01:20:15
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►
So, because I used to work at a Gizmodo Media Group and with the Jalopnik guys who would
01:20:20
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do a lot of car reviews and those are, you know, most of those guys live in Brooklyn
01:20:23
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►
where they don't have garages or access to any of that stuff and they would review EVs,
01:20:28
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►
although some of those people would live other places.
01:20:30
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►
And yeah, I mean, I think that you would find places where you could either adapt a way
01:20:34
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►
to charge or there'd be a charging station and they might give you like a limited loan.
01:20:38
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But yeah, I mean, it was, it was not uncommon where, you know, I had friends who live in
01:20:42
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►
apartments who would be, you know, test driving expensive automobiles in New York City.
01:20:48
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►
So it can be done.
01:20:49
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►
It just is obviously requires a lot more logistics than, you know, shipping somebody a phone
01:20:55
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►
or having a product briefing with a watch.
01:20:57
◼
►
Yeah, I don't think FedEx drops them off.
01:21:01
◼
►
And the thing too is that you have a much more limited number of like review devices,
01:21:07
◼
►
Like you can give the whole press corps one is one of those things where you have like
01:21:11
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►
a couple or maybe like two, like one kind of for the coast where people are going to
01:21:16
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►
So it would be a lot more limited, I assume.
01:21:19
◼
►
But yeah, and that even says, does Apple want the press reviews or do they want to do what
01:21:27
◼
►
they've been doing recently, which is do they want to see the car YouTubers?
01:21:31
◼
►
Like I could see them doing that, right?
01:21:34
◼
►
Like it just bypassing the traditional automotive press altogether.
01:21:38
◼
►
I don't know.
01:21:40
◼
►
And it's like, I know that there is an automotive press and I know that the automotive press
01:21:44
◼
►
reviews cars without buying them.
01:21:46
◼
►
You know, they, they get the equivalent of, you know, loaners.
01:21:50
◼
►
What I'm wondering is, will Apple go to the usual Apple reviewers?
01:21:54
◼
►
Like is it me and the Verge and Matthew Panzareno and Joanna Stern or do they go to the car
01:22:02
◼
►
Like it just seems...
01:22:03
◼
►
It seems crazy though, you know, and I guess, I guess it comes down to what is the thing
01:22:07
◼
►
that they think is special about the car.
01:22:10
◼
►
And it probably, I mean, like they would probably go to the Verge.
01:22:13
◼
►
The Verge has a transportation editor.
01:22:15
◼
►
It, you know, Neelay would probably want to review it himself, but you know, I mean, they
01:22:19
◼
►
would probably go there.
01:22:20
◼
►
The Wall Street Journal would get one, whether you know, Joanna or their car reviewer would
01:22:24
◼
►
be up to them.
01:22:25
◼
►
You and Panzareno, I guess it depends on if they see you as car enthusiasts and influencers
01:22:31
◼
►
or not, right?
01:22:33
◼
►
It's just a crazy thing for me to review.
01:22:37
◼
►
But like, but for instance, Marquez, Marquez Brownlee would get one.
01:22:39
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►
Oh, definitely.
01:22:41
◼
►
Like, like he would be number one.
01:22:42
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►
And I actually think that that would probably be, you'd see more of that type of things.
01:22:45
◼
►
I think that if it were me, if I were Apple and I were trying to, you know, seed review
01:22:50
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►
units for this mythical Apple car, I would be going after the big tech YouTubers who
01:22:56
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►
we all know have Teslas and get them on board.
01:23:02
◼
►
I don't know.
01:23:03
◼
►
It's just a fascinating personal aspect to it.
01:23:06
◼
►
And it's like, and how do I send it back?
01:23:08
◼
►
How do I get it?
01:23:09
◼
►
How do you send it back?
01:23:10
◼
►
How do you give it back to them?
01:23:11
◼
►
No, totally.
01:23:12
◼
►
I mean, yeah.
01:23:14
◼
►
I mean, I say this as somebody who I more than one occasion actually had, you know,
01:23:18
◼
►
companies want me to do potentially car reviews.
01:23:21
◼
►
And I'm like, I don't have a license.
01:23:23
◼
►
I can connect with someone else, you know?
01:23:24
◼
►
Like, oh, come on.
01:23:25
◼
►
But you can.
01:23:26
◼
►
I'm like, nope.
01:23:27
◼
►
I don't want to, even if I did, would genuinely have no interest because like you, I have,
01:23:33
◼
►
I live in fear of like getting in a car accident.
01:23:35
◼
►
And to me, the only thing that would be more nightmare inducing than getting in a normal
01:23:39
◼
►
car accident would be getting in a car accident with a hundred thousand dollar review car
01:23:44
◼
►
Like that would genuinely be like, that would keep me up at night, like 100%.
01:23:48
◼
►
Like that would be enough of a panic inducement.
01:23:50
◼
►
I wouldn't even be able to enjoy it because I'd be so freaked out about like, what happens
01:23:54
◼
►
if I wrecked this car?
01:23:56
◼
►
I don't know.
01:24:00
◼
►
My guess is the way they would do it is that they would be a limited number of reviews
01:24:04
◼
►
just for, you know, for the obvious reason.
01:24:07
◼
►
And that they would deliver them, you know, like ding dong, they'd show up at the, you
01:24:13
◼
►
know, where, you know, what's your address?
01:24:15
◼
►
As somebody would show up, the car is there and, you know, with, with a colleague in another
01:24:22
◼
►
car to take the person who brought it home.
01:24:24
◼
►
And then like, you know, two weeks later we're going to come and we'll pick it up.
01:24:30
◼
►
That's, I guess was what they would do.
01:24:32
◼
►
I don't know.
01:24:33
◼
►
Yeah, I think that's what they would do.
01:24:34
◼
►
And they would probably, you know, um, prioritize people who either live places that have charging
01:24:40
◼
►
stations like in my apartment building.
01:24:42
◼
►
Um, we have a couple of EV, um, uh, chargers, um, that, that people can use or whatever.
01:24:48
◼
►
So they would prioritize like people who either live near one that they can go to, to top
01:24:52
◼
►
up or have their own garage where they can retrofit, you know, or have an adapter or
01:24:56
◼
►
whatever to use their, their main, you know, like power outlet to charge the, to charge
01:25:02
◼
►
And, you know, and typically it doesn't really make a big difference that I'm in Philadelphia,
01:25:08
◼
►
which isn't really, you know, a hub for Apple, but I'm close to New York.
01:25:13
◼
►
But again, shipping anything else Apple has ever made is not that big a deal because it
01:25:19
◼
►
can always just come FedEx.
01:25:22
◼
►
Like the car, like this is going to have to be on a flatbed.
01:25:25
◼
►
Like this is either going to have to be driven or this is going to have to be on a flatbed
01:25:28
◼
►
that's going to be delivered to you.
01:25:30
◼
►
Presumably they would have a couple sent to New York, however they send cars.
01:25:34
◼
►
And then I would guess somebody from New York, somebody from Apple would drive it from New
01:25:37
◼
►
York to Philadelphia and drop it off at my house.
01:25:40
◼
►
But I, I don't know.
01:25:41
◼
►
I mean, that's what I would assume either that or they would have some sort of place
01:25:44
◼
►
where you would go to pick it up.
01:25:46
◼
►
But like what would they do if I lived in a what's like Nebraska?
01:25:50
◼
►
I probably wouldn't get one.
01:25:52
◼
►
Like you would need to be somebody who'd be super high on their list for you to get one.
01:25:57
◼
►
Or else I'd have to agree to like spend a week in California and get a hotel and you
01:26:00
◼
►
know, drive around the car for a week.
01:26:01
◼
►
There you go.
01:26:02
◼
►
That would be it.
01:26:04
◼
►
I mean, it, I'm trying to think like the, the car press is kind of distributed, but
01:26:06
◼
►
you do have a lot of people in Detroit.
01:26:07
◼
►
You do have people in New York, obviously people in California.
01:26:11
◼
►
And and they, they get their cars there.
01:26:14
◼
►
But I think for people who would be in other places who would want it, yeah, you need to
01:26:18
◼
►
either make your own arrangements or be somebody who would be deemed so important to review
01:26:25
◼
►
this that they would be willing to, you know, go through the extra stuff.
01:26:30
◼
►
It really just, it brings to mind, I mean, I've, I've thought about this.
01:26:33
◼
►
It just brings to mind what a preposterous thing to own a car is.
01:26:39
◼
►
Like we just, in America, we just have this car culture and we just.
01:26:42
◼
►
I mean, this is, this is my point.
01:26:44
◼
►
I live with someone who loves cars and I don't get it.
01:26:48
◼
►
And so I think that this underscores my whole like question.
01:26:51
◼
►
It's like, why are you wanting to get into this space?
01:26:56
◼
►
Because it is a preposterous notion that you're spending as much as you know, you could on
01:27:02
◼
►
a house for a depreciating asset.
01:27:04
◼
►
Well, and it's, again, it's not like watches where you buy a $10,000 Rolex and you could
01:27:09
◼
►
sell it for 20,000 10 years from now.
01:27:11
◼
►
You know, you're, you know, as they say, it depreciates the moment you drive it off the
01:27:17
◼
►
It's like, it's not going to use whatever its value is.
01:27:18
◼
►
And that is the other thing.
01:27:19
◼
►
I mean, let's go with this because I mentioned my son before.
01:27:23
◼
►
So my son's 17 years old.
01:27:25
◼
►
The driver, driving age in Pennsylvania is 16.
01:27:28
◼
►
And when my wife and I turned 16 and we lived in the suburbs, we, I mean, we had already
01:27:34
◼
►
had our permits because you could get your permit.
01:27:37
◼
►
I don't know.
01:27:38
◼
►
It was like three months before you turn 16, you can get your driver's permit.
01:27:41
◼
►
And it's like three months to the day because the car meant freedom when you live in the
01:27:50
◼
►
But for your son, we talked about this last show.
01:27:51
◼
►
Like he doesn't care, right?
01:27:55
◼
►
So we did bring it up.
01:27:57
◼
►
He's 17 and does not, the last, it's homework he doesn't want.
01:27:59
◼
►
What does he want to study to take a driver's test?
01:28:02
◼
►
He doesn't want to drive anywhere.
01:28:03
◼
►
He lives in the city.
01:28:05
◼
►
He walks most places he goes.
01:28:06
◼
►
And once this COVID thing blows over, he'll take, go back to, you know, we, he still hasn't
01:28:12
◼
►
taken like an Uber by himself, but you know, 17, 18, he will probably by the time this
01:28:17
◼
►
thing blows over, you know, none of his friends drive.
01:28:20
◼
►
They don't want to drive.
01:28:21
◼
►
They don't need to drive.
01:28:22
◼
►
And an Uber and a Lyft is better.
01:28:23
◼
►
You don't have to park.
01:28:24
◼
►
Well, you don't have to park, which parking, depending where you live, it can be extremely
01:28:28
◼
►
I imagine it's pricey in parts of Philadelphia and hard to find and, and, you know, takes
01:28:34
◼
►
And, and if you have an expensive car then becomes yet another like thing that you are
01:28:38
◼
►
afraid about because you've got your pricey car out there in the city, right?
01:28:42
◼
►
Like cars are great in the suburbs, in the cities.
01:28:45
◼
►
And I'm a city person, so yeah.
01:28:48
◼
►
Again, like this kind of goes to my question.
01:28:50
◼
►
Like, I think about all these things and like, I'm like, okay, this, a lot of the car companies
01:28:55
◼
►
are trying to turn themselves into tech companies, which makes sense because that's where they
01:28:59
◼
►
feel like they can continue to prosper and sell.
01:29:01
◼
►
But it's been a trend for the last decade that, you know, kids are getting their driver's
01:29:06
◼
►
license later and later and are, fewer people are buying cars.
01:29:09
◼
►
Like that's been a problem for the car industry.
01:29:12
◼
►
Like Ford has faced that and, and the other big manufacturers have too.
01:29:17
◼
►
And again, I would never bet against Apple because I feel like Apple is unique in the
01:29:22
◼
►
vacant inner markets that seem to not make sense and can make things work really well.
01:29:29
◼
►
It's just like, this just seems like, okay, but all the car companies want to be you.
01:29:35
◼
►
Why do you want to be a car company?
01:29:38
◼
►
And I wonder a little bit.
01:29:40
◼
►
I know lots of people at Apple live in San Francisco, literally in the city and they
01:29:46
◼
►
take, you know, like the buses down to Cupertino.
01:29:50
◼
►
And I know that's a big deal in that they, you know, in a way that would have made no
01:29:54
◼
►
sense 20 years ago, but it makes tons of sense now with ubiquitous cellular networking, you
01:29:59
◼
►
can actually, you know, start your workday and do be productive.
01:30:03
◼
►
And people go there and park and spend all day at work and then drive home if they don't,
01:30:09
◼
►
if they don't live in the city and take the bus and they live, you know, somewhere in
01:30:13
◼
►
But I can't help but think if there's a little bit of a bias towards car culture there because
01:30:17
◼
►
Silicon Valley is a place where you drive to go places.
01:30:21
◼
►
Yeah, you do.
01:30:22
◼
►
Yeah, that's true.
01:30:23
◼
►
And if does it bias them in a way that I think in ways, lots of little ways, Apple's products
01:30:30
◼
►
are sort of biased towards California weather.
01:30:35
◼
►
Like, why doesn't the iPhone show you the temperature on the lock screen?
01:30:41
◼
►
Because it's 71 and sunny.
01:30:45
◼
►
Yeah, no, that's, that's a good, that's a really good point.
01:30:49
◼
►
Yeah, no, that makes sense.
01:30:51
◼
►
I mean, it does also and maybe the other thing that could influence them is that if all of
01:30:54
◼
►
your competitors in the area are interested in this thing, then I'm not saying that like
01:31:00
◼
►
you're, you have to be follow on, but it's hard to, it would be hard for that not to
01:31:05
◼
►
be influential in some way, right?
01:31:07
◼
►
Like, the same way that, you know, everybody's making a microcomputer, you want to get into
01:31:12
◼
►
that business.
01:31:13
◼
►
Everybody's making a phone, you want to get into that business.
01:31:16
◼
►
If everybody around you is investing in all the hiring talent is so competitive around
01:31:21
◼
►
automotive and about self-driving around AI and all that stuff, maybe that plays a role.
01:31:26
◼
►
I don't know.
01:31:28
◼
►
Well, let me take a break and we'll thank our next sponsor.
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My thanks to Linode for sponsoring the show and for hosting Daring Fireball.
01:32:54
◼
►
Let's talk about Clubhouse before we run out of time.
01:32:59
◼
►
What are your thoughts on Clubhouse?
01:33:00
◼
►
I feel like Clubhouse right now is like, as we speak, February 2021, it's still in private.
01:33:09
◼
►
I wouldn't call it beta.
01:33:10
◼
►
I mean, it's on the App Store.
01:33:12
◼
►
It's invite only.
01:33:14
◼
►
But they seem to be accelerating the invitations to the point now where February 2021 sort
01:33:20
◼
►
of is the month where Clubhouse went big.
01:33:22
◼
►
Yeah, I would agree with that.
01:33:24
◼
►
I mean, I would say maybe January.
01:33:26
◼
►
No, yeah, I'm trying to think, when was Alon on?
01:33:30
◼
►
When did he do the Game Stonk thing?
01:33:32
◼
►
That was its Oprah joins Twitter moment.
01:33:35
◼
►
Yeah, 2021 to date, January to February.
01:33:38
◼
►
And I'm sure, in hindsight, there'll be even more people in March and more people in April,
01:33:42
◼
►
but it's getting big.
01:33:44
◼
►
A, can you describe what Clubhouse is?
01:33:48
◼
►
And B, tell me your thoughts about it.
01:33:51
◼
►
So I'll find something that I sent, let me find my tweet that I sent about it because
01:33:55
◼
►
Steven Sinofsky was annoyed with me, but I stand by it.
01:34:01
◼
►
This was what someone asked me, like two weeks ago.
01:34:03
◼
►
It says, "What does one do with Clubhouse?"
01:34:05
◼
►
And then I wrote, "Waste time not working by listening to other people not working,
01:34:10
◼
►
talking about stuff they claim to be experts in but really aren't, while hoping for celebrities
01:34:14
◼
►
to show up."
01:34:15
◼
►
That's pretty, that's pretty tart, but I don't disagree with it.
01:34:22
◼
►
And I say this as someone who, I've spent a lot of time on Clubhouse.
01:34:25
◼
►
I've hosted shows on Clubhouse when that was still a beta feature.
01:34:29
◼
►
I think I joined in April.
01:34:31
◼
►
I'm not above this, like at all.
01:34:33
◼
►
I'm just saying like when I use it, it is usually because it's either the end of the
01:34:37
◼
►
day and there I see one of the many notifications come in that, you know, somebody you're on
01:34:43
◼
►
and something interesting is going on, or I'm like, you know, kind of trying to avoid
01:34:48
◼
►
doing actual work and so I tune in in the afternoon and then listen to other people,
01:34:54
◼
►
you know, who are often doing the same thing.
01:34:56
◼
►
And then there is that bit of like, "Oh, and maybe someone famous will, you know, pop
01:35:02
◼
►
I don't know.
01:35:03
◼
►
I'm being totally honest.
01:35:04
◼
►
Like for me, that is kind of the appeal.
01:35:06
◼
►
That's not to say that I don't think there, I think that you can have some real substantive
01:35:10
◼
►
and interesting conversations and there are some really interesting ways it can be used
01:35:14
◼
►
and the way that its interest graph is both connected but disconnected from Twitter I
01:35:19
◼
►
think is interesting.
01:35:22
◼
►
I was in a room last week and someone's 10-year-old was briefly in the room before that was deemed,
01:35:29
◼
►
I guess, not okay and we were asking the youth some questions about their use of technology
01:35:36
◼
►
and, you know, they kind of described it.
01:35:38
◼
►
They were like, "Oh, it's Discord for adults."
01:35:41
◼
►
And that's actually not a bad description to be totally honest.
01:35:45
◼
►
Like it's, you know, kind of Discord's audio groups but, you know, audio channels for adults.
01:35:51
◼
►
That's not a completely terrible analogy.
01:35:57
◼
►
I'm trying to still wrap my head around it.
01:35:59
◼
►
I think they're on, I do think they're on to something.
01:36:02
◼
►
Oh, totally.
01:36:03
◼
►
And I also think, and I haven't quite had this feeling about something since Instagram
01:36:12
◼
►
So I was not on the Instagram beta.
01:36:14
◼
►
MG Siegler was and he tweeted enough pictures from it.
01:36:19
◼
►
I definitely kind of was like, "Okay, square pictures, filters."
01:36:25
◼
►
And then I was just saying on my other podcast Dithering with Ben Thompson, I think the episode
01:36:30
◼
►
that aired this morning that I remember where I was when I realized Instagram was out of
01:36:35
◼
►
beta and I could sign up.
01:36:36
◼
►
I was with my family down in Disney World and I was on a bus going from, I think I even
01:36:43
◼
►
remember which park we were going to.
01:36:44
◼
►
We're going from our hotel to the Disney Studios park on the little Disney transportation bus.
01:36:51
◼
►
I was like, "Oh, it's out of beta.
01:36:53
◼
►
Quick, get Gruber.
01:36:54
◼
►
Oh, it's still available.
01:36:57
◼
►
Start clicking around.
01:36:58
◼
►
And within five minutes, because all of a sudden we're at Disney and it's time to have
01:37:02
◼
►
fun and go on rides and stuff, I was like, "Oh, I get this.
01:37:06
◼
►
This is great."
01:37:09
◼
►
And now that is the original Instagram where it was just you post pictures and you see
01:37:13
◼
►
pictures from the people you follow and you can comment on the pictures and you can apply
01:37:20
◼
►
these filters that really, at the time, was a great feature because cell phone cameras
01:37:26
◼
►
were still so crappy.
01:37:28
◼
►
The filters-
01:37:29
◼
►
It really added, it was perfect.
01:37:31
◼
►
In Hipstagram, what was it?
01:37:33
◼
►
Or no, Hipstamatic.
01:37:34
◼
►
Hipstamatic.
01:37:35
◼
►
It was awesome.
01:37:36
◼
►
So it fit with that whole aesthetic that was happening at the time, but it made it easy
01:37:41
◼
►
They didn't take as long as some of the other filter apps did and it really made your photos
01:37:45
◼
►
look better and added.
01:37:46
◼
►
I remember when they added the tilt shift feature and it was amazing.
01:37:51
◼
►
The tilt shift feature was this massive deal because I was like, "Oh my God, I can take
01:37:55
◼
►
Mr. Rogers' pictures," right?
01:37:56
◼
►
Like, it's how I felt.
01:37:58
◼
►
At the time, Hipstamatic took so long.
01:38:00
◼
►
And I still don't know.
01:38:02
◼
►
I've never talked to anybody who could explain it.
01:38:04
◼
►
I don't know if they did it on purpose to fake, but Hipstamatic took so long to apply
01:38:11
◼
►
I remember talking to somebody at Apple about it and they're like, "Yeah, it makes no sense
01:38:13
◼
►
that even if they're using a bad algorithm, it shouldn't take that long."
01:38:17
◼
►
And it was like, "Yeah, it's crazy."
01:38:18
◼
►
It was frustrating.
01:38:19
◼
►
And Instagram let you like, "Oh, this filter?
01:38:23
◼
►
This filter?
01:38:26
◼
►
And then you'd pick one that made your picture look better and then you'd post it.
01:38:27
◼
►
And I was like, "I got it."
01:38:29
◼
►
I was like, "Oh, this is going to be huge."
01:38:32
◼
►
Just a snap judgment.
01:38:34
◼
►
I feel that way about Clubhouse with just a little less certainty because the thing
01:38:39
◼
►
about Instagram was I knew I wanted to use it.
01:38:42
◼
►
Whereas with Clubhouse, I'm like, "I get this.
01:38:45
◼
►
I can see why people really like it.
01:38:47
◼
►
I don't think this is for me."
01:38:50
◼
►
No, I kind of agree with you.
01:38:51
◼
►
And I'm somebody who like, I go back and forth about my feeling on it.
01:38:57
◼
►
Do I think that its current valuation is kind of insane?
01:39:01
◼
►
Do I think the concept has massive legs?
01:39:04
◼
►
I think the other difference is that Instagram came out, there were a couple of other kind
01:39:11
◼
►
of competitors.
01:39:12
◼
►
I remember there was like PickPlease, which was available on both iOS and Android that
01:39:16
◼
►
Dalton Caldwell, who later did app.net did, and that didn't work.
01:39:21
◼
►
And there were some other kind of attempts at doing similar things, but Instagram was
01:39:25
◼
►
always where the momentum was.
01:39:28
◼
►
And I think it's because they had really strong product direction.
01:39:31
◼
►
I think that always from the beginning, the product direction and the aesthetic and the
01:39:35
◼
►
usability was key.
01:39:38
◼
►
It was always product first.
01:39:39
◼
►
It was always product first.
01:39:41
◼
►
Clubhouse is one of those things where not that I don't think, where I wonder if it's
01:39:45
◼
►
going to be more like an Instagram Stories thing, where not Instagram Stories, the Snapchat
01:39:48
◼
►
Stories things, but you see where I'm going with this, where it's a great idea, but it
01:39:53
◼
►
could be potentially co-opted and done better by someone else.
01:39:58
◼
►
I feel like Twitter Spaces could beat it in a way that no one else even had a chance against
01:40:07
◼
►
Instagram, even though Instagram was iOS only until it was acquired by Facebook.
01:40:12
◼
►
No one else even had a chance.
01:40:13
◼
►
It sucked all the oxygen out of the room because it was the best.
01:40:19
◼
►
I feel like the concept of Clubhouse has a lot of legs.
01:40:21
◼
►
I just don't know if Clubhouse is going to be the thing or if it'll be whatever Mark
01:40:26
◼
►
Cuban things that he thinks he's doing or if it'll be Twitter Spaces.
01:40:29
◼
►
I don't think it'll be Facebook's thing.
01:40:31
◼
►
I think Facebook's thing will fall flat on its face.
01:40:34
◼
►
But I do feel like Twitter Spaces could potentially pull the Instagram move and make their review
01:40:43
◼
►
version of Stories way more successful, even though it's a blatant copy.
01:40:48
◼
►
It's better.
01:40:52
◼
►
You just echoed my thoughts exactly, where I feel like either Clubhouse is onto something,
01:40:57
◼
►
whether it is the thing and Clubhouse becomes a major titan of networking and owns the space,
01:41:06
◼
►
or is it Snapchat Stories and it just becomes a feature that everybody has and everybody
01:41:12
◼
►
has these audio group rooms and you can add.
01:41:17
◼
►
I don't know which way it's going to go.
01:41:20
◼
►
Either Clubhouse will become the thing for this in the way that Instagram became the
01:41:25
◼
►
thing for just sharing photos or it's Stories and everybody will have their own implementation
01:41:33
◼
►
of Clubhouse and Clubhouse is just one of them.
01:41:38
◼
►
On Dithering Ben and I talked about the way that Periscope and Meerkat were onto something
01:41:44
◼
►
with live streaming video from your phone, but there is no single home for live streaming
01:41:51
◼
►
video from your phone.
01:41:53
◼
►
Everybody just has live streaming on their platforms.
01:41:55
◼
►
You could do it on YouTube, you could do it on Facebook, you could do it on Citizen.
01:42:01
◼
►
It's just a feature that you add to anything that has this sort of thing.
01:42:04
◼
►
I don't know which way it's going to go.
01:42:06
◼
►
Here's what I see with Clubhouse and I'm not a heavy user, haven't even been there that
01:42:11
◼
►
long, but I see three types of rooms.
01:42:16
◼
►
Tell me if you think that I'm either off or if I'm missing something.
01:42:20
◼
►
I see there's shows.
01:42:23
◼
►
Ben Thompson was on a show.
01:42:24
◼
►
There's a show every night called, I forget what it's called now, Big Fun, Big Time, Good
01:42:30
◼
►
Time, Good Time last night and it's like a late night talk show, really late night for
01:42:36
◼
►
East Coasters.
01:42:37
◼
►
It's like 10 to 11 Pacific, but I was up last night and hundreds of people listen.
01:42:43
◼
►
It's a lot like a podcast except it's live and it was good and I liked listening to my
01:42:50
◼
►
friend Ben and the questions were good and I liked listening to it, but all I could think
01:42:54
◼
►
is this is just like a podcast, but with A, the frustration of you have to listen live,
01:43:02
◼
►
can't pause, you have to be there and tune in, which is a huge problem compared to, it's
01:43:08
◼
►
like going from having a TiVo to going back to not having a DVR and if you have to go
01:43:14
◼
►
to the bathroom or your phone rings during a show, you miss the show.
01:43:18
◼
►
You're screwed, totally.
01:43:20
◼
►
Which is crazy.
01:43:21
◼
►
Although I think that's why it works, but sorry, go on.
01:43:24
◼
►
Well, yeah, because maybe people are willing to say different things, right?
01:43:28
◼
►
They're willing to be looser because they're not quite on a permanent record.
01:43:32
◼
►
And I get it that that's also, it's not completely unrelated to the popularity of the Stories
01:43:37
◼
►
feature on all these platforms.
01:43:41
◼
►
B, worse audio quality.
01:43:43
◼
►
The audio quality is way worse than the worst podcast I've ever listened to.
01:43:48
◼
►
They do, technically, they do a great job with crosstalk.
01:43:51
◼
►
They really are doing some good things, but people are just talking into their phones
01:43:55
◼
►
and they're using phone microphones and there's a lot of compression.
01:43:59
◼
►
I had my AirPods Pro on last night and I was like, "This is the worst podcast I've ever
01:44:02
◼
►
listened to."
01:44:03
◼
►
I mean, I listen to podcasts where sometimes guests call in on the phone and they patch
01:44:08
◼
►
them in like the old days on radio and they sound better than Clubhouse.
01:44:14
◼
►
So the show's thing to me is sort of like live podcasts and yeah, maybe there is a social
01:44:20
◼
►
psychological angle where there still is room for that because it's not a permanent record,
01:44:26
◼
►
So there's podcasts with me and you, people will be able to listen to it in years.
01:44:29
◼
►
We don't know if they're listening to it next week or tomorrow or if they're listening to
01:44:33
◼
►
it in the year 2030 and they're laughing because they're listening to it while their Apple
01:44:38
◼
►
car is driving them around, right?
01:44:41
◼
►
And they're like, "Well, John Gruber and Christina Warren were idiots nine years ago."
01:44:46
◼
►
And they're sleeping, you know, and they're like going to take a nap in the backseat of
01:44:50
◼
►
their Apple car.
01:44:52
◼
►
So there's shows.
01:44:54
◼
►
Then there's B, there's just like group chats, like seven, eight, nine people.
01:45:00
◼
►
This is what I've done more of.
01:45:02
◼
►
Maybe you know them, maybe you don't and there's a topic or something and there's like eight
01:45:06
◼
►
people and you have a talk and you're just chatting.
01:45:11
◼
►
I find that personally, it's like I'm on the introvert scale enough where I find it exhausting
01:45:19
◼
►
and in a way, but I understand that there are other personality types who crave social
01:45:25
◼
►
interaction and they find it energizing and they love it.
01:45:30
◼
►
And 2020 is a great year to launch something like that.
01:45:35
◼
►
Because people who crave social interaction have no way to fulfill that.
01:45:42
◼
►
It's great, but that's definitely not for me.
01:45:45
◼
►
Do you like talking to new people when you go to a party or do you like talking to your
01:45:50
◼
►
I like talking to my friends.
01:45:54
◼
►
Because I find it exhausting.
01:45:55
◼
►
I mean, that's sort of the definition of an introvert.
01:46:00
◼
►
But then in the middle, the ones that I find the most interesting are the ones that are
01:46:05
◼
►
sort of like a panel discussion at a conference.
01:46:11
◼
►
And it's different than a podcast because the audience members can participate.
01:46:20
◼
►
So you get John Gruber and Christina Warren to talk Apple Car on Clubhouse and we could
01:46:29
◼
►
have a couple hundred people show up and we can pick one at a time through the app to
01:46:34
◼
►
invite people to ask us questions about what you and I think about Apple Car.
01:46:39
◼
►
And then for that time, it's me and you and our invited guests from the audience are now
01:46:44
◼
►
the speakers.
01:46:46
◼
►
Everybody else is listening and they can ask us questions that maybe you and I didn't think
01:46:50
◼
►
about and we can answer them.
01:46:53
◼
►
And then after we talk about it, pick somebody else who has their hand up.
01:46:56
◼
►
There's like a hand raise feature.
01:46:58
◼
►
Now that to me is, ooh, that's new.
01:47:03
◼
►
No, I agree.
01:47:04
◼
►
I actually, I totally agree with your three categories.
01:47:08
◼
►
And my experience, especially early on, was mostly with that third category.
01:47:12
◼
►
And I agree with you.
01:47:13
◼
►
I think that's the power because I think that the first two, the first one especially, I
01:47:16
◼
►
don't really see a whole lot there.
01:47:20
◼
►
I think at that point, your audio twitch, right?
01:47:24
◼
►
Like, I don't know if the platform really lends itself to anything.
01:47:26
◼
►
I think the second one is interesting and it can be fun.
01:47:29
◼
►
And I'm somebody who is an extrovert and doesn't mind talking to new people, but it can still
01:47:33
◼
►
be one of those things where it's going to be kind of dependent on what people you can
01:47:39
◼
►
gather together.
01:47:41
◼
►
I don't remember party lines, but I think that that was like a thing.
01:47:45
◼
►
That's kind of what that seems like, right?
01:47:47
◼
►
I remember they existed, but it was also, again, I don't even think I considered myself
01:47:51
◼
►
an introvert at the time.
01:47:53
◼
►
I think when I was younger, I attributed introvert to shy.
01:47:57
◼
►
And I'm not shy, obviously.
01:47:59
◼
►
I do a podcast, but I do find it exhausting to talk to new people.
01:48:04
◼
►
Well, it can be.
01:48:06
◼
►
Whereas I think the third thing, and this is what I think is powerful, is A, as you
01:48:10
◼
►
said, the fact that you can bring in other people, but also you add this element.
01:48:14
◼
►
Because I do think the ephemerality is key to this.
01:48:16
◼
►
I think the fact that you can't listen again, you have to be tuned in live, you have to
01:48:20
◼
►
be participating, does add something to the experience.
01:48:24
◼
►
And not only can you bring in listeners, but say we were talking about Apple Car and like
01:48:28
◼
►
this would never happen.
01:48:29
◼
►
But like, let's just say, and then some listener came in and it turns out like it was Bob Mansfield.
01:48:35
◼
►
And Bob Mansfield is a listener and now we can bring him in and he can talk and he can
01:48:39
◼
►
tell us all the ways that we're wrong.
01:48:42
◼
►
And that specific example won't happen.
01:48:45
◼
►
But there have been examples and there have been rooms I've been in, especially like when
01:48:48
◼
►
it was first kind of starting, you know, like in April or so when I was on it a lot more,
01:48:54
◼
►
ironically, you know, when there were fewer people on it, where you would see those sorts
01:48:58
◼
►
of situations happen.
01:48:59
◼
►
And I've seen that happen time and time again, where you have people who are brought in who
01:49:06
◼
►
might have a different perspective.
01:49:07
◼
►
Or again, this is where I get into like the celebrity angle where you have somebody who
01:49:10
◼
►
like has something to add to it that's really interesting context, who you might even be
01:49:15
◼
►
talking about or might even be talking around and they can share actual insights and give
01:49:20
◼
►
actual information in a way that you wouldn't be able to get through a show, right?
01:49:27
◼
►
Because that's scripted and that's planned and that has like a performative and kind
01:49:31
◼
►
of PR field to do it.
01:49:32
◼
►
And that you're not going to get with just a random chat of strangers, but instead you're
01:49:37
◼
►
having a conversation around a certain topic with a certain set of people and you all of
01:49:43
◼
►
a sudden have somebody in your audience who's really interesting that you would really love
01:49:46
◼
►
to hear from and you can pull them up.
01:49:48
◼
►
And I can't think of any other place where we would have that way to have kind of that
01:49:52
◼
►
that two way dialogue where you could bring somebody in.
01:49:54
◼
►
And I do feel like that has a ton of potential.
01:49:58
◼
►
And it seems like if it, like I said, like let's just say it's me and you, we're doing
01:50:01
◼
►
a panel discussion on Apple car conjecture and people can just jump in and we see who
01:50:09
◼
►
has their hand up.
01:50:10
◼
►
And if you recognize, holy shit, it's Bob Mansfield or, you know, or, or, you know,
01:50:15
◼
►
somebody else who you just know has car experience, you know, you know, it's the, the CEO of Volkswagen,
01:50:22
◼
►
Well, you know, of course you're, you know, you're going to jump that person to the front
01:50:26
◼
►
to see, you know, what's their question and get their, their feedback.
01:50:31
◼
►
And yeah, that happens.
01:50:32
◼
►
And my thinking about this is I, and I've, you know, I've sort of gotten away from speaking
01:50:37
◼
►
at conferences again, COVID aside.
01:50:42
◼
►
Just because I find it to be a huge time sink and I just have sort of reevaluated whether
01:50:47
◼
►
it's, you know, I'm not going to say I'm never going to do it again.
01:50:50
◼
►
I probably will.
01:50:51
◼
►
And if anything, post COVID, it's like, oh my God, let me do everything I haven't done
01:50:55
◼
►
in the last couple of years.
01:50:57
◼
►
Like but I've, you know, back when I used to go to South by Southwest, I did panel discussions
01:51:03
◼
►
and I always felt like it was a bit of a cheat, you know, cause it's so much like you don't
01:51:08
◼
►
do any preparation.
01:51:09
◼
►
You just, you know, pick a topic.
01:51:10
◼
►
You show up and you try to entertain people.
01:51:14
◼
►
And hopefully I always thought I'm better at it maybe than some people because I don't
01:51:19
◼
►
phone it in.
01:51:20
◼
►
I'm every moment I've ever been on a panel in front of an audience, no matter how small,
01:51:25
◼
►
like maybe it was 30 people.
01:51:26
◼
►
Cause it was the first time I was at South by Southwest, but I was desperately aware.
01:51:31
◼
►
Like I, you know, you've paid a lot of money to come to this conference and you're giving
01:51:36
◼
►
me an hour of your time and there's all these other panels you could have been to.
01:51:40
◼
►
Let me try to be as interesting and aware of your time as possible, but still it's nowhere
01:51:45
◼
►
near the value that I think I've delivered when I give a prepared talk that I've sweated
01:51:53
◼
►
over for weeks and prepare slides or, and rehearsed.
01:51:57
◼
►
And you know, a talk is such an easier way to do, to get a speaker badge than to prepare
01:52:06
◼
►
A panel, I mean, is easier than doing a talk, just orders of several orders of magnitude
01:52:12
◼
►
in my personal opinion.
01:52:15
◼
►
And it's not great.
01:52:17
◼
►
It's like the best panels you've ever heard are not that great.
01:52:23
◼
►
And when there is a question and answer period, it usually is awkward, often gets hijacked
01:52:30
◼
►
by somebody who just wants to ramble for five minutes.
01:52:34
◼
►
And whereas with Clubhouse, this panel idea is suited to it, right?
01:52:42
◼
►
Like the idea of a panel discussion is way better suited to Clubhouse than a conference
01:52:49
◼
►
because it is just audio.
01:52:51
◼
►
There's no reason to be in the room together.
01:52:53
◼
►
You know, you're not really getting that much out of it.
01:52:56
◼
►
And when you do do the Q&A type thing and just pull someone out of the audience, they
01:53:00
◼
►
become a full peer to the speaker.
01:53:03
◼
►
They're not out there in the audience on the weirdo mic that got passed around like Phil
01:53:08
◼
►
They get put up in the top of the little window in the iPhone and now they're on stage.
01:53:16
◼
►
It's much more suited to it.
01:53:19
◼
►
It's more convenient and it's like native to the format.
01:53:22
◼
►
That's the thing that's most interesting to me and the thing I could see doing is some
01:53:26
◼
►
sort of panel type discussion thing with daring fireball readers and listeners of the show
01:53:33
◼
►
or something like that.
01:53:34
◼
►
I'm not saying I'm going to do it, but I could see doing it.
01:53:36
◼
►
No, and I think that was something I would love to participate in as a listener and potentially
01:53:42
◼
►
as a participant because you would have that potential option in the back of your mind.
01:53:46
◼
►
You're like, "Hey, I might even be able to have a chance to contribute."
01:53:49
◼
►
But even as a listener, that unexpected thing if you don't know who all is going to be
01:53:53
◼
►
there is really interesting.
01:53:55
◼
►
And you mentioned South by Southwest and it makes me think, my favorite parts of South
01:53:58
◼
►
by and I went for I think like 10 years in a row or something and I've been on more
01:54:05
◼
►
panels than I could think about.
01:54:07
◼
►
Like you, I always try to give my own, but there was kind of a more off the cuff type
01:54:12
◼
►
of aspect of it.
01:54:14
◼
►
But my favorite part of South by was not the panels.
01:54:16
◼
►
It was the side conversations you would have at the parties or that you would have in between
01:54:19
◼
►
panels or that you would have on the streets.
01:54:22
◼
►
And it would be those times when, you know, you're, this is the same goes for like Macworld
01:54:27
◼
►
or something like that back in the day or WWDC.
01:54:29
◼
►
It's those hallway conversations where you have this collection of people, XOXO is actually
01:54:34
◼
►
a perfect example.
01:54:35
◼
►
Like you have this collection of people where you might not ever be in that same group together,
01:54:41
◼
►
but you have enough common connections where it doesn't just feel like it's strangers.
01:54:45
◼
►
And you can have these really interesting discussions that you wouldn't expect to have
01:54:49
◼
►
and maybe you couldn't have naturally in any other way.
01:54:53
◼
►
You know, I remember I was at a conference once and I don't remember which one it was.
01:54:56
◼
►
And I remember that Twitter had been hacked and like celebrities had hacked.
01:55:01
◼
►
I remember like Britney Spears' account had been hacked and something else was going
01:55:04
◼
►
And I was talking to the guy who was at the time like the head of security at Twitter
01:55:09
◼
►
and he was having a real rough day and we were kind of commiserating.
01:55:12
◼
►
And then like somebody came up, I remember who it is, but I'm not going to out him
01:55:19
◼
►
because it was hilarious, but I'm not going to do that.
01:55:21
◼
►
And not knowing who this guy was just starts, "Can you believe that clusterfuck with Twitter
01:55:25
◼
►
and their security and all this and that?"
01:55:28
◼
►
And just starts going on and on.
01:55:29
◼
►
I was like, "Hey, this is John, you know, who runs Twitter security."
01:55:34
◼
►
And the guy was super embarrassed.
01:55:35
◼
►
It was a funny conversation, but it was one of those things where this news had just broken
01:55:40
◼
►
and I was having this conversation and a very human conversation.
01:55:43
◼
►
It was a good interaction with this guy who was having a pretty bad professional day.
01:55:48
◼
►
And it was not his fault, but it was, you know, stuff was happening or whatever.
01:55:52
◼
►
And I'll just never forget that because it was like, that's one of those happenstance
01:55:56
◼
►
things that's kind of a magical experience, right?
01:56:00
◼
►
And this feels to me like the closest thing that we could do with technology that can
01:56:05
◼
►
capture those sorts of, you know, situations where you could have a gathering of people
01:56:11
◼
►
who might not ever normally be in the same space, but could contribute something to the
01:56:17
◼
►
conversation or could, you know, maybe make a gaffe and not realize it, you know, amongst
01:56:21
◼
►
themselves or whatever.
01:56:22
◼
►
And you can get something more out of it than just blathering.
01:56:27
◼
►
I don't know.
01:56:28
◼
►
I have maybe, I don't know.
01:56:31
◼
►
What do you think of what's, I like the aesthetic of Clubhouse.
01:56:34
◼
►
I like the look of the app.
01:56:36
◼
►
I think they're, you know, they've got like a nice little unique thing going.
01:56:39
◼
►
What's the deal with the icon?
01:56:42
◼
►
They update it with, I think it's a user, somebody from the community, every release.
01:56:48
◼
►
I think that's what that is.
01:56:49
◼
►
And did they tell you who it is?
01:56:51
◼
►
I mean, that's, it used to be in the release notes.
01:56:53
◼
►
I don't know if it still is.
01:56:55
◼
►
It's such a weird, to me, it's so weird, but yet I dig it because it's so distinctive,
01:57:02
◼
►
It's like when you're like flipping through apps, it's like, you can't miss Clubhouse.
01:57:04
◼
►
It's this black and white picture of some dude with a hat.
01:57:10
◼
►
I'm trying to think what else, what do you, what do you think they're going to do monetization
01:57:16
◼
►
That's the interesting question, if anything.
01:57:18
◼
►
I mean, they might not even have to, right?
01:57:20
◼
►
I mean, the easiest thing to think about would be sponsored rooms.
01:57:24
◼
►
That's exactly, I was just talking to my pal Dave Whiskus about that.
01:57:27
◼
►
To me, that's the obvious route.
01:57:30
◼
►
And maybe that's because that's what, I built my whole career on the sponsored model, which
01:57:36
◼
►
I really do see as distinct from advertising.
01:57:42
◼
►
No, cause you could have a sponsored room sponsored by so-and-so that doesn't have to
01:57:46
◼
►
dictate that isn't an advertisement for that.
01:57:48
◼
►
No, I think sponsored rooms.
01:57:49
◼
►
I also feel like that could be an opportunity where if you did want to have a more formal
01:57:52
◼
►
panel setting or more formal conversation, and maybe if it's sponsored, like it's pinned
01:57:57
◼
►
to the top of a section so it has better visibility.
01:58:00
◼
►
Like I think that's what they could do.
01:58:02
◼
►
Either sponsor a room, sponsor a section, have something pinned so that it's easier
01:58:06
◼
►
to find because the thing that they're already kind of struggling with as it gets bigger
01:58:09
◼
►
and bigger is like discovery.
01:58:11
◼
►
And that's okay.
01:58:13
◼
►
But if, to me, that would be value.
01:58:14
◼
►
If you've got all these millions of users, your brand, like I would think that would
01:58:18
◼
►
be what you would want to try to like get across.
01:58:20
◼
►
What you always want and where the sponsored model works now is does the sponsored model
01:58:26
◼
►
get you to the valuation that this as a Silicon Valley Marc Andreessen backed startup gets
01:58:34
◼
►
That's the problem with that.
01:58:35
◼
►
That's the whole story of the last 15 years of the internet, right?
01:58:40
◼
►
Like the sponsored model turned Daring Fireball into a really nice business for me.
01:58:47
◼
►
But it is not a billion dollar business.
01:58:51
◼
►
And it never will be.
01:58:52
◼
►
And it never will be.
01:58:53
◼
►
Well, it doesn't scale that way.
01:58:54
◼
►
I don't know.
01:58:55
◼
►
I mean, you could.
01:58:56
◼
►
I mean, you look at Spotify and you look at, you know, arguably they've kind of done that
01:59:02
◼
►
a little bit.
01:59:03
◼
►
I mean, I think you could, because I just don't think the regular advertising works
01:59:06
◼
►
in an audio setting.
01:59:07
◼
►
No, I don't see how it could.
01:59:08
◼
►
I don't think there's any way that it could work.
01:59:10
◼
►
I mean, you could use subscriptions, but that seems weird to, I don't know.
01:59:15
◼
►
I mean, look, I feel like the valuation is completely absurd, but I also feel like the
01:59:19
◼
►
valuation is disconnected from reality.
01:59:22
◼
►
You know, it's its lead investors who are prominent users of the apps who, you know,
01:59:26
◼
►
the other VCs are fighting with.
01:59:27
◼
►
Like, I kind of feel like the valuation is what the valuation is, but I don't put a whole
01:59:31
◼
►
lot of stock in that if it makes any sense.
01:59:33
◼
►
Because to me, the bigger question, and this is also why I think that Twitter could be
01:59:37
◼
►
really well poised for this, is that if this is something that Twitter could do really
01:59:43
◼
►
well, then this is a feature of Twitter that keeps people engaged with Twitter, but doesn't
01:59:47
◼
►
have to be a direct moneymaker for Twitter because they have their additional ad business
01:59:51
◼
►
and their additional revenue ways to make money.
01:59:55
◼
►
The way my brain works is always, "Hey, that would be a nice business."
01:59:59
◼
►
And it would be, you know, money for the creator and money for the company and happy users,
02:00:06
◼
►
and it's a virtuous circle.
02:00:08
◼
►
And that's the way my brain works.
02:00:09
◼
►
And my brain doesn't work with, "That's a $500 billion company."
02:00:15
◼
►
Like, I don't come up with ideas like that.
02:00:16
◼
►
But my thinking with the sponsorship thing is, "Hey, let's get a couple of nerds and
02:00:22
◼
►
they'll talk about the new iPhone."
02:00:25
◼
►
And it could be sponsored by a company that makes iPhone cases.
02:00:30
◼
►
And this room is sponsored by like Spigen or whoever, OtterBox or whoever, and they
02:00:37
◼
►
may sell iPhone cases and there it is.
02:00:40
◼
►
And there'd be a thing that you could tap to learn more about their cases.
02:00:44
◼
►
But otherwise, and whatever they pay, you know, it could go like 80/20 or 90/10 or probably
02:00:52
◼
►
70/30, I think we all agree is sort of exorbitant.
02:00:55
◼
►
But, you know, 80/10 or 80/20 or 90/10 to the creator, and then there's 10 for Clubhouse,
02:01:02
◼
►
and they make money and the creators make money and you can attract star talent to host
02:01:10
◼
►
these rooms and bring people in, and that's nice.
02:01:13
◼
►
I do think there's probably a market to, again, is it a multi-billion dollar idea?
02:01:18
◼
►
I don't think so, but I think it could be profitable.
02:01:20
◼
►
I think pro accounts always could be profitable.
02:01:23
◼
►
I always think back to Flickr, where when Flickr was a big deal, people paid for Flickr
02:01:31
◼
►
Pro so that they could get the pro badge on their avatar because you looked a little bit
02:01:36
◼
►
like a simp without it.
02:01:40
◼
►
Maybe unlimited, more uploads or whatever.
02:01:45
◼
►
And no, there were good things with that.
02:01:48
◼
►
Yeah, I think that sponsors could work.
02:01:49
◼
►
I think that paying creators could work.
02:01:51
◼
►
I have a feeling they would probably do the standard creator rate, which is usually like
02:01:54
◼
►
50/50 or something for YouTube, but who knows?
02:01:59
◼
►
I think the thing that they would need to be careful with on that is that if you...
02:02:03
◼
►
Yeah, but Substax 90/10, you know, it's all over the place.
02:02:08
◼
►
I'm just thinking more like YouTube terms, right?
02:02:11
◼
►
Like I'm thinking in those senses.
02:02:13
◼
►
And I think the fear with any of these things is like you want to get your high profile
02:02:17
◼
►
people and you want them to do shows, but you also...
02:02:21
◼
►
Those people are increasingly looking for what's the next big platform they can leverage
02:02:26
◼
►
and want to own their own brand and their own thing.
02:02:29
◼
►
So you see people...
02:02:32
◼
►
The big TikTokers all really want to be big YouTubers is really what it comes down to.
02:02:37
◼
►
My question would be like, could Clubhouse make enough of a monetization play off of
02:02:43
◼
►
its creators, but prevent its creators from going to YouTube or Twitch or whatever?
02:02:51
◼
►
Maybe they could, right?
02:02:52
◼
►
Like Snapchat is paying creators now and there are some creators who are apparently making
02:02:56
◼
►
a lot of money and that seems to be working well for Snapchat.
02:03:00
◼
►
And Snapchat is a multi-billion dollar company.
02:03:05
◼
►
And their model has largely been kind of in the sponsored thing, although they have some
02:03:10
◼
►
intermittent ads.
02:03:11
◼
►
I don't know how big of a part of their revenue that is.
02:03:16
◼
►
I feel like they...
02:03:17
◼
►
I think the sponsored rooms you could probably do well.
02:03:19
◼
►
The only problem with that is that's obviously going to...
02:03:22
◼
►
For the biggest brands in the biggest rooms and the biggest things, it's going to emphasize
02:03:26
◼
►
like the most popular and the most populist types of conversations, which kind of, again,
02:03:33
◼
►
like, I don't know, it sort of shuts down some of the magic, which are some of those
02:03:37
◼
►
more serendipitous things.
02:03:38
◼
►
But maybe that doesn't matter.
02:03:39
◼
►
Maybe that's what you need.
02:03:40
◼
►
Maybe those are your big tentpole movies that you need to pay for the rest of the slate
02:03:45
◼
►
and you can keep the rest of the business running.
02:03:47
◼
►
Is it a multi-billion dollar business?
02:03:48
◼
►
I don't know.
02:03:49
◼
►
I think it's a good idea and I think that's why we see everybody else wanting to jump
02:03:54
◼
►
on board to try to copy it.
02:03:55
◼
►
The last interesting thing that they do, and I wanted to get your thoughts on this.
02:03:59
◼
►
I'm so glad I just thought of it.
02:04:01
◼
►
I should have better notes because I almost forgot.
02:04:03
◼
►
But they do a thing where if you go to somebody's profile, you can see who it is who invited
02:04:09
◼
►
that person to Clubhouse.
02:04:13
◼
►
That's what they call it sponsored by.
02:04:15
◼
►
I guess maybe they need to change the language at some point.
02:04:19
◼
►
But if I got in by being...
02:04:21
◼
►
I got invited from Dave Whiskus.
02:04:23
◼
►
So I think if you go to my profile, you'll see that...
02:04:26
◼
►
It'll show you.
02:04:27
◼
►
Invited by Dave.
02:04:29
◼
►
Which I've thought of about for years as a way to grow a social network and not have
02:04:38
◼
►
the problems that we've seen with trolls.
02:04:44
◼
►
You know, they want it to be a big tent.
02:04:47
◼
►
They want it to be inviting.
02:04:48
◼
►
I think clearly they'd like to explode and become a major cultural force.
02:04:53
◼
►
But if you...
02:04:54
◼
►
It gives accountability.
02:04:56
◼
►
I'm thinking they never leave the invite only thing.
02:04:59
◼
►
I think that they're...
02:05:00
◼
►
That would be smart, actually.
02:05:03
◼
►
They stay invite only forever and they just increase the number of invitations to the
02:05:08
◼
►
existing users.
02:05:10
◼
►
No, actually, I like that idea.
02:05:12
◼
►
And what would be interesting about that, I mean, it reminds me...
02:05:14
◼
►
So I'm an old and I joined Facebook when it was college only.
02:05:17
◼
►
And it was that same thing.
02:05:18
◼
►
Like you had to be invited by another college kid.
02:05:21
◼
►
And this was like 2005.
02:05:23
◼
►
And I don't remember who it was, but somebody was invited by their school and even how it
02:05:28
◼
►
spread school to school.
02:05:30
◼
►
Like that's how it happened.
02:05:31
◼
►
And there were a number of us who were non-hyperbolically sane.
02:05:37
◼
►
And I don't think we're wrong.
02:05:39
◼
►
Obviously, the business grew and got way bigger and that changed.
02:05:42
◼
►
But Facebook fundamentally changed when it became available to everyone.
02:05:46
◼
►
And when you didn't have to have that gatekeeping thing.
02:05:50
◼
►
And it's not so much...
02:05:51
◼
►
And it got to the point, like at first it was only select colleges.
02:05:53
◼
►
But then it basically was anything.
02:05:54
◼
►
Like as long as you had an EDU address or you could get someone to invite you, then
02:05:57
◼
►
you could get in.
02:05:58
◼
►
But I do wonder, like if they just increased the number of invites, but you have to find
02:06:03
◼
►
Like obviously there will be people who will be selling invites and that's already happening
02:06:06
◼
►
and will invite anybody.
02:06:08
◼
►
But the fact that you need someone's phone number beyond just their email to invite them
02:06:13
◼
►
is one thing.
02:06:15
◼
►
The other thing I think, yeah, showing who's invited people on the platform is one thing.
02:06:20
◼
►
That's a certain way in some respects to hold accountability.
02:06:23
◼
►
If you see that a whole bunch of spam accounts or a whole bunch of agitators have joined
02:06:29
◼
►
by one person, you can kick that person out.
02:06:31
◼
►
You could see the tree.
02:06:32
◼
►
You could see the tree of...
02:06:35
◼
►
So, maybe I shouldn't... screw it.
02:06:38
◼
►
So, okay, in the torrentine community, like music torrent sites, which do slugs at private
02:06:44
◼
►
torrent trackers, that is how it works.
02:06:46
◼
►
Is that if you get an invite from someone, it will show who invited you.
02:06:49
◼
►
And if you then have somebody who abuses the system, usually what happens is that the person
02:06:55
◼
►
who invited the abuser gets kicked out.
02:06:57
◼
►
And that is a problem because you want to be able to get those unreleased copies of
02:07:05
◼
►
whatever album you want because...
02:07:07
◼
►
I don't think you're in trouble for this, Christina.
02:07:09
◼
►
I mean, I don't care.
02:07:10
◼
►
Not that you...
02:07:13
◼
►
Not that I would personally ever download anything illegally off the internet.
02:07:17
◼
►
But yeah, you know, but I feel like there is something to be said for that model.
02:07:22
◼
►
And maybe it does say "invite only forever" and that adds to the appeal.
02:07:27
◼
►
That does limit your growth, which if you're wanting to be the next Instagram, maybe is
02:07:31
◼
►
a problem, but maybe that is also how you keep up the cache.
02:07:33
◼
►
Because there's a certain thing now where everybody wants in, which does remind me of
02:07:38
◼
►
Instagram, although Instagram was never invite only.
02:07:40
◼
►
But it does remind me of like, you know, those other kind of invite only services.
02:07:44
◼
►
And I think there's power to that.
02:07:46
◼
►
By the way, about three minutes ago was the first time, I believe, in my life that I knowingly
02:07:56
◼
►
used the word "invite" as a noun.
02:08:00
◼
►
I've been on team invitation stubbornly for a while, but Merriam-Webster, a friend of
02:08:05
◼
►
mine, Paul Kefasis, pointed out on Slack this week that when I objected to the invite as
02:08:09
◼
►
a noun once again, Merriam-Webster has added a note to their dictionary.
02:08:15
◼
►
Is "invite" really a noun?
02:08:17
◼
►
This is from Merriam-Webster.
02:08:18
◼
►
"Some people feel strongly that the role of invite should be restricted to that of a verb,
02:08:22
◼
►
but the English language changes and grows according to its own peculiar whims and not
02:08:26
◼
►
those of people who write angry letters to dictionaries.
02:08:30
◼
►
The process whereby a word changes as part of speech is called functional shift, and
02:08:36
◼
►
there are tens of thousands of words which have done this.
02:08:38
◼
►
Some of them just bother people more than others.
02:08:40
◼
►
And invite, along with gift and friend, which have changed in the opposite direction, is
02:08:45
◼
►
one that attracts considerable opprobrium."
02:08:50
◼
►
So I have to admit, I love Merriam-Webster.
02:08:52
◼
►
It's probably my favorite dictionary.
02:08:55
◼
►
So I'm trying to buy into "invite" as a noun.
02:08:59
◼
►
I can be team invite for a noun as long as—and I disagree with Merriam-Webster here—irregardless,
02:09:04
◼
►
I don't care.
02:09:05
◼
►
It's not a word, and I refuse.
02:09:06
◼
►
Like that, I will die.
02:09:08
◼
►
Because it's bigger.
02:09:09
◼
►
That's the problem, right?
02:09:11
◼
►
The advantage to invite is it's shorter than an invitation.
02:09:16
◼
►
And it also, I do think you can make the argument it's become a noun because it is this feature.
02:09:19
◼
►
It is this thing, right?
02:09:21
◼
►
Like it has this secondary meaning, whereas "irregardless" is just people who are too
02:09:24
◼
►
stupid to say "regardless."
02:09:28
◼
►
And it's not like "ain't" where "ain't" is—like I'm pro-ain't because "ain't" has connotations.
02:09:36
◼
►
If it ain't broke, don't fix it works in a way that if it isn't broke, don't fix it,
02:09:41
◼
►
makes you sound like an asshole.
02:09:44
◼
►
That's like you're the dean at the college and the Animal House movie.
02:09:50
◼
►
You know, you got to use "ain't" there.
02:09:53
◼
►
Irregardless, yeah, I'm with you.
02:09:55
◼
►
Never use it.
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What do you call the quick round?
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The bonus round?
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I don't know.
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The lightning round.
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Lightning round.
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Lightning round Apple TV.
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You said Apple TV.
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Sorry, go on.
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Apple TV is where you use Siri and it works.
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I completely agree.
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I love Siri with Apple TV.
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My favorite feature on Apple TV is hold the microphone and say, "What did they just say?"
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It goes back 10 seconds, turns subtitles on, replays the 10 seconds with subtitles, and
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then just at the right moment turns the subtitles off again, which is an order of magnitude
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◼
►
to the point where you read the subtitles of the thing you couldn't hear, and then manually
02:12:14
◼
►
turning subtitles off again.
02:12:16
◼
►
Yeah, no, I couldn't agree more.
02:12:20
◼
►
That is magic.
02:12:21
◼
►
I also think even the way that the human language search stuff does, like, "Show me this episode
02:12:28
◼
►
with whatever," or "Take me to this show," works fantastic in a way that it doesn't work
02:12:33
◼
►
well on any other Apple platform.
02:12:35
◼
►
No, because I think it's the domain specificity where Siri on Apple TV knows what you're talking
02:12:42
◼
►
You're talking about shows and movies.
02:12:46
◼
►
It's really good.
02:12:47
◼
►
But the discussion, Jason Snell wrote a piece this week, "Why does Apple TV, the hardware
02:12:51
◼
►
box still exist?"
02:12:52
◼
►
Still exist.
02:12:53
◼
►
I think it's a great question.
02:12:54
◼
►
I wrote a piece about it.
02:12:57
◼
►
This is one of the answers people have come up with is, you know, you can talk to Siri
02:13:01
◼
►
and it works great.
02:13:05
◼
►
But bottom line, and you say this, and I love Apple TV.
02:13:09
◼
►
This is where I watch most of my TV, but I protest because I care, because there has
02:13:18
◼
►
to be more of a reason or Apple is going to lose interest in the same way.
02:13:23
◼
►
I don't want to see Apple TV go the way airport went.
02:13:27
◼
►
No, I agree with that.
02:13:29
◼
►
I made a comment after Jason wrote his kind of initial thing, but before your article
02:13:32
◼
►
came out and I got so much pushback from it, even though I was pretty clear where I was
02:13:36
◼
►
telling people, I was like, look, I love my Apple TV.
02:13:39
◼
►
I have two of them.
02:13:40
◼
►
I use it every day.
02:13:41
◼
►
I'm not telling people who already have an Apple TV not to use one.
02:13:45
◼
►
But at this state in February 17th, 2021, I cannot in good conscience recommend that
02:13:51
◼
►
any human being spend $180 on an Apple TV.
02:13:55
◼
►
I just can't.
02:13:56
◼
►
Like, there's no way for me to rationally recommend a newcomer today to buy one.
02:14:03
◼
►
And that makes me really sad, but there's no way.
02:14:04
◼
►
I cannot come up with any argument where it is worth $180.
02:14:09
◼
►
It's, it's, unless they renamed it Apple TV edition.
02:14:15
◼
►
That's exactly it.
02:14:16
◼
►
And didn't change at all.
02:14:17
◼
►
Didn't change.
02:14:18
◼
►
You don't have to gold.
02:14:19
◼
►
Didn't change anything.
02:14:20
◼
►
You just call it the edition and that would be it.
02:14:21
◼
►
Because the thing is, is that does it have a better user experience than most of the
02:14:24
◼
►
other boxes?
02:14:26
◼
►
Does it have the niceties like the Siri thing?
02:14:28
◼
►
Does it have arguably a better privacy thing?
02:14:33
◼
►
The one area I'll push back is that look, Apple might not be spying on every move you
02:14:39
◼
►
make, but like every single one of those apps you use is absolutely getting usage information.
02:14:43
◼
►
So do not be under the assumption that you were not being tracked because of course you
02:14:50
◼
►
But do those things add up?
02:14:53
◼
►
Because I even said this to someone, people are like, oh, it's so much better for this
02:14:56
◼
►
I was like, is it $150 better?
02:14:58
◼
►
Because a 4K Fire TV stick, which might not have the Dolby stuff, but a lot of people's
02:15:04
◼
►
TVs don't have Dolby either.
02:15:06
◼
►
So it still does HDR.
02:15:07
◼
►
It just doesn't do the Dolby out-my-out-my stuff, has an Apple TV app on it so you can
02:15:11
◼
►
watch your purchases and you can watch the original programming.
02:15:17
◼
►
It's got access to all the services.
02:15:20
◼
►
I can't come up with an argument that says this is $150 better.
02:15:25
◼
►
I just can't.
02:15:26
◼
►
Well, and the other thing too is it does seem, if it goes away, right?
02:15:32
◼
►
If Apple TV just slowly fades away and they never come out with a new version of the box
02:15:36
◼
►
and two years from now they just stop selling it, we'll all look back at it and say, yeah,
02:15:41
◼
►
I guess of course they were drifting away from it.
02:15:43
◼
►
That's why they added the Apple TV app to the TV sets and to all these other boxes.
02:15:49
◼
►
Of course, yeah.
02:15:50
◼
►
And they'll all look back and say, yeah, of course that's what they were doing.
02:15:52
◼
►
Because that's what it kind of looks like.
02:15:53
◼
►
It kind of looks like Apple is cannibalizing their own TV box sales by saying, we'll just
02:16:00
◼
►
be a pure software service.
02:16:02
◼
►
We'll just be a pure software.
02:16:04
◼
►
At first I thought that it was just a growth play for TV+.
02:16:07
◼
►
I was like, okay, they know that they can't have mass adoption if this isn't on Roku,
02:16:12
◼
►
if it isn't on Fire TV, if it isn't on TVs.
02:16:15
◼
►
Because if you really want to compete with the Disney+'s and the Netflix's of the world,
02:16:19
◼
►
or which they can't, but let's say you want to compete with the Peacocks, you know, and
02:16:23
◼
►
HBO Max's of the world, then you need to be on all of these devices.
02:16:27
◼
►
So at first that was my thought.
02:16:28
◼
►
Because they did a similar thing with Apple Music, right?
02:16:30
◼
►
Like Apple Music is available on Android.
02:16:33
◼
►
But when they added AirPlay to the LG TVs, and when they started adding that to more
02:16:38
◼
►
devices, that's when you go, okay.
02:16:41
◼
►
Because AirPlay had always been their specific standard.
02:16:44
◼
►
You have to buy an Apple product to get AirPlay.
02:16:47
◼
►
And it's one of those magical things.
02:16:49
◼
►
And Miracast and the other, you know, DLNA or MLNA, whatever things have never worked
02:16:56
◼
►
the same way.
02:16:57
◼
►
So when they started doing that, that was when, plus the fact that, you know, it's now
02:17:01
◼
►
three and a half years old hardware-wise, makes me go, hmm, yeah, like what are you
02:17:09
◼
►
Because your price is completely, like it's not even in the same realm of like reality.
02:17:15
◼
►
Like you could cut it in half and it would still be overpriced.
02:17:19
◼
►
But you would have to literally, like if you lower the price to $100, it would still be
02:17:23
◼
►
more expensive than the competition.
02:17:25
◼
►
But you could maybe start to make kind of a high-end argument, but it would be hard.
02:17:30
◼
►
But that would be cutting $100 off the price.
02:17:32
◼
►
Like it's insanely priced right now.
02:17:35
◼
►
And I love the Apple TV.
02:17:36
◼
►
I would never tell anyone to buy one right now, ever.
02:17:41
◼
►
Because, you know, you can get a TV with Apple TV built into it for not much more than an
02:17:48
◼
►
The only thing, and this is what I mentioned, was that, you know, the only sign in the last
02:17:54
◼
►
year or two, or at least since their initiative to put their TV app on other companies' TVs
02:18:00
◼
►
and set-top boxes that makes you think they have any commitment to their own platform
02:18:06
◼
►
is Apple Arcade.
02:18:08
◼
►
Which is, well, but it's a mixed bag.
02:18:11
◼
►
So on the one hand, every single Apple Arcade game is, it's a mandatory part of being an
02:18:18
◼
►
Apple Arcade game, is you need to be on all of the platforms.
02:18:21
◼
►
You have to have an Apple TV app, which is a big commitment because there's an awful
02:18:26
◼
►
lot of games that the hardest platform to support is Apple TV because it's a weak GPU.
02:18:33
◼
►
It pushes 4K, right?
02:18:37
◼
►
Like you can't, I believe, and I believe that if you have a performance-sensitive game,
02:18:45
◼
►
you can't push 180 out of Apple.
02:18:48
◼
►
If you're playing on an Apple 4K to a 4K TV, you need to push 4K, but you have to also
02:18:54
◼
►
get 30 frames per second at all times.
02:18:57
◼
►
And it's hard for some games.
02:18:58
◼
►
No, that is hard.
02:18:59
◼
►
I mean, look, the next-gen consoles, the PS5, the Xbox Series X, they don't do that.
02:19:05
◼
►
Like, they're optimized.
02:19:06
◼
►
Like, they will go down to 1080p or 1440p.
02:19:09
◼
►
Like they don't do 4K at all times because it makes no sense to do that.
02:19:14
◼
►
And the games, if they're phone or iPad first, they're designed for touch.
02:19:18
◼
►
You're not playing with touch.
02:19:19
◼
►
You're playing with the thing.
02:19:21
◼
►
And you've got the worst controller of all time.
02:19:25
◼
►
And again, let's just skip because we're in the bonus round.
02:19:28
◼
►
We're in the lightning round.
02:19:29
◼
►
Let's not even talk about the Apple TV remote as a remote for watching TV, like video.
02:19:34
◼
►
As a game controller...
02:19:35
◼
►
As a gaming controller, it is bad.
02:19:39
◼
►
It's like one of those jokes, like the joke, like the guy dies and goes to hell.
02:19:43
◼
►
And the first thing he sees is there's just a complete replica, blade of grass, tree for
02:19:49
◼
►
tree of Augusta National Golf Course.
02:19:51
◼
►
And he says to the devil, "My God, I love golf.
02:19:54
◼
►
This is unbelievable."
02:19:55
◼
►
And he says, "Here you go."
02:19:56
◼
►
And there's a brand new set of Ping golf clubs.
02:19:58
◼
►
And he goes, "This is fantastic.
02:20:00
◼
►
I thought this was hell."
02:20:01
◼
►
And he goes, "Oh, yeah.
02:20:02
◼
►
There's no golf balls."
02:20:03
◼
►
And that's like the Apple TV remote.
02:20:07
◼
►
It is like, "Oh, yeah.
02:20:08
◼
►
Here's this thing that can play games."
02:20:10
◼
►
And you have Apple Arcade, so you get all the games, quote unquote, for free.
02:20:14
◼
►
And here's your controller.
02:20:15
◼
►
Here you go.
02:20:16
◼
►
Here's your controller.
02:20:17
◼
►
Here's your controller that makes using one Joy-Con on the Nintendo Switch seem like using
02:20:22
◼
►
one, seem like a revelation.
02:20:24
◼
►
It's like trying to play basketball with a wadded up newspaper as the ball.
02:20:30
◼
►
It's very strange.
02:20:31
◼
►
They do, but they've made all of these participants in Apple Arcade make the arcade games, which
02:20:37
◼
►
makes me think there's maybe a commitment or I don't know.
02:20:41
◼
►
I'm going to be honest.
02:20:42
◼
►
I don't know because, A, I don't know if Apple Arcade is that successful.
02:20:49
◼
►
I'm not working on that assumption.
02:20:50
◼
►
I feel like people maybe are part of it because they feel like they want to be in the good
02:20:54
◼
►
graces of Apple, but I get it as part of Apple One because I pay for the $35 or whatever
02:21:02
◼
►
the most expensive plan is, so I get it.
02:21:05
◼
►
I don't use it and I play games.
02:21:09
◼
►
So I don't know.
02:21:10
◼
►
Maybe it is something there, but I wouldn't use that as a sign that shows that they're
02:21:16
◼
►
that deeply committed to it because this is Apple.
02:21:21
◼
►
I don't think they have any problem throwing their Apple TV developers under the bus and
02:21:25
◼
►
being like, "Yep, we're getting rid of this and thanks for optimizing your game to work
02:21:29
◼
►
with our shitty controller."
02:21:31
◼
►
I don't think that that would bother them at all.
02:21:34
◼
►
They're not good at breaking up with their products.
02:21:37
◼
►
They just sort of ghost them, right?
02:21:39
◼
►
Yeah, but that's so true.
02:21:42
◼
►
That's sort of what they did with Airport, right?
02:21:44
◼
►
It's totally what they did with Airport.
02:21:45
◼
►
Yeah, they totally just ghosted it until one day they were like, "Yeah, we're not going
02:21:48
◼
►
to do this anymore."
02:21:51
◼
►
And so I feel like there's three options.
02:21:55
◼
►
Either, one, they're ghosting it and there's never going to be another Apple TV box.
02:21:59
◼
►
At some point they'll just say, "Oh yeah, we're not doing that anymore.
02:22:01
◼
►
Don't you have a TV that has Apple TV?"
02:22:03
◼
►
Yeah, they'll just stop selling it like they did with the iPods.
02:22:05
◼
►
They'll just quietly remove it from sale.
02:22:07
◼
►
B, they do have some sort of plan and it has to be this year, right?
02:22:13
◼
►
I don't know.
02:22:14
◼
►
I'm not saying it's next month, but it has to be a 2021 thing because the 4K one is so
02:22:18
◼
►
outdated and so expensive and they come out with a new thing and it's powerful and maybe
02:22:25
◼
►
it has a game controller or something or some sort of story and there's something about
02:22:30
◼
►
it that is different than just Apple 4K with an A14 instead of an A12.
02:22:34
◼
►
Maybe it's $120 instead of $180.
02:22:37
◼
►
I don't know.
02:22:38
◼
►
I don't know.
02:22:39
◼
►
I don't know.
02:22:41
◼
►
Or C, they come out with a new one that is just the same thing but a new chip, which
02:22:48
◼
►
to me is the least likely because it just makes no sense.
02:22:52
◼
►
And it also is expensive.
02:22:54
◼
►
They just come out with another $180 box that seems exorbitantly expensive and doesn't do
02:22:59
◼
►
anything else and this is just it and for some reason, Apple thinks this is compelling.
02:23:05
◼
►
It's a very strange product.
02:23:08
◼
►
And what's frustrating to me, and then we move on or lightning round, is that with the
02:23:11
◼
►
third generation, before the fourth gen came out, they'd finally gotten that to be fairly
02:23:15
◼
►
inexpensive and you did have mass adoption because that was before, that was back when
02:23:20
◼
►
the Chromecast was pretty bad and when you didn't have the sticks and you didn't have
02:23:26
◼
►
the sub $50 very good, very competitive streamers and also you didn't have everything built
02:23:31
◼
►
in to every TV.
02:23:33
◼
►
So they were doing really well with the third gen TV and then they doubled the price essentially
02:23:37
◼
►
when the fourth gen came out.
02:23:39
◼
►
But they didn't continue to keep up and the trends, even if I think it's a superior experience
02:23:47
◼
►
and I do, I've used all the other ones and I can't, because people ask me for advice,
02:23:51
◼
►
what thing to buy.
02:23:53
◼
►
I can't in good conscience tell somebody to spend $200 on an Apple TV.
02:23:57
◼
►
I just can't.
02:23:58
◼
►
There's no way.
02:23:59
◼
►
It'd be like telling somebody to buy a HomePod.
02:24:01
◼
►
HomePod mini, sure.
02:24:02
◼
►
A HomePod, hell no.
02:24:03
◼
►
Are you kidding me?
02:24:05
◼
►
Absolutely not.
02:24:06
◼
►
Under no circumstances would I recommend that to someone.
02:24:09
◼
►
And I feel like anybody who's willingly buying one needs to buy one with the understanding
02:24:13
◼
►
that you are overpaying by a massive margin and you are doing it for whatever reasons
02:24:19
◼
►
I guess the other thing they could do, option D would be to not change the hardware at all,
02:24:23
◼
►
but just cut the price in half.
02:24:25
◼
►
If they did that, that would help them.
02:24:28
◼
►
99 bucks would make it, it still wouldn't be competitive, but it would be so much better.
02:24:33
◼
►
But then it's within the realm of the Apple tax.
02:24:37
◼
►
So you could buy a Roku premium from your whatever, like there's still a better product
02:24:40
◼
►
spec wise, but you could make that argument.
02:24:43
◼
►
Right now, the thing that makes it untenable for me is similar to when the HomePod first
02:24:48
◼
►
came out where it's like it costs so much money compared to everything else that's out
02:24:53
◼
►
there that it's just, you know, what I hope they do is they do what they did with HomePod
02:24:58
◼
►
I would really like to see them do a redesigned option that is more modern and that is lower
02:25:03
◼
►
Maybe drop some of the features if you need to, although I don't think you should because
02:25:06
◼
►
at this point the chip and the tech is so old.
02:25:09
◼
►
But like, if it were me, you know, yeah, like I would, I would, you know, maybe require
02:25:15
◼
►
you to get a secondary controller to play a game.
02:25:19
◼
►
Like that could be a way to make money.
02:25:20
◼
►
Like you have to buy a controller.
02:25:21
◼
►
The remote doesn't work as a game controller anymore.
02:25:23
◼
►
I don't know.
02:25:24
◼
►
Like, but, but cut it down, make it less expensive and do what they did with HomePod mini is
02:25:30
◼
►
the only way I could see it being salvageable in my opinion.
02:25:33
◼
►
Otherwise it's, it's just kind of this product they sell that is a mystery to me.
02:25:40
◼
►
It remains a product in our lineup.
02:25:50
◼
►
Lightning round over show over Christina Warren.
02:25:51
◼
►
Thank you for being here.
02:25:52
◼
►
People can follow you on Twitter, your film underscore girl, but they could just search
02:25:57
◼
►
for Christina Warren on Twitter.
02:26:00
◼
►
You want to give your, your clubhouse name?
02:26:02
◼
►
Yeah, I'm, I'm Christina on clubhouse I think.
02:26:05
◼
►
Yeah, you are.
02:26:06
◼
►
You are just Christina.
02:26:08
◼
►
Uh, this is a sign that I've been an early adopter or something if I just get my first
02:26:12
◼
►
Um, so that's, that's awesome.
02:26:15
◼
►
And um, I do a podcast called a rocket that I'm late for right now.
02:26:19
◼
►
I'm so sorry.
02:26:20
◼
►
You were completely fine.
02:26:21
◼
►
Let's tell everybody to listen.
02:26:23
◼
►
Let's make it even.
02:26:25
◼
►
It's a good podcast.
02:26:26
◼
►
It's a great podcast.
02:26:27
◼
►
So if you want to listen to me be slightly late for a, for, for rocket, it's a relay
02:26:31
◼
►
FM, uh, dot com slash rocket.
02:26:34
◼
►
Um, I do it for you on a blue and some underbrush for, it's a great time.
02:26:38
◼
►
And uh, do you have another podcast over tired with Brett?
02:26:43
◼
►
Do over tired with Brett tripstra.
02:26:46
◼
►
The one we really want to, we really want to promote because I'm the one who made you
02:26:49
◼
►
So my best Brianna and Simone, tell them I said hi.