177: ‘Surface Curious’ With Rene Ritchie
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All right, I'll forgive you for cheating. How are you feeling? You feeling better or are you still getting worse?
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Now I feel terrible that I invited you on the show.
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No, no, I'm doing really good. It's one of those things where like I'm someone who's only really sick at night
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and like late at night, like nine o'clock, I'll feel horrible, but you know, most of the day I'm fine.
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So I'm using up the remaining hours of you feeling good.
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No, this is a lot of fun.
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All right, well, we'll try to hurry up.
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No, not at all.
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What do you want to start with?
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Do you want to do the year-end review stuff?
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Do you want--
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Oh, I think we should probably save that.
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Let's save that.
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Let's do the-- let's talk about topical, new stuff that's--
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Apple and finally publishing AI?
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Yeah, that was-- that's--
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they said they were going to do it, and now they've done it.
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So it's-- in some ways, it's--
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Apple does what they said they were going to do,
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so it's not that big a deal.
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But it's another step in the new Apple--
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open Apple, right?
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And what was hilarious to me is that we talked about this on the talk show previously was
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Google got up at I/O and instead of showing off a lot of the cool stuff that they're doing
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with AI, they basically reintroduced sequential inference from Siri from 2010 and everyone
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just lost their shit and said, you know, Apple's way behind.
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And Apple's been doing this stuff since before Siri and they've been doing all sorts of different
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machine learning and they just never spoke about it.
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And now there's sort of, it's become table stakes and Wall Street and everyone is judging
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you based on your AI performance, so now they have to get ahead of the story.
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Sequential inference is when you do something like, "Hey Dingus, what's the Dallas Cowboys
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And then Siri will answer and tell you that they're 13 and 2.
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And then you say, "When do they play next?"
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And Siri—I don't know if that particular example works—but sequential inference is
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when, in other words, the sequential query, Siri can infer what I mean when I say "they."
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Yeah, like the classic example is what's the capital of Germany and it'll say Berlin, you say
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what's the population, you don't have to say Berlin again because it remembers what you're talking
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about. Right, which is something that you don't, the reason I don't even know, I'm not, number one,
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I'm not an AI researcher, number two, the reason most people don't know the term "sequential
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inference" is because it comes naturally to human beings, it's called having a conversation.
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Yeah, absolutely. It's all part of their natural language, you know, whatever magic that they've
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got going on. Right. There's all sorts of things that we'll say even in this conversation on the
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show that taken out of context as an individual sentence, somebody would say, "Well, I don't know
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what the hell they're talking about, but it makes perfect sense in the midst of a conversation." And
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that's a very tricky AI problem. Yeah. And, you know, again, there was all this conversation
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about right now people are saying Amazon is far and away ahead in terms of natural language and
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voice assistance and we saw the story about Wynn Hotels installing Alexa in all, you know, the Wynn
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and in Encore. And yet to some extent because but I think it's also greatly inflated by how much
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American tech pundits really love Amazon because outside of the US and the UK and now Germany since
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September, Amazon has absolutely no presence. Meanwhile, Apple and Google are doing multi-language
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and now sometimes multilingual, where you can switch from one language to another
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during a conversation, which is super important in some countries like Europe, even in Montreal.
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And so everyone is sort of ahead in different areas, and when you normalize it,
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it's a super interesting area. Yeah, so we could segue right into the
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story about the win and encore. Yeah.
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It's pretty interesting. So the basic... Do we miss anything on the other story?
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it was basically computer vision where they were trying to train, it's super hard to get to
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take a human being and annotate images because you have to go through the image and tell the
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computer what everything is, so they're trying to use simulated images to identify enough that
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they can start implying what's in, so they start figuring out what's in the natural images.
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Right, but as I wrote, I think, and I, you know, I guess I agree with myself, the bigger news is not
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whatever the details of this particular paper, it's that Apple's AI researchers are in fact
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publishing papers at all, because Apple is a very secretive company. I don't know if you knew that.
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And they traditionally keep what they're working on to themselves until they have a product,
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and even when the product comes out, they don't really explain a lot—often don't explain how
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it works. They just put it out for people to enjoy. Yeah, and that seemed to have changed radically,
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like right around WWDC when they started talking about computer vision and machine learning on
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stage and then Tim Cook made comments about how they're using artificial intelligence
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to increase battery life.
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And Apple is one of the few companies that makes their own silicon.
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Like Samsung makes their own silicon, but they don't use it in all their phones.
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So they can put stuff in the chip that does a lot of the stuff that other companies have
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to do in the software layer.
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And they're deeply invested in all this technology.
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Yeah, and there was a presentation recently that an Apple AI researcher gave.
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I think it was actually where the news came out that they're going to start publishing.
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And I know that this particular thing on the image recognition was part of the talk that
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And they were talking about the custom set of images that they have that's apparently
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way bigger than the standard one.
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There's an open source one.
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I don't know if it's actually open source, but effectively open, that researchers can
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And Apple has their own proprietary set of I don't know how many million images.
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But the bigger story is that Apple's publishing it at all.
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And I think this is true.
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I think it's a very simple story, which is that in the AI community, it's a very academic
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community, and much like the university world, publishing is how you get ahead professionally.
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And so to take a job as an AI researcher at a company where you're not allowed to publish
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anything is sort of a dead end career-wise.
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So you could maybe throw money at the problem,
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but at a certain part, for a lot of these professionals,
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their career is more important than their salary.
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They're not in it for the money.
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I mean, the money's nice.
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I'm sure that Apple's AI researchers
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are compensated very well compared to the median income
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of an average citizen in the United States.
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But there's more to it than that,
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if you're really are looking to cultivate a decades-long career,
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publishing is fundamental to it.
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And apparently, Apple had a notorious reputation
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that at conferences and stuff like that, that AI researchers--
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it just wasn't a place that you go because you can't publish.
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Yeah, and it was similar this year's security.
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For years, Apple would just swallow up
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people who were experts at algorithms
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or some form of advanced computing or product category
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that they wanted to do.
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And they would go into a black hole,
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and you'd never hear about them again.
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And this year, they very slowly started
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letting Apple people, for example, present--
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Ivan Krstic presented at Black Hat
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this year for the first time.
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And now you have these papers being published.
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And it is becoming table stakes to acquiring and retaining
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the best talent.
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And if Apple can't or won't offer that as an option,
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other companies will.
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So I think it's become a competitive enough area
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that they have to relent.
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Yeah, actually, it wasn't the first time
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Apple presented at Black Hat.
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They presented a long time ago.
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And it was a widely panned talk because it was so empty.
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It was sort of what you think a secretive company would give.
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It's like, you know, it was sort of like an empty presentation.
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Now, years later, maybe like 10 years later,
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the presentation this year was a lot of people,
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because of the last one, I saw a lot of coverage of it
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from Black Hat attendees.
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They rolled their eyes, and they're like, oh, this
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is going to be something.
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And then it ended up being a very, very serious,
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you know, informative talk.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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And again, that's what you want for the top people
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in their respective fields, especially
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it is something as new and exciting as AI, which a lot of people think is going to be
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one of the next big chapters in computing.
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Yes. So speaking of AI, what in the news this week was this announcement you referred to
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that the Wynn and Encore in Las Vegas, Nevada, are going to equip all of their rooms, about
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4,800 rooms between the two, with an Amazon Echo. Wynn and Encore, it's sort of one
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big resort, you can go between one and the other without ever stepping outside. There's
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like a shopping mall between the two. So it's sort of really, it's more like one property.
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It's just two different towers and slightly different themes between the two. It's a lot.
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4800 is a lot of rooms. And I think it's interesting. My take on it is that there's a lot of talk
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that hey it's early days of this voice driven AI stuff nobody's too late to the
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game like the fact that Apple doesn't have a standalone speaker type thing
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like the Google Home and the Amazon echo doesn't mean that they're too late you
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know because it's so early it's sort of like how maybe you know smartphones in
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2004 2005 the fact that Apple didn't have one was didn't mean they were too
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late, obviously, in hindsight, and that the situation might be similar to that with voice.
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But 4,800, 5,000 of them in a hotel here, 5,000 in a hotel there, and all of a sudden
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you can have a pretty entrenched market leader. Because it's also the sort of thing that
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in a hotel room is not going to get replaced every year or every two years like a cell
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Yeah, no, totally. Again, it's one of those things that really depends on your point of
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because some people will look at the Amazon Echo or now the Google home and say that Apple
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is super far behind because they don't have a home hub, where with Amazon, if you have
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the Amazon Echo or the Dot and you leave the house and then realize something's wrong,
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you can't just yell and change whatever is on that device.
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Where with Siri, it's super portable across a wide range of different devices and Google's
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assistant, it can be in the home, it can be on the phone, it's in all of those areas.
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And again, Amazon Echo only functions in, I think, two languages now and three countries
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compared to multiple languages, including Chinese and Hebrew for something like Siri.
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So you could look at it and say Amazon is super far behind because they don't have multilingual,
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they don't have multi-device, they're not mobile, they're not portable.
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An assistant that's not with you all the time is not a very good assistant at all.
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So all this stuff is very perspective-based, but I think this is sort of the exciting period
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where everything's being figured out.
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And the win is a huge, I don't see what to say, but it's a huge win for Amazon.
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But again, for me, it's like, what is the implication of all this?
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Is this a dumb terminal that's going to just parse voice commands and do a certain subset
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of features?
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Or there was a story in the information today about a court subpoenaing Amazon Records in
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a murder trial, and I'm not even going to have to worry about everything I say in a
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hotel room from now on.
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Yeah, I just was about to mention that.
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Well, and I even wrote, you know, it's—in any hotel room, I think that a reasonable—it's
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reasonable for somebody to have privacy concerns about an always-listening electronic device
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whether you're committing a crime or not. And in Vegas in particular, there might be, you know,
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there might be more concerns than in other cities. I don't think that's unreasonable in the least
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bit. So I'm curious at a practical level what the win and encore will do if some guest is checking
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in and says, "I don't want that." Yeah, well, it reminds me of that, the Citizen 4, the movie,
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the documentary about Edward Snowden. And all these companies have technology. Like they parse
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the voice locally until you say the command phrase and then they engage the network. So it's not as
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if everything you're saying is streamed to Amazon. But we don't know if that can change and we don't
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know if someone can order that to be changed. So it's sort of like when Edward Snowden sees that
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phone and he starts taking it apart and the reporter says, "But that phone's not on." And
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he goes, "Ha ha ha." You know, as if that's the most naive question in the world. And you have
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you have to deal with, yes, I understand that Amazon says,
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or that the technology is built this way,
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I don't know who flipped a switch
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or forced them to flip a switch,
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and I can't understand the state of this device,
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therefore my only option is to disassemble it.
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- Right, and I, you know,
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I have the Echo downstairs, and by default,
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it's very, very simple, you just plug it in,
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you can unplug, if you unplug it,
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I'm pretty sure you're good,
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because there's no battery in it.
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And when you address it,
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with the, you know, whatever your catchphrase is.
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I think you have the choice with that.
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I use, what do I use?
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Alexa, I think.
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I think you can, I forget what else you can call it.
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You can call it like Echo or something, I don't know.
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But I call it Alexa.
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And then when Alexa starts listening,
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there's a blue ring that lights up.
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So you know, okay, now it's listening.
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But it's always listening
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because otherwise how would it hear Alexa?
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- Yeah, they claim that it's locally listening only
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until it hears the phrase,
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and then it enables network function.
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But again, in a post-Noden world,
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I don't wanna make any of these assumptions anymore.
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- Right, and who is to say whether a court order
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could force them to secretly,
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I mean, again, this sounds like paranoid stuff.
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Like, if you told me I'd be talking about this
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10 years ago, I would've thought I was a nut,
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but I mean, this stuff has come to pass,
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that these, you know, you get these,
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I forget what they're called, the court order,
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that in addition to having to comply with it,
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you're also not allowed to talk about it
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or to inform your customer.
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- Yeah, the national security letters.
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- Right, national security letters.
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Who's to say that they can't come to Amazon
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and either force them to make it listen
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without having the blue light light up
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or similar to the Apple case from earlier this year,
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what if the FBI has, or whoever else, law enforcement,
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they have their own team of hackers who have a patch.
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You know, like, you don't even have to,
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we're not even gonna make you write it.
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All we want, we just wanna force this patch
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onto this guy's Echo.
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- Or a nation state, or a hacker just goes
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into the assembly line, or smokies themselves
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into the source code, you know,
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they just hide amongst the other programmers.
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If you don't bring the device into the room,
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your confidence level can never be 100% about that device.
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So it's, yeah, exactly, especially going to a hotel room,
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who's to say that the device hasn't been diddled with
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by somebody, you know, not even,
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even if you trust the Wynn Corporation completely,
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who's to say that a previous guest hasn't been in?
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- Totally, I mean, there are jobs where if your devices
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are ever out of your sight, you just have to walk away,
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you can never pick them up or touch them again.
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And you know, Vegas, are they gonna have guests like that?
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So I wonder how they're gonna tackle those problems.
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- At the same level, who's to say that,
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I mean, if you're gonna say that there's malfeasance
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who are gonna come in and hack the echo in the room,
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Who's to say that they didn't go in and plant a bug,
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just an old-fashioned bug underneath the bed
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or somewhere else where a housekeeping
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can go to spot it. - Absolutely.
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- So, I mean, it's not like it's entirely new.
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◼
►
But why would they do this?
00:15:05
◼
►
Why would the wind do this?
00:15:05
◼
►
I've stayed at the wind several times.
00:15:08
◼
►
Where by several, I mean many.
00:15:11
◼
►
- We stay there every CES.
00:15:13
◼
►
- If I went there for CES,
00:15:14
◼
►
I would definitely stay at the wind.
00:15:16
◼
►
If I ever go to CES, and it's a perennial topic on the,
00:15:20
◼
►
I'm not going this year.
00:15:21
◼
►
This year it was impossible for personal reasons here.
00:15:24
◼
►
I've gotta, I cannot be away in early January.
00:15:26
◼
►
But every year I say, boy, one of these years
00:15:31
◼
►
I'd like to go to CES, just because,
00:15:32
◼
►
not because I think it'd be great.
00:15:33
◼
►
I think for all the reasons that people
00:15:36
◼
►
in the press complain about it would be bad.
00:15:38
◼
►
But I think it's something to see.
00:15:40
◼
►
And I don't think it's gonna last forever.
00:15:42
◼
►
And so I kind of wanna see it while it is still a thing.
00:15:45
◼
►
But anyway, I would say it win for sure,
00:15:46
◼
►
'cause it's my, A, it's my favorite place in Vegas.
00:15:49
◼
►
And B, it's reasonably walkable to both the convention center,
00:15:56
◼
►
which is a bit of a hike from the Wynn,
00:15:58
◼
►
and it's right next door to the Sands Convention
00:16:01
◼
►
Center, which is part of Venetian,
00:16:04
◼
►
where there's a whole bunch of other stuff.
00:16:07
◼
►
And it's so close to the Venetian
00:16:08
◼
►
that you'd be nuts to take a cab.
00:16:11
◼
►
Yeah, absolutely.
00:16:12
◼
►
It'll take you 20 minutes longer than it would take you to walk.
00:16:15
◼
►
So they annex more and more hotels every year,
00:16:17
◼
►
- Until one day it'll just be in the wind.
00:16:20
◼
►
- I doubt it.
00:16:20
◼
►
I don't think the wind would,
00:16:21
◼
►
I think the wind would turn the business down.
00:16:24
◼
►
- Probably. - Honestly.
00:16:25
◼
►
I know they don't want the refraf.
00:16:27
◼
►
But anyway, I've been there many times
00:16:29
◼
►
and they actually recently, I think within the last year,
00:16:32
◼
►
I think only the last time I was there
00:16:33
◼
►
did they have the new setup, but they replaced,
00:16:36
◼
►
there used to be a console next to one side of a bed
00:16:39
◼
►
that would control the drapes,
00:16:41
◼
►
what do they call them, the shears?
00:16:42
◼
►
So you could like let light in,
00:16:44
◼
►
but have, you know, like sheer things
00:16:46
◼
►
so nobody could see through the window,
00:16:48
◼
►
and the various lights in the room.
00:16:50
◼
►
So you control the lights, you control the drapes
00:16:52
◼
►
and the shears with this touch thing.
00:16:54
◼
►
They recently replaced them with a sort of new one
00:16:58
◼
►
that still looks sort of '80s-ish.
00:17:00
◼
►
It looks like really high-end consumer electronics
00:17:03
◼
►
from the '80s.
00:17:04
◼
►
I can't help but think that maybe that's part
00:17:06
◼
►
of how this is possible, though,
00:17:07
◼
►
that they got these new ones that are more,
00:17:11
◼
►
at least sort of computerized rather than purely electronic
00:17:14
◼
►
so that Alexa, that they can write some kind of custom app
00:17:17
◼
►
to have it happen.
00:17:20
◼
►
And the Wynn is supposed to be the nicest place in town.
00:17:23
◼
►
I think it is the nicest place.
00:17:24
◼
►
It's a high-end hotel.
00:17:26
◼
►
It's sort of annoying, if you think about it,
00:17:27
◼
►
if you're in bed with another person, that only one of you
00:17:31
◼
►
has those controls on their side.
00:17:33
◼
►
Yeah, it can be a sore spot.
00:17:36
◼
►
And for us, it's not like an argument of--
00:17:40
◼
►
with me and Amy, I always sleep on the left, she on the right.
00:17:43
◼
►
I mean, and this is, I don't know, geez, 20-some years.
00:17:46
◼
►
That's set in stone.
00:17:48
◼
►
But a lot of hotels, it's like when you stay there,
00:17:52
◼
►
it's like every other room is every other side.
00:17:54
◼
►
And so it's like a 50% chance who's got the thing.
00:17:59
◼
►
So just being able to address Alexa and say,
00:18:01
◼
►
"Hey, open the drapes," that'd be way nicer.
00:18:05
◼
►
That'd be 10 times nicer.
00:18:07
◼
►
And plus, honestly, the buttons don't even work
00:18:09
◼
►
half the time you touch them.
00:18:11
◼
►
- So I think it'd be great.
00:18:12
◼
►
And with the lights and stuff like that, every time you go to any hotel,
00:18:15
◼
►
I mean, I stay at the Wynn at least once a year.
00:18:18
◼
►
And I still get confused over which lights control,
00:18:20
◼
►
which buttons control which lights.
00:18:23
◼
►
>> To their credit, I mean, Amazon made Alexa a very open platform.
00:18:25
◼
►
And it seems, I'm not a developer, but it seems relatively easy to sort of add
00:18:28
◼
►
these automations and these customizations to it.
00:18:31
◼
►
And they've got a lot of, I forget what they call them, recipes or formulas or
00:18:34
◼
►
what the nomenclature is.
00:18:35
◼
►
But to sort of add these control points to them for
00:18:37
◼
►
different features and services.
00:18:39
◼
►
But here's what's weird, and I have a friend, Hunter,
00:18:42
◼
►
who has a great app if you ever go to Vegas, VegasMate.
00:18:47
◼
►
Just, it's just sort of like a,
00:18:51
◼
►
you know, like a tour guide type thing.
00:18:55
◼
►
And you can just plug in, AI has news
00:18:57
◼
►
so you can find out what's going on in Vegas
00:18:59
◼
►
if there's anything new going on.
00:19:00
◼
►
So there's lots of news and how to get between places
00:19:04
◼
►
and stuff like that.
00:19:05
◼
►
Anyway, it's a great app, go check it out
00:19:06
◼
►
if you're in Vegas, VegasMate.
00:19:09
◼
►
He pointed out immediately after I read "Staring Fireball," he pointed out immediately,
00:19:14
◼
►
the Wynn Corporation's biggest investments by far aren't in Vegas, they're in Macau.
00:19:20
◼
►
They actually have two separate resorts in Macau.
00:19:26
◼
►
I don't really understand the layout of Macau quite, but there's a waterway between the
00:19:31
◼
►
two parts of town and there's resorts on both sides and Wynn has one on each side.
00:19:37
◼
►
So it's way bigger.
00:19:39
◼
►
The casino revenue is way bigger over there.
00:19:44
◼
►
They obviously aren't going to equip those rooms with Alexa,
00:19:47
◼
►
because like you pointed out, they don't speak Chinese yet.
00:19:51
◼
►
Yeah, no Cantonese, no Portuguese, none of those things.
00:19:53
◼
►
And they don't even officially support locations in English
00:19:58
◼
►
outside the United States.
00:20:01
◼
►
I mean, you can get it to work.
00:20:02
◼
►
And I know people have complained
00:20:04
◼
►
when I pointed this out.
00:20:04
◼
►
People in other countries-- well,
00:20:06
◼
►
I have one, and just cheat and have it work.
00:20:09
◼
►
But you can't do things like get the weather,
00:20:11
◼
►
because you have to give it a zip code in one
00:20:13
◼
►
of the countries they do support.
00:20:15
◼
►
So you can set it up and use it if you live in Taipei,
00:20:18
◼
►
like Ben Thompson.
00:20:20
◼
►
But it gives them the weather from Madison, Wisconsin.
00:20:24
◼
►
And some people say it's trivial for them
00:20:25
◼
►
to roll out additional languages and dialects.
00:20:27
◼
►
But that's years and years of work that Apple and Google
00:20:30
◼
►
have put in that Amazon has invested in something else.
00:20:32
◼
►
And the opportunity cost is huge.
00:20:33
◼
►
So yeah, anything could be trivial,
00:20:36
◼
►
given enough money and resources.
00:20:37
◼
►
- I'm skeptical of anything in AI being called trivial.
00:20:41
◼
►
- You know, ship it and let's see.
00:20:42
◼
►
- Absolutely, no, totally agreed.
00:20:44
◼
►
And again, things like the multi-language,
00:20:46
◼
►
which they started doing on Apple TV,
00:20:48
◼
►
where you can ask for a movie in French
00:20:50
◼
►
with a title in English.
00:20:51
◼
►
I mean, just understanding that problem set
00:20:53
◼
►
of when does one language start,
00:20:54
◼
►
when does one begin, when does it end again,
00:20:56
◼
►
what's the time, I mean, those are all non-trivial problems.
00:20:59
◼
►
- Yeah, I'm curious, too, how they're going to do it.
00:21:03
◼
►
Like presumably, they're not going
00:21:05
◼
►
to have you use your own Amazon ID.
00:21:12
◼
►
I don't think you would need it, though.
00:21:14
◼
►
There's no-- they'll just pay Amazon some sort of group rate,
00:21:19
◼
►
massive group rate, for access to Amazon Music
00:21:21
◼
►
so that you can tell your Alexa to play music
00:21:23
◼
►
and it's not going to tell you to log in or whatever.
00:21:29
◼
►
I'm just curious, though.
00:21:31
◼
►
because it is sold as a personal device.
00:21:34
◼
►
I'm curious how it will work
00:21:35
◼
►
as sort of an institutional device.
00:21:37
◼
►
- Well, that was one of the things I heard
00:21:38
◼
►
about a potential Apple home hub,
00:21:40
◼
►
is that one of the things that needed to be solved for
00:21:42
◼
►
was a multi-personal Siri,
00:21:43
◼
►
because if, let's say for example, you have one at home,
00:21:45
◼
►
and you say, what are my messages?
00:21:47
◼
►
Does it play your messages, Amy's messages, Jonas's messages?
00:21:50
◼
►
Solving those problems are also non-trivial,
00:21:52
◼
►
if you wanna have the deep level of integration
00:21:54
◼
►
and the full range of services
00:21:55
◼
►
that something like Siri offers.
00:21:57
◼
►
So you can do rudimentary account switching,
00:22:00
◼
►
like they do on Apple TV right now,
00:22:01
◼
►
but that's not a full featured product.
00:22:03
◼
►
And making a multi-personal Siri is, I think,
00:22:06
◼
►
key to what they wanna do in the living room.
00:22:08
◼
►
That's probably why it's taking a little bit long.
00:22:10
◼
►
But it's also interesting because when you look
00:22:11
◼
►
at Amazon's businesses, like you said, in Macau,
00:22:14
◼
►
it's not clear to me that Amazon has much
00:22:16
◼
►
of a roadmap in China.
00:22:17
◼
►
They have established internet companies and retailers
00:22:20
◼
►
in China to begin with, where maybe Apple
00:22:22
◼
►
or maybe Google have a better story to tell there.
00:22:24
◼
►
And if you don't have something
00:22:25
◼
►
that can truly scale internationally,
00:22:27
◼
►
this can go with you when you travel.
00:22:29
◼
►
I'm in London right now and I need my assistant and where is it? Or I'm in Germany today or I'm,
00:22:33
◼
►
you know, I'm in Spain, I'm in Northern Africa. All those things aren't necessary until they are,
00:22:39
◼
►
and I think that's why it was a better decision to sort of scale a little bit internationally
00:22:44
◼
►
before we started going deeper in terms of APIs and things like that.
00:22:47
◼
►
Yeah, yeah. So I'm curious, you know, where it's going to go. But clearly the end solution,
00:22:54
◼
►
It needs to be, I mean, we are in some ways early,
00:22:58
◼
►
so early days, I don't care what anybody says,
00:23:00
◼
►
because clearly where this is going to go,
00:23:03
◼
►
and somebody will get there, it's inevitable,
00:23:05
◼
►
and I think it'll be sooner than later,
00:23:09
◼
►
is truly a personal assistant quality conversation
00:23:15
◼
►
where you never have any question
00:23:18
◼
►
that the sequential inference is going to work,
00:23:21
◼
►
and that things that you think,
00:23:23
◼
►
everything you think that your assistant could do for you,
00:23:27
◼
►
they definitely can do.
00:23:28
◼
►
So if you say, get us a reservation at the Palm
00:23:33
◼
►
at nine o'clock tomorrow night,
00:23:37
◼
►
it's going to know that you mean the Palm in Vegas.
00:23:40
◼
►
You know what I'm saying,
00:23:41
◼
►
if you're in a hotel in Vegas.
00:23:42
◼
►
It knows that it's not gonna ask you what city,
00:23:45
◼
►
and it's going to make the,
00:23:49
◼
►
either make the reservation or tell you that you can't
00:23:53
◼
►
because there's no times available.
00:23:55
◼
►
You can have 930, will 930 work for you?
00:23:58
◼
►
Yes, that's fine, and then you get the 930 reservation.
00:24:00
◼
►
Everything you think, you know,
00:24:01
◼
►
anything you could communicate with a human,
00:24:04
◼
►
you should be able to do with these.
00:24:06
◼
►
And in the same way that if you and I were working
00:24:10
◼
►
in a shared office together,
00:24:11
◼
►
that I could say, what are my messages?
00:24:14
◼
►
And you could say, what are my messages?
00:24:15
◼
►
And it's gonna know who we are, you know?
00:24:19
◼
►
is gonna be able to tell, in the same way that a human
00:24:22
◼
►
is never gonna be confused over my voice and your voice,
00:24:25
◼
►
neither is the personal assistant.
00:24:28
◼
►
- Yeah, I spoke about this before,
00:24:29
◼
►
but Nuance has an office in Montreal,
00:24:30
◼
►
and they went there for one of their demos,
00:24:32
◼
►
and they were showing technology like that,
00:24:33
◼
►
and it was about two years ago, it was super primitive.
00:24:35
◼
►
Basically, you snapped your fingers twice,
00:24:37
◼
►
and three cameras and three beam-forming microphones
00:24:40
◼
►
locked in on you, and then would isolate you from the room
00:24:42
◼
►
as you walked about saying things.
00:24:44
◼
►
And that's obviously not a consumer product yet,
00:24:45
◼
►
but it was one of the, and also driving between cities
00:24:48
◼
►
when there's no internet connection.
00:24:49
◼
►
Right now, as you saw people commenting about the AirPods,
00:24:51
◼
►
if you lose the internet connection,
00:24:52
◼
►
the functionality of a lot of these virtual assistants
00:24:54
◼
►
goes away 'cause they're still incredibly server-based.
00:24:57
◼
►
So there's all these problems that they're solving for.
00:24:59
◼
►
And it could be like that movie "Her"
00:25:01
◼
►
where Scarlett Johansson is in your AirPods.
00:25:03
◼
►
I don't know if you saw it or not,
00:25:04
◼
►
but there was that video that,
00:25:05
◼
►
I still don't know if it's a real product or not,
00:25:07
◼
►
but it was that Japanese Azuma Hikari virtual assistant
00:25:11
◼
►
where it was like a little animated person
00:25:13
◼
►
in a display case that was in your house
00:25:17
◼
►
talking to you as your friend so you were not lonely,
00:25:19
◼
►
and then would follow you to your phone
00:25:20
◼
►
and to your computer throughout your day,
00:25:22
◼
►
and then get your house ready for you
00:25:24
◼
►
when you came back at night.
00:25:26
◼
►
It's quasi-creepy, but it's the sort of stuff
00:25:28
◼
►
people are working on.
00:25:29
◼
►
- I just realized, I think I have like two or three
00:25:33
◼
►
episodes of this show, and I keep passing this forward
00:25:36
◼
►
in my show notes from one show to another,
00:25:37
◼
►
follow-up on Mario Run, or I forget if it was two shows,
00:25:40
◼
►
I think it was two shows ago, where we were saying
00:25:44
◼
►
If you don't log in to a Nintendo account,
00:25:47
◼
►
you have to pay again to get it.
00:25:49
◼
►
And that's not true.
00:25:49
◼
►
It ends up, you know, you can just restore the purchase
00:25:53
◼
►
on the same ID.
00:25:54
◼
►
You don't have to have a Nintendo account.
00:25:56
◼
►
You can put it on your iPad and your phone.
00:25:59
◼
►
But one of the things that they do do
00:26:01
◼
►
is you can only run one at a time per Apple ID.
00:26:06
◼
►
So if you buy it on your iPad and you buy it
00:26:09
◼
►
and then you install it on your iPhone
00:26:12
◼
►
and somebody's playing it on your iPad,
00:26:14
◼
►
you can't play it on your iPhone.
00:26:15
◼
►
That's part of the reason that they require always
00:26:18
◼
►
on internet access is that they're
00:26:21
◼
►
checking for things like that.
00:26:22
◼
►
Yeah, I think in their perfect world,
00:26:24
◼
►
you'd have to pay for every instance that you run.
00:26:28
◼
►
The talk show, the show where we do follow up halfway
00:26:30
◼
►
into the show.
00:26:32
◼
►
Yeah, you know what else I saw about Mario Run before we break
00:26:35
◼
►
for the first time is that it is falling off
00:26:40
◼
►
the top selling, falling down the top grossing list around the world. Still on it, but it's
00:26:49
◼
►
now back, things have been, order has been restored and Clash Royale or whatever the
00:26:53
◼
►
hell it is is now back to being the top grossing app. Yes, Clash Royale, Pokemon Go, Clash
00:27:00
◼
►
of Clans, Mobile Strike, Game of War, Madden NFL, and then at number seven, here in the
00:27:07
◼
►
at least, is Super Mario Run.
00:27:09
◼
►
Netflix, number eight.
00:27:10
◼
►
- One time purchase can't compete with consumables.
00:27:12
◼
►
Consumables that people are playing all the time.
00:27:14
◼
►
- Right, and these games that people are truly addicted to.
00:27:17
◼
►
Candy Crush, all the way down at number 10.
00:27:22
◼
►
- I saw someone playing that on a 12.9 inch iPad Pro
00:27:25
◼
►
in my last plane trip, respect.
00:27:27
◼
►
- I love, the thing I love is that Minecraft
00:27:29
◼
►
is still at number 11 on top grossing,
00:27:31
◼
►
and it's still, you're firmly entrenched
00:27:35
◼
►
at number one on top paid.
00:27:37
◼
►
And that's--
00:27:38
◼
►
It came out for Apple TV.
00:27:41
◼
►
You just pay $7 up front.
00:27:43
◼
►
There is no demo.
00:27:44
◼
►
You get Minecraft on your iOS device.
00:27:47
◼
►
And they're doing so-- it's the only app making money
00:27:50
◼
►
with that, the old-fashioned pay-for-the-app model.
00:27:54
◼
►
I mean, effectively, that's what Mario is, but it's--
00:27:59
◼
►
I think in hindsight, they would have been better
00:28:00
◼
►
with a Minecraft model.
00:28:01
◼
►
It's just because their brand is as good as Minecraft.
00:28:03
◼
►
People know what Minecraft is, and they want it.
00:28:04
◼
►
And again, the Apple TV version just came out,
00:28:06
◼
►
people wanted that too and they would have just wanted Mario. Mario, sorry.
00:28:09
◼
►
Right, what if you had to pay, right, I would love to run that alternate universe where,
00:28:14
◼
►
all right, so let's take the price down, right, if you have to pay. So instead of nine, nine,
00:28:19
◼
►
you know, play three levels and then pay $9.99, what if they just matched Minecraft's price and
00:28:24
◼
►
sold Mario run for $6.99? Yeah, you get rid of... And if you don't pay $6.99, you get nothing and
00:28:32
◼
►
like it. Yep, and you can't leave bad reviews about how much you've charged in half and
00:28:36
◼
►
it's just a cleaner experience. Yeah, no bad reviews. Man, if anybody could have pulled
00:28:40
◼
►
it off, it's a Nintendo. I can't help but think that they'd have made more money. I
00:28:44
◼
►
really do. Yeah, I think they're one of the few people who like Minecraft who would absolutely
00:28:48
◼
►
have just the recognition to do it. Right. And once you get the good faith, you could
00:28:52
◼
►
do that with your next game and so on. Right. Or maybe split it? I do, and I salute them,
00:28:59
◼
►
And I don't want to complain.
00:29:00
◼
►
I salute them for not even going near the radioactive pile
00:29:04
◼
►
of dog shit that buying--
00:29:06
◼
►
paying $1 here and there for extra coins.
00:29:08
◼
►
And you have to watch a video before you
00:29:11
◼
►
can do the next level or pay your way out
00:29:14
◼
►
that these other games do.
00:29:15
◼
►
I salute Nintendo for not doing it.
00:29:17
◼
►
I'm not surprised.
00:29:18
◼
►
I think that would be poisonous, absolute poison to their brand.
00:29:22
◼
►
But it's obviously-- that's the path to make money,
00:29:26
◼
►
the most money on the App Store.
00:29:27
◼
►
I salute them for not doing it, but I can't help but think that they could have made money
00:29:31
◼
►
with paid up front for less than $9.99 and maybe one other in-app purchase in some way
00:29:36
◼
►
to something else that was cut off that you'd have to pay another maybe $5 for the game
00:29:41
◼
►
and $5 for the rest, something like that.
00:29:44
◼
►
Or one of the different games that comes built into it, like the Toad Rally or something.
00:29:48
◼
►
Like maybe you get to play $5.99, you get to play all the regular levels, and for another
00:29:53
◼
►
599 you get to play the toad rally and they'll give you a taste of toad rally like they did with the taste of the levels
00:29:59
◼
►
Like you get like three toad rallies before you have to pay
00:30:02
◼
►
Another 599 and then you are an end for 99 and then you're done you're in for you know
00:30:07
◼
►
Not ten bucks and you got the whole game. I think that they have made more money
00:30:12
◼
►
And I think I would have given a better experience
00:30:14
◼
►
They wouldn't have had the same problem they had with bad reviews and it would have it would have been I mean
00:30:18
◼
►
Way better than I think the review I think it would be a five-star game. I really do
00:30:22
◼
►
Agreed because the people who would buy it pay that much money are the superfans and they would have had a much easier
00:30:26
◼
►
Bolst in the beginning. It's the first action game for iOS that I've played
00:30:31
◼
►
Ever I think that I've stuck with I mean, I played cannibal a little bit
00:30:36
◼
►
Cannibal, but cannibal is like 90 seconds and I mean the best I ever did was like 4,000 meters or something like that
00:30:42
◼
►
So it's like, you know, and then once you get a good run like that, you're like done. Yeah, I mean there are games
00:30:47
◼
►
I always say I don't play games. I played the
00:30:50
◼
►
I've played the stick band golf a little bit. I played the day. I like the desert golf, which is sort of you ever play that
00:30:58
◼
►
Like the desert golfing I think it's I think it's sort of
00:31:01
◼
►
It it's artful it's it's sort of like meditative
00:31:07
◼
►
Letterpress and threes and a bunch of those puzzle games. Yeah letterpress. Yeah threes I got into a little bit. It was real quick
00:31:13
◼
►
I appreciate the artistry of it letterpress. I had a brief obsession with and I was yeah
00:31:17
◼
►
I hate to brag but I was really really good
00:31:20
◼
►
But it's too competitive. I don't know. Or too time-consuming and I feel guilty then,
00:31:28
◼
►
because it's with other people, I feel guilty when I drop off and leave a good game hanging.
00:31:33
◼
►
You know, it was too time-consuming to me. So...
00:31:38
◼
►
And you never knew when Game Center just did it to you. You couldn't tell if they weren't playing
00:31:41
◼
►
or Game Center was.
00:31:42
◼
►
Right, right.
00:31:42
◼
►
But Mario, boy I like that game. And I've started replaying it.
00:31:50
◼
►
Nintendo does best, they made it.
00:31:52
◼
►
So I beat all the levels and now I'm going through and collecting all the pink coins on each level.
00:31:58
◼
►
I don't think I'm going to keep going. I think I'll do that, but I can't see going after the damn purple ones.
00:32:03
◼
►
I don't know about that. I'm not good enough.
00:32:06
◼
►
They just do a really good job of matching the game to the control mechanics that are available on the device.
00:32:10
◼
►
on the device and he did that with the iPhone as well,
00:32:12
◼
►
which I thought was really great.
00:32:13
◼
►
- Yeah, totally.
00:32:14
◼
►
It's a very, very, you know, you think infinite runner,
00:32:18
◼
►
ah, it's simple, but it's pretty damn good.
00:32:21
◼
►
I do think they messed up with the pricing.
00:32:25
◼
►
All right, let's take a break.
00:32:27
◼
►
All right, our first sponsor.
00:32:29
◼
►
Are you ready for it?
00:32:30
◼
►
It's very exciting.
00:32:31
◼
►
First sponsor is Casper.
00:32:33
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►
Casper, they're the company
00:32:36
◼
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that make obsessively engineered mattresses
00:32:38
◼
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that's shockingly fair prices.
00:32:39
◼
►
to kasper.com/thetalkshow and use code "thetalkshow" to save 50 bucks towards your mattress. But
00:32:47
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there's an asterisk. Let me tell you what that means. It's a footnote that I'll tell
00:32:51
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you at the very end of this. Casper has created one perfect mattress. You don't have to decide
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between different types of mattresses. If you want springs or you want memory foam or
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you want latex foam or something like that. No, you don't want that. They've got one type
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of mattress. It is a blend that their engineers have spent thousands of hours developing it.
00:33:10
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It combines springy latex and supportive memory foams for a sleep service with just the right
00:33:15
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sink and just the right bounce. It's exactly like the reason I like buying Apple products.
00:33:20
◼
►
You don't have to decide between 20 different types of phone or something like that. They
00:33:26
◼
►
give you one. They figure out, "Here's two sizes. Here's one type of phone. Two sizes.
00:33:32
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You're done.
00:33:33
◼
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That's what the mattresses from Casper are like.
00:33:36
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One quality style of mattress.
00:33:38
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You just pick how big your bed is and you go.
00:33:41
◼
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And because they don't have stores,
00:33:43
◼
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they don't have middlemen, they don't
00:33:45
◼
►
have warehouses around the world and stuff like that,
00:33:50
◼
►
they can sell them direct to you at a shockingly fair price.
00:33:53
◼
►
This is such a better way to buy a mattress.
00:33:56
◼
►
Premium mattresses usually start at over $1,500.
00:34:00
◼
►
Casper mattresses cost just $500 for a twin, $750 for full, $850 for queen, and just $950
00:34:07
◼
►
You cannot buy a king-size mattress for $950 that's a good mattress anywhere else.
00:34:13
◼
►
It just can't.
00:34:14
◼
►
It can't be done.
00:34:15
◼
►
And they're made right here in America.
00:34:19
◼
►
They've also made buying mattresses online easy and completely risk-free.
00:34:23
◼
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No, you can't try it before you buy it because you're buying online.
00:34:27
◼
►
But they have a 100-night home trial.
00:34:30
◼
►
it keep it for three months and if you don't like it they will come and pick it
00:34:34
◼
►
up at your house and give you a full refund no questions they also have a new
00:34:41
◼
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pet mattress if you have a dog and I have that more reader comments or
00:34:46
◼
►
listener comments wherever you want to call you people listening to me from
00:34:49
◼
►
people who bought this thing for their dog that their dog loves it now here's
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◼
►
the here's the deal you use that code to talk so you see 50 bucks towards a
00:34:57
◼
►
mattress. Here's the bad news. It only applies to human mattresses. The dog
00:35:01
◼
►
mattress costs less and so they don't give you 50 bucks off for it. So I'm
00:35:05
◼
►
sorry about that but it's a heck of a dog mattress and I'm telling you I got
00:35:09
◼
►
more comments from people who've bought that than anything else. So go to Casper
00:35:13
◼
►
dot com slash the talk show. Use that code. If you need a mattress I'm telling you
00:35:17
◼
►
that's where to go. I never thought I'd be selling mattresses. I really didn't.
00:35:23
◼
►
It's one of my favorite sponsors.
00:35:26
◼
►
Just makes me…
00:35:27
◼
►
Just, it's, Casper is a sponsor.
00:35:29
◼
►
Oh, they're amazing.
00:35:30
◼
►
It just makes me…
00:35:31
◼
►
But it just…
00:35:32
◼
►
I just, if you went back and told me 15 years ago that you're going to be pitching mattresses
00:35:36
◼
►
on like a radio show, I would…
00:35:38
◼
►
I wouldn't have believed it.
00:35:39
◼
►
I just don't…
00:35:41
◼
►
I didn't see it.
00:35:42
◼
►
I wouldn't have seen the path from where I was to where I am at this moment and where
00:35:46
◼
►
the world is.
00:35:47
◼
►
I've been using one for like three years now.
00:35:48
◼
►
I still love it.
00:35:50
◼
►
It's a great mattress.
00:35:51
◼
►
It's a great mattress.
00:35:52
◼
►
I'm telling you.
00:35:53
◼
►
You know, I think if anybody out there thinks,
00:35:55
◼
►
ah, it's for lazy people
00:35:56
◼
►
that don't wanna go to the mattress store.
00:35:57
◼
►
No, it's a better way to get a great mattress.
00:36:00
◼
►
- Yeah, and...
00:36:02
◼
►
- What? You tell me.
00:36:04
◼
►
- I was gonna say, good mattresses are really hard to find
00:36:06
◼
►
because after you've had a bunch of physical,
00:36:08
◼
►
physiotherapy like I have,
00:36:10
◼
►
you want something that is actually pretty firm
00:36:12
◼
►
because then when you relax,
00:36:13
◼
►
it takes on your body weight
00:36:14
◼
►
and your body, your muscles don't have to stress
00:36:16
◼
►
the entire night trying to support your own weight.
00:36:18
◼
►
And this one I find is great
00:36:19
◼
►
because I get a better night's sleep
00:36:21
◼
►
than I have on any of the Trician watches I bought.
00:36:27
◼
►
- All right, what else is on our agenda?
00:36:29
◼
►
I have in the news, there was Marc German's blockbuster
00:36:35
◼
►
story, well, it wasn't really, but it was widely cited.
00:36:39
◼
►
Last week in Bloomberg, title,
00:36:41
◼
►
How Apple Alienated Mac Loyalists.
00:36:43
◼
►
And it had, did have some, you know, it was well reported,
00:36:45
◼
►
definitely had some quotes, anonymous.
00:36:50
◼
►
How would you summarize this story?
00:36:52
◼
►
This was the big story of the day
00:36:54
◼
►
when it came out on December 20.
00:36:56
◼
►
- I mean, Mark has proven phenomenal sources,
00:37:00
◼
►
but so much of this is how you string the pieces together.
00:37:03
◼
►
And I would read similar information differently.
00:37:07
◼
►
So this sort of paints a narrative
00:37:10
◼
►
where Apple is negligent or lackadaisical
00:37:14
◼
►
when it comes to supporting the Mac.
00:37:16
◼
►
And my understanding is more that you have two kids,
00:37:20
◼
►
love them both, one has become Taylor Swift and you have to make sure that you're on tour with her,
00:37:24
◼
►
and the other one is a college student in grad school doing pretty great on his own,
00:37:28
◼
►
doesn't really want you hanging around all the time, and you, again, you still love them,
00:37:32
◼
►
but you're giving each of them the attention that they really need at the moment.
00:37:34
◼
►
And I think that narrative fits the same facts.
00:37:37
◼
►
Quote from the article, "Interviews with people familiar with Apple's inner workings revealed
00:37:40
◼
►
that the Mac is getting far less attention than it once did. They say the Mac team has lost clout
00:37:46
◼
►
with the famed industrial design group led by Johnny Ivan
00:37:49
◼
►
and the company software team.
00:37:52
◼
►
They also describe a lack of clear direction
00:37:53
◼
►
from senior management departures of key people
00:37:56
◼
►
working on Mac hardware and technical challenges
00:37:59
◼
►
that have delayed the rollout of new computers.
00:38:02
◼
►
There's a lot in that paragraph.
00:38:04
◼
►
This is the fourth paragraph of the story.
00:38:06
◼
►
But I feel like that's the nut paragraph.
00:38:09
◼
►
And if you pick it apart, I haven't linked to it
00:38:12
◼
►
because it seemed--
00:38:13
◼
►
it's been Christmas.
00:38:15
◼
►
and I've been busy, and it seemed impossible to link to without extensive commentary.
00:38:22
◼
►
You got to unpack it.
00:38:24
◼
►
There's no way to link to it with a quip or to let it stand.
00:38:27
◼
►
But it—and I thought, "Well, it's better to—I could do it on the show in a way that's
00:38:32
◼
►
better—that'll take less time than writing about it."
00:38:35
◼
►
I still might write about it, but—
00:38:39
◼
►
First sentence of that paragraph.
00:38:40
◼
►
"Interviews with people familiar with Apple's Center of Workings reveal that the Mac is
00:38:42
◼
►
is getting far less attention than it once did.
00:38:45
◼
►
When is then it once did?
00:38:47
◼
►
Yeah, I mean, it used to be one product.
00:38:49
◼
►
There was just the Mac, and it got all the attention.
00:38:51
◼
►
And now there's five, six different products.
00:38:53
◼
►
So if we're talking about like pre-iPod Apple,
00:38:57
◼
►
or like pre-2004, 2005 Apple, of course
00:39:00
◼
►
the Mac got more attention then because it
00:39:02
◼
►
was keeping the company afloat.
00:39:03
◼
►
The Mac was Apple, and Apple was the Mac.
00:39:06
◼
►
I mean, without the Mac, the company was literally--
00:39:10
◼
►
there was no company.
00:39:11
◼
►
So of course it gets less attention than it did then.
00:39:15
◼
►
Now, does he mean some other time?
00:39:17
◼
►
Does he mean--
00:39:18
◼
►
- Like compared to last year?
00:39:19
◼
►
- Right, 2011, 2012.
00:39:20
◼
►
Is this a, and you know, let's just state facts.
00:39:27
◼
►
These are, there are, the fact is the Mac Pro
00:39:32
◼
►
is literally a relic at this point.
00:39:35
◼
►
It is a three year old, high end, $5,000, $20,000 workstation
00:39:40
◼
►
that literally hasn't been updated even in the most
00:39:43
◼
►
minor components possible in three years.
00:39:46
◼
►
Since it launched, yeah.
00:39:47
◼
►
The Mac Mini is a relic.
00:39:49
◼
►
And for enthusiasts-- and the Mac Mini is one of these devices,
00:39:53
◼
►
a device where obviously there's some people who buy it
00:39:56
◼
►
because it's a budget laptop.
00:39:58
◼
►
And if you want to buy a third party display--
00:40:01
◼
►
or at this point, you might be stuck buying a third party
00:40:04
◼
►
display, we'll get to that in a second--
00:40:06
◼
►
or a discount display, or if you've already got a display,
00:40:09
◼
►
And that's part of, you just wanna buy a desktop
00:40:12
◼
►
to hook up to the display you already have,
00:40:13
◼
►
and cost is an issue.
00:40:15
◼
►
Mac Mini is the way you go.
00:40:17
◼
►
It's still a fine device for that.
00:40:18
◼
►
But for the enthusiasts, and there are people
00:40:20
◼
►
who are like power users, if you want another term,
00:40:24
◼
►
who buy Mac Minis, maybe not to use as their main computer,
00:40:28
◼
►
but for really super nerdy things.
00:40:30
◼
►
Like instead of having an Apple TV,
00:40:32
◼
►
they use a Mac Mini and install their own software
00:40:35
◼
►
and run their home entertainment from a PC.
00:40:38
◼
►
And the Mac Mini is great for that.
00:40:41
◼
►
Longtime sponsor of the show, Mac Mini Colo.
00:40:43
◼
►
There's people who use Mac Minis to host websites.
00:40:46
◼
►
It's a great little mini rack server.
00:40:49
◼
►
And for those people, the current Mac Mini
00:40:52
◼
►
is actually worse than the predecessor
00:40:53
◼
►
because it's, I think it's a dual core thing
00:40:56
◼
►
instead of a quad core.
00:40:58
◼
►
It's whatever, it's just got internals
00:41:01
◼
►
that are less interesting to enthusiasts than the old one.
00:41:04
◼
►
The iMac, which is their best desktop,
00:41:08
◼
►
and it's the one that Tim Cook even called out and mentioned by name in a recent company Q&A,
00:41:14
◼
►
skipped a year. It still is great. It's a great, the current iMac is a great, great device.
00:41:20
◼
►
But there were no updates in 2016.
00:41:25
◼
►
And Apple is apparently out of the standalone display game.
00:41:29
◼
►
They haven't said so officially, but they certainly hinted as much on stage at the Mac Book Pro event in October
00:41:37
◼
►
when they said they partnered with LG to have these LG 5K and 4K displays
00:41:42
◼
►
that are clearly meant to, by default, assume that they're being connected to a Macintosh.
00:41:47
◼
►
Yeah, and my understanding is there's significant Apple engineering resources and effort dedicated to those displays,
00:41:52
◼
►
they just didn't have an Apple enclosure and logo on them, which is a curious choice.
00:41:56
◼
►
Everybody cites Nely, because Nely says, Patel from The Verge, after his product briefing after the event,
00:42:03
◼
►
said categorically when he asked that Apple said they're out of the display game.
00:42:06
◼
►
I asked, as well, "Does the LG mean that Apple is not going to make a retina standalone display?"
00:42:14
◼
►
And I did not get an answer that was unequivocal.
00:42:17
◼
►
The answer I got was something more or less...
00:42:22
◼
►
It's a very typical— oftentimes, when you ask a question like that,
00:42:27
◼
►
I don't think Apple's unique in this regard, but they always have a prepared answer.
00:42:33
◼
►
It doesn't they don't have to think of it on the spot, but it's not yes or no
00:42:36
◼
►
But with the answer I got of does this mean there's not going to be an apple branded retina
00:42:41
◼
►
Just standalone display. The answer was this is what we have to talk about today
00:42:45
◼
►
Standalone displays today require so much engineer. It's no longer just a video signal
00:42:54
◼
►
Going from one thing to another it's not just you know, it's effectively there like many computers
00:42:59
◼
►
It's almost as much work as developing a standalone system.
00:43:03
◼
►
- Which Apple, again, which Apple did most,
00:43:05
◼
►
a lot of with LG.
00:43:07
◼
►
And my understanding is that this is one of those things
00:43:09
◼
►
where they're deeply conflicted internally,
00:43:10
◼
►
that they're wrestling over this.
00:43:11
◼
►
That some people believe that Apple does not have
00:43:14
◼
►
to make everything anymore,
00:43:15
◼
►
that they have to be focused and make hard choices
00:43:17
◼
►
and choose which parts of the chain
00:43:18
◼
►
they wanna be involved with.
00:43:19
◼
►
And other people believe rightly,
00:43:21
◼
►
or at least in their opinions,
00:43:22
◼
►
that the display is your interface to the computer.
00:43:25
◼
►
The interface is what the customer sees.
00:43:27
◼
►
And if there's no Apple logo on that,
00:43:28
◼
►
then the customer sees LG and it sort of ruins the effect
00:43:31
◼
►
and it ruins the benefit of the Halo effect
00:43:33
◼
►
that Apple's been enjoying for all these years.
00:43:35
◼
►
And if they're staring at an LG logo for their display,
00:43:38
◼
►
maybe it's easier to buy an LG computer
00:43:39
◼
►
or it's easier to buy,
00:43:41
◼
►
maybe they're getting out of the router business,
00:43:42
◼
►
it's easier to buy an LG router,
00:43:43
◼
►
and that sort of unravels the value
00:43:45
◼
►
of the Apple ecosystem they've been building.
00:43:47
◼
►
- Yeah, and it's, you know, I can't put it better
00:43:52
◼
►
than Sir Q-Sid has repeatedly on ATP that it's,
00:43:56
◼
►
You know, he's even said that he's never even owned a non Apple display in his life. That's not true for me
00:44:02
◼
►
I used to have a
00:44:06
◼
►
17-inch I bought in
00:44:08
◼
►
1998 was a nice display was not as nice as the Apple displays. I bought it because I
00:44:14
◼
►
Didn't have enough money. Well, I did the money it was enough difference that I bought the Viewsonic instead
00:44:20
◼
►
It does hint at
00:44:25
◼
►
at the idea that maybe the future of Apple on the desktop is iMac only,
00:44:31
◼
►
or maybe iMac and Mac Mini, but that the Mac Pro might be on the way out simply because...
00:44:35
◼
►
Tim Cook's statement to me was hard to parse because he talked about how great the iMac was
00:44:39
◼
►
and how great its display was and its P3, but there was nothing he could have said about the Mac Pro or the Mac Mini.
00:44:44
◼
►
There are 13 year old, there are 3 year old computers with Haswell.
00:44:48
◼
►
I mean it would have been completely awkward to mention them in any context.
00:44:51
◼
►
context and the worst part is the last iterations of both made them even more
00:44:55
◼
►
like computing appliances and an even harder for users to update on their own
00:44:58
◼
►
which made them dependent on Apple for future updates which then didn't didn't
00:45:02
◼
►
come that's an incredibly uncomfortable message to have in his year-end Q&A with
00:45:06
◼
►
his employees right it's a tough situation like you can't read too much
00:45:10
◼
►
into it either way except that there's some there are there only thing I could
00:45:15
◼
►
read into it it's Tim Cook's statement on the Q&A that I would say is bet on it
00:45:20
◼
►
is that there's going to be great,
00:45:24
◼
►
or at least in somebody's opinion, great new IMAX coming.
00:45:27
◼
►
Because otherwise, what he said is a lie, right?
00:45:34
◼
►
His credibility, and he has obviously got to be measured
00:45:39
◼
►
and careful in his words, and he knows that this Q&A
00:45:42
◼
►
is going to leak if there's anything newsworthy.
00:45:45
◼
►
But he's not going to,
00:45:49
◼
►
matter how cynical you want to be about it, he's not going to say something that's flat
00:45:52
◼
►
out going to ruin his credibility with his own employees.
00:45:55
◼
►
So let's just say in the hypothetical world that people fear that Apple is simply done
00:45:59
◼
►
with desktop computers, period, and that it's Macbooks only the rest of the way.
00:46:06
◼
►
Well then what he said is, in hindsight, is going to make people think it's just a flat
00:46:13
◼
►
And he's not going to do that.
00:46:14
◼
►
So there's got to be iMacs coming.
00:46:15
◼
►
There has to be.
00:46:16
◼
►
It says desktops plural, but does that mean two sizes of iMacs or does that mean iMacs?
00:46:21
◼
►
And it's very interesting because when you actually look at the numbers, Apple, very,
00:46:24
◼
►
very, very, very few people connect external displays to their Macs.
00:46:28
◼
►
And I believe the number is smaller than ever.
00:46:30
◼
►
And also very, very, very, very...
00:46:31
◼
►
You mean to their MacBooks?
00:46:32
◼
►
You mean to...
00:46:33
◼
►
Yeah, to their MacBooks.
00:46:34
◼
►
Well, you said Macs.
00:46:35
◼
►
Obviously, if you've got a Mac...
00:46:36
◼
►
Yeah, I apologize.
00:46:37
◼
►
If you've got a Mac Pro, I mean...
00:46:39
◼
►
Totally, absolutely.
00:46:40
◼
►
But on the flip side of that, almost nobody buys...
00:46:43
◼
►
Again, almost nobody buys desktop Macs anymore.
00:46:46
◼
►
the vast, vast, vast majority of what they sell are Macbooks.
00:46:49
◼
►
When we vote with our wallet, we are telling them as customers that we care mostly and
00:46:53
◼
►
by a vast majority about the notebooks.
00:46:56
◼
►
And that's sort of something they have to weigh because they only have enough resources
00:46:58
◼
►
to do this or that.
00:47:00
◼
►
And they say that most of their customers are buying Macbooks and most of them aren't
00:47:03
◼
►
buying displays to go with them.
00:47:06
◼
►
Do they stop making displays?
00:47:07
◼
►
Do they stop making desktops?
00:47:08
◼
►
I'd argue that no, that they're important enough that they have to keep making them
00:47:12
◼
►
But it's not like we have the numbers on our side for those.
00:47:15
◼
►
Right. So if there is a new Mac Pro that is in the works and is coming, there's no
00:47:23
◼
►
way that Tim Cook can say anything about it in this Q&A now. He can't. If there's not,
00:47:29
◼
►
if the Mac Pro is end of life, he can't say anything, he can't say that
00:47:36
◼
►
because they're still selling the old one. Now why are they still selling the
00:47:39
◼
►
old one? I don't know, but maybe it's, you know, they're in theory they could, let's
00:47:44
◼
►
Let's just say that they're going
00:47:47
◼
►
to rethink the whole approach to the pro market,
00:47:50
◼
►
and they're going to do, effectively, an iMac Pro.
00:47:52
◼
►
That the new Mac Pro is like the iMac, but it's space gray
00:47:58
◼
►
and has higher end Xeon processors or something
00:48:05
◼
►
Now, put aside how do you do that and deal
00:48:07
◼
►
with the heat dissipation.
00:48:08
◼
►
That's their problem.
00:48:09
◼
►
But if that's, hypothetically, where
00:48:11
◼
►
they're going with the pro market is
00:48:13
◼
►
devices built all in ones with pro performance,
00:48:18
◼
►
they have to keep the old Mac Pros around
00:48:23
◼
►
until those are ready to sell.
00:48:24
◼
►
They can't have a gap.
00:48:25
◼
►
- Yeah, I mean they did announce the end of life
00:48:28
◼
►
of the old Thunderbolt display.
00:48:30
◼
►
But again, that raises all these questions
00:48:32
◼
►
about what's happening with the product line
00:48:33
◼
►
that they probably don't want to answer right now.
00:48:37
◼
►
They still can't talk about it.
00:48:39
◼
►
But anyway, that's the first sentence of that paragraph.
00:48:42
◼
►
They say the Mac team has lost clout with the famed industrial
00:48:45
◼
►
design group led by Johnny Iovine and the company software
00:48:48
◼
►
team, which is a weird combination.
00:48:51
◼
►
I don't understand what they mean has lost clout.
00:48:54
◼
►
It doesn't make sense to me.
00:48:56
◼
►
Because there's no--
00:48:57
◼
►
there are Mac-- there's a Mac marketing team,
00:48:59
◼
►
but Apple doesn't have a Mac business unit,
00:49:01
◼
►
and they don't have an iPhone business unit.
00:49:03
◼
►
And Dan Riccio still has to build all these machines,
00:49:06
◼
►
and Johnny Iovine's team has to design them all,
00:49:08
◼
►
and Craig Federighi's team has to make software
00:49:09
◼
►
to run on all of them.
00:49:10
◼
►
And yes, those teams are highly focused on iPhone
00:49:14
◼
►
because iPhone absolutely has to ship every year
00:49:16
◼
►
or it's company crushing.
00:49:17
◼
►
But those people are still working on Macs
00:49:20
◼
►
and care desperately about Macs.
00:49:21
◼
►
And my understanding is that a lot of the recent design
00:49:24
◼
►
meetings have been about Macs.
00:49:26
◼
►
So again, I don't understand the context
00:49:28
◼
►
of all the information.
00:49:29
◼
►
I don't know what it means to have lost clout.
00:49:33
◼
►
What would the evidence of that be?
00:49:34
◼
►
And the only way it would make sense
00:49:38
◼
►
is if there are new Macs ready to go other than having
00:49:41
◼
►
an industrial design.
00:49:43
◼
►
And that Johnny Ives team is like, nah, we're not interested.
00:49:47
◼
►
It doesn't make any sense.
00:49:48
◼
►
That's not how it works.
00:49:49
◼
►
It's not like--
00:49:50
◼
►
It's such a dependent product.
00:49:51
◼
►
It's not like Johnny Ives--
00:49:53
◼
►
the design team just is like a bunch of hipsters sipping
00:49:58
◼
►
coffee, wearing berets, and they just
00:50:00
◼
►
work on what they want to work on.
00:50:02
◼
►
And like, ah, Macs, they're boring.
00:50:03
◼
►
We're not going to work on those.
00:50:05
◼
►
We're just going to work on--
00:50:06
◼
►
"No, we are not making your Macs this year. Go home."
00:50:09
◼
►
Right. I don't get it.
00:50:13
◼
►
There aren't, you know, the problem is, as I said, the fact is that too many of the Macs
00:50:19
◼
►
haven't been updated, period. It's not like they haven't gotten attention. And the ones that have
00:50:23
◼
►
been updated, the MacBook, I know the MacBook, this year's MacBook isn't a new design, but it
00:50:29
◼
►
came out last year. And this year's MacBook Pros, obviously, had a lot of work done by the
00:50:35
◼
►
industrial design team. It's all new enclosures. It's very different. It's not just like the old
00:50:41
◼
►
ones but thinner. The entire hinge mechanism for the display is entirely different. We'll get to
00:50:49
◼
►
this later, but I've been messing around with a whole bunch of MacBooks this week running battery
00:50:54
◼
►
tests. And with a bunch of them open at the same time and going between the two and restarting
00:50:58
◼
►
tests, it's more clear than it was even when I reviewed the new MacBook Pro how much nicer the
00:51:04
◼
►
the hinge is on the new one.
00:51:06
◼
►
And how rigid they are.
00:51:09
◼
►
But when you tilt it, if it's already
00:51:12
◼
►
at an angle for sitting--
00:51:14
◼
►
and I've been running these battery tests where
00:51:17
◼
►
I'll come by and update them, and I don't even sit down.
00:51:20
◼
►
But I want to tilt the screen just a little
00:51:22
◼
►
so it's more of an angle for standing.
00:51:25
◼
►
And when you do it on the new MacBook Pro,
00:51:28
◼
►
the screen, you just put one finger
00:51:30
◼
►
and a little bit of pressure, and it tilts back.
00:51:32
◼
►
And on my 2014 MacBook Pro, I do it.
00:51:35
◼
►
And at first, the whole device lifts off the table.
00:51:39
◼
►
It's more stiff.
00:51:41
◼
►
It's not as nice.
00:51:42
◼
►
Anyway, that's exactly the sort of thing
00:51:45
◼
►
that Johnny Ive's famed industrial design team does,
00:51:49
◼
►
is design a fancy new hinge that's
00:51:52
◼
►
way better than what was already the best hinge
00:51:56
◼
►
on a professional notebook in the world.
00:51:59
◼
►
Totally, and a more rigid unibody,
00:52:00
◼
►
and was already a very, very good unibody structure.
00:52:02
◼
►
Right, exactly.
00:52:04
◼
►
An entirely new keyboard switch system.
00:52:06
◼
►
I don't get it.
00:52:10
◼
►
And then there's this other half of the sentence,
00:52:12
◼
►
"and the company's software team."
00:52:16
◼
►
I don't get it.
00:52:16
◼
►
And this, to me, has been--
00:52:20
◼
►
and again, I'm worried.
00:52:22
◼
►
And I'm trying to be-- in this whole,
00:52:25
◼
►
is Apple abandoning the Mac or slowly sunsetting the Mac
00:52:28
◼
►
or just ruining the Mac whatever debate,
00:52:33
◼
►
which obviously does have some foundation in fact,
00:52:36
◼
►
the fact that the hardware hasn't been updated.
00:52:38
◼
►
One of the things I like to cite,
00:52:40
◼
►
I feel like it's not proof, but evidence to the contrary,
00:52:44
◼
►
is the annual update schedule that macOS has been on
00:52:47
◼
►
for the last few years.
00:52:48
◼
►
Like in 2007, famously, the first year of the iPhone,
00:52:53
◼
►
the Mac, they had to put out a press release
00:52:56
◼
►
because they had announced that the new macOS
00:52:58
◼
►
was going to be ready at WWDC, and they put out a press release
00:53:01
◼
►
that it's delayed five months because we
00:53:03
◼
►
had to pull so much engineering talent to work on the iPhone
00:53:07
◼
►
OS, as it was called then.
00:53:09
◼
►
There's obviously enough attention on a Mac
00:53:14
◼
►
now that the Mac is on the same annual update cycle as iOS.
00:53:19
◼
►
I don't see it.
00:53:20
◼
►
And it's getting features, and it's
00:53:21
◼
►
getting important features like the continuity ones, where
00:53:23
◼
►
you can use Touch ID or the watch to unlock it
00:53:26
◼
►
or to verify payments.
00:53:27
◼
►
They got Siri brought over to it.
00:53:30
◼
►
And there is some truth to Apple reorganizing
00:53:33
◼
►
their teams, and a lot of those teams are iOS-centric.
00:53:35
◼
►
But when you look at Mac and iOS,
00:53:37
◼
►
what differentiates them is their input methods
00:53:38
◼
►
and their interface.
00:53:39
◼
►
And Apple is, I think, wisely consolidating
00:53:42
◼
►
a lot of the things that go on under the covers.
00:53:44
◼
►
Like when you look at Swift, that's across all platforms.
00:53:46
◼
►
Apple File System is gonna go from Apple Watch
00:53:48
◼
►
all the way to Mac Pro.
00:53:50
◼
►
All the things that they're building,
00:53:51
◼
►
like one day, maybe, I don't know how long
00:53:53
◼
►
AppKit will be around for, but it might make sense
00:53:55
◼
►
have sort of a UI framework that crosses over both platforms. All that stuff can
00:53:59
◼
►
be made with one team and could benefit both platforms without them, without you
00:54:03
◼
►
having to micro measure how many people are doing each one. Right, and then
00:54:07
◼
►
there's my next argument in the, I'll argue the side of Apple as Apple is
00:54:14
◼
►
is still putting an awful lot of thought and attention into Mac is the Touch Bar,
00:54:18
◼
►
which is at a hardware level a fascinating,
00:54:23
◼
►
it's not really a device 'cause it's part of a device,
00:54:27
◼
►
but it is a fascinating piece of hardware
00:54:32
◼
►
that it's an iOS device.
00:54:34
◼
►
It is a full iOS computer in an Intel-based Mac computer.
00:54:39
◼
►
It's a computer in a computer which I just love.
00:54:43
◼
►
And the computer in the computer is a better computer,
00:54:47
◼
►
a more powerful computer than like the computers we had,
00:54:51
◼
►
I don't know how many years ago, you know,
00:54:52
◼
►
but at some point in my life,
00:54:54
◼
►
a full personal computer was not as powerful
00:54:56
◼
►
as the touch bar.
00:54:58
◼
►
- Absolutely.
00:54:59
◼
►
It's one of those only Apple things,
00:55:01
◼
►
'cause you have to have the ability
00:55:02
◼
►
to make a tiny embedded device
00:55:03
◼
►
that runs an entirely separate yet, you know,
00:55:06
◼
►
in some ways compatible operating system.
00:55:08
◼
►
And Brett Victor actually tweeted this,
00:55:10
◼
►
so I think it's public knowledge
00:55:11
◼
►
that they've been working on this for up to a decade.
00:55:13
◼
►
It's not like this is, like last year they said,
00:55:15
◼
►
they go, oh crap, what can we do with the Mac?
00:55:17
◼
►
This has been a project they've been working on
00:55:18
◼
►
for a very, very long time.
00:55:20
◼
►
- I did not know that.
00:55:21
◼
►
I do know, though, that I know several people
00:55:23
◼
►
who were engineers, either at a hardware level
00:55:26
◼
►
or a software level or some combination of the two
00:55:28
◼
►
on the touch bar, who are truly,
00:55:30
◼
►
you know, it's in confidence, so I can't say who they are,
00:55:34
◼
►
but truly some of the best engineers at the company,
00:55:38
◼
►
people who have seats in the second row
00:55:41
◼
►
at a couple events and are seated near,
00:55:44
◼
►
ready to go be tapped to go backstage to fix demos
00:55:48
◼
►
if they go awry.
00:55:49
◼
►
They're one step ready to--
00:55:52
◼
►
they're like the emergency, the demo's gone bad,
00:55:54
◼
►
we need top men to investigate.
00:55:58
◼
►
Those type of talent.
00:55:59
◼
►
And that they've spent the last 18 months on Touch Bar
00:56:02
◼
►
and are incredibly proud of how it turned out.
00:56:06
◼
►
One of them--
00:56:06
◼
►
I don't have the direct quote in front of me,
00:56:08
◼
►
but one of them said, I hope this shows people
00:56:11
◼
►
that we still care about the Mac,
00:56:13
◼
►
because inside Apple it's the best proof of it possible.
00:56:18
◼
►
Combine that with the fact that on day one
00:56:23
◼
►
of these Macs with touch bars shipping,
00:56:26
◼
►
all of the commonly used consumer apps
00:56:32
◼
►
that Apple makes for the Mac had full touch bar support.
00:56:35
◼
►
A lot of it very, very thoughtful.
00:56:38
◼
►
None of it half-assed, not one of them.
00:56:40
◼
►
Even apps like TextEdit or something like that,
00:56:44
◼
►
or Preview had thoughtful--
00:56:46
◼
►
- Reminder. - Right.
00:56:47
◼
►
And I talked about this before,
00:56:51
◼
►
it's a separate conversation of,
00:56:53
◼
►
does Apple even fully understand the right way
00:56:55
◼
►
to use the touch bar yet?
00:56:56
◼
►
Will they, you know,
00:56:57
◼
►
my example is in the early years of the Mac,
00:57:03
◼
►
like 1984, '85, there were dialogue boxes
00:57:07
◼
►
where OK and Cancel were stacked vertically,
00:57:11
◼
►
and then there was others where they were horizontal.
00:57:13
◼
►
They just hadn't figured the consistency out
00:57:15
◼
►
on stuff like that.
00:57:16
◼
►
And of course now everybody knows it goes Cancel
00:57:19
◼
►
and then OK to the right.
00:57:21
◼
►
That maybe there's like touch bar things like that,
00:57:24
◼
►
that there's certain things that we're doing in touch bars,
00:57:26
◼
►
like the way that Safari defaults
00:57:27
◼
►
to showing thumbnails of your tabs.
00:57:29
◼
►
I don't know, I don't find that useful.
00:57:31
◼
►
Maybe other people do, I feel like, but anyway.
00:57:34
◼
►
- I scroll with it, I scroll super fast through windows
00:57:36
◼
►
and I pop up to the one that I want really quickly with that,
00:57:37
◼
►
so I'm a huge, huge fan of it.
00:57:39
◼
►
- So you swipe your finger across?
00:57:42
◼
►
- Yes, 'cause sometimes with tabs,
00:57:43
◼
►
I have to hit, like previously I hit Command + T,
00:57:44
◼
►
Command + T to get to each one,
00:57:45
◼
►
and I just swipe now and I see which one I want
00:57:47
◼
►
and I stop immediately.
00:57:48
◼
►
- Yeah, maybe I'm using it the wrong way.
00:57:50
◼
►
Maybe that's the way I should use it,
00:57:51
◼
►
is run my finger across it instead of staring at it
00:57:54
◼
►
and try to poke at the right one.
00:57:55
◼
►
I never thought about that.
00:57:56
◼
►
So maybe that's right, I don't know.
00:57:57
◼
►
But anyway, to me, the support across not just the OS,
00:58:03
◼
►
but across their apps and in the Cocoa frameworks
00:58:07
◼
►
for third-party developers.
00:58:09
◼
►
Like everything I've heard from developer friends
00:58:12
◼
►
about the Touch Bar APIs is that, yes,
00:58:16
◼
►
these are very solid APIs written by people who get Cocoa.
00:58:21
◼
►
I mean, this is exactly what you'd want,
00:58:23
◼
►
but it's a sign that Apple has top engineering cut talent.
00:58:27
◼
►
So I just don't get how that jibes with Germin's,
00:58:31
◼
►
They say the Mac team has lost clout, dot dot dot,
00:58:33
◼
►
with the company software team.
00:58:35
◼
►
I don't get it.
00:58:36
◼
►
- Another example of that is when you look at it,
00:58:38
◼
►
the iOS device, the embedded iOS device,
00:58:40
◼
►
actually controls the printout of the price on the display
00:58:43
◼
►
because they don't want an app to be able to intercept
00:58:46
◼
►
and change the price that you then agree to
00:58:47
◼
►
with your fingerprint.
00:58:49
◼
►
And that, again, is another level of complexity added
00:58:51
◼
►
to the engineering that they do for security's sake,
00:58:53
◼
►
but it's non-trivial to implement.
00:58:54
◼
►
And you stack all these up on top, and I think,
00:58:56
◼
►
'cause you were at the event with me,
00:58:57
◼
►
the people at Apple were super excited about this.
00:59:00
◼
►
And yeah, they're still feeling their way through the best practices for it, but it
00:59:03
◼
►
was clear that they thought they were doing what was right for the platform.
00:59:06
◼
►
Yeah, and another example is the way that the iOS—the Touch Bar's iOS device has
00:59:12
◼
►
the Secure Enclave, which is there first and foremost for the Touch ID, but it's also
00:59:18
◼
►
used now to control the webcam on the front of the display, so that the webcam, you know,
00:59:24
◼
►
is obviously—that's a huge security thing.
00:59:26
◼
►
sorts of people, you know, people put tape over the thing because they're worried that
00:59:30
◼
►
they can be certain, you know, somebody can install software that'll surreptitiously turn
00:59:35
◼
►
the camera on. There's a green light that turns on when the camera's on. People worry, I mean,
00:59:40
◼
►
again, rightfully so, it's not crazy, but rightfully so, worry that that could be overridden by the
00:59:46
◼
►
malware. That may not stop people, the fact that it goes through the secure enclave now, may not
00:59:53
◼
►
stop people from putting tape over their camera, but it should if they think about it.
00:59:58
◼
►
It could if they think about it. And even if you're not worried about it, it's just
01:00:02
◼
►
Apple's just happy to know that they've cut off a path that malware could take to do something
01:00:08
◼
►
which would be truly dreadful like take control of your webcam. And they're spending valuable
01:00:12
◼
►
engineering resources to implement those features, which shows to me at least the investment they
01:00:16
◼
►
they have in that platform.
01:00:17
◼
►
- Right, I mean, what they could do,
01:00:20
◼
►
like, this is why I don't think Germin's article
01:00:24
◼
►
shows what people think that it shows.
01:00:27
◼
►
I think it's written to fit the narrative
01:00:29
◼
►
and it doesn't really show it.
01:00:30
◼
►
I think the MacBook Pro refutes it.
01:00:35
◼
►
Apple could have just put the upgraded Intel chipsets
01:00:39
◼
►
in the old MacBook Pro enclosure.
01:00:42
◼
►
It's not like the old MacBook Pro enclosure was dated.
01:00:46
◼
►
It was still, it's exactly what most, you know,
01:00:50
◼
►
other PC laptops still copy.
01:00:52
◼
►
And anybody who prefers the larger key travel
01:00:57
◼
►
wouldn't be complaining about the shallower key travel.
01:01:01
◼
►
People who-- - The old ports?
01:01:02
◼
►
- People who want the device, you know,
01:01:05
◼
►
the people who want to argue,
01:01:06
◼
►
which is a reasonable viewpoint that I'd rather Apple
01:01:09
◼
►
stop making these things thinner
01:01:11
◼
►
and keep them the same thickness
01:01:12
◼
►
and just put bigger batteries in
01:01:14
◼
►
so I get even more battery life.
01:01:16
◼
►
Stop settling for quote unquote 10 hours of battery life,
01:01:19
◼
►
why don't you go for 20 by keeping the old thickness.
01:01:21
◼
►
They would have had far fewer complaints.
01:01:24
◼
►
I think it would have been worse devices.
01:01:26
◼
►
I think it's, in the long run,
01:01:29
◼
►
I think they were right to do this.
01:01:32
◼
►
But it's the weird thing,
01:01:35
◼
►
and this is why Apple has had long-term success,
01:01:37
◼
►
is they're not afraid to do things
01:01:39
◼
►
that will draw criticism,
01:01:41
◼
►
but are the right thing to do going forward.
01:01:43
◼
►
I mean, the headphone jack
01:01:44
◼
►
is the best example of that possible.
01:01:46
◼
►
Nobody was gonna complain
01:01:48
◼
►
if the iPhone 7 had a headphone jack.
01:01:50
◼
►
Lots of people did complain
01:01:52
◼
►
that the iPhone 7 didn't have a headphone jack.
01:01:54
◼
►
Lots of complaints on one side, no complaints on the other,
01:01:57
◼
►
but if it's the right way to do it,
01:01:58
◼
►
they'll take the side with complaints,
01:02:00
◼
►
whereas most companies always err on the side
01:02:02
◼
►
of let's do the thing that generates the fewest complaints,
01:02:05
◼
►
even if it's the worst thing.
01:02:09
◼
►
People don't complain.
01:02:10
◼
►
People complain about what's new.
01:02:11
◼
►
They don't complain about the status quo.
01:02:13
◼
►
- No, and there's, I mean, they can't win either way.
01:02:15
◼
►
If they'd kept the old enclosure,
01:02:16
◼
►
it would have been like the iPhone 7.
01:02:17
◼
►
Oh, it's the same design.
01:02:18
◼
►
Apple's not innovating anymore.
01:02:19
◼
►
They're boring.
01:02:20
◼
►
And then they change it.
01:02:21
◼
►
Well, you know, why did they bother changing it?
01:02:23
◼
►
They could have just left the same design.
01:02:24
◼
►
But Apple just never goes to the judges.
01:02:26
◼
►
They don't care about the judges.
01:02:27
◼
►
They don't want their routine scored by the Swedish judge
01:02:30
◼
►
with like an eight or something.
01:02:31
◼
►
They do what they think is right,
01:02:33
◼
►
and they'll take the lumps.
01:02:34
◼
►
And it could be the headphone jack.
01:02:35
◼
►
It could be USB-C, Thunderbolt 3 across the line.
01:02:37
◼
►
could be making thinner Macs, they're
01:02:40
◼
►
willing to take those lumps for what
01:02:41
◼
►
they think is the best product.
01:02:42
◼
►
But that hypothetical world, the hypothetical world
01:02:45
◼
►
where Apple's October 2016 new MacBook Pros effectively
01:02:49
◼
►
looked more or less just like the old MacBook Pros,
01:02:53
◼
►
that world fits with Gherman's narrative.
01:02:58
◼
►
Well, they've lost clout with Johnny Ive's team.
01:03:00
◼
►
So the Ive's team said, nope, old enclosure is good enough.
01:03:07
◼
►
It fits with the idea that they've lost clout
01:03:08
◼
►
with the software team because no software really asked,
01:03:11
◼
►
all they need to do is put new drivers in, right?
01:03:13
◼
►
It's not, hey, every single Mac app from Apple
01:03:17
◼
►
has to be updated with touch bar support.
01:03:20
◼
►
That fits it.
01:03:24
◼
►
The world where they come out with these new MacBook Pros
01:03:26
◼
►
that are much thinner,
01:03:28
◼
►
have the weight of the old MacBook Airs,
01:03:31
◼
►
but are pro, and have the high color gamut,
01:03:35
◼
►
wide color gamut, whatever you want to call it, displays.
01:03:38
◼
►
I just don't get it.
01:03:42
◼
►
- Yeah, those products were internally expensive to produce
01:03:45
◼
►
and they wouldn't do that if that was a platform
01:03:47
◼
►
that they were abandoning.
01:03:48
◼
►
- I don't know what else to say about it other than,
01:03:54
◼
►
oh, the other part that I thought was,
01:03:57
◼
►
I haven't written about this either, but I want to,
01:03:59
◼
►
but it's just been late in December,
01:04:01
◼
►
is people now have more options.
01:04:04
◼
►
Microsoft Corporation once derided by Mac loyalists for its clunky, buggy software offers
01:04:09
◼
►
Windows 10, which provides the tablet-type functionality Apple pioneered with the iPad."
01:04:15
◼
►
Now, that's a funny sentence because…
01:04:21
◼
►
And I mean it.
01:04:22
◼
►
I don't mean to be like a nitpicker, but it's a funny sentence because people now
01:04:26
◼
►
have more options.
01:04:27
◼
►
Windows was derided by Mac loyalists as clunky and buggy software.
01:04:34
◼
►
I would agree with that. That is certainly why I haven't used Windows on a regular basis
01:04:38
◼
►
other than when I had shitty jobs when I was younger and had to. Now offers Windows 10,
01:04:46
◼
►
and it's not, which is not clunky or buggy or as unsavory as Windows ever was, but it
01:04:51
◼
►
instead says, "Which provides the tablet type functionality Apple pioneered with the iPad."
01:04:57
◼
►
Yeah, I mean, there was 10 years of tablet PC before the iPad. I had a chance to try
01:05:02
◼
►
out Lea Laporte's Surface Studio when I was there for the holiday show. We did a review of it.
01:05:06
◼
►
And it's an interesting product, but I don't under... I wrote about this too. Like, it seems
01:05:11
◼
►
like non-Apple products get created on a curve because this was an i5 with a 5200 RPM hard drive,
01:05:16
◼
►
which was just not sufficient for that product. And this is a device that's plugged in all time.
01:05:21
◼
►
There's no reason for it to be power constrained at all. You could put anything as powerful as you
01:05:25
◼
►
want in there, but it was incredibly power constrained. It could run in either desktop
01:05:29
◼
►
or tablet mode which was confusing and when you would swipe down to get rid of
01:05:32
◼
►
something you could literally count like seconds in between the animation frames
01:05:36
◼
►
not just they're a frame off but like seconds before would animate and
01:05:39
◼
►
start dropping it down and not the first time when it loaded it but over and over
01:05:42
◼
►
again and it was by far not an experience that I would tolerate on a
01:05:45
◼
►
daily basis I know some people love Windows for gaming or for that
01:05:49
◼
►
functionality but I just don't get that entire narrative about Apple sorry
01:05:53
◼
►
Microsoft is now catering to creatives they're putting out very small niche
01:05:57
◼
►
products that they're having a hard time shipping on schedule as well.
01:06:02
◼
►
Microsoft Surface computers offer Apple-esque quality and a well-reviewed
01:06:06
◼
►
creative paint program aimed at the Mac's audience. I do think there's a
01:06:11
◼
►
little bit of kernel of truth there where if you are a professional
01:06:14
◼
►
illustrator or architect or somebody who draws professionally, the Surface Studio,
01:06:19
◼
►
if I did, I would certainly look at one and maybe only use it for drawing and
01:06:22
◼
►
still use a Mac for all my other computing and just have a
01:06:25
◼
►
dedicated in a way that you know a lot of these people have had a dedicated
01:06:29
◼
►
device hooked up to their Macs it's antique yeah that you'd buy this just
01:06:32
◼
►
for the drawing I could see it but I certainly wouldn't call it Apple s
01:06:37
◼
►
quality honestly I mean I again it's like you know the guy who runs a site
01:06:41
◼
►
that's mostly about Apple says yes surface studio isn't as nice as a Mac
01:06:45
◼
►
the hinge is really good the hinge is really really good but I found that the
01:06:49
◼
►
the drawing response time if you want to compare to the iPad Pro it's there's no
01:06:53
◼
►
comparison, that there is latency and it varies widely. And it's true on the iPad too. I mean,
01:06:59
◼
►
it is software dependent. But if you want to just look at the reference apps, you know,
01:07:05
◼
►
Microsoft's own Microsoft Paint, which I tried in the store, and Apple's Notes app,
01:07:12
◼
►
where you can draw the sketches, you know, just as baselines for latency, there's practically none.
01:07:19
◼
►
I mean, I don't want to say none with the iPad Pro, but it's, you know, I don't think
01:07:24
◼
►
there's any reviews that disagree that the latency is downright amazing.
01:07:28
◼
►
There's definitely latency.
01:07:29
◼
►
I could see it on the Surface Studio.
01:07:32
◼
►
And there's parallax.
01:07:33
◼
►
The display is nowhere near as close to the surface of the glass or plastic or whatever
01:07:38
◼
►
it's made of than the iPad Pro.
01:07:39
◼
►
There's absolutely a bit of parallax there.
01:07:42
◼
►
It's not bad.
01:07:43
◼
►
It's not horrible.
01:07:44
◼
►
But it certainly isn't the iPad Pro, and the iPad Pro is what I would define as Apple
01:07:50
◼
►
And so the service is, by definition, sub-Apple quality.
01:07:54
◼
►
It's hard to go back.
01:07:55
◼
►
I used a Wacom tablet for years, and that was just
01:07:58
◼
►
what you had.
01:07:58
◼
►
It was the best thing in the business,
01:07:59
◼
►
so nobody really paid attention.
01:08:01
◼
►
And after using the iPad Pro for a year,
01:08:02
◼
►
I found it really hard to go back,
01:08:04
◼
►
because you do notice the difference in latency,
01:08:06
◼
►
and you do notice the air gap.
01:08:08
◼
►
And on proper Wacom, you notice the reticule,
01:08:10
◼
►
which I know you can turn off, but still super annoying to me.
01:08:12
◼
►
It sort of spoils you for that experience.
01:08:14
◼
►
And yeah, there is no 27-inch iPad Pro,
01:08:17
◼
►
There's not a 27-inch pencil support on an iMac yet.
01:08:20
◼
►
But technologically speaking, there's
01:08:23
◼
►
a world of difference between the two.
01:08:24
◼
►
Sensing an opportunity-- and back to Germin's story.
01:08:26
◼
►
Microsoft called the MacBook Pro a, quote, "disappointment"
01:08:30
◼
►
and said, "more users than ever were switching
01:08:32
◼
►
to its Surface laptops."
01:08:34
◼
►
And that's the end of that.
01:08:36
◼
►
So it's a total Bezos chart of--
01:08:39
◼
►
--of how many users are switching to Surface laptops.
01:08:44
◼
►
Switching, obviously--
01:08:46
◼
►
I presumably from Macs they mean not from other Windows laptops more than ever.
01:08:52
◼
►
It's the Mac problem. It's like if five people switched last month and ten people switched this month,
01:08:55
◼
►
100% more people switched this month. I sincerely doubt that the number of people switching from
01:09:02
◼
►
MacBooks to Surface laptops is significant and I also strongly suspect that if the ones who are
01:09:09
◼
►
are people who never really took to the Mac in the first place and that they are not the
01:09:14
◼
►
Mac loyalists, that's the term of the headline of Gurman's story, I really doubt that any of them,
01:09:23
◼
►
or no, I wouldn't say any, obviously there's in a world of seven billion people, I'm sure there's
01:09:28
◼
►
some, but that the number effectively is zero of Mac loyalists who've switched to the surface.
01:09:33
◼
►
But I could be wrong. But anyway, it would be nice to have numbers to back up
01:09:39
◼
►
a statement from Microsoft that isn't refuted at all, more than ever.
01:09:44
◼
►
And they said it's a disappointment.
01:09:46
◼
►
- No, it's true.
01:09:47
◼
►
I mean, I know a lot of people who are surface curious,
01:09:49
◼
►
who just, they wanted to get a device
01:09:50
◼
►
that they could draw on the screen that ran Photoshop.
01:09:52
◼
►
And they all, they bought surfaces to use in coffee shops
01:09:55
◼
►
or to use around the house, but they still kept their Macs.
01:09:57
◼
►
And I don't know how all these numbers,
01:09:59
◼
►
to me, this is a math problem.
01:10:00
◼
►
It's not a real, it's not an industry trend.
01:10:03
◼
►
It was just like the, again, like it's the same thing
01:10:06
◼
►
where we had those Pixel sales, where Pixel,
01:10:08
◼
►
more people were, like the acceleration of Pixel was faster.
01:10:11
◼
►
- The internal turmoil has taken a toll.
01:10:13
◼
►
This is Germin's story.
01:10:14
◼
►
"More than a dozen engineers and managers
01:10:16
◼
►
"working on Mac hardware have left for different
01:10:18
◼
►
"Apple teams or other companies in the past year and a half,"
01:10:21
◼
►
said people familiar with the situation.
01:10:23
◼
►
Allow me to confirm that more than a dozen engineers
01:10:28
◼
►
working on Mac hardware have left for different Apple teams
01:10:32
◼
►
or other companies.
01:10:32
◼
►
It's a lot more than a dozen.
01:10:34
◼
►
And people within Apple switch to other places within Apple
01:10:39
◼
►
all the time, always have.
01:10:42
◼
►
And it has been, I think-- and you know this.
01:10:44
◼
►
I think you probably know this too.
01:10:45
◼
►
I think there's been a little bit more shifting around
01:10:48
◼
►
in the last 18 months or so than usual,
01:10:50
◼
►
just because of Project Titan and a few other things.
01:10:54
◼
►
But to cite as evidence of problems within Apple
01:11:00
◼
►
that, quote, "more than a dozen engineers and managers working
01:11:03
◼
►
on Mac hardware have left for different teams"
01:11:05
◼
►
is really not news at all.
01:11:07
◼
►
It would be, if 18 months go by and fewer than a dozen
01:11:12
◼
►
engineers and managers change jobs,
01:11:14
◼
►
that would be startling.
01:11:16
◼
►
I wouldn't believe it.
01:11:20
◼
►
- And also, it's unclear to me what that means
01:11:22
◼
►
because I know people who are on loan to other,
01:11:25
◼
►
like maybe they work on iPhone,
01:11:27
◼
►
but they've been on loan to Apple Watch
01:11:29
◼
►
to complete a project over there,
01:11:30
◼
►
and then eventually they either stay or they go back.
01:11:32
◼
►
And they move around all the time,
01:11:33
◼
►
depending on where those engineering resources are needed.
01:11:36
◼
►
And again, if desktop Macs weren't a priority this year,
01:11:40
◼
►
it's very easy to see those engineers get put
01:11:43
◼
►
on other projects in the meantime.
01:11:45
◼
►
- Right, and I know, for example,
01:11:46
◼
►
I know that people who worked on Touch Bar
01:11:48
◼
►
were on loan from other teams because it's, you know,
01:11:51
◼
►
it wasn't, it's not like they need
01:11:53
◼
►
a dedicated Touch Bar team forever.
01:11:55
◼
►
I mean, not that there's never gonna be an update
01:11:56
◼
►
to the Touch Bar, but that to ship the first one
01:11:59
◼
►
and decide here's the foundation of how it works,
01:12:01
◼
►
we need some iOS people because we gotta get, you know,
01:12:03
◼
►
let's get these guys from, you know, who work on iOS
01:12:05
◼
►
'cause they know how to do the fewer enclave or whatever.
01:12:08
◼
►
But anyway, I don't know.
01:12:11
◼
►
I just don't think, again, there is definitely
01:12:13
◼
►
something weird and problematic going on
01:12:16
◼
►
with Apple's desktops across the board, even the iMac.
01:12:21
◼
►
Maybe, I mean, it just seems a little weird
01:12:25
◼
►
to go over a year without an update at all,
01:12:27
◼
►
even a speed bump.
01:12:29
◼
►
- Totally, and it's not by the same token.
01:12:30
◼
►
I mean, we know people who for years have been saying
01:12:32
◼
►
why doesn't Apple take a break
01:12:33
◼
►
and get off this yearly update cycle.
01:12:36
◼
►
It's just those products going three or two years,
01:12:38
◼
►
I think, is alarming.
01:12:39
◼
►
But going a year between IMAX,
01:12:41
◼
►
if it's the spring instead of the fall,
01:12:42
◼
►
I don't think that's alarming.
01:12:45
◼
►
So anyway, and what I've heard repeatedly
01:12:48
◼
►
from people at Apple is that,
01:12:51
◼
►
regarding Germin stories and stuff like this,
01:12:54
◼
►
not specific stories, you know what I mean?
01:12:56
◼
►
Like Germin's best story of 2016
01:12:59
◼
►
was probably the AirPods scoop.
01:13:03
◼
►
He got certain details wrong, including--
01:13:05
◼
►
the big thing he got wrong was that the AirPods would
01:13:09
◼
►
be Beats branded, and that Beats would come out
01:13:13
◼
►
with a lower-priced thing, which made no sense to me,
01:13:17
◼
►
marketing-wise.
01:13:18
◼
►
The Apple-branded one is the one that would be priced to sell,
01:13:21
◼
►
and the Beats is the premium brand
01:13:23
◼
►
that would be more expensive.
01:13:24
◼
►
And in fact, that's exactly how it turned out,
01:13:26
◼
►
that Beats sells the $300 over-the-year things,
01:13:29
◼
►
and the AirPods are, of course, Apple-branded.
01:13:32
◼
►
But in terms of what the AirPods were
01:13:34
◼
►
and how they would work and they'd have
01:13:35
◼
►
a little charging case and stuff like that,
01:13:37
◼
►
he had that last January.
01:13:39
◼
►
Very specific, was spot on.
01:13:41
◼
►
Even the product marketing part that he got wrong,
01:13:44
◼
►
it shouldn't have even speculated on.
01:13:46
◼
►
He gets the product marketing stuff wrong
01:13:48
◼
►
almost all the time because people in product marketing
01:13:50
◼
►
just don't leak.
01:13:52
◼
►
And the people who do leak are people who know things
01:13:54
◼
►
like the hardware engineering.
01:13:56
◼
►
And that's obviously who leaked the story.
01:13:58
◼
►
Anyway, specific story like that, Germin nails it.
01:14:01
◼
►
Something like this that's bigger,
01:14:02
◼
►
he often gets facts right but gets the story wrong.
01:14:04
◼
►
And I've heard that from like three different people.
01:14:07
◼
►
Facts were right. - And again,
01:14:09
◼
►
it's super hard. - Story is right.
01:14:09
◼
►
- What he does is super, super tough,
01:14:11
◼
►
not just gathering the information,
01:14:12
◼
►
but doing the analytics behind it,
01:14:13
◼
►
sort of guessing Apple's intent,
01:14:15
◼
►
which is kudos to him for doing it, 'cause I wouldn't.
01:14:18
◼
►
But that part is super, super hard.
01:14:22
◼
►
We are desperately running out of time here.
01:14:26
◼
►
We are gonna do a big year-end review
01:14:28
◼
►
and we're not even gonna get to it.
01:14:29
◼
►
We're gonna have to rush through that part.
01:14:31
◼
►
We can pick our targets.
01:14:32
◼
►
Let me take a break here and thank our next sponsor.
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and you could probably listen to their audio books.
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But they've got more than books.
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They've got, it's effectively like the Netflix for audio,
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This is why I think that it's obvious why Audible sponsors podcasts, because podcasts
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by definition are listened to by people who like spoken word audio content.
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Duh, their address is audible.com go there with the URL audible.com
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01:16:16
◼
►
Next on list is consumer reports. Yeah fiasco
01:16:25
◼
►
So consumer reports at the end of last week on Friday
01:16:28
◼
►
How would you summarize it? You summarize it? So they put out
01:16:32
◼
►
And so they put out a headline
01:16:35
◼
►
They put out a report saying that they could not recommend the new MacBook Pro because they got wildly inconsistent battery tests
01:16:42
◼
►
It was I think that the gist of it that went from 15 hours on the high end to like three point something on the low
01:16:50
◼
►
And so they gave it, it's the first MacBooks ever
01:16:53
◼
►
not to receive their quote unquote recommended.
01:16:56
◼
►
So in other words, it's sort of like
01:16:58
◼
►
the good housekeeping seal of approval.
01:17:01
◼
►
They're not saying it's the best,
01:17:02
◼
►
they're not saying it's the worst,
01:17:03
◼
►
they're not ranking 10 laptops,
01:17:05
◼
►
here's number two, number three.
01:17:06
◼
►
It's just, is it at least in their recommended list?
01:17:10
◼
►
And it's sort of like a minimum badge of,
01:17:13
◼
►
this is a decent machine.
01:17:14
◼
►
And it's the first one ever not to get it.
01:17:17
◼
►
And it was top-- all the tech sites,
01:17:20
◼
►
it was the number one story on Tech MeMo on Friday.
01:17:23
◼
►
Yeah, and their logic was because they
01:17:25
◼
►
thought that battery was such an important characteristic
01:17:27
◼
►
that they couldn't take an average.
01:17:28
◼
►
They had to take the lowest result for each one,
01:17:30
◼
►
because that's the only thing people could count on.
01:17:32
◼
►
So it got scored based on having around a 3-point-something-hour
01:17:35
◼
►
battery life.
01:17:36
◼
►
So Consumer Reports-- and again, there's a--
01:17:40
◼
►
you complain about Consumer Reports because they
01:17:42
◼
►
said something bad about Apple.
01:17:43
◼
►
But this is-- to frame this, Consumer Reports
01:17:45
◼
►
has been around for a long time.
01:17:46
◼
►
And when I was growing up, had a great reputation.
01:17:48
◼
►
And it was expensive, because one of the policies
01:17:53
◼
►
that they have is that they don't accept product
01:17:55
◼
►
advertising.
01:17:56
◼
►
And so they are supported by their subscribers.
01:18:00
◼
►
And it's a very expensive thing to do.
01:18:02
◼
►
So when they do things like they test cars,
01:18:05
◼
►
they go to a car dealer and they buy cars.
01:18:08
◼
►
And they don't say, I'm from Consumer Reports,
01:18:10
◼
►
and they buy a car.
01:18:11
◼
►
They just go in like regular customers
01:18:12
◼
►
and buy whatever cars they're testing,
01:18:14
◼
►
so that they know that they're getting a consumer product, not
01:18:17
◼
►
like a cherry picked, you know, hey, this is--
01:18:22
◼
►
like the Ford Motor Company is going
01:18:24
◼
►
to make sure everything's right about this car
01:18:27
◼
►
before they give it to Consumer Reports on loan
01:18:29
◼
►
for a week of testing or something like that.
01:18:31
◼
►
They have their own test track.
01:18:32
◼
►
They own a test track where they drive cars.
01:18:35
◼
►
And they test everything from washing machines
01:18:37
◼
►
to refrigerators to all sorts of stuff.
01:18:40
◼
►
Consumer Reports is not what it used to be, though.
01:18:42
◼
►
There was an editorial purge about five or six years ago.
01:18:45
◼
►
I'll put a link in the show notes from a former editor.
01:18:48
◼
►
But effectively, they got new management
01:18:51
◼
►
five or six years ago who thought they could do a lot
01:18:54
◼
►
better with cheaper, with new--
01:18:57
◼
►
just freelancing out all the work.
01:19:00
◼
►
Yeah, like satellite reviewers.
01:19:02
◼
►
Right, and redesigned the magazine.
01:19:04
◼
►
And it became a lot less dense.
01:19:07
◼
►
And the reviews, it was a lot more--
01:19:09
◼
►
they sort of USA Today-ed it up.
01:19:11
◼
►
a lot more graphs and charts and graphics and a lot less dense text.
01:19:17
◼
►
And so if you think that Consumer Reports has gone downhill, just in your mind, there's
01:19:21
◼
►
actually a factual basis for that insofar as a huge amount of their staff that used
01:19:26
◼
►
to be there, long-term people who were there for 10, 20 years or even more, no longer work
01:19:33
◼
►
Number two, their computer testing has never actually been very good in my opinion.
01:19:38
◼
►
So that's just background.
01:19:40
◼
►
But here's the thing, what they say about these new MacBook Pros,
01:19:42
◼
►
maybe the new MacBook Pros get inferior battery life.
01:19:46
◼
►
Let's just say that that's a possibility.
01:19:49
◼
►
What they're saying, though, it doesn't make any sense at all.
01:19:52
◼
►
To test these machines that Apple claims gets 10 hours in whatever
01:19:58
◼
►
Apple's testing is, it ranged from three hours to 18 hours.
01:20:03
◼
►
The 18 hour number is impossible.
01:20:05
◼
►
Numerous people on Twitter pointed out, and I believe it's true,
01:20:09
◼
►
that if you turn on a MacBook Pro and don't open any apps
01:20:13
◼
►
and just set it so that the display doesn't
01:20:16
◼
►
go to sleep automatically, you're
01:20:18
◼
►
not going to get 18 hours of battery life.
01:20:21
◼
►
Just sitting there idle with the screen on as bright
01:20:24
◼
►
as they say it is--
01:20:26
◼
►
Unless he forgets to unplug it for part of that time,
01:20:28
◼
►
it seems incredibly unlikely that that would be
01:20:30
◼
►
the amount of time you get.
01:20:32
◼
►
Obviously, the machines went to sleep or something.
01:20:34
◼
►
I mean, I don't know.
01:20:35
◼
►
But number two, they don't reveal their testing.
01:20:38
◼
►
Now presumably they don't reveal the exact nature
01:20:40
◼
►
of their testing because they don't want to,
01:20:43
◼
►
if they give you repeatable steps
01:20:45
◼
►
of how they test the battery life,
01:20:46
◼
►
then computer makers could maybe somehow game the system.
01:20:51
◼
►
- And that's fair.
01:20:53
◼
►
I mean, Samsung's been caught trying to game things
01:20:54
◼
►
like Geekbench or other benchmark systems, yeah.
01:20:56
◼
►
- But it depends though.
01:20:58
◼
►
See, benchmarks are different because you can,
01:21:02
◼
►
like the benchmark cheating is dreadfully easy
01:21:06
◼
►
in some cases where there's ways that they actually
01:21:10
◼
►
compile code that looks for the compiled code of the benchmark
01:21:14
◼
►
and then just knows to give the right answer
01:21:16
◼
►
without actually going through the actual algorithm.
01:21:20
◼
►
Like, if you happen to know--
01:21:23
◼
►
I mean, just to put it in super layman's terms--
01:21:25
◼
►
if you just happen to know that the benchmark is going
01:21:27
◼
►
to ask what the square root of a particular large number is,
01:21:34
◼
►
you could just hard code the answer
01:21:35
◼
►
that instead of computing the square root,
01:21:37
◼
►
you just say, well, if asking for the square root
01:21:41
◼
►
of this particular large number,
01:21:42
◼
►
just skip ahead to the answer 'cause we already have it.
01:21:45
◼
►
And that's the sort of cheating Samsung's
01:21:47
◼
►
been caught doing, literally.
01:21:48
◼
►
I mean, not on the square root, but on a real example.
01:21:52
◼
►
I don't know how you could do that with battery life.
01:21:55
◼
►
Depending on the test, I don't know.
01:21:59
◼
►
And it's contrary to the way that science works, right?
01:22:04
◼
►
whole point of like publishing something in science is you know you publish in a
01:22:08
◼
►
way that you can get reproducible results. Yeah they're repeatable and the
01:22:12
◼
►
thing that immediately was a red flag to me on there was a lot of them in this
01:22:15
◼
►
article but you know Apple controversially removed the time
01:22:18
◼
►
remaining indicator but before they did that it's always been bad but for this
01:22:23
◼
►
new generation of Macbooks I was and I tweeted them for weeks before it became
01:22:26
◼
►
an issue that I was getting like 16 hours or 14 hours or 18 hours remaining
01:22:31
◼
►
on it when it was clearly not the case.
01:22:33
◼
►
And that those numbers sort of match
01:22:35
◼
►
those sort of made up numbers that the API was spitting out,
01:22:37
◼
►
to me was curious from the get go.
01:22:40
◼
►
- Oh, so I never saw numbers like that,
01:22:42
◼
►
but I never really looked at that number.
01:22:43
◼
►
And I've upgraded the test machines I have here to the
01:22:47
◼
►
12, you know, to 10.12.2, God, I hate that 10.
01:22:52
◼
►
So I can't test it.
01:22:55
◼
►
I was always getting the opposite.
01:22:57
◼
►
I was getting an under representative estimate
01:23:00
◼
►
when I did look.
01:23:02
◼
►
But I think-- but part of it is that I just don't
01:23:04
◼
►
look at that time remaining.
01:23:06
◼
►
I just look at the percentage.
01:23:07
◼
►
I really-- it's just the habit I've gotten into.
01:23:09
◼
►
I'm not trying to--
01:23:10
◼
►
Yeah, it's been known to be wrong for a while.
01:23:12
◼
►
And I was actually joking with someone
01:23:13
◼
►
who makes-- who uses the third party API, which
01:23:15
◼
►
is slightly different, who was just saying,
01:23:17
◼
►
I'm just going to cap it at 10 hours
01:23:18
◼
►
because I can't trust anything it says over that.
01:23:20
◼
►
Oh, so the third party one is different.
01:23:22
◼
►
I didn't know that either.
01:23:23
◼
►
Because I do know that you can still get it--
01:23:26
◼
►
without installing any third party utilities,
01:23:28
◼
►
you can get it out of ActivityMeter.
01:23:29
◼
►
- Yes, that's the Apple one still.
01:23:30
◼
►
- Or not, activity monitor.
01:23:31
◼
►
And there's plenty of third-party utilities.
01:23:36
◼
►
I did laugh when I first found out that Apple,
01:23:40
◼
►
as part of their explanation
01:23:43
◼
►
for how they've improved the battery life
01:23:44
◼
►
on the new MacBook Pros in the 10.12.2 update,
01:23:48
◼
►
that they removed the time remaining.
01:23:51
◼
►
I literally laughed out loud because it looks so bad.
01:23:55
◼
►
- So I know people internally
01:23:56
◼
►
who've been trying to get that thing fixed for years,
01:23:58
◼
►
and then I pointed out again,
01:23:59
◼
►
this time to somebody-- - Fixed or removed?
01:24:01
◼
►
- Fixed, and then I pointed it out to someone on the team
01:24:04
◼
►
when it happened to me again, and they came back
01:24:06
◼
►
and they looked at it and they went, holy shit,
01:24:07
◼
►
why is this like this?
01:24:09
◼
►
And I think that they just didn't have time to fix it.
01:24:11
◼
►
I think maybe it was a harder problem to solve.
01:24:13
◼
►
- And to get it out for 10.12.2,
01:24:17
◼
►
they could, taking it out was obviously easy.
01:24:21
◼
►
That's a really easy software change.
01:24:23
◼
►
Fixing it might be hard, and they're not gonna delay 10.12.2
01:24:28
◼
►
12.2 to wait for the fix and because there's all sorts of other good stuff in in that update
01:24:35
◼
►
that was ready to ship and
01:24:38
◼
►
So, you know, I'm down with it. It's just funny that it can't it's just sad that's sad
01:24:44
◼
►
But it's funny that it that they decided to do it in response to complaints about a new device
01:24:48
◼
►
What they should have done is take it out of Sierra
01:24:51
◼
►
Just take it out
01:24:52
◼
►
You know should have recognized that it was
01:24:54
◼
►
either fix it for Sierra or take it out for Sierra and just say it's a Sierra update.
01:24:59
◼
►
It's like a lot of things at Apple, it doesn't get attention until it does.
01:25:03
◼
►
And it's got the wrong kind.
01:25:06
◼
►
It made me laugh.
01:25:08
◼
►
Anyway, I've told you before the show, I have spent the last five days since Friday
01:25:14
◼
►
creating my own little battery benchmark.
01:25:18
◼
►
Now here's how Consumer Reports claims—I don't have the quote in front of me—
01:25:21
◼
►
But effectively, they say what they do to test the battery is they load a series of web pages
01:25:25
◼
►
Repeatedly over and over until the battery runs out
01:25:28
◼
►
And they run them from a locally hosted web server in their lab
01:25:33
◼
►
Which I think is actually in my opinion is the wrong way to do it
01:25:38
◼
►
I feel I guess they're thinking that if they run it locally they can get more repeatable, but you know that if there's some sort of
01:25:46
◼
►
problem between here and the actual server.
01:25:48
◼
►
But they get like a rogue ad tracker that just spins up more and more trackers and starts killing the processes.
01:25:54
◼
►
But I feel like if you want to test real-world battery life, you should test it on real-world websites.
01:25:59
◼
►
It's, you know, like running off a fake web server in your lab, testing, loading the pages from a fake web server in your lab is
01:26:06
◼
►
like, it's saying like we're not gonna run the real version of Photoshop. We're gonna, you know, run our own simulation of Photoshop.
01:26:13
◼
►
It's you know, why not run the real thing?
01:26:15
◼
►
It's what real people are gonna do so run a recording of a drawing instead of running the program that makes the drawing
01:26:20
◼
►
Now I haven't published this yet because I'm not done and unlike Consumer Reports
01:26:24
◼
►
I don't want to publish it before I'm done, but I can talk about it here on the show. It's a very simple
01:26:27
◼
►
I wrote an Apple script and what it does I took 25 stories from the top 25 stories on tech meme on Friday
01:26:34
◼
►
Just to have real world stories that are supposedly actually pop popular real pep pages that were loaded by real people
01:26:43
◼
►
I don't think it really matters too much what they are, but there are real websites.
01:26:50
◼
►
And then it, one at a time, loads them into new tabs, leaves all of them open, loads a
01:26:58
◼
►
web page, waits five seconds, pages down, waits another five seconds, pages down, waits
01:27:04
◼
►
another five seconds, pages down.
01:27:06
◼
►
After that, goes on to the next URL, does the same thing.
01:27:10
◼
►
seconds with five seconds in between to page down to simulate, you know, reading a website,
01:27:17
◼
►
loading anything else that might roll into the scroll view like an automatic playing
01:27:21
◼
►
video or something like that. Do all 25 of them have 25 tabs open and then at the end of that,
01:27:28
◼
►
close it, start all over again, load the same 25 pages over and over again at a sort of,
01:27:34
◼
►
for, you know, I could take out the five second delays and it like, it's like the screen is just
01:27:39
◼
►
just like flash, flash, flash, and it's going way faster
01:27:42
◼
►
than you can see.
01:27:43
◼
►
In real life, is anybody actually gonna sit there
01:27:45
◼
►
in front of a computer for five hours
01:27:47
◼
►
and every 15 seconds load another webpage and scroll down?
01:27:52
◼
►
No, I mean, it's sort of like simulating like a Coke Fiend
01:27:56
◼
►
on a news binge.
01:27:57
◼
►
But it's not supposed to be like this is simulating
01:28:00
◼
►
a real person in real use.
01:28:01
◼
►
It's just something that I could run on multiple machines
01:28:05
◼
►
to see if the scores come out consistently
01:28:08
◼
►
on multiple runs on the same machine,
01:28:10
◼
►
and to compare one machine to another,
01:28:12
◼
►
and to compare these new ones to my old 2014 MacBook Pro.
01:28:16
◼
►
And the results I got are very different
01:28:19
◼
►
than consumer reports.
01:28:20
◼
►
- So there wasn't like a 15 hour one and a three hour one?
01:28:23
◼
►
- No, if anything, the results have actually gotten slowly
01:28:27
◼
►
but steadily better since Friday on the same machine,
01:28:30
◼
►
which I attribute to the fact that when I first started
01:28:33
◼
►
on Friday, I had just updated to 10 point, 12 point two
01:28:37
◼
►
I had sort of packed these review units up
01:28:38
◼
►
to send back to Apple.
01:28:39
◼
►
I'm glad I didn't.
01:28:40
◼
►
They were all packed up, and most of the,
01:28:43
◼
►
I have three of them.
01:28:44
◼
►
I have one without, I have the MacBook Escape.
01:28:46
◼
►
I have 13-inch with a Core i5 with a touch bar,
01:28:49
◼
►
and I have a 15-inch.
01:28:51
◼
►
I attribute the earlier ones getting worse scores
01:28:57
◼
►
by about an hour to the fact that I did check,
01:29:01
◼
►
not while the benchmark was running,
01:29:03
◼
►
but just while I was setting up and testing it
01:29:05
◼
►
and trying to figure, you know, just making sure
01:29:06
◼
►
that the test did what I thought it did
01:29:08
◼
►
and was logging what I thought it did.
01:29:10
◼
►
What I do is I write to a text file every time
01:29:12
◼
►
through the 25 tabs just to list how long has gone
01:29:15
◼
►
since we started and what's the current battery life
01:29:17
◼
►
as a percentage to make sure it was all sane.
01:29:21
◼
►
I ran it sometimes with Activity Monitor running
01:29:24
◼
►
and I could tell the first time it was running
01:29:26
◼
►
that a lot of the photos demons
01:29:28
◼
►
were running in the background.
01:29:31
◼
►
- I think because I have these machines signed
01:29:34
◼
►
into my iCloud account.
01:29:36
◼
►
And I think that the photo sharing,
01:29:39
◼
►
all the photos I've taken since I wrote my MacBook review
01:29:42
◼
►
in October were new, and so it was doing facial detection
01:29:46
◼
►
and all that stuff on all of the photos
01:29:49
◼
►
that I've taken since October.
01:29:50
◼
►
And we took a vacation over Thanksgiving,
01:29:52
◼
►
and so there was actually a lot of photos.
01:29:54
◼
►
I honestly think that the photo thing was giving,
01:29:57
◼
►
so effectively I got, I don't have the exact numbers here,
01:29:59
◼
►
but I was getting four hours and change on my test
01:30:03
◼
►
on the 13-inch MacBook Pro, the new one with the touch bar.
01:30:06
◼
►
And now, like I ran it last night,
01:30:08
◼
►
I got five and a half hours.
01:30:09
◼
►
But it's all between four hours and change
01:30:15
◼
►
and a maximum of like five.
01:30:18
◼
►
The MacBook Escape got six hours and 20 minutes.
01:30:23
◼
►
So it actually does get, as reported by some,
01:30:27
◼
►
I guess now that I have the script,
01:30:28
◼
►
I can actually report battery life
01:30:29
◼
►
when I write these reviews.
01:30:32
◼
►
But it does get better battery life
01:30:34
◼
►
than the one with the touch bar, which makes some sense,
01:30:37
◼
►
I think, because the touch bar never goes off.
01:30:39
◼
►
This script-- I have the-- obviously,
01:30:40
◼
►
I have the machine set to not dim the display,
01:30:43
◼
►
not dim it automatically.
01:30:45
◼
►
The touch bar is always on, because it seems to the computer
01:30:47
◼
►
that the user is actively, constantly,
01:30:50
◼
►
never stopping to use Safari.
01:30:52
◼
►
Well, and also, I think some people noted this
01:30:54
◼
►
when they were first introduced, that the specs are
01:30:55
◼
►
widely different.
01:30:56
◼
►
And it would be odd that they would get the same battery life
01:30:57
◼
►
according to Apple with those different specs.
01:31:02
◼
►
The other crazy thing from the Consumer Reports story was that they said that switching from
01:31:08
◼
►
Safari to Chrome fixed the problem, that it got consistent results, and it got better
01:31:15
◼
►
So who knows what's going on?
01:31:18
◼
►
I still can't wait to hear the explanation for this.
01:31:21
◼
►
I don't care.
01:31:22
◼
►
There's just no possible way that you can load web pages for 18 hours on one of these
01:31:29
◼
►
But the idea that switching to Chrome would fix it makes no sense whatsoever because Chrome
01:31:33
◼
►
is widely known as a battery hog.
01:31:35
◼
►
One of the single biggest differences between Safari and Chrome on the Mac is that Chrome
01:31:41
◼
►
is not optimized for battery life.
01:31:43
◼
►
And Safari is optimized possibly as its single highest priority for battery life.
01:31:49
◼
►
I don't know that there's a single priority on Apple's WebKit and Safari team higher than
01:31:53
◼
►
maximizing battery life.
01:31:56
◼
►
It is a grade one priority for--
01:31:59
◼
►
- That is their zero regression jihad.
01:32:02
◼
►
And lo and behold, I tried the exact same battery test
01:32:06
◼
►
with Chrome.
01:32:07
◼
►
Same URLs, same delay between scrolling.
01:32:11
◼
►
All I did was change TEL application Safari to,
01:32:16
◼
►
and then here's the repeat, it's a very simple script.
01:32:22
◼
►
I will publish it so that people can reproduce the result.
01:32:24
◼
►
All I did was change the tell target
01:32:26
◼
►
from tell application Safari
01:32:28
◼
►
to tell application Google Chrome.
01:32:30
◼
►
That's the only change.
01:32:32
◼
►
Everything else, actually,
01:32:33
◼
►
there's no other change that's needed
01:32:34
◼
►
to even an Apple script.
01:32:36
◼
►
The command is very simple.
01:32:37
◼
►
It's just open location,
01:32:38
◼
►
and then you put the URL as a string, and it opens.
01:32:41
◼
►
So you don't even have to change that.
01:32:43
◼
►
The battery life, lo and behold,
01:32:45
◼
►
was only 2/3 as long as with Safari.
01:32:49
◼
►
It went from four hours and change
01:32:51
◼
►
to three hours and change,
01:32:52
◼
►
and you divide one over the other,
01:32:54
◼
►
It came out to like 0.65.
01:32:57
◼
►
It was almost exactly 2/3, a 33% drop off in battery
01:33:01
◼
►
switching to Chrome.
01:33:02
◼
►
I always get a new MacBook.
01:33:03
◼
►
I try-- I do Chrome for a day.
01:33:05
◼
►
And without fail, it's an hour to an hour and a half less
01:33:07
◼
►
battery life for me.
01:33:10
◼
►
This exactly fits with the little simple tests that I ran.
01:33:16
◼
►
And I'm not even saying that this is a great-- the world's
01:33:18
◼
►
greatest battery test.
01:33:19
◼
►
All I can say is that it's as close as I
01:33:22
◼
►
can come to approximating what Consumer Reports says they did.
01:33:25
◼
►
And I don't think it's an unreasonable battery test.
01:33:28
◼
►
It seems fairly reasonable to me.
01:33:29
◼
►
What was so odd to me with this whole situation
01:33:31
◼
►
is, one, that Consumer Reports would be happy enough
01:33:33
◼
►
with those results to publish them instead of becoming super
01:33:37
◼
►
inquiring, why am I getting these results?
01:33:39
◼
►
I need to understand these before I try to explain it
01:33:41
◼
►
to somebody else.
01:33:42
◼
►
And also, we find out again on Twitter--
01:33:44
◼
►
and I know Marco has mentioned this before--
01:33:46
◼
►
is that we're really bad with multiple truths.
01:33:48
◼
►
Like, the battery could not live up to Apple's expectations,
01:33:51
◼
►
and it could be shitty tests.
01:33:52
◼
►
Both those things could be true.
01:33:54
◼
►
And Consumer Reports did nothing to sort of convince me
01:33:56
◼
►
that the shitty test part weren't part of it.
01:33:58
◼
►
- I will say though that my tests show
01:34:02
◼
►
that the new MacBook Pros are getting
01:34:04
◼
►
better battery life consistently,
01:34:05
◼
►
at least an hour more than my 2014 13-inch MacBook Pro.
01:34:09
◼
►
Now, that said, my 2014 MacBook Pro,
01:34:12
◼
►
which I personally own, is two years old,
01:34:14
◼
►
almost exactly two years old.
01:34:17
◼
►
And I've used it a lot over two years,
01:34:20
◼
►
and the batteries, two-year-old batteries
01:34:23
◼
►
that have been used for two years do not behave
01:34:25
◼
►
as well as brand new batteries.
01:34:27
◼
►
And I'm quite certain that that very same machine
01:34:31
◼
►
that I own probably would have scored significantly better
01:34:33
◼
►
if I tested it two years ago.
01:34:35
◼
►
So it may not be an Apple,
01:34:37
◼
►
it's an Apples to two-year-old Apples comparison.
01:34:40
◼
►
But I will say it is an hour longer.
01:34:42
◼
►
So if I were to switch today from my 2014 MacBook Pro
01:34:48
◼
►
to the new one with Touch Bar,
01:34:50
◼
►
I would expect to get an hour more battery life of active, active use.
01:34:54
◼
►
Totally. And I mean, there's, there's a lot of things again, to unpack your one,
01:34:57
◼
►
is that Apple famously a few years ago,
01:34:59
◼
►
changed the way they measured battery life and it resulted in significantly
01:35:02
◼
►
better battery estimates. People just remarked that Apple's became super solid,
01:35:05
◼
►
but times keep changing.
01:35:07
◼
►
And I think Apple does have to update these again.
01:35:09
◼
►
And we saw that with iPhone devices recently too,
01:35:11
◼
►
because it's not back like in the Steve jobs days when he did,
01:35:14
◼
►
when he started going through web pages,
01:35:15
◼
►
it was the New York times and apple.com and that's just not how people,
01:35:20
◼
►
don't just check email and the web now anymore, they've got Snapchat and Facebook and Pokemon Go
01:35:26
◼
►
and apps that keep the screen lit up and keep the radios fired and keep GPS on all the time
01:35:30
◼
►
and are significantly higher battery drains and this is what a lot of normal people are using
01:35:35
◼
►
than just looking at web pages or mail. I think the same is true on the Mac depending on which
01:35:39
◼
►
sites you choose to load, these can have, you know, and the site I run is as guilty of this as anybody
01:35:45
◼
►
they'll load a tracker which will load a tracker and every once in a while I get one that just goes
01:35:48
◼
►
15 or 80 levels deep and kills everything.
01:35:51
◼
►
Guiltier than most.
01:35:53
◼
►
Yes, guiltier than most.
01:35:56
◼
►
Maybe my site was the one that Consumer Reports
01:35:58
◼
►
killed the MacBook on.
01:35:59
◼
►
I don't know.
01:36:00
◼
►
I think that that might explain a bit of some
01:36:02
◼
►
of the variability that I've seen in my own testing
01:36:06
◼
►
here is that even loading the same 25 URLs every time,
01:36:10
◼
►
you can get different ad trackers.
01:36:12
◼
►
And you certainly see it.
01:36:14
◼
►
If you ever look in Activity Monitor
01:36:16
◼
►
and you see one Safari process,
01:36:20
◼
►
'cause each tab in modern Safari gets its own process,
01:36:23
◼
►
and you can see them individually in the activity monitor.
01:36:26
◼
►
And if you see one for iMore that's taking
01:36:31
◼
►
1.2 gigabytes of RAM,
01:36:32
◼
►
you're like, well, that's weird,
01:36:35
◼
►
because I've got three iMore tabs open,
01:36:37
◼
►
and only one of them is using this.
01:36:39
◼
►
It's something like that.
01:36:40
◼
►
- Totally, and again, there's no indication
01:36:43
◼
►
that they were, like you said,
01:36:44
◼
►
the photos agent could spin up, or Spotlight Indexer
01:36:48
◼
►
could spin up.
01:36:49
◼
►
And there's various processes that
01:36:50
◼
►
are running in the background that
01:36:51
◼
►
could have profound impacts on what the battery life is.
01:36:53
◼
►
And there was no indication they controlled for that either.
01:36:57
◼
►
So it's a lot of hullabaloo about nothing.
01:37:00
◼
►
And again, as you said that Marco pointed out,
01:37:02
◼
►
that doesn't mean that the battery life on these things
01:37:06
◼
►
But from my testing, it doesn't seem to be bad.
01:37:08
◼
►
And also, it also doesn't put aside the fact
01:37:11
◼
►
that there were definitely bugs in 10.12.1 across the board.
01:37:17
◼
►
And I think, in particular in Safari,
01:37:19
◼
►
there was something going on there.
01:37:22
◼
►
And I've heard from people at Apple
01:37:24
◼
►
that some of the people-- and again, if you're out there
01:37:27
◼
►
and you've got a new MacBook Pro and you've had a really, really
01:37:30
◼
►
sad or disappointing battery life,
01:37:32
◼
►
I'm not saying that that's not true.
01:37:33
◼
►
And I know that there are people out there.
01:37:35
◼
►
I know that there are people at Apple, though,
01:37:37
◼
►
who are 100% convinced, 100% that it's software
01:37:40
◼
►
and that it's easily fixable and will be fixed,
01:37:43
◼
►
and it's not hardware.
01:37:44
◼
►
- That they might have hit a couple edge cases
01:37:46
◼
►
in one of those tests that greatly skewed the results.
01:37:47
◼
►
And again, instead of, and the part to me
01:37:50
◼
►
that I dislike about the modern internet,
01:37:51
◼
►
and it's similar, like when Apple removed
01:37:54
◼
►
the time remaining indicator, the story,
01:37:56
◼
►
we lost the battery life story,
01:37:57
◼
►
it all became about the battery life indicator,
01:37:59
◼
►
and this was about the headline,
01:38:00
◼
►
Consumer Reports Can't Recommend the MacBook.
01:38:02
◼
►
There could be an issue with the battery life,
01:38:04
◼
►
and that gets totally lost.
01:38:05
◼
►
And you got a lot of the same tweets that I did,
01:38:07
◼
►
and when you just raised questions about this,
01:38:09
◼
►
you're called an apologist or something else.
01:38:12
◼
►
But to me, these are legitimate questions
01:38:13
◼
►
because I actually wanna know about the battery life.
01:38:15
◼
►
I really don't care about the rest of it.
01:38:16
◼
►
I just want an answer on that.
01:38:18
◼
►
- Yeah, I agree.
01:38:21
◼
►
So anyway, I think that Consumer Reports blew it on this.
01:38:25
◼
►
Anyway, and you'll hear more from me on the battery test
01:38:27
◼
►
and I will publish the script
01:38:28
◼
►
and people can run it themselves.
01:38:30
◼
►
- And I do hope, and this is my speculation,
01:38:32
◼
►
but I do think that Consumer Reports got a taste
01:38:34
◼
►
for what big attention is
01:38:36
◼
►
because they're battling for relevance now.
01:38:38
◼
►
There's sites like Wirecutter.
01:38:39
◼
►
There's a whole internet out there.
01:38:40
◼
►
It used to be just Consumer Reports,
01:38:42
◼
►
and now they have to compete with a bunch of other sites,
01:38:44
◼
►
and there's Dilution in this industry.
01:38:46
◼
►
And with Antennagate, they saw a ton of attention.
01:38:49
◼
►
And then after that, we got the weird
01:38:50
◼
►
sort of bend gate stuff from them.
01:38:52
◼
►
And then last year, it was the Samsung Galaxy Active
01:38:54
◼
►
water retention.
01:38:56
◼
►
It just feels like they're testing to see
01:38:58
◼
►
where they can regain relevancy with these things.
01:39:00
◼
►
And I think that leads them to published articles
01:39:03
◼
►
that aren't always in the best interest of their consumers.
01:39:05
◼
►
- Yeah, and then one last thing I will point out,
01:39:07
◼
►
And this is the thing where I feel like they most screwed the pooch, is by publishing on
01:39:13
◼
►
Friday when they did, was that they tested multiple machines and got the same inconsistent
01:39:20
◼
►
results on all of them.
01:39:21
◼
►
So I don't put it past the possibility that an early production model of one of these
01:39:28
◼
►
machines could be a lemon and would produce wildly different results.
01:39:32
◼
►
That's certainly possible.
01:39:35
◼
►
But the odds that you would buy three,
01:39:38
◼
►
and all three would exhibit the same bizarre behavior,
01:39:41
◼
►
and like nobody else is seeing wildly divergent battery life
01:39:47
◼
►
like that between runs, I mean, for one,
01:39:52
◼
►
not to suspect that the problem is with the test
01:39:54
◼
►
and not with the machines boggles the mind.
01:39:57
◼
►
Again, if it was just one device and you got that,
01:40:02
◼
►
that seems possible, but three devices?
01:40:05
◼
►
I mean, it's like that scene in Casino
01:40:07
◼
►
when De Niro's berating the guy
01:40:10
◼
►
because three slot machines in a row,
01:40:13
◼
►
they gave out a jackpot,
01:40:14
◼
►
and they didn't suspect that they were being scammed.
01:40:17
◼
►
- No, totally, and again, we have a Nantec,
01:40:19
◼
►
we have Ars Technica, we have a lot of sites
01:40:22
◼
►
that do really, really good work with battery tests,
01:40:24
◼
►
and there's a lot of things
01:40:24
◼
►
that you can check these results with.
01:40:27
◼
►
- All right, let me take a break here
01:40:28
◼
►
and thank our third and final sponsor, Warby Parker.
01:40:31
◼
►
Warby Parker thinks glasses, eyeglasses,
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Their prescription eyeglasses start at 95 bucks,
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including the prescription lenses.
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Here's what you do, you go there,
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browse the site, they've got so many glasses,
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so many eyeglasses to choose from.
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And you pick like five that you like,
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and they will ship 'em right to your door
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with just regular non-prescription lenses in them.
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You get all five.
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Try 'em on, look in the mirror, ask your friends,
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ask your loved ones what you look like, what they think,
01:41:09
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or just make the decision yourself.
01:41:11
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Pick the ones you like the best.
01:41:13
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Order 'em, put the ones back in the,
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◼
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put the sample ones back in the box.
01:41:19
◼
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They already have gave you the label to send it back.
01:41:22
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Just put the label, the new label on the same box,
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send it back.
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prepaid. Couldn't be easier. So you're not no pressure in the store. No, no, you know,
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you're in a real your real house looking in real lighting, getting real opinion, you can
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try them in the morning, try them at night. 100% free, it's free. So if you don't like
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any of them, just pack all five back, send them back and that's it. It is nothing to
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it. At the prices that they sell them at for about 100 bucks a pair, you could get two
01:41:54
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or three pairs of glasses instead of just having one. You know, do it like your watch straps.
01:41:58
◼
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They also sell sunglasses. They start at 95 bucks, including polarized lenses,
01:42:03
◼
►
and with a prescription they start at 175 bucks. All sorts of stuff. It's really, really great.
01:42:10
◼
►
I'm wearing a pair of Warby eyeglasses as I read this. They're, I think, three years old? I don't
01:42:14
◼
►
know, but they're like new. They're in perfect shape. Still like them. Love the Tryon program.
01:42:24
◼
►
I've got another pair upstairs that I just because I like these so much. I got another pair. Just keep
01:42:29
◼
►
them in the box in case I ever break these. Really, if you need eyeglasses, go to warbyparker.com/the
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talk show. Check it out. Get your free home try-ons. Even if you don't need new glasses,
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think about it. Maybe get another pair for 100 bucks. Why not? So go to warbyparker.com/the
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◼
►
talk show and get your free home try-on experience today.
01:42:53
◼
►
We've got to wrap it up soon.
01:42:54
◼
►
I've got dinner plans, Rene.
01:42:55
◼
►
I don't know about you.
01:42:56
◼
►
I know, and you're going to get sick soon.
01:42:59
◼
►
Apologies to Caleb.
01:43:00
◼
►
So let's cover the entire year in five minutes.
01:43:03
◼
►
The year in review, 2016.
01:43:06
◼
►
My thought was, what are your favorite products of the year?
01:43:08
◼
►
And my two favorite products of the year, very easy.
01:43:11
◼
►
Number one, the winner for product of the year
01:43:15
◼
►
And number two, the iPhone 7.
01:43:18
◼
►
I've already talked, I've written,
01:43:19
◼
►
I wrote a huge review of the iPhone 7.
01:43:21
◼
►
I don't need to say why I like it.
01:43:22
◼
►
But I will just point out this.
01:43:26
◼
►
As the time goes on and I get more and more used
01:43:28
◼
►
to my iPhone 7, I really,
01:43:32
◼
►
I do kind of hope that if it's true that they go bezel-less,
01:43:35
◼
►
that the whole device will shrink
01:43:36
◼
►
and it'll become even smaller in my hand.
01:43:38
◼
►
I mean, I'm an iPhone 7 person, not an iPhone 7 Plus.
01:43:41
◼
►
I'd love to have an iPhone SE-sized device,
01:43:44
◼
►
or almost iPhone SE-sized device,
01:43:46
◼
►
and just have the whole thing be a display.
01:43:49
◼
►
But even so, I've been using this 7 size for so long.
01:43:53
◼
►
But I love the little things that they've
01:43:55
◼
►
done differently in this.
01:43:56
◼
►
To call it exactly the same industrial design
01:43:58
◼
►
is just not true.
01:43:59
◼
►
Yes, it's very, very similar.
01:44:01
◼
►
It is familiar.
01:44:02
◼
►
And I will also point out, three months in,
01:44:08
◼
►
that my jet black, used with no case iPhone 7,
01:44:13
◼
►
still looks fantastic.
01:44:14
◼
►
Yes, there are scratches.
01:44:15
◼
►
not just fine, whatever they call them,
01:44:18
◼
►
what do they call those?
01:44:18
◼
►
- Micro abrasions.
01:44:20
◼
►
- There are plenty of micro abrasions
01:44:22
◼
►
which are impossible to see unless you really
01:44:24
◼
►
tilt it exactly to the right and look for it.
01:44:26
◼
►
But there are also, I don't even know when this happened,
01:44:29
◼
►
about an inch down and a half an inch
01:44:32
◼
►
to the right of the Apple logo,
01:44:34
◼
►
there are some serious scratches on it.
01:44:37
◼
►
You can't see them, even this actual scratch scratches,
01:44:40
◼
►
you can't see them unless you really look for it.
01:44:43
◼
►
And I don't care, it's fine.
01:44:46
◼
►
It feels so great in my hand.
01:44:47
◼
►
It is not slippery.
01:44:49
◼
►
It wasn't slippery when it was hot.
01:44:52
◼
►
I've been-- in the three months I've had it,
01:44:53
◼
►
I've been in the tropics.
01:44:55
◼
►
I have been in freezing, sub-freezing, East Coast
01:45:00
◼
►
It's not slippery when your hands are cold.
01:45:02
◼
►
It's not slippery when your hands are hot.
01:45:04
◼
►
It's not slippery at room temperature.
01:45:07
◼
►
And I do-- and I've taken some amazing photographs
01:45:11
◼
►
with the camera.
01:45:12
◼
►
So iPhone 7, my second favorite product of the year.
01:45:15
◼
►
What about you?
01:45:16
◼
►
What's your favorite products of the year?
01:45:17
◼
►
- You know, I would say the iPhone 7 Plus
01:45:19
◼
►
just because I've been on the Plus since it first came out
01:45:21
◼
►
and I just love the larger screen
01:45:23
◼
►
because to me it really,
01:45:24
◼
►
it becomes a primary computing device
01:45:25
◼
►
and I can do everything that my job,
01:45:27
◼
►
almost everything my job needs me to do
01:45:28
◼
►
right from my iPhone.
01:45:30
◼
►
And especially with the camera system,
01:45:32
◼
►
the lens fusion on the iPhone 7 Plus.
01:45:35
◼
►
I used to shoot everything for IMOAR with DSLR
01:45:38
◼
►
and I haven't used one since this phone came out.
01:45:40
◼
►
And yeah, there's some gray in on a lot of the pictures,
01:45:43
◼
►
but I'm taking photos I never thought
01:45:45
◼
►
I would be able to take.
01:45:46
◼
►
It's just photos that I could never have taken
01:45:47
◼
►
with previous generation iPhones.
01:45:49
◼
►
And to me, that's a huge, huge improvement.
01:45:52
◼
►
But because you already picked iPhone,
01:45:53
◼
►
I'm gonna go with the 9.7 inch iPad Pro
01:45:57
◼
►
because it has all of the benefits of the big iPad Pro.
01:46:01
◼
►
It's, but it's even more of sort of this hybrid computer.
01:46:04
◼
►
I know other companies have been making
01:46:05
◼
►
these convertible computers for years,
01:46:07
◼
►
but to me, Apple really nailed it with this
01:46:09
◼
►
because you have the keyboard
01:46:10
◼
►
and you can sit there and in a coffee shop
01:46:12
◼
►
or on an airplane tray table and type,
01:46:15
◼
►
within two or three minutes, I forget I'm typing
01:46:17
◼
►
on a piece of laser ablated taffeta,
01:46:19
◼
►
and I just type, and it's great.
01:46:21
◼
►
And then you can pull it off and sit back
01:46:23
◼
►
and use it like an iPad Air 2.
01:46:24
◼
►
It's the exact same basic size, shape, and weight,
01:46:27
◼
►
and watch movies or play games or do those things
01:46:29
◼
►
and forget that a few seconds ago,
01:46:31
◼
►
it was basically like a little laptop computer.
01:46:33
◼
►
And then you add in the decent camera system on that,
01:46:36
◼
►
which is as good as a previous generation iPhone,
01:46:38
◼
►
the True Tone display, which I hope Apple really refines
01:46:42
◼
►
that and puts it everywhere.
01:46:43
◼
►
And it just, it makes it a really great product.
01:46:46
◼
►
- The True Tone display, I'm a little disappointed
01:46:50
◼
►
that it didn't get into the iPhone 7.
01:46:52
◼
►
And I see why, because it actually requires
01:46:54
◼
►
additional sensors, and that space is at a premium.
01:46:58
◼
►
And, you know, I get it.
01:47:00
◼
►
But I love the True Tone display so much.
01:47:03
◼
►
And I thought that the tell was when they introduced it
01:47:07
◼
►
back in March, Schiller said, "Once you see it,
01:47:08
◼
►
you can't do without it."
01:47:11
◼
►
I thought that meant it was coming in the iPhone.
01:47:13
◼
►
- And maybe it was back then.
01:47:15
◼
►
- Yeah, maybe, I don't know.
01:47:16
◼
►
But it's one of those neat ways that,
01:47:19
◼
►
in the old days, I mean old days,
01:47:23
◼
►
but the early days of the iPad,
01:47:25
◼
►
the iPhone was always a full step ahead.
01:47:27
◼
►
It was the first to have everything.
01:47:29
◼
►
First to get the new A series, whatever,
01:47:31
◼
►
first to get Touch ID.
01:47:34
◼
►
With the iPad Pro, the iPad is sort of, in some ways,
01:47:37
◼
►
a half a step ahead of the iPhone, right?
01:47:39
◼
►
The iPhone right now, as we speak,
01:47:41
◼
►
has the newer A series processor
01:47:43
◼
►
and does have a better camera.
01:47:45
◼
►
But it's the 9.7 inch iPad Pro
01:47:47
◼
►
that has the True Tone display.
01:47:49
◼
►
And the True Tone is not a gimmick.
01:47:51
◼
►
It is a real thing.
01:47:53
◼
►
It bothers me when I use it at night in particular
01:47:59
◼
►
and then look at my iPhone
01:48:00
◼
►
'cause it makes my iPhone look like it's miscolored.
01:48:03
◼
►
I was hoping they'd figure out some great way
01:48:04
◼
►
to use the sensors on the iPad Mini to say,
01:48:06
◼
►
if you have, sorry, the iPad Pro, if you had it,
01:48:08
◼
►
it would just copy that display profile
01:48:10
◼
►
to all the other devices that you have on your account.
01:48:13
◼
►
- Yeah, iPad Pro is a great device.
01:48:15
◼
►
The other thing I think that is historically,
01:48:18
◼
►
you know, if we wanna listen to this,
01:48:19
◼
►
if somebody's listening to this 10 years in the future,
01:48:22
◼
►
like, to me, the iPad Pro is an inflection point
01:48:27
◼
►
where their A series ARM processors
01:48:31
◼
►
past Intel's low power processors,
01:48:35
◼
►
the ones used in the regular MacBook.
01:48:37
◼
►
The iPad Pro, I know it's, you know,
01:48:40
◼
►
Apple's to orange is because it's iOS versus Mac OS,
01:48:43
◼
►
but the fact that like you can get,
01:48:45
◼
►
you get better Geekbench scores on the iPad
01:48:48
◼
►
compared to the MacBook is in hindsight,
01:48:51
◼
►
I really think it's an inflection point
01:48:53
◼
►
because I think it's only going to get,
01:48:55
◼
►
it's gonna diverge even more.
01:48:58
◼
►
And I, you know, we don't have time for discussion
01:49:00
◼
►
of whether Apple's ever going to switch to those chips
01:49:02
◼
►
in the MacBooks.
01:49:03
◼
►
But given where the iPad started in 2011 or 2010,
01:49:11
◼
►
where it was--
01:49:12
◼
►
I mean, there was all sorts of things
01:49:13
◼
►
to love about the original iPad.
01:49:15
◼
►
It was a popular product.
01:49:16
◼
►
It was useful.
01:49:18
◼
►
But you'd never say, well, it's faster than a Mac.
01:49:22
◼
►
And this one, with the latest generation MacBook,
01:49:25
◼
►
the M3 version, was choking on a single stream of 4K video
01:49:29
◼
►
me where the iPad Pro could fly on three streams.
01:49:33
◼
►
And you just never, you know, one thing, and I want, you know, just to go back to the previous
01:49:37
◼
►
segment where I, you know, why use loading a bunch of tabs over and over again as a benchmark?
01:49:45
◼
►
It is A) something real people do is load pages and web browser tabs, but B) it's easy
01:49:52
◼
►
to forget that rendering web pages is computationally expensive.
01:49:57
◼
►
It is really, really like WebKit and Chrome and those things.
01:50:02
◼
►
They do an incredible amount of--
01:50:04
◼
►
it's CPU intensive to render HTML, at least modern HTML,
01:50:07
◼
►
with all the JavaScript and everything that's going on.
01:50:11
◼
►
And you see it on the iPad Pro.
01:50:13
◼
►
Like when you browse the web on the iPad Pro,
01:50:15
◼
►
it's like it just feels fast.
01:50:16
◼
►
Whereas in the early years of the iPad,
01:50:18
◼
►
it was nice to read web pages on the iPad,
01:50:21
◼
►
but it wasn't nice to load web pages on the iPad.
01:50:23
◼
►
Our old checkerboard friend that when it couldn't keep up,
01:50:26
◼
►
would show you that until it finally rendered the page.
01:50:28
◼
►
And now I never see that.
01:50:31
◼
►
And AirPods, my number one is AirPods, which I can't--
01:50:36
◼
►
I still have to do a review.
01:50:37
◼
►
And I was sort of waiting for production ones.
01:50:41
◼
►
I was uneasy with the emphasis Apple placed on the--
01:50:45
◼
►
these are pre-production prototypes on the ones
01:50:47
◼
►
they gave us back in October.
01:50:49
◼
►
I was uneasy writing an authoritative review
01:50:52
◼
►
about them, especially once it became clear
01:50:55
◼
►
that there was some sort of delay,
01:50:56
◼
►
that we didn't know what it was, would the production ones
01:50:59
◼
►
be different?
01:51:01
◼
►
I have to say, in real life, I think
01:51:03
◼
►
the battery life is a little worse on the production ones.
01:51:06
◼
►
But it could be a placebo effect.
01:51:08
◼
►
I don't know.
01:51:09
◼
►
I don't know if you've noticed that.
01:51:10
◼
►
But I would say it's just a little bit--
01:51:13
◼
►
it's more like--
01:51:15
◼
►
I don't know.
01:51:16
◼
►
Maybe it's like the actual AirPods
01:51:19
◼
►
seem to run down a little bit more noticeably.
01:51:22
◼
►
But the case seems to hold the same amount of a charge.
01:51:25
◼
►
Yeah, I spent a lot of time trying to figure out differences.
01:51:27
◼
►
And I was like, is this magnet just a little bit magnet-y?
01:51:29
◼
►
Or maybe other ones weren't out.
01:51:30
◼
►
No, no, no, René, magnets don't wear out.
01:51:31
◼
►
It's just a little bit more--
01:51:32
◼
►
and just trying to figure out what was different.
01:51:33
◼
►
But my usage has been almost identical.
01:51:35
◼
►
I can't think of anything that's significantly different for me.
01:51:38
◼
►
But the battery life I'm getting on these production model ones
01:51:43
◼
►
is still terrific and so much better than the old Beats
01:51:47
◼
►
pre-W1 Bluetooth headphones I had.
01:51:51
◼
►
It's mind-boggling.
01:51:52
◼
►
And those I had to charge my phone every day.
01:51:55
◼
►
And if I didn't, I wouldn't be able to get through a run
01:51:57
◼
►
with the charge.
01:51:58
◼
►
These, I haven't plugged them in.
01:52:00
◼
►
I've been testing it.
01:52:02
◼
►
How long these last?
01:52:02
◼
►
I haven't plugged the lightning into the case.
01:52:05
◼
►
Let's see where we're at here.
01:52:06
◼
►
So right now, I think after like five days,
01:52:11
◼
►
my AirPods are at 100% and the case is at 15%.
01:52:14
◼
►
So I kind of have to plug it in soon, I guess.
01:52:16
◼
►
But I could take the AirPods out right now
01:52:18
◼
►
and they're at 100%.
01:52:19
◼
►
And I haven't plugged this in in days and days and days.
01:52:21
◼
►
- I'm the same way.
01:52:22
◼
►
My case is I think it's 7% right now,
01:52:24
◼
►
but I alternate too because I usually listen
01:52:25
◼
►
to podcasts or audiobooks.
01:52:26
◼
►
I almost always only have one in a year at a time,
01:52:29
◼
►
and I just alternate between them, and it lasts for days.
01:52:32
◼
►
- All right, I have an important tip for all of you
01:52:34
◼
►
who have AirPods already,
01:52:35
◼
►
or who are waiting for them to arrive.
01:52:38
◼
►
I've seen, one of the complaints I've seen now
01:52:39
◼
►
that they've shipped to real people
01:52:40
◼
►
is I've seen people say that they're hard
01:52:42
◼
►
to get out of the case,
01:52:44
◼
►
because they're a little, they're slippery white plastic,
01:52:47
◼
►
and people are pinching them and pulling them,
01:52:49
◼
►
and the magnet that sucks them in is fighting them.
01:52:52
◼
►
And let's be a little gross,
01:52:53
◼
►
after you use them for a while,
01:52:54
◼
►
they pick up some earwax, right?
01:52:56
◼
►
They're only gonna get slipperier.
01:52:59
◼
►
Don't pinch them to take them out of the case.
01:53:00
◼
►
Put your finger, like your index finger or your thumb,
01:53:03
◼
►
right in the middle between the two.
01:53:05
◼
►
In other words, put your finger right over the light
01:53:07
◼
►
that lights up and just press them to the outside
01:53:10
◼
►
and they just pop right out.
01:53:12
◼
►
You don't have to pinch.
01:53:13
◼
►
It's a one finger thing.
01:53:14
◼
►
You just put your finger in the middle,
01:53:16
◼
►
push to the side and they just pop right out.
01:53:18
◼
►
So there's my hot tip of the day for AirPod users.
01:53:22
◼
►
I love these things.
01:53:23
◼
►
They are exactly, they're everything I love about Apple.
01:53:27
◼
►
It's the best, purest Apple product I can think of in years.
01:53:31
◼
►
Everything about them.
01:53:32
◼
►
The way they work, the way they pair,
01:53:34
◼
►
the integration between the hardware and the software,
01:53:36
◼
►
the way that they've solved the pairing problem,
01:53:39
◼
►
the way they've improved it,
01:53:40
◼
►
the way the case is sort of the most
01:53:44
◼
►
Johnny Ive designed thing I've ever,
01:53:47
◼
►
I think of anything that Apple's ever made, ever.
01:53:50
◼
►
People have pointed out that you turn it around,
01:53:52
◼
►
it looks a little bit like Eve from Wall-E,
01:53:54
◼
►
which Johnny Ive consulted on.
01:53:56
◼
►
The tactile sensation, the fun of just clicking the case
01:54:02
◼
►
and having it shut.
01:54:03
◼
►
And briefly, briefly, there was a thing that,
01:54:07
◼
►
do you see this thing this week
01:54:08
◼
►
where people have speculated that the case
01:54:11
◼
►
was originally going to use USB-C instead of lightning?
01:54:14
◼
►
Because when you put the lightning cable in,
01:54:17
◼
►
you can kind of see the sides a little bit of,
01:54:21
◼
►
you know, like the slot.
01:54:23
◼
►
And if you just hold a USB-C cable up,
01:54:27
◼
►
it looks like it's the same width.
01:54:28
◼
►
And people are like, "Whoa!"
01:54:29
◼
►
And so I guess the idea is that Apple made millions
01:54:32
◼
►
of these cases with a slot meant for USB-C
01:54:35
◼
►
and then changed their mind. - No, I hate this.
01:54:37
◼
►
I hate this so much, 'cause this is what's exactly wrong
01:54:39
◼
►
with the internet.
01:54:40
◼
►
No, no, if you actually take the AirPod
01:54:43
◼
►
and you put an iPhone underneath it,
01:54:44
◼
►
it is exactly the same port.
01:54:48
◼
►
You don't see the gap between the sides of the cable
01:54:51
◼
►
and the slot on the iPhone because the iPhone's darker.
01:54:54
◼
►
It's the fact that this is white that makes it noticeable.
01:54:58
◼
►
But people blog that.
01:54:59
◼
►
I mean, someone put that up on Twitter,
01:55:00
◼
►
and I had to go and write an article saying,
01:55:02
◼
►
no, if you actually look at it.
01:55:04
◼
►
And I had to go to bed an hour late that night
01:55:06
◼
►
because I had to write that article.
01:55:08
◼
►
The other thing is that the width matches up exactly
01:55:11
◼
►
with the width of USB-C, which is curious,
01:55:14
◼
►
except for the fact that USB-C is just a vaguely lightning
01:55:18
◼
►
So of course it's similar.
01:55:19
◼
►
But because it's exactly the same width,
01:55:21
◼
►
then it means it's not wide enough for it to fit.
01:55:25
◼
►
The hole has to be wider than the plug.
01:55:28
◼
►
And please don't try to force it because it'll be very bad.
01:55:31
◼
►
Don't force it.
01:55:32
◼
►
And then the second factor is that height wise,
01:55:35
◼
►
in other words, how thick--
01:55:37
◼
►
not how wide the plug is, but how thick it is,
01:55:42
◼
►
It's nowhere near wide enough for USB-C.
01:55:46
◼
►
You can't even fit the corner of a USB-C cable into this socket.
01:55:50
◼
►
It's nowhere near wide enough.
01:55:52
◼
►
It's complete nonsense.
01:55:53
◼
►
I'm not going to waste any more time on it.
01:55:55
◼
►
There's absolutely zero truth to this.
01:55:57
◼
►
And you just prove it just by trying
01:56:00
◼
►
to fit the corner of a USB-C thing in there.
01:56:02
◼
►
But the second thing is that if Apple switched from USB-C
01:56:05
◼
►
to Lightning, they would have changed the size of the port
01:56:10
◼
►
in hardware.
01:56:11
◼
►
It's not like they make 50 million cases before they make 50 million internals.
01:56:16
◼
►
It's, no, it is exactly the lightning port that they have used for devices going back
01:56:21
◼
►
from the beginning of lightning. There is no difference. It's a nonsense. It's equivalent
01:56:26
◼
►
of fake news. It's, I forget what Fraser Spears called it, "manufactured controversy."
01:56:30
◼
►
Right. Yes, exactly. Everybody loves a conspiracy, even if the conspiracy is that they switched from
01:56:35
◼
►
USB-C to lightning. Yeah, no, never happened. And I gotta imagine how hard the eyes rolled at Apple
01:56:41
◼
►
and if this even made, they probably just looked
01:56:43
◼
►
at the internet and closed it at that point.
01:56:45
◼
►
- All right, one more product from you, what do you got?
01:56:48
◼
►
- WatchOS 3, I think, just to get on the software side,
01:56:50
◼
►
because it took even the original Apple Watch,
01:56:53
◼
►
the Series Zero, and made it so much more responsive
01:56:55
◼
►
and so much more alive, and yes, they spent battery life
01:56:58
◼
►
and memory to do it, but it sort of showed the refinement
01:57:01
◼
►
of what WatchOS could be when they focused down on it.
01:57:04
◼
►
- Yep, that's a great pick.
01:57:06
◼
►
I think that as a top four, that that is,
01:57:08
◼
►
at the year in review, I think it's a perfect top four.
01:57:11
◼
►
I probably wouldn't have picked watchOS 3
01:57:13
◼
►
just 'cause it wouldn't have popped into my mind,
01:57:15
◼
►
but once you said it, I was like, oh yes, definitely.
01:57:18
◼
►
And I think that the fact that it made
01:57:20
◼
►
the original Series Zero watches so much better
01:57:24
◼
►
is the best example of it.
01:57:25
◼
►
It's that it's not just an improvement for the new hardware,
01:57:27
◼
►
but that if you already own an Apple Watch,
01:57:29
◼
►
my recommendation is strongly no,
01:57:31
◼
►
there's no reason for you to buy a new one.
01:57:33
◼
►
Yes, the new ones are a nice improvement,
01:57:35
◼
►
especially the brighter displays,
01:57:37
◼
►
but unless your biggest complaint
01:57:38
◼
►
with your original Apple Watch
01:57:39
◼
►
is that you can't read the display in sunlight,
01:57:42
◼
►
if that's a frequent problem for you,
01:57:43
◼
►
the new one might be worth it,
01:57:45
◼
►
but that's the one and only reason.
01:57:47
◼
►
- I'll add one more, and that is the 38 millimeter.
01:57:48
◼
►
If you have trouble getting a day of battery life
01:57:50
◼
►
with workouts, the 38 millimeter Series 2
01:57:52
◼
►
is much better for workouts.
01:57:54
◼
►
- Yeah, that was a problem,
01:57:56
◼
►
and maybe watchOS 3 didn't solve it,
01:57:58
◼
►
but anyway, it's a terrific update,
01:58:00
◼
►
because it not just fixes things,
01:58:01
◼
►
doesn't just make things better,
01:58:02
◼
►
but it really shows a thorough rethinking
01:58:06
◼
►
of the way that everything about the interface of the watch.
01:58:10
◼
►
And it was involved them humbly stepping back
01:58:14
◼
►
from some things.
01:58:16
◼
►
Like, no, I guess the hardware button
01:58:17
◼
►
shouldn't just be a way to doodle your friends.
01:58:21
◼
►
Totally, yeah.
01:58:23
◼
►
So anyway, that's a great pick.
01:58:26
◼
►
Anything else, Rene?
01:58:28
◼
►
I mean, it was a jam-packed year,
01:58:31
◼
►
and there's still a few days left.
01:58:35
◼
►
I'm worried.
01:58:37
◼
►
As we speak, the news of the day is the sad passing
01:58:39
◼
►
of Carrie Fisher.
01:58:41
◼
►
And so with the way things are going with George Michael
01:58:44
◼
►
and Carrie Fisher, it's like, I really
01:58:47
◼
►
hope there is no more news for the remainder of the year.
01:58:50
◼
►
Because so far, the year-end news
01:58:53
◼
►
has been nothing but absolute garbage.
01:58:56
◼
►
Just the worst.
01:58:57
◼
►
The worst that the universe can dump on us.
01:59:00
◼
►
I made a comment on Twitter yesterday
01:59:01
◼
►
that I'm an optimist because I have to be.
01:59:03
◼
►
Otherwise, I just assumed that everyone was fleeing and that's the only possible explanation I have anymore
01:59:07
◼
►
Carrie Fisher seemed like a wonderful person and and the fact that it's
01:59:12
◼
►
Well, I mean, I love the movies
01:59:15
◼
►
She's very funny
01:59:16
◼
►
But the fact that she wore her mental illness and her fights with that with that on her sleeve just was like proud of it
01:59:25
◼
►
It's so great and I've seen so many people on Twitter who maybe have to deal with some issues along those lines
01:59:31
◼
►
That what how amazing it was to have one of the most well-known actresses in the world
01:59:37
◼
►
Just be out there as yeah, I'm bipolar and you know
01:59:40
◼
►
That that's deal with it
01:59:43
◼
►
instead of you know from
01:59:45
◼
►
Decades past where that would be like a source of shame. What a wonderful person in a wonderful life and what a horrendous
01:59:52
◼
►
Horrendous loss. Yeah, I heard a die at the age of 60. She was an inspiration in so many ways
01:59:59
◼
►
Princess Leia was just one a very small part of what she contributed. I
02:00:02
◼
►
Can't help it and again, I don't mean to make light of her dying but as a Star Wars nerd you can't help but think too
02:00:11
◼
►
Good God, this is going to change the the new trilogy. Yeah, I
02:00:15
◼
►
Wonder what they're gonna do
02:00:18
◼
►
Yeah, I mean general again. I was in many ways the full the fullness of that character, right?
02:00:23
◼
►
And how weird is it gonna be next year going to see episode 8 where she's in it?
02:00:28
◼
►
it and how sad that is.
02:00:32
◼
►
I don't know. I'm trying to think.
02:00:34
◼
►
I guess there was the Fast and Furious movie where Paul Weller died in a car accident.
02:00:40
◼
►
In between filming, I guess they weren't finished filming it.
02:00:43
◼
►
They had to bring his brothers into,
02:00:45
◼
►
he apparently had some brothers that looked like him and they came in.
02:00:50
◼
►
>> Brandon Lee and the Crow.
02:00:52
◼
►
I mean, there's very few examples.
02:00:54
◼
►
>> It's just going to be a real kick in. I mean,
02:00:55
◼
►
forget about whatever it means for episode nine,
02:00:57
◼
►
whether she was going to be in it or not. But it's just going to be what a kick in the pants is going
02:01:00
◼
►
to be again in a year when episode eight comes out. And all of a sudden, the first time you see
02:01:04
◼
►
her on screen, there's that sinking feeling in your gut of, you know, who knows? Presumably,
02:01:11
◼
►
I'm just guessing. I have no idea. No spoilers. This is just a guess. But presumably she's going
02:01:15
◼
►
to see Luke in the movie and there's going to be like a hug and wow, they haven't seen each other
02:01:19
◼
►
in forever. And it's supposed to be this happy moment in the film. And meanwhile, I'll be in the
02:01:23
◼
►
theater like ready to crawl it yeah because she's dead and just even just
02:01:27
◼
►
her twitter commentary was absolutely priceless it's a i
02:01:30
◼
►
could you read it i had such a hard time reading it was almost like to me like
02:01:33
◼
►
deciphering a puzzle i i almost enjoyed it like like solving
02:01:36
◼
►
like a little mini five by five word word game well as you said i mean
02:01:40
◼
►
she she sacrificed her privacy to try to help
02:01:43
◼
►
people and that's incredibly noble she used to for those who don't know her
02:01:47
◼
►
tweets she'd substitute like every emoji possible including
02:01:53
◼
►
like the word combination ones like her or her tweets are like this weird mishmash of pros and
02:01:58
◼
►
emoji. Yeah incredibly forthright though. Yeah well happy new year to you. Happy new year. Happy
02:02:05
◼
►
holidays. Thank you for doing this. Thanks. It's become a mini tradition to do the year in review
02:02:10
◼
►
with you. Thank you. I love it every year. Well I'll see you soon I hope. Absolutely.
02:02:16
◼
►
All right thank you René. All right thanks John.