36: Stockpiling the Nuclear Weapons of Design War
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This episode of the talk show is sponsored in part by audible find out more at audiblepodcast.com
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The talk show
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Oh malek what a week yes there is and it's not even over yet
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I'm just surprised. Uh, it's only friday. I'm just waiting for something else to happen tomorrow
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I'm not even sure what the biggest news of the week is. I think it's probably the the facebook home
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facebook phone
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But I don't know. There's also the the the webkit. Um
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I don't know. What do you want to call it a divorce between apple and google where google sort of
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Taking their half a webkit and going their own way
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I think those two stories are pretty much the same story
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of google versus apple
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the narrative you and I have been talking about for a very long time.
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I wouldn't think of the two events very separately.
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I think the Facebook home story is essentially another assault by the Android ecosystem on
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Apple right I mean I don't know if you read all those interviews you know
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Zuckerberg gave to all the print publications by fortune no I didn't
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actually and so he's basically talking about like how easy it is to innovate on
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Android and how open it is and then they have a great relationship with Apple but
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there are constraints, which is kind of very passive aggressive, classic Harvard way of
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saying, you know, we got some issues we need to resolve.
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Well, and I do think it's, it's almost surprising, the level to which Facebook home as just
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software is able to sort of redefine the Android experience. I mean, and I know, I make fun of it
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over and over again. The whole Android is open mantra. But here's an example where it really
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it really is like it's at it's designed at a level where an app that you just download from the Play
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Store can once you you know you granted a bunch of permissions which I think is a lot more broad
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than the typical app you download from the Play Store. But once you say okay this I'm going to
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allow this to do these things your your phone interface is really completely redefined.
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And, you know, it's very, very much the case that you cannot do anything like that on iOS.
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I mean, a part of me says, "Thank God," you know, because what I don't want is Facebook
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controlling my user experience on my phone.
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I mean, I'm sorry.
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I would rather trust Cobra, you know, in my pocket than, you know, Facebook.
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And, you know, I'm no big fan of Android, but I will say this, though.
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I do think it's to Android's credit, and I think it's a lesson learned from the PC decade
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of the '90s and maybe even the 2000s, that even, let's say, and I don't know this for
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sure because it's not out yet.
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It doesn't hit the Play Store until the 12th, and the Android phone I have here is, I think
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it's a Galaxy Nexus, and I don't think that's on their list of supported phones.
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so I probably won't be able to try it.
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But, you know, it is still a download from the Play Store.
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So if you download it and you don't like
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what it's done to your phone, you can uninstall it.
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You can delete the app and go back.
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As opposed to the dark days of, you know,
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PCs and especially Windows in the 90s,
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where you might install, I don't know,
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browser toolbars and stuff like that,
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and you have no idea how to uninstall them.
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- That's true.
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I mean, I would give you that.
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I think the other issue which we don't talk about often with the Android is that it allows
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you to customize everything to the system level and Facebook is taking advantage of
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that and creating an experience which is very similar to how they see the world.
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And I wonder if this is something which becomes a trend where successful companies like Facebook,
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like Twitter, like Spotify start to layer their own usability interface on top of Android.
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And what Google does about it would be interesting to see because when I looked at the Facebook
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home I was at the event yesterday I looked at it and I said you know it's
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only a matter of time before Facebook launches its own OS it's only a matter
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of time before Google brings Android back into the you know into the cage I
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think it's getting too crazy for them you know if Samsung is running away with
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one version of Android and Amazon did their own thing and you know now I think
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I think Facebook is going to try and do their own thing.
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I just think they said at the event
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that they will be upgrading this every month
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with growing regularity.
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And I was like, wait, this is essentially
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just a Trojan horse for a full OS.
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I'll give it 18 months.
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- Well, and I will say this.
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I mean, I invited you to be on this show yesterday,
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but it was mainly because I saw that after the event
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They had a Q&A, and their credit for having a Q&A with the press.
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Apple often usually doesn't.
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But I saw that you were pressing them on this exact issue, this, "Come on, this is the first
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step towards your own operating system."
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And they didn't even really...
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They didn't really address it directly, but they didn't really...
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I thought their answers to it were kind of interesting, because it wasn't a denial, that's
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You know one thing I was quite enjoying it see how well-trained Mark has become in terms
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of media doesn't even acknowledge the question and answers with what he wants to answer but
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I tried and they you know the limit the limit of time is always an issue but I'm fairly
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convinced that this is just an opening salvo and they have to do it.
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If they are investing so much time and energy in trying to create this user experience on
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Android, it makes perfect sense for them to go deeper.
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I tell you, they may have been working on an OS level program in the background and
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the reason they are not launching it just yet is that it's not mature enough because
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But it takes a lot more to build an operating system.
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I mean, it took Google a few years.
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It took Apple many, many years to get it done right.
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And Apple is in the business of OS,
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and Google is in the business of building operating systems.
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I will say this.
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I have spoken to executives at Apple, I mean, really high up.
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And they see iOS-- and this is even just from your-- even
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today, they see it as a continuous effort dating back to 1988, 1989, and the original
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next step operating system.
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And in terms of things like graphics performance, the smoothness of animation and font rendering
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and stuff like that, and certain technical advantages that iOS has had over Android and
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other competitors all along, they see that not as something that they've been working
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on since 2005 or 2006 when they started working on the iPhone, but as something that they
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dates back to 1989. I mean it is hard stuff.
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Yeah, it is. And you know, I will give the Facebook guys full credit for being relentless
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too. I think there is a little bit Microsoft in that company and they are just, they just
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don't like giving up.
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Well, and I, and the thing that you have me convinced of in terms of this angle that this
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This is just an opening salvo in terms of a broader mobile initiative from Facebook.
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And I think it's very clever, and I think it shows – it's a clever way, like you
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said, that if a full operating system under their control – maybe something – maybe
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still something based on Android, but something more like what Amazon's done, a fork – if
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it's not ready yet, this is a very – this strategy of doing this first, doing a home
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home screen first that you can install on five very popular Android phones and ship
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a new phone from HTC that'll be in AT&T stores later this month, right, is a great way to
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ship something as soon as possible, you know, in that mantra of, you know, minimum viable
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Like what's the minimum viable mobile operating system that Facebook could ship?
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And home screen might be it.
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It's a way to ship early.
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I think the other thing, if you really look at it, John,
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they are, they are basically, they did something
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which is quite brilliant.
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They tore, they gave the middle finger to Google
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in a big way, and yet at the same time, they kept saying,
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you know, we love Google.
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They have never said in the past that, hey Google,
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you're great, they're open, we have a, you know,
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we really applaud what you're doing.
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The narrative on Facebook is that Google sucks, right?
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And then suddenly they wake up and like,
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"Ooh, we are saying all these nice things about Google."
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And my view is, well, you're just trying to hide
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what's the reality, right?
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Maybe I'm a little bit too cynical or too old
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for this industry, but that's how I read it.
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The second thing which I would say is that
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there also, Google's big play was Google+ on the web.
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on the mobile, right?
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That's their social play.
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And here comes Facebook,
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add the social layer on top of Android and says,
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"Great guys, to help with you and your Google Plus,
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"here is how we do social on your platform."
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And I think that is what is going to make Google
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kind of have a little bit of a second thought
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as to like what should they do about Facebook and Android
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and how open they should keep it.
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I do think, and I've seen it on Twitter and I've seen it elsewhere, I saw Horace Deju
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of ASIMCO speculating along the same lines of, "Does this..."
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I think Google was already being prodded in this direction of, "Hey, have we given competitors
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too much by making Android this open?
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Too much of a leg up."
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Where would Amazon be in tablets if it were not for the fact that Android is open source?
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Have we given away too much? You can't help but think given the, it's not even implicit,
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it's explicit. Everybody knows that Larry Page is seriously got Google+ as one of his
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primary objectives for the next few years at Google, right? And that Facebook might
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be their top competitor, even more than Apple, more than, you know, the most direct competitor
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maybe. And now they've given their most direct competitor this this opportunity.
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You have to wonder whether they're they're reconsidering what that's going to mean for
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the next major version of Android. It'd be fun to see what happens. I'm just like almost giddy
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with delight to just write the next story. Whatever happens will be pretty awesome.
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And on similar lines, I wrote a little bit earlier this week, but I played off a report
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by Nicholas Carlson in Business Insider on Andy Rubin's departure as Android lead.
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And that it's—nobody's on the record, unfortunately, but it really seems more and more that what
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happened to him is exactly what happened to Scott Forstall at Apple, which is that he
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he got pushed out. He didn't just decide to step down. His little do another moonshot
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for Google thing is really just a gardening leave where he's waiting for options to vest
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or something like that or non-competes to expire.
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Dr. Ahmad Sairam. I would not disagree with you. I've heard the same story from multiple
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sources that he got pushed out mostly because he was very difficult to work with.
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All right, I mean like again the one phrase I heard from somebody was quote-unquote Larry was sick of the fighting
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Yeah, and the thing that's so telling about that and is that the fighting was with
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Correct me if I'm pronouncing wrong Sundar
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Pichai Pichai
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The chrome lead who took over Android and that's really when you read between the lines the biggest tell that this was not Andy
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Ruben's idea because I
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And a couple of people said the same thing, that Pichai is the last guy Andy Rubin would
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have wanted to take over Android, because he's the guy he was fighting with all the
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Or one of the guys he was fighting with all the time.
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I think it was a very explicit message which went out to the rest of the company, is that
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you do what is necessary for Google.
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This is why I am convinced that the Android gets brought back to the farm.
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out there too much.
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I've said this for years.
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And just not-- it's not even like the details of it.
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It's just a general feel, like an emotional feel,
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that Android, to me, always felt like an independent company
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that Google happens to own.
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Not part of Google.
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Everything from their graphic design to--
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I don't know, there's just so much about it
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that it just did not seem aligned with the company,
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other than the fact that it ships with a bunch of Google services, you know, as apps in part
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of the default app set.
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And I think that that's definitely the message that I get is that's going to change, and
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that the next major version of Android is going to be a lot more Googley.
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You know, the talking about the next version of Android being more Googley, I would say
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It's interesting that the Chrome OS and Android look so much similar when their purposes are
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entirely different.
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And I just wonder what is the unified experience look like when these two projects actually
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are run by the same guy.
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It'll be pretty fun to see.
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And I'm actually pretty excited about what Google is doing.
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Not entirely as somebody who's going to end up spending his time on Android, but just
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to see them make these moves is at least interesting.
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They're not being boring compared to--
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Oh, no, that's definitely the case.
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And I think some people overread into my taste in the fact that I generally prefer iOS over
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Android in most design senses.
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That doesn't mean that I don't look at Android with open eyes and appreciate a lot of the
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stuff that they're doing.
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And I agree with you.
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Especially now that it's under one person, I do wonder where that's going to go with
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Chrome as an OS and Android as an OS.
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You know, this brings me to the bigger challenge, which is you and I have talked about this
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in the past.
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Like what does Apple do?
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Like this is a time when the idea of operating systems,
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user interfaces, everything is up for grabs.
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And it seems like our guys are just like
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kind of, seem to be a little stuck, a little static.
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I don't know what you think about that.
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I mean you're very close to the design thinking
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Apple and iPhone and iOS? Well, I don't know. I don't think that there's as
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much need for new stuff in iOS, major new stuff, as some people do, because I don't
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know. And again, I think I talked about this on my show a couple weeks ago, but I
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think it's in a sense that I'm getting older, that I'm no longer as
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infatuated with new for the sake of newness. Like, I saw some people yesterday
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I saw people and immediately after the Facebook home launch
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bemoaning the fact that
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That the that that little drag your face up left or right thing
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Seemed so much more cooler than than anything in iOS
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And it is cool, and it's definitely novel
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But I feel like I can't help but wonder if that's going to be confusing to a lot of people like I
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I appreciate the fact, not that I need it as a super nerd type guy, but for most people,
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I think that the fact that on iOS you can just look at it and figure it out, it tells
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It actually tells you in iOS when you have your phone locked, slide this to unlock it.
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Some people still have trouble with that because they don't slide it all the way and hold
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They'll slide it a little bit and let go and it goes back.
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So I think it's really hard to overstate the success Apple's had because iOS is so simple.
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And there's so many ways that what people see in other systems that they see as Apple
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may be falling behind in the whiz-bang regard would just lose so much of what makes iOS
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popular with regular people.
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You know, it's just a little confusing time right now.
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I think there is a lot of talk about how things are different now with Android and Samsung
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and all sorts of new user experiences coming to market.
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And then you also have the issue of Apple still continues to do really well.
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I wonder if the next earnings report is going to be something to watch for.
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I don't know.
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Well, I don't know.
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I guess that is coming soon.
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I feel like they warned so heavily that this was going to be the first--
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I mean, if it's not, they're really going to blow past expectations.
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But they warned so heavily three months ago
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that this coming report was going to be the first one in, I don't know,
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how many quarters, 16 quarters or something like that, that shows a year
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over year earnings decrease.
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Although I think revenue should still increase significantly year over year.
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But the margins have shrunk enough for whatever reason
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recently that earnings are going to be down a little bit year
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So we'll see how the market reacts.
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But I think that that's already baked
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into the depression of Apple's stock price.
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What about the bigger narrative around Apple
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is that they are failing to keep up
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on the cloud side of things, which I think
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is a big challenge for them.
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we saw the iCloud related stories pop up this past week
00:20:26
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and then you have the problem with Chrome,
00:20:30
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WebKit, you know, DevOps so to speak.
00:20:33
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I don't know, I would love to know
00:20:34
◼
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how you're thinking about this.
00:20:35
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Like you're the guy who understands
00:20:39
◼
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the software side of Apple better than most people do.
00:20:42
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- I think that that's one of the,
00:20:46
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I do think for the most part that getting the iCloud stuff
00:20:49
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to work as well as the--
00:20:54
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I think it needs for Apple to really succeed
00:20:56
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over the next five years, like they have over the last five years.
00:20:59
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The iCloud stuff needs to start working as well for third party developers
00:21:06
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what do you want to call it-- Coco Touch or UI Kit,
00:21:09
◼
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but whatever you want to call it.
00:21:11
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The framework that you use to make native iPhone and iPad apps,
00:21:16
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and how much-- when you talk to developers,
00:21:18
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much easier it is to write really good-looking, smoothly animated, beautiful apps for iPhone
00:21:26
◼
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as opposed to other platforms. They need to get it so that writing stuff that stores data
00:21:32
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and syncs data to the cloud is just as good as it is to make good-looking apps. Does that
00:21:41
◼
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And they're not there yet. And part of it, I just saw that Google has announced some
00:21:45
◼
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some new developer features for Google Drive.
00:21:50
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And some of them--
00:21:50
◼
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a couple of the headlines have said
00:21:52
◼
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that it's iCloud, heading in the direction of iCloud,
00:21:55
◼
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where it's not just like Dropbox, where it's a folder
00:21:59
◼
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that you sync to Google.
00:22:01
◼
►
They've added key value storage, which is an iCloud feature.
00:22:04
◼
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And that's actually an iCloud feature
00:22:06
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that works pretty well if you talk to developers.
00:22:10
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And I forget what else.
00:22:11
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They don't have like a database level, database record level
00:22:18
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They don't even try it.
00:22:19
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►
And that's the part of iCloud that developers
00:22:22
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►
are bedeviled by.
00:22:23
◼
►
That's what the Ars Technica story was about.
00:22:25
◼
►
That's what Rich Segal's incredibly detailed,
00:22:29
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►
and I think very, very fair, technical assessment
00:22:33
◼
►
that I linked to on During Fireball last week.
00:22:36
◼
►
And it's also The Verge--
00:22:38
◼
►
who was it who wrote this Verge story?
00:22:40
◼
►
Was it Alice Hamburger?
00:22:41
◼
►
it was Alice Hamburger at The Verge, had a really great story. And what made it great
00:22:46
◼
►
was he really, I mean, he must have talked to at least a dozen or more developers to
00:22:51
◼
►
get different perspectives, but they all kind of told the same story about core data syncing
00:22:56
◼
►
to iCloud. Google doesn't even try that yet. I mean, so it's frustrating for developers
00:23:01
◼
►
in so far is that core data syncing to iCloud, it's not fair to say it doesn't work, but
00:23:08
◼
►
it is fair to say it does not work well enough,
00:23:12
◼
►
to the point where a lot of applications
00:23:14
◼
►
simply can't rely on it.
00:23:17
◼
►
But in another sense, Apple's ahead
00:23:19
◼
►
because they're at least trying something
00:23:21
◼
►
that Google isn't offering yet, that Amazon doesn't have.
00:23:26
◼
►
So we'll see.
00:23:27
◼
►
I mean, is this a case where maybe they shouldn't
00:23:31
◼
►
have shipped when they did?
00:23:33
◼
►
Maybe they should have left it in the labs for another year?
00:23:36
◼
►
or was it worth getting it out there to maybe help iron out the kinks in the field?
00:23:43
◼
►
You know, I would say that they need to kind of take a step back and figure out their entire
00:23:52
◼
►
internet strategy, not just iCloud, not just iTunes. They really need to figure out how
00:24:02
◼
►
internet interfaces with everything they do including their iOS, how deeply
00:24:08
◼
►
integrated it is. I think what I'm trying to say is that if you look at
00:24:13
◼
►
Google they are coming from this position of knowing web services really
00:24:18
◼
►
really well and they are building a design and hardware experience on top of
00:24:22
◼
►
that. Much easier to do compared to what Apple is trying to do is graph web
00:24:29
◼
►
experience into its way of thinking and I think unless they figure that out they
00:24:34
◼
►
will always be challenged with this iCloud type problems. I think as a
00:24:38
◼
►
company they don't think about the the internet the way as native internet
00:24:44
◼
►
companies do and I think they are not understanding the little fact that it's
00:24:48
◼
►
not enough to make great design, great UI, great hardware, great software. You have
00:24:56
◼
►
to have the ability to be a great connected experience and I think great as Apple might
00:25:02
◼
►
be on all those things, internet is and will always be its weak point and they're chinking
00:25:10
◼
►
the armor and so they really need to kind of, they have to have a step back thinking
00:25:17
◼
►
about this and I think they need, I personally think they need to go find a 35 year old chief
00:25:25
◼
►
internet officer. That's what they need. They don't need a big company. They don't need to buy a lot of things. They need to buy a
00:25:33
◼
►
guy or a gal who are native internet thinkers who are in their mid 30s who have grown up on
00:25:41
◼
►
broadband who think about devices from a connected experience. So if I was free I would volunteer, but I'm not.
00:25:48
◼
►
But they would look, you know, there's a guy who runs Snapguide. He's a friend of mine, Daniel Raffer.
00:25:54
◼
►
you know, he could be a good guy to run their, you know, their internet like
00:25:59
◼
►
ideology, they need the internet ideology and they need to
00:26:02
◼
►
Inculcate the whole company with connected thinking and I don't think they have it
00:26:09
◼
►
I just look at all their products great as they are
00:26:12
◼
►
I would not be able to use anything from any other company
00:26:15
◼
►
But they still need to think about the services as part of the core software
00:26:21
◼
►
up in experience and I and if they need to go away from this what's happening
00:26:25
◼
►
with iCloud it's it just is bringing in that DNA I mean I know it sounds kind of
00:26:31
◼
►
out there but at least that's how I think about it I I agree though I think
00:26:37
◼
►
that there's I've always said that I think for anybody whether it's a person
00:26:41
◼
►
or even an institution where you start informs where you're going how you're
00:26:48
◼
►
going to look at things forever. And, you know, Apple started pre-internet by decades.
00:26:56
◼
►
And I mean, just for example, I went, my freshman year of college was 1991. And I went to a
00:27:02
◼
►
very technical university. I mean, Drexel was, you know, super nerdy. I mean, it was
00:27:06
◼
►
one of the first, famously one of the first colleges that required all students to have
00:27:11
◼
►
computer. But when I got there in 1991, and everybody was supposed to buy a Mac, and that
00:27:18
◼
►
you could buy them at terrific discounts, student discounts. So you go there, and the
00:27:23
◼
►
second day you'd go and pick up your Mac from this student center where they had all
00:27:28
◼
►
the ones that you bought through the university. You take it up in your dorm, and the only
00:27:33
◼
►
thing you connected it to was the power supply in the wall. There was no Ethernet in the
00:27:38
◼
►
dorms yet. And modems were incredibly expensive. The cheapest modem was three or four hundred
00:27:45
◼
►
bucks. So we all hooked up our computers. And freshman year, we ended up making our
00:27:52
◼
►
own little network. It was this little—remember these things? I don't know if you remember
00:27:56
◼
►
these things. PhoneNet?
00:27:57
◼
►
Darrell Bock Yeah.
00:27:58
◼
►
…where it was like you'd plug it in the serial port of the Mac, and then you could
00:28:02
◼
►
just use either copper wiring or just phone cabling.
00:28:06
◼
►
And it was just copper wiring, and you'd get a little Apple local—what was it called?
00:28:12
◼
►
Local talk network.
00:28:15
◼
►
We did that so we could play games against each other.
00:28:16
◼
►
But it wasn't a campus-wide network.
00:28:18
◼
►
It was just the people in the dorm hallway who we ran copper wiring between.
00:28:24
◼
►
That was our network, which is crazy, you know, in hindsight.
00:28:27
◼
►
I mean, and anybody who's younger than me, even just by five years, even somebody who
00:28:32
◼
►
went to college five years after me, it's almost laughable that you would have a computer
00:28:38
◼
►
in your dorm room and not have it hooked up to any sort of network.
00:28:42
◼
►
I mean, it's almost like I'm sure that anybody who is that young is laughing right now.
00:28:46
◼
►
They're probably laughing out loud.
00:28:48
◼
►
Or they think I'm exaggerating.
00:28:50
◼
►
And I think there's a lot of people, you know, that still is Apple's root, where you buy
00:28:55
◼
►
a beautiful Apple computing product.
00:28:58
◼
►
And it's a really thoughtful interface.
00:29:01
◼
►
It's beautiful.
00:29:03
◼
►
It feels good in your hand.
00:29:05
◼
►
And you go home, and you use it by yourself.
00:29:10
◼
►
But that was then.
00:29:11
◼
►
And what is now is that all the people
00:29:16
◼
►
start with the experience of being connected and services
00:29:21
◼
►
just being there, right?
00:29:22
◼
►
and like how all those things connect
00:29:25
◼
►
with the actual hardware also defines
00:29:28
◼
►
how we feel about the hardware,
00:29:30
◼
►
not just the user experience level.
00:29:33
◼
►
The user experience also means
00:29:36
◼
►
the internet experience now, right?
00:29:38
◼
►
And I think that's a change in how the world
00:29:42
◼
►
thinks about these things.
00:29:43
◼
►
I just wish, you know, there was like more thought
00:29:49
◼
►
being put into this at the Apple on this front.
00:29:55
◼
►
At least I feel they don't think about it that much.
00:29:59
◼
►
Well, I think they do.
00:30:00
◼
►
But I don't know, though, that it's high enough a priority.
00:30:03
◼
►
And some of the stuff they've done really is great
00:30:05
◼
►
and has worked really well.
00:30:07
◼
►
I mean, I think that the iCloud backups for iOS devices
00:30:10
◼
►
has been an unheralded success.
00:30:14
◼
►
I think the fact that most people seem
00:30:17
◼
►
have it on, you know, it's opt-in. Everybody has to make a choice, right? When you turn
00:30:25
◼
►
on your new iPhone or iPad, you've got to go through this setup where you, you know,
00:30:30
◼
►
if you already have an iCloud account, you can enter it. And if you don't, they encourage
00:30:34
◼
►
you strongly, but don't force you to create one. And if you do, they ask if you want to
00:30:38
◼
►
back up to iCloud.
00:30:40
◼
►
And from everything I've heard from people who do tech support for people and daring
00:30:47
◼
►
Fireball readers who work as geniuses in the stores and stuff like that, it's been a huge,
00:30:52
◼
►
huge success because now people come in with a dead iPhone and either buy a new one or
00:30:59
◼
►
get a replacement under warranty or whatever, and they type their iCloud password into the
00:31:05
◼
►
replacement one and while they're in the store on Apple's super fast Wi-Fi, boom, their stuff
00:31:10
◼
►
his back, as opposed to before, they'd be like, "Back it up, Hal." And they'd just look
00:31:16
◼
►
at the guy, and he'd be like, "Did you ever plug it in your computer?" And they're like,
00:31:19
◼
►
"I think I did when I—the day I bought it, and that was the last time they'd plugged
00:31:23
◼
►
it into their computer." And so everything they had after that, you know, was gone.
00:31:28
◼
►
So I think that's been a huge success for Apple. But it's monolithic, right? It's restoring—it's
00:31:36
◼
►
whole you know you can restore your whole phone to a new phone and that it
00:31:40
◼
►
does work well but I feel like the incremental updates you know this just
00:31:47
◼
►
the little stuff throughout the day of having you know your records in each app
00:31:51
◼
►
sync seamlessly between devices is you know it's it's a huge challenge for them
00:31:57
◼
►
we look I I'm a believer that they can get it right if of all the people out
00:32:04
◼
►
there they're the one company which will understand how human beings like to use
00:32:12
◼
►
you know the internet and a connectivity and all those things and bring it all
00:32:18
◼
►
together but they need to make it a top priority like I wrote a little tiny post
00:32:23
◼
►
last night in which Microsoft Robbie Bach and one of the other guys talking
00:32:29
◼
►
about Microsoft Kin in 2010.
00:32:34
◼
►
Three years later, Zuckerberg used pretty much the same language describing Facebook
00:32:40
◼
►
Home and in three years what Microsoft couldn't get it right, Facebook got it right because
00:32:46
◼
►
they are an internet native company.
00:32:49
◼
►
Microsoft had the right ideas, just was a bad UX, bad UI and bad execution.
00:32:56
◼
►
that company is like their middle name should be bad execution right like they
00:33:01
◼
►
come up with technologies first and they can't execute on it and I don't know why
00:33:05
◼
►
you know they were the first ones with tablet and just couldn't get it right
00:33:09
◼
►
they were the first ones with like a proper smartphone with like a
00:33:12
◼
►
programmable software with Windows CE and they still couldn't get it right so
00:33:18
◼
►
as a company they're bad they're bad execution guys but the key Microsoft kin
00:33:24
◼
►
made a lot of sense they were talking about people centric they were talking
00:33:28
◼
►
about content and context they were talking about all these things three
00:33:32
◼
►
years ago but they were not a native internet company so they didn't quite
00:33:37
◼
►
understand how to do it right Facebook yesterday when I saw it my issues with
00:33:43
◼
►
their privacy you know you know disregarding privacy aside that's an
00:33:49
◼
►
actually a product built for the connected age right but there are a lot
00:33:53
◼
►
of people use it or not remains to be seen, but it takes into the account that you're
00:33:58
◼
►
always on. You're always engaging with the smartphone. You're always connected. And
00:34:04
◼
►
I think that's the thinking of that web thinking is there. And that's what Apple
00:34:11
◼
►
That's what I…
00:34:12
◼
►
That's… And let's hold the privacy discussion for a moment. But the one note
00:34:17
◼
►
I have written down to speak to you about is, to me, what it is is proof of something
00:34:22
◼
►
that I've suspected for a while which is that Facebook now realizes that they've
00:34:27
◼
►
had a change of heart at some point in the last few years where they realized
00:34:30
◼
►
that they're not a website they're a service. The website is just one
00:34:38
◼
►
way to access the service and that they need to think that way and you know
00:34:43
◼
►
and now mobile is a different way to access the service. Yeah I totally agree
00:34:48
◼
►
with you now think about it this way that they with the new Facebook home
00:34:55
◼
►
they're essentially saying what has been Facebook since 2005 the whole newsfeed
00:35:02
◼
►
idea it's okay to not have that idea let's break up everything into
00:35:07
◼
►
individual components I mean that's the big implication of yesterday's news is
00:35:13
◼
►
that they're okay, you know, disaggregating the entire Facebook experience into a whole
00:35:20
◼
►
different screen, right?
00:35:24
◼
►
It's not just that one web, canonical website interface.
00:35:28
◼
►
And I think that is a very interesting way of looking at Facebook now.
00:35:33
◼
►
It's like, okay, if they're a service, I agree with you, 100%, they're a service.
00:35:38
◼
►
really and they're finally beginning to embrace that bit.
00:35:45
◼
►
Maybe they've already always embraced it, just not talking.
00:35:47
◼
►
No, I don't think so.
00:35:48
◼
►
I think their old mindset was what's the best way to get our website to people, including
00:35:53
◼
►
even their initial efforts on mobile, which I think was mostly just wrapping the website
00:35:57
◼
►
into an app.
00:35:58
◼
►
It was how do we get our website into an app.
00:36:01
◼
►
Whereas now I think they're thinking what's the best way – what's the best interface
00:36:05
◼
►
to get our information, our service to its users.
00:36:10
◼
►
And if it's native code, it's native code, then do it.
00:36:15
◼
►
Then let's hire designers and developers
00:36:20
◼
►
who are gonna kick ass at it.
00:36:21
◼
►
Because that's the other thing too.
00:36:23
◼
►
Did you get your hands on the phone yesterday?
00:36:25
◼
►
- Yeah, I did.
00:36:26
◼
►
- Was it as smooth as it looked in the videos and the demos?
00:36:28
◼
►
- Actually better.
00:36:30
◼
►
I was completely, they exceeded my expectations.
00:36:35
◼
►
Let's get back to that in a second. Let me take a break here for a sponsor and that's
00:36:40
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where we'll pick up. But I want to thank our first sponsor and its many tricks and
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►
today for free.
00:39:33
◼
►
Go to their website, ManyTricks.com, M-A-N-Y-T-R-I-C-K-S.com, or you could jump right to the NameMangler
00:39:41
◼
►
site at ManyTricks.com/get-name-mangler and check it out today.
00:39:49
◼
►
My thanks to ManyTricks and NameMangler.
00:39:51
◼
►
I just downloaded it man, spent 18 bucks on it.
00:39:55
◼
►
It's a great app, it really is. It's just fantastic. It does exactly what it says on the tin.
00:40:03
◼
►
So anyway, smoothness, animation smoothness, that's one of the things that really blew me away.
00:40:09
◼
►
And it's one of the things, I don't even use Facebook, I've never signed up for it.
00:40:13
◼
►
But I'm fascinated by the company and keep my eye on them.
00:40:17
◼
►
on them. And the one thing all of us, anybody who covers the industry has noticed over the
00:40:21
◼
►
last two years is that they've hired an enormous amount of design talent. A lot of people who
00:40:28
◼
►
used to work at Apple, Mike Mattes, for example, iOS developers, the guys who did Kaleidoscope,
00:40:37
◼
►
what were they called, Sofa, and a couple of other great apps, like really high quality
00:40:44
◼
►
the type of apps that win and have won Apple Design Awards, those type of developers and
00:40:49
◼
►
designers. Facebook has been hiring as fast as they can get them. And I know firsthand from a
00:40:56
◼
►
bunch of my friends that they've reached out to more who've turned them down.
00:41:02
◼
►
Yeah, they're stockpiling the nuclear weapons of design war man. They're just bringing on anybody and everybody
00:41:10
◼
►
I actually had a list and then I just the list was got so big that I just forgot and like I said
00:41:18
◼
►
Let's give up keeping track of these people and I think
00:41:21
◼
►
My my take is that these guys are gonna stop and nothing to get get it right for all different kind of
00:41:32
◼
►
of device experiences and all kinds of web experiences.
00:41:36
◼
►
I do agree with you that they are splintering away
00:41:40
◼
►
from the idea of a unified feed and becoming more of a--
00:41:45
◼
►
more of-- sorry.
00:41:52
◼
►
Thinking of the information as being
00:41:54
◼
►
abstract from the interface for it, right?
00:41:56
◼
►
And then here's this device.
00:41:58
◼
►
Here's a four-inch device.
00:41:59
◼
►
What's the best interface for this?
00:42:01
◼
►
Well, it's nothing at all like it is on your 21 inch monitor
00:42:04
◼
►
where you're running a web browser.
00:42:07
◼
►
So much design thinking in the company
00:42:11
◼
►
means that they are thinking about data and design
00:42:16
◼
►
and screen in a very contextual, very thoughtful manner.
00:42:21
◼
►
I think that's a new thing about what Facebook is doing.
00:42:25
◼
►
And I think this is going to be an interesting challenge
00:42:29
◼
►
for our friends at Apple,
00:42:32
◼
►
like how do they think about all these things, right?
00:42:34
◼
►
Like, I don't think data has been part of their thinking.
00:42:38
◼
►
I don't think, you know,
00:42:39
◼
►
internet has been part of their experience thinking so far.
00:42:44
◼
►
You know, they can still continue to just make hardware
00:42:47
◼
►
and make software and still do what they do,
00:42:50
◼
►
but design and the connectedness are,
00:42:53
◼
►
oh sorry, data and connectedness,
00:42:55
◼
►
or the state of connectedness are part of the thinking
00:42:59
◼
►
which they need to have, which is what I think these guys are able to do.
00:43:03
◼
►
Look, Google has done the same thing.
00:43:06
◼
►
I don't know if you've noticed Google's apps have just gotten infinitely better looking
00:43:11
◼
►
than they used to.
00:43:12
◼
►
And the reason is that they're also understanding that apps on the desktop don't necessarily
00:43:18
◼
►
have to work like the way they do on the mobile.
00:43:24
◼
►
But they're also going in the, you know, they're coming up with same design language as for
00:43:29
◼
►
various different screens, which is the Google Look, the Apple Look, the Facebook Look, and
00:43:35
◼
►
all these guys are thinking about that.
00:43:37
◼
►
And I think from my standpoint, I do feel that Facebook has a slight advantage right
00:43:44
◼
►
I gently disagree with you, though.
00:43:47
◼
►
I feel that what Facebook showed yesterday is more of a threat to Google than Apple,
00:43:52
◼
►
I feel like what Facebook has done has become to me, and I haven't seen the phone firsthand,
00:43:58
◼
►
but I really do take your word for it, and the videos were pretty impressive, but it
00:44:03
◼
►
looks to me like the first other company that's created an Apple quality, humane interface
00:44:10
◼
►
for touch in terms of the organic-ness of the way that animations work.
00:44:19
◼
►
And it's not just that things bounce, it's the way that they bounce and stretch.
00:44:22
◼
►
And like I said, like, making it feel organic is the best way I can think to put it.
00:44:29
◼
►
And while Google's iOS apps, I think, have gotten really good and consistent and have
00:44:35
◼
►
a very nice Google-wide brand, I don't see that on their Android apps.
00:44:40
◼
►
Their Android apps, to me, and it's, to me, it stems, I think it's purposeful, I think
00:44:45
◼
►
It stems from the whole name Android, that they've gone for this sort of robotic aesthetic.
00:44:53
◼
►
But it's sterile in a way that like when you bounce, when you scroll in lists and stuff
00:44:59
◼
►
like that and you get to the end, it doesn't bounce at all.
00:45:01
◼
►
It just ends.
00:45:02
◼
►
It feels very mechanical.
00:45:05
◼
►
There's no organicness to it.
00:45:06
◼
►
I feel like it lacks humanity.
00:45:09
◼
►
And that to me is a problem for Google because what Google wants, I think, most is not to
00:45:14
◼
►
to be more like Apple and sell their own $700 phones and tablets, but to be more like Facebook
00:45:23
◼
►
and have people share their personal information and do their social networking through Google
00:45:27
◼
►
Plus. And I feel like Facebook getting more humane in their design helps Facebook stay
00:45:36
◼
►
ahead of Google in that regard.
00:45:39
◼
►
Hmm, okay. I mean, you know, I do feel that there are all these three companies are all
00:45:46
◼
►
on the, you know, they're going on a collision course, so to speak.
00:45:51
◼
►
And well, and among the other news this week on the collision course, so we've got Amazon
00:45:57
◼
►
who already has tablets based on Android, like complete forks. Now they've hired Charlie
00:46:04
◼
►
Kindle, who has the most amazing name for someone to be hired by Amazon, even
00:46:09
◼
►
though he has the E and the L transposed versus their e-readers. But he
00:46:15
◼
►
used to work at Microsoft on mobile, and since leaving Microsoft has written, I
00:46:22
◼
►
think, extremely cogently—I mean, I've linked to him several times on Daring
00:46:26
◼
►
Fireball, his blog, and very astute—a very astute observer of the mobile
00:46:31
◼
►
industry as a whole for a quote unquote secret project.
00:46:35
◼
►
But I think, you know, is there anybody who isn't thinking that he's been hired by
00:46:39
◼
►
Amazon to lead their mobile phone?
00:46:41
◼
►
No, I don't think that anything, it's nothing, it's, I am convinced that it's,
00:46:48
◼
►
it's a phone and Charlie's gonna help build that.
00:46:52
◼
►
And I think that's a great hire because, like I said, just from reading his blog where
00:46:56
◼
►
it seems to me like for the, you know, I mean, obviously I think that's gonna, his openness
00:47:00
◼
►
is going to stop in that regard. But I think he's a really astute observer of what's, you know,
00:47:06
◼
►
what's made the mobile industry tick over the last few years.
00:47:09
◼
►
So I had a chance to meet with him and be on a panel with him like a couple of months ago.
00:47:16
◼
►
And man, that guy is one smart cookie. I can't believe, you know, Microsoft lets people like him
00:47:25
◼
►
walk out. It just is amazing to me. And it just boggles my mind like how can you have
00:47:32
◼
►
talent like that just walk out. But most important thing I think from an Amazon's perspective is
00:47:39
◼
►
that how much of the the experience they are going to control from a shopping standpoint now
00:47:47
◼
►
if they have a phone also. I mean that just is just going to be amazingly brilliant way
00:47:54
◼
►
of thinking about shopping and buying things.
00:47:57
◼
►
And it just is amazing how those guys are thinking about the world.
00:48:02
◼
►
And you have to kind of think about it.
00:48:06
◼
►
There's the old adage, follow the money.
00:48:08
◼
►
And so these guys are all competing with each other.
00:48:11
◼
►
And let's just take phones.
00:48:12
◼
►
It's not even talk tablets, but just phones.
00:48:15
◼
►
Almost everybody only has one phone at a time.
00:48:19
◼
►
Guys like me and you might have an office full of phones
00:48:22
◼
►
and more than one SIM card at a time because we're testing phones and stuff like that.
00:48:26
◼
►
I mean, we're clearly oddballs, right? And business guys who have an iPhone and a Blackberry
00:48:32
◼
►
or something like that, there's such a small number of people, it's not even worth thinking
00:48:37
◼
►
about, right? People get one phone at a time. And unless it breaks or something like that,
00:48:41
◼
►
they keep it for at least two years because they buy it under contract.
00:48:46
◼
►
So there are—there's absolutely—they're all competing against each other because they
00:48:50
◼
►
They want you, when you go buy your next phone,
00:48:53
◼
►
to buy their phone, right?
00:48:55
◼
►
So there's definitely competition.
00:48:56
◼
►
But their interests are all very, very different.
00:48:59
◼
►
Apple really just wants you to buy the iPhone
00:49:02
◼
►
'cause they make a lot of money
00:49:03
◼
►
once you've bought the iPhone.
00:49:04
◼
►
And they wanna keep you happy
00:49:05
◼
►
so that you'll use their services and stuff like that.
00:49:08
◼
►
But they've already got the money
00:49:09
◼
►
and their main interest in making you happy
00:49:11
◼
►
is so that the next phone you buy is also an iPhone.
00:49:14
◼
►
Google and Facebook are primarily in the ad business, right?
00:49:19
◼
►
They want you to use their stuff because they want to be able to make money on the ads they're
00:49:23
◼
►
going to show you.
00:49:24
◼
►
And Amazon, different than all the others, just wants you to buy stuff from Amazon.
00:49:30
◼
►
And if you are going to buy more stuff because your phone is an Amazon phone, that's great.
00:49:36
◼
►
I think they should just give these devices away for free.
00:49:41
◼
►
I mean, my view is both the tablets and the phones, if they make them, they should give
00:49:47
◼
►
them away for free if they want people to shop from them constantly.
00:49:51
◼
►
I mean, it's like the logic on buying an iPhone is, or maybe even a Samsung Android, is that
00:50:01
◼
►
you can basically go to any place and buy anything or do anything without regard of
00:50:09
◼
►
one specific service.
00:50:11
◼
►
And that is, you know, a Swiss model.
00:50:15
◼
►
I mean, I kinda like that, but if these companies,
00:50:19
◼
►
Facebook or even Amazon want us to buy their phone,
00:50:25
◼
►
they shouldn't try and make us spend a lot of money on them.
00:50:30
◼
►
I would want them for free.
00:50:31
◼
►
So that, yeah, I'll happily shop on it, no problems.
00:50:35
◼
►
I mean, I shop on it like,
00:50:36
◼
►
I mean, I buy pretty much everything on Amazon right now.
00:50:39
◼
►
- I buy everything I can buy on Amazon from Amazon,
00:50:43
◼
►
If I can't, you know, and if I think that they have it, I check there first.
00:50:51
◼
►
It's definitely true for me.
00:50:52
◼
►
I've had the same thought on the Facebook phone pricing.
00:50:55
◼
►
With Apple, they don't want...
00:50:58
◼
►
It's in their interest to have a phone that is free with a contract, you know, the two-year-old
00:51:03
◼
►
iPhone 4 now.
00:51:07
◼
►
But not as their big new, this is the thing when they come up on stage and unveil something
00:51:13
◼
►
new. They don't want to come out with something new and say that it's free. It doesn't work
00:51:17
◼
►
for them because it doesn't help their brand image as a premium brand. It's this sort of
00:51:25
◼
►
premium luxury or affordable luxury, I should say, where it's not like buying a Rolex watch
00:51:33
◼
►
where it's way too expensive for most people. It's, "Hey, here's the best phone on the market
00:51:38
◼
►
and you can afford it because it starts at $1.99, right?
00:51:41
◼
►
It's this affordable luxury.
00:51:44
◼
►
Free doesn't fit in with that.
00:51:45
◼
►
Whereas with the Facebook thing, with like the HTC first,
00:51:50
◼
►
I don't know, if they're going to show ads in the thing,
00:51:53
◼
►
to me, like, why not make it free?
00:51:56
◼
►
With the contract, with the, in terms of,
00:51:59
◼
►
well then how do you get AT&T on board?
00:52:01
◼
►
You get AT&T on board because it's still the two-year
00:52:04
◼
►
contract, not a free phone that you don't have
00:52:07
◼
►
the obligation for but quote unquote free right agreed like I am with you and
00:52:13
◼
►
that 100% they need to figure that one out and they would actually do well if
00:52:17
◼
►
they were making an actual phone which was for free and people could you know
00:52:22
◼
►
get it for free and and they could show ads on it great I mean I'm I'm pretty
00:52:28
◼
►
sure there's like you know many many people who would want something like
00:52:32
◼
►
Yeah, and you know, and Amazon's the one who I think is most likely to just go there, just
00:52:39
◼
►
do it maybe even out of the gate and just say, "Look, the damn thing's gonna be free."
00:52:43
◼
►
Because they, you know, their pricing, their, their, their, it's, competing with them on
00:52:48
◼
►
price is almost crazy because they'll do crazy things and, and they have the support from
00:52:52
◼
►
their shareholders to do that, to, to run the, you know, the business at break even
00:52:56
◼
►
or even slightly under.
00:53:00
◼
►
So can we talk a little bit about this WebKit fork because I'm trying to understand this
00:53:09
◼
►
and you've been blogging pretty extensively about it.
00:53:12
◼
►
Well, you know what?
00:53:14
◼
►
Let's do that, but let me do the second sponsor break first and then we can finish the show
00:53:17
◼
►
by talking about the WebKit.
00:53:20
◼
►
Our second sponsor, as mentioned at the outset, is audible.com.
00:53:26
◼
►
Audible.com is the leading provider of downloadable audiobooks with over 100,000 titles in virtually
00:53:38
◼
►
every genre. If you want to listen to it, Audible has it. Listen to audiobooks anytime,
00:53:44
◼
►
anywhere, including on your Mac, your iPhone, your iPad. Audible is offering listeners of
00:53:49
◼
►
this show, the talk show, a free audiobook along with a 30-day trial. Here's what you
00:53:54
◼
►
do, go to www.audiblepodcast.com/thetalkshow, and you can take advantage of this special
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◼
►
offer. That will let them know you're coming from this show, and it will automatically
00:54:13
◼
►
qualify you for the 30-day free trial.
00:54:19
◼
►
They always like a recommendation from the hosts.
00:54:23
◼
►
I have a great recommendation for an audiobook.
00:54:26
◼
►
Perfect for this week and it's perfect for you, Om.
00:54:30
◼
►
Right now, and you know what,
00:54:31
◼
►
and I don't think people appreciate this, Om,
00:54:33
◼
►
that you and I are voluntary,
00:54:34
◼
►
we're missing a Yankees game right now to do this show.
00:54:39
◼
►
The Yankees are playing the Detroit Tigers.
00:54:41
◼
►
I haven't looked at the score.
00:54:42
◼
►
Have you looked at the score?
00:54:43
◼
►
- I'm just scared to look at the score.
00:54:45
◼
►
- You know what, I felt good last night.
00:54:47
◼
►
I felt good last night watching 40-year-old Andy Pettit throw eight innings and 43-year-old
00:54:53
◼
►
Mariano Rivera get the save.
00:54:56
◼
►
You know, just to feeling a little old, I would say as guys who've been doing what
00:55:02
◼
►
we've been doing for a very long time, it is good to see some old guys.
00:55:08
◼
►
It warmed my heart.
00:55:09
◼
►
It warmed my heart to see guys my age save the Yankees season.
00:55:14
◼
►
They were 0-2 going into it.
00:55:16
◼
►
Perfect for the start of baseball season is this book. It's called "Scorecasting,
00:55:20
◼
►
the hidden influences behind how sports are played and games are won." And it's by
00:55:26
◼
►
two economists, L. Ron Wertheim and Tobias Moskowitz. And it's just a fascinating
00:55:34
◼
►
book. And it's for sports fans combined with math fans,
00:55:40
◼
►
statistical fans. And it's just chock full of the the intersection of psychology and statistics.
00:55:48
◼
►
And they make like a great case that statistically, this is just one example, statistically in US pro
00:55:55
◼
►
football, teams should almost never punt. They should almost never punt on fourth down. They
00:56:01
◼
►
should go for it almost all the time except in extreme circumstances. And instead, across all
00:56:06
◼
►
levels of football, high school, college, and especially pro coaches are super, super
00:56:10
◼
►
conservative and on almost every fourth down they do punt. Why? It's, it's even
00:56:15
◼
►
though the stats show you'd be better off, you'd win more games by not punting,
00:56:19
◼
►
it's the psychology of it and that you feel like when you don't make it you're
00:56:23
◼
►
losing more than you gain when you do make it, right? It's, that's the
00:56:29
◼
►
psychology of it. The book is just chock full of examples like that for all
00:56:34
◼
►
sports it's not just about football it's not just about baseball but basketball
00:56:38
◼
►
they go into great have a great chapter on the home field advantage and where it
00:56:43
◼
►
where it comes from and how the home field advantage holds up across all
00:56:48
◼
►
sports soccer football baseball all team sports all around the world how all
00:56:53
◼
►
every one of them has a very very consistent home field advantage it's a
00:56:57
◼
►
great book for sports fans who love stats it's called score casting and they
00:57:02
◼
►
They have it there on audible.com.
00:57:08
◼
►
So the WebKit thing.
00:57:10
◼
►
I don't know what to make of this.
00:57:12
◼
►
I really don't.
00:57:13
◼
►
Can we talk Yankees before we talk WebKit?
00:57:15
◼
►
Yeah, we can talk Yankees, definitely.
00:57:18
◼
►
This has been a hard year, man.
00:57:20
◼
►
It's been like going into it and I'm looking at this and like, who are these people?
00:57:24
◼
►
I don't even know them.
00:57:26
◼
►
It's like this like two hundred and twenty nine million dollars for like this team. Oh my god
00:57:31
◼
►
It is just I think you know, I wrote a little post on my personal blog
00:57:39
◼
►
basically bemoaning that
00:57:41
◼
►
This is gonna be a tough year to be a Yankee fan and it will test our faith like nothing has ever before
00:57:48
◼
►
Well, man, it's like day four and I'm like, oh my god
00:57:52
◼
►
I guess like oh my god is like my favorite expression as far as the Yankees course are concerned
00:57:57
◼
►
The score is actually six three. I just looked at and
00:58:01
◼
►
Three in the seventh and Nunez just left to injury. I don't know what is going on
00:58:07
◼
►
You know what right before we got started the show right before we started I?
00:58:10
◼
►
Had watched while I ate lunch and him it happened after I that but I saw an update that he'd gotten hit by a pinch
00:58:17
◼
►
And was apparently really really writhing around and pay and I hope that's not it but
00:58:21
◼
►
- Wow man, this is gonna be some year.
00:58:25
◼
►
- This is the first time I can remember
00:58:28
◼
►
since sometime maybe in the early 90s
00:58:30
◼
►
where the opening day lineup was filled with,
00:58:35
◼
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who the hell is that?
00:58:36
◼
►
I've never heard of this guy.
00:58:37
◼
►
Travis Hafner and I mean I've heard of Vernon Wells,
00:58:41
◼
►
but I mean you really had to be paying attention
00:58:42
◼
►
to even realize the Yankees had signed him.
00:58:45
◼
►
They only had three guys on their opening day lineup
00:58:47
◼
►
from the year before.
00:58:48
◼
►
Whereas for the last, I don't know, 15, 16 years,
00:58:52
◼
►
they've really had a lot of continuity
00:58:56
◼
►
from season to season.
00:58:57
◼
►
I don't know.
00:58:59
◼
►
It's either gonna be a brutal year to be a Yankee fan,
00:59:01
◼
►
a real brutal, I mean, just really horrible,
00:59:05
◼
►
or some of these young guys and the new guys
00:59:08
◼
►
are gonna step up and it's gonna be kinda awesome
00:59:10
◼
►
because it might be reinvigorating
00:59:13
◼
►
to get some new blood onto the lineup
00:59:15
◼
►
if they can play first place baseball?
00:59:19
◼
►
- Well, let's hope so.
00:59:21
◼
►
I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
00:59:25
◼
►
Let's see what happens.
00:59:27
◼
►
But let's get back to Chrome and WebKit.
00:59:32
◼
►
- Blink. - And Blink.
00:59:33
◼
►
- I'm not sure about that name.
00:59:36
◼
►
I still think, I'm still scarred from 1995
00:59:40
◼
►
when the Blink tag was hooked up in Netscape.
00:59:44
◼
►
I'm not sure if that's a nod to that or if it's something else.
00:59:48
◼
►
I guess it's supposed to be about how fast it is.
00:59:50
◼
►
I mean, that's what they say is there.
00:59:52
◼
►
I mean, and admittedly, Chrome is a very, very fast browser,
00:59:56
◼
►
maybe the fastest of the major browsers.
00:59:59
◼
►
You know, I'm not sure if it's also supposed to be like a wink, wink,
01:00:04
◼
►
nudge, nudge to the Blink tag.
01:00:07
◼
►
>> You know, I don't know what the name is.
01:00:09
◼
►
I bet you most of those kids don't even know the Blink tag.
01:00:13
◼
►
they may have not even remembered it.
01:00:15
◼
►
Yeah, you know what that might be.
01:00:17
◼
►
It might be.
01:00:18
◼
►
So the politics of this whole situation is pretty interesting.
01:00:23
◼
►
That post by Rob Isaac, who's a developer based in New Zealand, was pretty fun to read.
01:00:31
◼
►
Actually he did the bullshit to English translation on the whole FAQ on Blink, which was pretty
01:00:39
◼
►
awesome to read.
01:00:40
◼
►
Yeah, and he took a very "this is political and we're trying to screw Apple" sort of stance
01:00:44
◼
►
to it. I'm not sure that that's true, and I'm not one, I think my reputation is one to sort of,
01:00:49
◼
►
by default, you know, to be one to think that app, that Google is a bit more scheming and
01:00:56
◼
►
less open and less, or more disingenuous than people give them credit for. But I'm not sure
01:01:02
◼
►
that's the case here. I really don't. I really don't know what to make of this.
01:01:07
◼
►
Look, there's a little bit of truth that there's politics involved.
01:01:13
◼
►
And I think there is a truth that WebKit has become a little bit, you know, big and bloated,
01:01:20
◼
►
I mean, if that's the right way to describe it.
01:01:23
◼
►
Well, or at least the… from their perspective as the developers of WebKit, it has gotten
01:01:29
◼
►
bloated, right?
01:01:31
◼
►
And I think that's the argument that, forget his name, but one of the Chrome developers
01:01:34
◼
►
made was that it's just got all of these build targets for platforms that Chrome doesn't
01:01:40
◼
►
So why are they – they're stuck making sure that all of their changes don't cause
01:01:46
◼
►
problems on all of these other platforms that use WebKit that Chrome doesn't care about
01:01:50
◼
►
because Chrome only runs on Mac, Windows, iOS, and Android, right?
01:01:55
◼
►
So why do they care if it causes a problem on the Nokia phone or something like that
01:02:00
◼
►
or, you know, Blackberry?
01:02:02
◼
►
You know, why are they developing, fixing bugs that they don't care about?
01:02:08
◼
►
I, you know, I totally see their standpoint on this.
01:02:11
◼
►
I think it'll be, I've also heard, and I don't know if you've heard something similar that
01:02:16
◼
►
Apple is working on their own, you know, twist on, on WebKit and whatnot.
01:02:27
◼
►
You know what?
01:02:28
◼
►
I did hear something like that.
01:02:31
◼
►
And again, I don't, what I heard somebody, something, something about maybe a new web
01:02:36
◼
►
rendering engine from Apple, I don't think, when I hear new web rendering engine, I don't
01:02:41
◼
►
think brand new, although that is what Mozilla and Samsung are apparently working on.
01:02:46
◼
►
I think it's another, you know, it's starting with WebKit and doing something new with it,
01:02:52
◼
►
And I do think that's the one thing that people aren't clear about, a lot of people aren't
01:02:54
◼
►
clear about with Blink, is that Blink is not like a brand new web rendering engine from
01:02:59
◼
►
Google and they're walking away from WebKit. Blink is Google saying we're taking a fork of WebKit as
01:03:05
◼
►
it stands today and making our own new thing Blink starting with it. In the same way that WebKit
01:03:12
◼
►
didn't start from scratch, it started with look we're going to take khtml and make this thing
01:03:17
◼
►
called WebKit from it. You know, I think that that translation from Isaac that you talked to,
01:03:27
◼
►
He seemed to me seem to be under the impression that they're talking up a new a brand new web engine in blink
01:03:34
◼
►
But that's not what blink is
01:03:38
◼
►
It could be in the future right like sir look. They they have a lot of you know
01:03:44
◼
►
invested in in in in Chrome right Chrome OS and the Chrome browser
01:03:51
◼
►
So it would make perfect sense for them to do what they need to do
01:03:55
◼
►
to make that investment pay off properly.
01:03:59
◼
►
- I mean, look, just these are big companies
01:04:03
◼
►
with big businesses, right?
01:04:05
◼
►
I wouldn't put it past them to do it.
01:04:08
◼
►
And you know, I wouldn't, I guess, yes,
01:04:12
◼
►
as a user of the web and web services,
01:04:16
◼
►
this is going to be a little bit painful
01:04:21
◼
►
and not right, but I guess, you know,
01:04:24
◼
►
what happens next is is still to be seen right I don't know if it's gonna be
01:04:31
◼
►
painful I I'm I don't I think it's a different I think the way that these
01:04:34
◼
►
browser wars go today is very different from those of the late 90s where it
01:04:43
◼
►
really was so hard then to have even moderately complicated web app that
01:04:52
◼
►
worked in all the major browsers and on Mac and Windows. It really was almost like you
01:04:57
◼
►
had to rewrite it each time for each one and detect each one. And then when somebody else
01:05:03
◼
►
came out with a new browser, it didn't work at all because it wasn't one of the browsers
01:05:06
◼
►
you actually sniffed for and explicitly served the custom code for. I don't think that we're
01:05:12
◼
►
seeing that anymore. I feel like, you know, I feel like there's this baseline of HTML5.
01:05:17
◼
►
I feel like HTML5 standards thing has been so successful
01:05:23
◼
►
that that's a really-- it's a pretty consistent baseline
01:05:25
◼
►
that developers can hit.
01:05:27
◼
►
And even IE does a pretty good job with it nowadays.
01:05:31
◼
►
I think it's more about what's coming next, the next stuff.
01:05:36
◼
►
It's not the stuff that we already have,
01:05:38
◼
►
like how does the CSS3 we're already using render,
01:05:42
◼
►
and what's the spacing, and stuff like that.
01:05:44
◼
►
I think it's about stuff like for Google,
01:05:46
◼
►
might be about like, what do they call it, NACL, the Native Client, which is just, you
01:05:54
◼
►
know, hasn't really taken off yet. But I know a lot of people who really keenly think that
01:05:59
◼
►
it might be a big new thing coming. But it's this way to get native code, code that runs
01:06:05
◼
►
as fast as native compiled code, running in the browser, but with all the security advantages
01:06:12
◼
►
of a browser where it's all sandboxed from your actual computer. So you're getting, you know,
01:06:17
◼
►
you could have a game that runs through Chrome with native performance, not JavaScript performance,
01:06:24
◼
►
not let's make JavaScript faster, but actual native performance and, you know, the hooking up to the
01:06:30
◼
►
graphics processor on the computer and getting, you know, OpenGL and stuff like that.
01:06:41
◼
►
But with the-- look, you don't have to install anything.
01:06:43
◼
►
You just go to this URL and the native code loads,
01:06:47
◼
►
just like you go to a website.
01:06:48
◼
►
So getting that baked into their web rendering engine
01:06:53
◼
►
at whatever layer they see as the best fit
01:06:56
◼
►
is a huge win for Google, I think,
01:06:59
◼
►
as opposed to trying to get Apple to allow them to put it
01:07:02
◼
►
in the WebKit, which I think wasn't going to happen.
01:07:04
◼
►
Whether that's for politics or whether Apple
01:07:08
◼
►
has good reasons for that, you don't even have to--
01:07:10
◼
►
you don't have to agree what the reason was. It's, you know, it just probably wasn't going to happen
01:07:14
◼
►
as long as Apple was in charge of WebKit. But maybe Apple wants to do their own version of
01:07:19
◼
►
that, right? Like that's pretty likely too. It very well could be. I definitely think so. And,
01:07:25
◼
►
you know, and Apple, that's one of those ways that Apple and Google are different is that culturally
01:07:30
◼
►
Google will talk about what it's doing first and then ship it. You know, Google Glass, another
01:07:36
◼
►
example right been talking about it for a while been showing it for a while
01:07:40
◼
►
having a preview you know the way Apple does stuff is they keep it secret secret
01:07:44
◼
►
secret secret okay now it's for sale next week and that's the same way it was
01:07:48
◼
►
with WebKit and what do you call it a multi-processing model where the the
01:07:55
◼
►
rendering engine is separate from the browser application both for security
01:08:00
◼
►
and hopefully for performance but you know so far in Safari I don't think it's
01:08:04
◼
►
out that way for performance. But Chrome has this multi-process rendering model where each
01:08:11
◼
►
tab you open gets a separate process called a WebKit renderer that just renders that tab.
01:08:20
◼
►
Safari has one separate process that renders all of your tabs, but it is still a separate
01:08:24
◼
►
process from the actual Safari browser application. But it's two totally different ways of doing
01:08:30
◼
►
doing it. And you know, that's just one of the points of conflict between Google and
01:08:36
◼
►
Apple and WebKit over the last few years.
01:08:39
◼
►
You know, somebody really needs to write an explainer for human beings, right? Like, what
01:08:45
◼
►
it really means for people. I mean, I'm trying to figure out, you know, what this really
01:08:51
◼
►
means. And like, you know, and it's like really hard to understand.
01:08:54
◼
►
I it's very hard for me to understand. And I've been as close to this stuff as you know,
01:09:00
◼
►
I could be for all along. I mean all the way from like 1995, but it's really really hard.
01:09:05
◼
►
I think it's you know web rendering engines have become so
01:09:08
◼
►
sprawling in scope and so important to everybody in daily use that it's
01:09:13
◼
►
It's almost hard to get your head wrapped around everything that they do
01:09:22
◼
►
Stop talking about this stuff. Can I ask you one question? You can ask me anything home?
01:09:27
◼
►
So what does Apple do next in your opinion?
01:09:30
◼
►
Overall or just with the web rendering engines no would like the product being a picture a big picture I
01:09:38
◼
►
Think they just keep going as they've been going I think you know new iPhone
01:09:48
◼
►
new iPads and
01:09:51
◼
►
You know who knows what else but I don't know that they need to do much else
01:09:55
◼
►
I think that hardware-wise, their machine has been working.
01:09:59
◼
►
Machine meaning that the whole operation has been working just terrific, I think, year
01:10:05
◼
►
after year pumping out significant improvements.
01:10:09
◼
►
I think it's like we said half an hour ago, I think it's the cloud services is the big
01:10:14
◼
►
can they do it.
01:10:16
◼
►
Do you think they need to change a little bit how they work as a company?
01:10:23
◼
►
the privacy they worked with in the past may have worked in the era of Steve Jobs when
01:10:28
◼
►
he was the storyteller of the company or do they need to change their tactics?
01:10:34
◼
►
You know, I was thinking about this earlier in the show and I didn't say it, but I do
01:10:37
◼
►
think that one of the areas where maybe they really might need to change is with the cloud
01:10:42
◼
►
services, I think that they need to iterate faster.
01:10:47
◼
►
I think that this schedule of, we'll tell you what we've been up to at WWDC and then
01:10:55
◼
►
you'll hear from us again in 12 months.
01:10:58
◼
►
It doesn't, it works for hardware.
01:11:00
◼
►
As frustrating as some people are that they don't talk about hardware, they don't release
01:11:04
◼
►
a phone every three months or that they don't talk about new phones six months in advance,
01:11:09
◼
►
you know, because people just are dying to know about it.
01:11:11
◼
►
It does work for them to keep the hardware secret until they're ready.
01:11:16
◼
►
sort of works for them with the system software because they can unveil it at something like
01:11:21
◼
►
WWDC as a beta to get developers on board two three months in advance
01:11:25
◼
►
But they get to unveil it at a show and and get a lot of publicity at it
01:11:31
◼
►
but I think with the cloud stuff like you said Facebook is saying that they're going to be updating the
01:11:36
◼
►
Facebook home on a monthly schedule
01:11:39
◼
►
Right. I feel like with the iCloud stuff waiting a year between
01:11:46
◼
►
updates to iCloud, it just doesn't work.
01:11:51
◼
►
And it doesn't work for developers, and it doesn't work for users, right?
01:11:54
◼
►
I feel like – and this core data syncing thing is the epitome of this problem, because
01:12:04
◼
►
it's not just that they haven't fixed it.
01:12:07
◼
►
It's that developers don't even know if they're going to fix it, right?
01:12:11
◼
►
Apple actually even have-- is Apple taking this as seriously as the developers who are
01:12:16
◼
►
depending upon it hope that they are? Nobody knows, right? So if you're this developer,
01:12:21
◼
►
if you're developing an app for the iOS or the Mac or something like that, and your app
01:12:26
◼
►
depends on Core Data, and you're hoping to use or you're trying to use, you've actually
01:12:30
◼
►
got it in the store and it's supposed to be using Core Data syncing, but your users are
01:12:34
◼
►
running into these bugs that are like wiping out their whole library on the iPhone, and
01:12:40
◼
►
And then, you know, hopefully when it syncs, whatever's in the iCloud version is what they
01:12:45
◼
►
And if not, they've lost data.
01:12:49
◼
►
And you don't know.
01:12:50
◼
►
Is Apple taking this seriously and you should wait, wait for WWDC because there's good news
01:12:56
◼
►
But if you don't know, if you just, you ask and you get nothing back, what is that, what
01:13:01
◼
►
should you do?
01:13:02
◼
►
Should you wait anyway or should you decide, "I'm going to bite the bullet and rewrite
01:13:06
◼
►
the whole thing from scratch and use something else?"
01:13:08
◼
►
And I feel like that uncertainty is worse.
01:13:11
◼
►
It's like the worst situation that the developers could be in.
01:13:15
◼
►
So in terms of where Apple should go, I feel like with the iCloud stuff that developers
01:13:20
◼
►
are relying on, I really feel like open maybe isn't the right word, but they just need to
01:13:25
◼
►
iterate more quickly in terms of updates and in terms of conveying to developers where
01:13:32
◼
►
this is going.
01:13:33
◼
►
Right. I think that would be a good change if they made I would be in favor of something
01:13:40
◼
►
like that. It'd be fun to see them kind of adopt to this new world in a different way.
01:13:46
◼
►
Here's a here's another way to put it. There's an old adage, especially from the open source world
01:13:52
◼
►
to ship early and often. And Apple's never been a ship early and often company Apple's been a
01:13:58
◼
►
work on it and keep it and iterate. Do the often part. Do the iterate part, but do it
01:14:03
◼
►
all internally and wait until it's ready and then ship it.
01:14:06
◼
►
I feel like with iCloud, they did ship early. They unveiled iCloud as early as they feasibly
01:14:14
◼
►
could. And some of the stuff, like I said, the key value storage stuff worked great.
01:14:18
◼
►
I think the backup stuff has worked great, and I think it was worth unveiling. The core
01:14:22
◼
►
data stuff obviously hasn't. They did the early part, but they haven't done the often
01:14:26
◼
►
part and I feel like they go together. You suffer if you do the early
01:14:31
◼
►
without the often. Well let's see how they change and they adapt. So what do
01:14:37
◼
►
you think Apple is going to do? What do you think the rest of the year for Apple
01:14:41
◼
►
is going to look like? So I am not a big believer in the iWatch that's number one.
01:14:48
◼
►
I don't think they should be even bothering with stuff like that. I do
01:14:53
◼
►
I do believe that they will do something you will wear.
01:14:58
◼
►
They will make a wearable computer,
01:15:00
◼
►
whether it's for health reasons or it's a sensor device
01:15:04
◼
►
which uses your iPhone to do interesting things.
01:15:07
◼
►
That would be my number one prediction,
01:15:11
◼
►
that that is something they will release, not the iWatch.
01:15:14
◼
►
And the number two I think they will do
01:15:18
◼
►
and they are probably thinking about is
01:15:22
◼
►
how do they create a more jointed experience inside of iOS, like how to
01:15:33
◼
►
make all these applications talk to each other and make the
01:15:38
◼
►
interface more useful and more contextual, sort of like how they started
01:15:43
◼
►
off with the notifications and with notification type functionality
01:15:49
◼
►
becoming more center stage.
01:15:52
◼
►
That is something I hope they're working on, they should be working on, and thinking about.
01:15:58
◼
►
I think that would be my prediction for next 12 to 18 months.
01:16:03
◼
►
That is the direction, those two things.
01:16:05
◼
►
Dave Asprey Yeah, I would love for WWDC, I would love
01:16:10
◼
►
for the major announcements to be significant improvements to iCloud, and maybe even secondarily,
01:16:17
◼
►
and better inter-application communication.
01:16:23
◼
►
And I really do hope that that's what they've been working on, and I really do hope that
01:16:30
◼
►
the things we saw last year with the little tweet sheets and the Facebook status update
01:16:35
◼
►
sheets are examples of what they are working on a way to open up to third-party developers,
01:16:46
◼
►
two these two ones that they're going to bake into the system but that
01:16:51
◼
►
hopefully I would love it in iOS 7 if something like that could anybody could
01:16:56
◼
►
have it so like what Marco Arment could have a send to instapaper sheet that any
01:17:01
◼
►
app if you have instapaper installed when you hit the share button the send
01:17:05
◼
►
to instapaper thing automatically shows up and then the URL that the app has
01:17:11
◼
►
has, whatever app, whether it's a Twitter client or an email app or anything, you hit
01:17:18
◼
►
this share, there's send to Instapaper, and a Marco-designed sheet drops down. You don't
01:17:23
◼
►
switch to the app. This sheet drops down right in the app and lets you set which folder it's
01:17:29
◼
►
going to and set a title for it or something like that and send it. That sort of integration,
01:17:38
◼
►
I think it's almost limitless what the things could be.
01:17:42
◼
►
And it's definitely an area where they're behind
01:17:45
◼
►
both Android and Windows Phone 7,
01:17:47
◼
►
which have things more or less like that.
01:17:50
◼
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- Yep, and you know, last point I wanna make, John,
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I think people who write about Apple
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and I think their job has become much tougher
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in the post-Steve Jobs multi-competition landscape,
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because not everything Apple is gonna do is gonna be great.
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And I think it is gonna be good for us to think about that
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and make them constantly think about
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what they're doing wrong.
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I think it's like a hard thing to do,
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but I think the blogging community doesn't talk about
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the things they're not doing well as often.
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So I wish they would-- I think it's something which-- I think
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about a lot.
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I think it's important to kind of remind them
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that they need to be thinking about the internet.
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They need to be thinking about data.
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They need to be thinking about how
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to build these new connected experiences.
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And I wish-- it would be good to have a more deeper dialogue
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with the company as well.
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I think that's something we should talk about more often.
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- Yeah, well, and-- - That's my wish list, right?
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Like, I mean, I'm not, it's not like a,
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like, I think about the world in that sort of a way,
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so I guess I'm thinking in,
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with those parameters right now about everything.
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- It's, you know, it's funny,
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because we just this past week
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had the three-year anniversary
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of when the original iPad shipped,
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And it just seems crazy that it was only three years ago.
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Because it's like, I really can't even
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imagine what it was like going on an airplane
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and not seeing everybody holding an iPad of one shape or another.
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And the people who don't have an iPad
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have some kind of iPad knockoff.
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It seems crazy.
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But on the other hand, here we are three years in,
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and it still is so hard to send something from one app
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to another, other than just copy and paste,
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which is, you know, it doesn't even work for some things.
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And I feel like there's an under appreciation
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for the amount of work people actually want to do.
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I mean, I'm saying from Apple's perspective,
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the work that people want to do,
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but that requires more integration
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between different applications.
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You know, that work on computers is no longer,
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you know, right from day one,
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they had the numbers spreadsheet, right?
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But how many people really spend,
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I mean, I know some people do,
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But most people I know don't really sit down and spend hours working on spreadsheets anymore.
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That was like 20 years ago.
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People don't just open their iPad and work on a spreadsheet.
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It's this sort of back and forth interplay between applications and data that keeps coming
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in over the internet.
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You know, it is a lot of things going on right now.
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I think even as I sit today and I think about what does the world look like going forward,
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it's so hard to even project today.
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Five years ago, in 2007, when the iPhone came, it was fairly easy to see and actually draw
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a linear conclusion as to where the mobile world was gonna go, right?
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Like this is where everybody was gonna copy that design and that user experience and now
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suddenly it's not as clear.
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Like the whole world either seems to be moving forward at a much rapid space or at the end
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at the same time it's stuck in the same place.
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So it just is like a really hard time to figure out what's going on in technology.
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I agree. And it's, you know, the three year anniversary of the iPad makes for a nice halfway
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point for the distance from the iPhone, right? So the iPad came three years after the iPhone.
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So when the iPad shipped three years ago, the iPhone was still as new then as the iPad
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is today. Does that make sense?
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Six years ago was the iPhone. Three years in, we had the iPad. Now we're another three
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years later and the iPhone is certainly and and certainly iPhone like phones are
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they're just that's just the baseline we just we just assume that now right I do
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feel like it were at an interesting juncture as to where we go next well you
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and I will keep talking about it and writing about it and it'll be fun who
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knows maybe I'll be out soon to see a new new iDevice possibly great well I
01:22:39
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I will look forward to seeing you.
01:22:41
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- Yeah, save me a seat in the room.
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I'll sit next to you.
01:22:43
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- Absolutely.
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- Om, thanks for being here.
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Om Malik, you can always read more at GigaOm.com.
01:22:49
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Everybody probably reads it every day,
01:22:50
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and he's got the shortest Twitter handle
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of anybody I know, O-M.
01:22:56
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- Thank you, John, for having me.
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It's always wonderful to talk to you.