00:00:18 ◼ ► Snell, and not Myke Hurley, who is not here. He is on assignment, and his assignment was
00:00:28 ◼ ► for you. Go on your honeymoon." And so, our special guest to replace Myke, well, who could
00:00:44 ◼ ► we're basically the same person. We both have beards. Yeah, I mean, really, if you're face
00:00:48 ◼ ► blind but not beard blind, then you're like basically the same person as far as I'm concerned.
00:00:52 ◼ ► We both co-founded Podcast Networks. You both have, um, uh, I was going to make an accent
00:00:58 ◼ ► joke but I don't really know what that would be. We both have American accents. Yeah, by
00:01:05 ◼ ► the way, because Myke likes to do this even though I never do it, this episode of Upgrade
00:01:24 ◼ ► bright in here. I really, you said it and all the lights got brighter and someone handed
00:01:29 ◼ ► me a drink with a fancy straw. Did you see here there's a little ukulele playing in the
00:01:33 ◼ ► background. I've got a good microphone so I can hear it but you can't hear it. But it's
00:01:38 ◼ ► here. That's the best kind. That's the best kind. You know, when my wife was growing up,
00:01:48 ◼ ► it needs to, the volume needs to be so, turned so far down that you can hear it and I can't."
00:01:53 ◼ ► Which I always thought was like, first off, that's impossible and also kind of mean. But
00:01:58 ◼ ► anyway, that's how the ukulele music is tuned in your house. It's just loud enough that
00:02:15 ◼ ► Mark writes, "If you had a boat, what would you name it?" I think this may be the dumbest
00:02:24 ◼ ► snail talk question ever. Or the best. Well, I don't have a boat. But you know how, yeah,
00:02:38 ◼ ► time, I would need to workshop a bunch of stuff, I think. I, let's call it professional
00:02:52 ◼ ► for now. That'll be my placeholder name. I'll come up with a better boat name, probably
00:02:56 ◼ ► between now and when I buy a boat, which is never. You never know. But thank you, Mark,
00:03:06 ◼ ► tweeting with #snelltalkintothevoid, but the hashtag means they won't be into the void,
00:03:11 ◼ ► they will instead appear in a spreadsheet that is accessible by Myke and also apparently
00:03:30 ◼ ► right now, Steven?" And I don't mean Memphis time, I mean where is your body time right
00:03:43 ◼ ► out it was nine hours forward and then coming back it was eight hours back because I made
00:04:01 ◼ ► go to London, which is many more time zones away, and I had basically very little adjustment
00:04:08 ◼ ► to do when I got there and even less adjustment to do when I got back. I'm totally fine.
00:04:17 ◼ ► have it. I seem to be impervious to jet lag on this trip. That's amazing. That's amazing.
00:04:27 ◼ ► This is brutal for me. This was a hard one. I think two weeks in that time zone made it
00:04:35 ◼ ► harder. I think part of it might also be like, oftentimes when I make these international
00:04:44 ◼ ► that my family helps me adjust because they're all on Pacific Time schedule and then I'm
00:05:21 ◼ ► today. So it was, but it was, I had a lot of five a.m. wake ups, which I don't recommend.
00:05:37 ◼ ► no good. And a lot of falling asleep at like nine or like eight thirty where it's like,
00:05:55 ◼ ► behind and how many days were you there? We were there for seven. So we did Tuesday through
00:06:06 ◼ ► longest trip we've ever taken together, longer than our honeymoon. And it was really great.
00:06:10 ◼ ► I'm really bad at vacation. I did basically just one morning's worth of work for an entire
00:06:15 ◼ ► week, which felt great. Yeah, that was the paid all of us. Thank you. I paid all of you.
00:06:20 ◼ ► So I figured a lot of really people on vacation, I'm on vacation. I'd like to get paid. Yeah.
00:06:30 ◼ ► bad at vacation if seven days away is longer than your honeymoon. Yeah, well, we got married
00:06:38 ◼ ► Apple store, so I guess I'll take four days off from the Apple store. But, um, you know,
00:06:47 ◼ ► And it was a lot of fun to see a bunch of people and to meet people, significant others.
00:06:51 ◼ ► Um, you know, Jason, we have met each other's families, but that's not true for everybody
00:07:00 ◼ ► with other people's significant others and their partners. And it was a lot of fun. And,
00:07:05 ◼ ► um, London was a lot of fun. I had not been, uh, to England before, which seems shocking
00:07:11 ◼ ► to some people, but I haven't been. And, um, that was, that was great. And I think Myke
00:07:24 ◼ ► think, especially once they get settled into family life a little bit more. That's a great,
00:07:28 ◼ ► um, way to get yourself some trips to London. Yeah. Who's to say, let's do it both ways.
00:07:35 ◼ ► Myke let's, uh, and he may say, no, no, no, Steven, no, no. Uh, maybe you can settle on
00:07:40 ◼ ► like every six months just trading off because you guys both need your, uh, international
00:07:52 ◼ ► Well, I didn't leave North America until I was almost 30. Um, but the last 15 or so years
00:07:59 ◼ ► have been full of, uh, international trips and they're great. They're a lot of fun. And
00:08:14 ◼ ► building the trip, trying to include things that they would be interested in and not just
00:08:18 ◼ ► boring things like looking at paintings. Yeah. Um, because that was the, I think, I don't
00:08:23 ◼ ► know if I mentioned this last week on this show, but I mentioned it somewhere that, that
00:08:31 ◼ ► Dutch masters paintings, but they were so bored at that point that they were like counting
00:08:36 ◼ ► the number of cats that they could find in various paintings, which is actually a pretty
00:08:41 ◼ ► good, pretty good way to pass the time. That would be a fun scavenger hunt, but I mean,
00:08:52 ◼ ► have this, but I have that too. Or they don't have this, but I have one of those. And, uh,
00:08:59 ◼ ► Mary was like, I'm going to go. Yeah. I'm going to let you, you be alone with your computers
00:09:11 ◼ ► to the rest of the show that I wanted to mention something that happened last week, which is,
00:09:18 ◼ ► on upgrade for a while now. And it finally happened, which is that Sonos released their
00:09:27 ◼ ► their speakers. It's like four of their speakers, uh, Airplay 2. And so it's the Play 5, the
00:09:34 ◼ ► Sonos 1, the Play Bar, and the new one whose name escapes me, the brand new one they announced,
00:09:44 ◼ ► but it's, it's a relatively recent collection and it's the, it's the second generation Play
00:09:54 ◼ ► the one with the Amazon assistant in it. I have a, I have a Play 1 and, uh, yeah, it's,
00:10:11 ◼ ► so anyway, I do have that Play 5, so I updated the software and, uh, Airplay 2 is really
00:10:17 ◼ ► good. Like I know it took a long time for them to get it, but I'm really impressed with
00:10:52 ◼ ► and boop, the sound just began coming out of the Sonos Play 5 in the garage. Just flawless.
00:10:58 ◼ ► Just yeah, it's really fast. It's like the dream, right? Yeah. Yeah. And it's super fast.
00:11:02 ◼ ► Unlike Airplay, which has got that two second buffer, it all feels very instantaneous. And
00:11:10 ◼ ► go hit, you hit the button again and then it plays for a split second and pauses, which
00:11:14 ◼ ► is always fun. You can too, I believe if you have one of these quote modern Sonos devices
00:11:21 ◼ ► and you have a bunch of older ones too, that new one can act like a bridge to the other
00:11:28 ◼ ► ones. Yeah, that is an amazing feature. It requires you to fiddle around with the Sonos
00:11:41 ◼ ► the Sonos app and select the Play 5 and say group and add the Play 1 to the Play 5's group.
00:12:04 ◼ ► they're, they're linked. But if you want to chain every device, including non-compatible
00:12:15 ◼ ► know, whole home thing, you can totally do it. And then somebody was asking about volume
00:12:30 ◼ ► them individually. So it's not perfect, but I feel like it's way more than you would expect
00:12:42 ◼ ► 2, forget about them. They don't exist anymore. And that's not how they built it. They all
00:12:53 ◼ ► in the background, obviously Sonos is doing Sonos things to connect those other speakers,
00:13:12 ◼ ► did a good job of supporting it on the devices that they were, apparently there's enough
00:13:17 ◼ ► hardware like processing power going on here that a bunch of their devices are just not
00:13:28 ◼ ► is you know, pretty compelling. Yeah, I mean, it's a pretty good deal. It doesn't sound
00:13:54 ◼ ► let them do this. It would be great if I could use a Siri command to tell a Sonos speaker
00:13:59 ◼ ► to play music from Apple Music and have it just do it natively instead of from my phone
00:14:11 ◼ ► I can use my phone or whatever, my Siri devices to say, "Play this song or play this album
00:14:23 ◼ ► Apple Music and then using AirPlay 2 to stream it to that speaker. But it does work. The
00:14:52 ◼ ► funny thing is in that screen, the Sonos speaker is just sitting there like, "Oh, I found
00:15:08 ◼ ► laugh which is Sonos cautions you to not change the name of your speaker to be different.
00:15:21 ◼ ► because apparently that means something. And that gets really confusing. But after I added
00:15:44 ◼ ► But we also have sponsors, so I should probably take care of our friends at MailRoute. This
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00:16:16 ◼ ► free mailboxes to filter out spam and viruses, and he came to the conclusion that if he didn't
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00:16:31 ◼ ► the safe delivery of your clean email since '97, continues to this day. MailRoute solves
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00:16:47 ◼ ► it longer than anyone else. I have been using MailRoute for quite a while now. I used to
00:16:52 ◼ ► run an email server in my house, and what I found is that it basically filled my internet
00:16:56 ◼ ► connection with, not with delivering the mail, but with the spammer servers connecting to
00:17:03 ◼ ► my server and making attempts to send me mail. And that is a huge burden on an email server.
00:17:15 ◼ ► and it will reject the bad connections. And then if it does accept something and it looks
00:17:20 ◼ ► like spam, it files it away somewhere where you don't see it. One of the things I really
00:17:29 ◼ ► I ask for a daily summary of what it's filtered out. So if there is something that got filtered
00:17:37 ◼ ► message to my inbox, but then whitelist the sender so it never gets filtered again, which
00:17:42 ◼ ► means over time you find yourself getting false negatives a lot less often because you've
00:17:48 ◼ ► whitelisted the people you know are real. It also lets me keep up on the wackiest trends
00:17:54 ◼ ► in spam subject lines, and this week's wacky spam subject line that I got literally the
00:18:01 ◼ ► other day is "Need a sign this Sunday? No problem!" No problem. We can get you a sign. Just click
00:18:11 ◼ ► this link. It seems awfully specific. It does. Do people need signs on Sundays? Is Sunday
00:18:21 ◼ ► a sign to say "Go team"? I don't know, but that was a real life spam that I got. No problem.
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00:18:57 ◼ ► in my email and supporting this show and all of Relay FM. New MacBook Pros happened. Surprise!
00:19:13 ◼ ► of episodes. It's like when do they get deployed? And what I said to Myke was "Well, if there's
00:19:22 ◼ ► pre-recorded episode then because there will be nothing to talk about." That plan didn't
00:19:28 ◼ ► go very far because last week Apple released new MacBook Pros and they called a bunch of
00:19:36 ◼ ► people to New York City where they were greeted by media professionals who were doing this.
00:19:43 ◼ ► This seems to be a new trend in Apple's rollouts because they did this with the iMac Pro too.
00:19:52 ◼ ► using the technology to tell you why they're using it. So they're being much more aggressive
00:20:03 ◼ ► they love them which is an interesting, very active marketing technique that maybe Apple
00:20:13 ◼ ► be much more intense about this professional tool story. And I have some theories about
00:20:20 ◼ ► why, including the fact that I feel like Apple is actually trying very hard to impress on
00:20:29 ◼ ► as consumer products. I'm getting a real vibe. I was walking the dog yesterday and I had
00:20:36 ◼ ► this thought popped into my head which is "Apple's doing with the MacBook Pro what they did with
00:20:46 ◼ ► pro systems meant anybody who wasn't a base level consumer and over time on the desktop
00:20:52 ◼ ► side pro, you know, I used to only buy Power Macs and I stopped and started buying iMacs
00:21:02 ◼ ► and one of the reasons was pro went from being sort of all of the market except the low end
00:21:16 ◼ ► it clear like the reason that this thing costs so much is because they have packed it with
00:21:21 ◼ ► lots of expensive technology for people who really, really need it and it's not for everyone.
00:21:27 ◼ ► That is the kind of like implication I feel like of these dog and pony shows where they
00:21:49 ◼ ► may just be some Intel processors that need to ship for that because the whole, because
00:21:54 ◼ ► the MacBook escape, right, like which is really not a MacBook Pro and I'm now wondering
00:22:00 ◼ ► if that product is going to disappear or become something else because that's the other
00:22:06 ◼ ► part of the story, right? It's like, okay, Apple, if you're saying these are pro systems,
00:22:17 ◼ ► Yeah, I think that's a totally fair question because it does feel like there's this gap
00:22:23 ◼ ► there and Apple has like three machines down there. They have the Air, they have the one
00:22:28 ◼ ► port MacBook, they have the two port MacBook Pro and it's like there's a lot of overlap
00:22:46 ◼ ► the lineup and so yeah, I agree with you. I think something's going on there. I do think
00:22:50 ◼ ► there's something to the idea that Apple is trying to define these machines as pro machines.
00:22:54 ◼ ► Like you said, we saw it with the iMac Pro. I am sure when the Mac Pro shows up next year,
00:23:07 ◼ ► Totally and developers and again, video pros and anybody who's doing incredibly intense
00:23:14 ◼ ► high-end work because then it sets the context, right? Like when I got my iMac Pro, I basically,
00:23:32 ◼ ► even get one for review. They're not available." And I said, "Well, I can review it," and
00:23:55 ◼ ► have this whole plan about only seating certain people and telling this whole story about
00:24:01 ◼ ► the high end." And I ended up having to reassure them, which they got. It was fine. And my
00:24:07 ◼ ► review got, it's the only thing I've written, I think, that has been retweeted by Phil Schiller,
00:24:11 ◼ ► right? So it worked in the end, but I had to kind of reassure them like, "You guys know
00:24:22 ◼ ► I use high-end audio plugins that swamp every single core I can throw at it to do denoising
00:24:31 ◼ ► Final Cut Pro, and they're like, "All right. All right. We're okay with it." But they were
00:24:38 ◼ ► seems like they don't want people thinking, "Oh, my kid is going off to college. I'm going
00:24:42 ◼ ► to buy them a six-core 15-inch MacBook Pro." They don't want people thinking that, which
00:24:47 ◼ ► is good because you look at the price tag and you're like, "Nah, you probably shouldn't
00:24:50 ◼ ► buy that for your kid going off to college." That's probably overkill for them. Of course,
00:24:58 ◼ ► I still tell people to buy the Air. I mean, I get the same thing you get, right? You talk
00:25:01 ◼ ► to us on the show of like, you get friends like, "What should I buy my kid?" And my answer
00:25:15 ◼ ► valid machine and it's the price, right? The MacBook and the Escape are what, $1,200, $1,300?
00:25:25 ◼ ► Yeah, I bought my daughter a refurbed MacBook. And so it was, I think, $1,199 or something
00:25:42 ◼ ► computer for her. But before we dig in a little bit more to these laptops, I think it's worth
00:25:53 ◼ ► Apple's story for the rest of the people who want to buy a Mac laptop because it is a mess,
00:25:59 ◼ ► right? Like at least the MacBook Escape, which for those who aren't in on the lingo, although
00:26:10 ◼ ► come to be how people in the community refer to that system, which I was like, "Well, it's
00:26:14 ◼ ► Marco." But the MacBook Escape is the 13-inch MacBook Pro without touch bar. In other words,
00:26:21 ◼ ► it has an escape key. So that's why it's the MacBook Escape. I like it because it sounds
00:26:26 ◼ ► like a Journey album, Journey Escape, MacBook Escape. It's like, "Don't stop believing,"
00:26:43 ◼ ► got two $1,299 laptops at the base and then this $999 Legacy laptop that doesn't really
00:26:50 ◼ ► make sense. It's got the old ports, it's got the low-res screen, but it sticks around because
00:26:55 ◼ ► it's under $1,000 and the other ones are about $300 shy of that. So something's got to give
00:27:02 ◼ ► there, right? Like I had this moment of, because this is what happens with me, is I think about
00:27:12 ◼ ► like, "Oh, wait, what about that?" And I did have this thought yesterday, which was that
00:27:18 ◼ ► what if the MacBook Escape is the MacBook Air? Would you follow me here? All these rumors
00:27:23 ◼ ► about like, "Oh, there's going to be a new MacBook Air." I wonder, and maybe they won't
00:27:28 ◼ ► call it that, but I do wonder if that is the destination of that MacBook Escape, is that
00:27:33 ◼ ► it's finally going to be what it probably should have been all along, except maybe because
00:27:36 ◼ ► of the price, which is that's the other consumer laptop other than the super thin MacBook and
00:27:43 ◼ ► they find a way to drive its price down even more. And they have to give it a name, right?
00:27:49 ◼ ► It can't be the MacBook Pro anymore. So maybe it's the 13-inch MacBook. Maybe that's the
00:27:53 ◼ ► next MacBook Escape, is it's actually called the 13-inch MacBook, because it is not particularly
00:28:05 ◼ ► can get rid of the Air, because then it would serve the same purpose as the Air. Or if they
00:28:09 ◼ ► could get that down to $1,199 or $1,099 and they could get the MacBook down to $999, that
00:28:16 ◼ ► would be the other way to do it. And I feel like that's, I think those are the scenarios
00:28:21 ◼ ► that are at play here. I have a harder time believing they will actually release the MacBook
00:28:26 ◼ ► Air with updated internals and a retina screen. I have a hard time imagining that happening.
00:28:40 ◼ ► float out there at $999 or even $799, something like that, just to hold down the bottom end.
00:28:46 ◼ ► But that MacBook Escape, sometimes I think that's kind of the key to solving this problem.
00:28:54 ◼ ► Where can that computer go? Because it doesn't need to be super thin and light. It's got
00:28:57 ◼ ► a couple of ports. It's using the same processor family essentially as the MacBook Air uses
00:29:02 ◼ ► except newer. And it's got the retina screen. It's like, that's the one that should be your
00:29:08 ◼ ► Yeah, I think I think that's totally right. I think they just haven't been able to price
00:29:24 ◼ ► up all the names, that's I think the the product matrix you would build, right? Like if you
00:29:29 ◼ ► had those laptops on a table, you'd say, Oh, well, this air is old. And this one port thing
00:29:34 ◼ ► is the cheapest one. And then this two port one is kind of the default. And then you go
00:29:44 ◼ ► they'll get there. And I think that they've, I think Apple is clearly aware that the their
00:29:54 ◼ ► mean, I think I think it's different in the world of iPhones where you have older products
00:30:01 ◼ ► sticking around to hit price points. People understand that that makes sense. That's the
00:30:05 ◼ ► way the phone market works. But it's not so clear in notebooks, especially when the prices
00:30:18 ◼ ► Air is $500 cheaper than the MacBook, right? It's only a couple hundred dollars cheaper.
00:30:23 ◼ ► And they got to close that gap and they got to make it make sense again. And I'm confident
00:30:36 ◼ ► to the Mac and ways that we've talked about on all of our shows, right? The Mac Pro roundtable,
00:30:41 ◼ ► the iMac Pro unit both sitting in front of one. It's the best Macintosh I've ever owned,
00:30:51 ◼ ► working into the specifics of this generation, but they seem to be moving in the right direction.
00:31:10 ◼ ► new pro models in a second. But like the pushing them up doing what they did to them to me
00:31:16 ◼ ► and certainly, you know, it's four core and six core and 32 gigs of RAM and all of that.
00:31:31 ◼ ► your consumer strategy, which doesn't exist yet. Like we can't see it yet. It's clearly
00:31:36 ◼ ► there's got to be that story. So I look forward to seeing that because that is the place where
00:31:41 ◼ ► they're kind of a disarray right now. Whereas the pros have more clarity and this is their
00:31:51 ◼ ► lot there is a lot in there, right? They they they increased cores that was I was listening
00:31:56 ◼ ► to ATP and they were talking about how having your like sort of product line just get cores
00:32:02 ◼ ► added to it doesn't happen that often. Like since the Intel transition that which is 12
00:32:18 ◼ ► that's what happened here because of this is the coffee Lake and that's Intel, but it's
00:32:43 ◼ ► is again why more cores matters for pro users more than it does for maybe anyone else. Yeah,
00:32:50 ◼ ► we're clearly moving to a world where we're going to be more multi core and our professional
00:32:55 ◼ ► machines. I mean, you look at raw clock speeds, that those increases have slowed down over
00:33:08 ◼ ► know, the clock speed is going to be all very similar. But this machine's got four cores
00:33:13 ◼ ► and if an app really is built to take advantage of that, which a lot of pro apps are now,
00:33:18 ◼ ► you know, everything from logic and the Adobe suite all the way down to something like forecast
00:33:22 ◼ ► by Marco Arma, you and I both use every day, which is one of the few apps that really light
00:33:34 ◼ ► both Intel and Apple are realizing that that's where they've got to be on the pro end. And
00:33:39 ◼ ► to our point earlier, it is a way to separate the pro and the consumer offerings. You know,
00:34:14 ◼ ► if they refresh the Mac Mini in the future. Those are still going to be lower core counts,
00:34:18 ◼ ► I think definitely not six to help separate them a little bit. Yeah, I think that's right
00:34:22 ◼ ► in the Mac Mini. If it ever comes back again, if there's a chip available, that'll do more
00:34:26 ◼ ► power and that they can do as a build to order. I'm sure they'll do it like they did back
00:34:30 ◼ ► in the day where they had the four core version, but it's not going to be the focus, right?
00:34:34 ◼ ► And if like if if if they have to make a decision about which which you know reference logic
00:34:56 ◼ ► of my frustrations about this is like look I'm a keyboard snob. I am I really am. I didn't
00:35:01 ◼ ► used to be but I am I've got a bunch of mechanical keyboards. I have opinions about keyboards.
00:35:11 ◼ ► travel it bugs me. It feels every time I use one. It feels like I am basically just smack
00:35:16 ◼ ► smashing my fingers down on squares and letters come out and it's like look that's a personal
00:35:31 ◼ ► I I have issues with that. I think it's emblematic of this entire generation where Apple made
00:35:35 ◼ ► some decisions that maybe maybe we're a little too extreme and they just have to live it
00:35:40 ◼ ► down because it's a it's a hardware body generation and they're not going to redesign it for another
00:36:00 ◼ ► or we know people who've been affected by it which makes you think maybe a small percentage
00:36:04 ◼ ► how how small is small to you 5% 10% I mean, it's not necessarily point 0 1% but regardless
00:36:11 ◼ ► that became the story about this generation of laptops is oh the keyboards and I'll tell
00:36:24 ◼ ► story. In fact the story then was oh there's a second generation and they're they're more
00:36:28 ◼ ► clicky and they'll be okay and people sort of like accepted in large part that they were
00:36:41 ◼ ► very breakable came up what made the pro users who rely on the MacBook Pro really angry in
00:37:05 ◼ ► the real like high-end pros about those systems if you know I remember it very clearly and
00:37:29 ◼ ► built like a whole strange like memory controller with high-powered RAM so that the is different
00:37:39 ◼ ► all that stuff but they did that so they could get 32 gigs of RAM in there and that I think
00:37:45 ◼ ► I think it goes you can draw a straight line back to October of 16 when everybody was complaining
00:37:50 ◼ ► about it and probably Apple already knew that it wasn't really acceptable but it was what
00:37:55 ◼ ► they were stuck with and then they built like a workaround so let's not forget this is this
00:37:59 ◼ ► is in many ways this 15-inch directly addresses the biggest criticism from high-end professionals
00:38:28 ◼ ► having as much horsepower as that is reasonable I'm not gonna buy a max.machine I try to balance
00:38:34 ◼ ► it a little bit but having as much power as I can reasonably have on a notebook is important
00:38:44 ◼ ► privileged position I can have two nice machines but I've had a 15 because I want the quad-core
00:38:56 ◼ ► of see how the how the how the chips fall but if these machines end up being you know sort
00:39:01 ◼ ► of positively reviewed and the keyboard seem to be holding up that quad-core 13 is singing
00:39:06 ◼ ► my name and I think there are people who are just as excited about that as they are the
00:39:11 ◼ ► six core 32 gigagram 15 inch and you know they increase the core count but these machines
00:39:19 ◼ ► are faster Coffee Lake is a faster platform than what was there before so they are faster
00:39:26 ◼ ► across the board not just in like crazy multi-threaded situations and you know this is the third
00:39:34 ◼ ► MacBook Pro we've had in about three years you know it's roughly three years and if Apple's
00:39:40 ◼ ► you know saying hey this is going to be an annual cycle if you don't like this one then
00:39:44 ◼ ► like you probably only have to wait you know anywhere between nine and fifteen months for
00:39:50 ◼ ► the new one and that that predictability almost is more important to me than some the specifics
00:39:55 ◼ ► of any one of those updates because for so long there were just unpredictability in when
00:40:11 ◼ ► at this point yeah we heard a lot of people you know it's kind of screaming bloody murder
00:40:17 ◼ ► when WWDC happened and there were no new laptops right like oh no no it's awful and they're
00:40:28 ◼ ► and there was already evidence but it shows you again Apple can release products whenever
00:40:43 ◼ ► from that as you pointed out the first rev of the MacBook Pros came after like nine months
00:40:55 ◼ ► a year or even if we say it's an annual cycle and one of the questions one of the things
00:41:05 ◼ ► and some of that's on Apple and some of that's on Intel but I feel like with two of these
00:41:16 ◼ ► say like you said every year or so we're gonna get a new one and it might be yeah 13 14 months
00:41:25 ◼ ► it might be nine months but they seem to have now for two update cycles shown their commitment
00:41:32 ◼ ► to getting these updates out a little more timely in a little more timely fashion which
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00:43:29 ◼ ► and RelayFM. Okay the T2 which debuted in yours and my iMac Pro is in these new MacBook
00:43:39 ◼ ► Pros and I wrote a piece in January that I told good old Roman at MacPro and I was like
00:43:45 ◼ ► you should you should link to that piece again it's like it's evergreen and I linked to it
00:43:58 ◼ ► it's running a sort of like a version of iOS called boot OS that's being used in the boot
00:44:04 ◼ ► process it's used for a bunch of security stuff it's the disk controller it's encrypting
00:44:08 ◼ ► stuff on the fly it's doing a whole bunch of stuff that traditionally was done by other
00:44:13 ◼ ► parts of the Mac. Yeah I mean it's great Apple can leverage their custom silicon team not
00:44:18 ◼ ► only for iOS devices but using that same technology this is basically what like an 8 like an 810
00:44:25 ◼ ► ish processor yeah yeah it's an iPhone processor basically that's inside every every MacBook
00:44:30 ◼ ► Pro and iMac Pro and like repurpose that for these like very Mac specific tasks and it's
00:44:54 ◼ ► MacBook Pro it is now fundamentally different than previous and other Macs and obviously
00:45:16 ◼ ► it's the T1 and the touch bar and now we see it with the T2 those prices are the same so
00:45:26 ◼ ► the consumer notebook looks like the regular iMacs but I do hope Apple can work to absorb
00:45:31 ◼ ► that cost and not increase the price of every computer they sell by $300 to make this work
00:45:47 ◼ ► if it gets in your way and you know it's just it's just there doing its thing and that's
00:45:55 ◼ ► to think about it that's that's what I want out of a workstation computers you know what
00:46:05 ◼ ► an iMac than on a MacBook Pro this idea that as the disk controller it's also encrypting
00:46:17 ◼ ► on the fly which means that FileVault basically is free it doesn't slow you down in any way
00:46:23 ◼ ► Apple recommends that everything be encrypted and that matters on a laptop right where the
00:46:30 ◼ ► laptop could walk away and if it's entirely encrypted nobody's going to get the data off
00:46:34 ◼ ► of it. Plus they do the striping where they've got like it's literally just banks of RAM
00:46:51 ◼ ► throughput of it so it's it's got a performance story it's got a security story on the storage
00:46:56 ◼ ► side. Yeah it's a little confusing that like so the hardware encryption is happening all
00:47:02 ◼ ► the time you can then turn on FileVault on top of that if you want Apple I think recommends
00:47:07 ◼ ► it for additional security. Yeah what it does is it changes the it links it to your password
00:47:14 ◼ ► so instead of it just being kind of like attached to I think even though it's even though it's
00:47:20 ◼ ► on by default it's on based on data that's the identity of your laptop so that like they
00:47:40 ◼ ► a for a laptop that's what you want if you're working on anything sensitive because then
00:47:44 ◼ ► they'll never be able to read your your data. Yeah I run FileVault and the firmware password
00:47:52 ◼ ► on my notebook so you can't even boot it from an external drive without a password. In the
00:47:56 ◼ ► iMac I'm a little more relaxed it's here in the office probably not going to go anywhere
00:48:00 ◼ ► but yeah if you have a notebook you're crazy not turn that stuff on even with the new hardware
00:48:04 ◼ ► like you said this is an extra layer and it works with and with Mojave it works even more
00:48:13 ◼ ► microphone and the camera but it's it's controlling the camera the FaceTime camera so there's
00:48:35 ◼ ► doesn't have direct access to the mic or the camera it has to go through the T2 and then
00:48:49 ◼ ► really like it I actually think on a system that's designated for pros the touch bar is
00:48:59 ◼ ► these high-end apps where the touch bar as a sort of like extra control surface you can
00:49:06 ◼ ► you can at least make a stronger case for it some people are never gonna like the touch
00:49:08 ◼ ► bar and that's fine but I think you can make a stronger case for it in you know high-end
00:49:13 ◼ ► apps like Final Cut and Logic that that are you know able to do kind of wacky things and
00:49:20 ◼ ► they're super customizable like Logic I can tell you if you've ever looked at the customizability
00:49:25 ◼ ► on Logic for the touch bar it's like you can literally do anything you want in terms of
00:49:30 ◼ ► like putting buttons and controls on the touch bar and Logic it's it's it's amazing yeah
00:49:44 ◼ ► repaired it for free and then I put it on eBay but it's um the touch bar is a weird thing
00:49:50 ◼ ► right because it's still only on these machines I think your argument for being for pros is
00:49:56 ◼ ► interesting I think there's a really interesting counter argument as well that maybe people
00:50:00 ◼ ► like that don't necessarily use notebooks as notebooks all the time yeah you know they're
00:50:10 ◼ ► don't need anything else at this point or I find it distracting there's there's there's
00:50:26 ◼ ► a touch bar it is a pro who's motivated to customize it or have it be some sort of wacky
00:50:32 ◼ ► control surface that's doing something complicated I you know I'm not sure they are using the
00:50:39 ◼ ► touch bar either but I could see scenarios there whereas the scenario for like a consumer
00:50:43 ◼ ► using the touch bar is sort of like what it's sort of like clippy in a touch bar it's like
00:50:53 ◼ ► thing and I'm not sure that is a strong an argument I don't know this is a I think it's
00:50:59 ◼ ► great news great news also at a time when there's not a lot going on other than us processing
00:51:03 ◼ ► betas to talk about the some new Mac hardware and I feel like Apple is being consistent
00:51:15 ◼ ► like how they're training these systems the challenge is that their current product line
00:51:19 ◼ ► isn't consistent right there there there are pieces missing there it's a work in progress
00:51:23 ◼ ► and this is this part like kind of makes sense what they're doing here and I understand why
00:51:28 ◼ ► and not that there aren't things to criticize but kind of like I get where I get where they're
00:51:37 ◼ ► revision to these systems is probably going to react to the fact that that so many people
00:51:50 ◼ ► generations go they do have a chance to course correct but if you accept the fact that they're
00:51:55 ◼ ► not going to be doing major hardware revisions on the outside of these devices in this in
00:52:13 ◼ ► so speaking betas by the way worth a check-in on the summer of betas part of the fun of
00:52:34 ◼ ► we're gonna talk about Mac stuff and he's like go for it so have you been spending time
00:52:41 ◼ ► with Mojave how's that been going I have I'm running it on an external SSD on my 2015 MacBook
00:52:47 ◼ ► Pro and I'm getting pretty close to just booting from it I've got one more work trip in about
00:52:54 ◼ ► a week and a half and I think after that I'm gonna be booting my notebook into it it seems
00:52:59 ◼ ► pretty good you know I think it's obviously fun to talk about dark mode a bunch of people
00:53:04 ◼ ► including me have written about it but once you kind of get past that no hobby does have
00:53:10 ◼ ► some other interesting things the additions to the finder are you're talking about Apple
00:53:16 ◼ ► focusing on pros they feel like very pro features you know surfacing automator workflows and
00:53:28 ◼ ► you have a picture loaded in the finder preview and it shows sort of the metadata the photo
00:53:33 ◼ ► it can do different things depending on what you're looking at that's all very pro level
00:53:38 ◼ ► stuff and that I think is is an is the other side of the story with the hardware of Apple
00:53:51 ◼ ► or an iPad and be totally fine that's not true with pros all pros yet and Apple I think
00:54:02 ◼ ► a professional Apple user you're gonna get a Mac that's the way it is right now and Mojave
00:54:08 ◼ ► is working to cater to those users more and more there's obviously stuff in there that's
00:54:32 ◼ ► Mac OS release being a really big deal but in our current era Mojave feels like the biggest
00:54:49 ◼ ► bulletproof yet as far as a beta is concerned but in my limited time with it it's been it's
00:54:55 ◼ ► been a positive thing I think yeah I am perilously close to cutting over to this is the point
00:55:01 ◼ ► and I've talked about it before on this podcast but there is that point where you have to
00:55:11 ◼ ► that I can boot off of I've got a laptop here that is a loaner from Apple that they sent
00:55:17 ◼ ► when I was writing about the public beta I did my big public beta review so that's running
00:55:23 ◼ ► it and that's great but none of these is the system I sit at all day now the downside is
00:55:34 ◼ ► something else that I use to do my job that's really bad but at the same time I can't write
00:55:52 ◼ ► that and the way that works functionally is that I will install the beta on my existing
00:55:58 ◼ ► I'll back up then I'll install the beta on my existing and then I'll take that external
00:56:07 ◼ ► High Sierra on it so that I've got a place to retreat to in case of emergency and a couple
00:56:15 ◼ ► years ago I had to use that a lot last year I didn't so I can we live in hope that I'll
00:56:21 ◼ ► be able to actually do my job running Mojave and it won't be a problem but at some point
00:56:25 ◼ ► I got to do it as dumb as it is in in one way to have your production machine be running
00:56:31 ◼ ► a beta OS that's the job we have you and I yeah yeah cuz you're gonna review it yeah I'm
00:56:39 ◼ ► gonna review it I think I'm kind of debating if it's one review or like a series of three
00:56:54 ◼ ► clearly going to stay on this annual release cycle for Mac OS we've been on it a long time
00:57:05 ◼ ► it's much more about okay what what can they do what can they do this year and and of course
00:57:11 ◼ ► the the proper way to think about it is not that what's Mojave ships they start on 10/15
00:57:17 ◼ ► it's that some of these features span multiple years of work and they land at one point or
00:57:23 ◼ ► another but I think the most interesting story moving forward from probably in Mojave but
00:57:28 ◼ ► definitely after it is going to be those apps coming over from iOS Mojave shows what four
00:57:36 ◼ ► of them are like there's a lot of weird stuff there you can kill a single process and bring
00:57:40 ◼ ► down the whole like they kind of live in their own environment structurally within the OS
00:57:49 ◼ ► but there there is clearly day one or before being before day one on these apps and it's
00:58:01 ◼ ► evolve things like the the like the date picker and the home app has gotten a lot of grief
00:58:23 ◼ ► sort of iOS structured as far as the interface and so are we on the cusp of the Mac looking
00:58:35 ◼ ► of the questions that I'm thinking about this summer and spending time with it and spending
00:58:58 ◼ ► John Smith found out that like the build I think it was Steve Tran Smith found the build
00:59:02 ◼ ► numbers are the same across the OS is so that the suggestion there is that is that these
00:59:08 ◼ ► are basically the iOS apps and that part of what's going on here is you know the iOS apps
00:59:26 ◼ ► to be able to like do the work in your app and have it work this way on the Mac and this
00:59:30 ◼ ► way on iOS and this is not going to work if what this is is a method to make like a copy
00:59:42 ◼ ► truly broadly successful it needs to be as smooth a process from the iOS developers standpoint
00:59:55 ◼ ► it's logical like it's one app it's not it's not you but you don't break it off and then
01:00:05 ◼ ► is not that does not seem to be the end goal here and that's good it shouldn't be the goal
01:00:09 ◼ ► here is not to let you do a fork for the Mac the goal is you update your iOS app and now
01:00:15 ◼ ► it runs on the Mac as a Mac app that's that so we'll see how it goes because I too have
01:00:27 ◼ ► of those apps just die at once and that is a you know very different kind of experience
01:00:38 ◼ ► we have time but yeah I think it's fascinating and it is the most interesting Mac OS release
01:00:52 ◼ ► in the summer of fun is to do a draft do you agree I'm I'm scared for it okay because the
01:01:18 ◼ ► gonna do a really quick draft and we're gonna do it right after I tell you about our third
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01:02:09 ◼ ► support and the ability to drag in audio from other apps Stephen I believe you do a podcast
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01:02:59 ◼ ► way to get started and also Stephen yes okay I am the host of this episode so therefore
01:03:06 ◼ ► I'm gonna let you go first we're gonna draft six three each OS 10 versions from the catalog
01:03:32 ◼ ► first first one but it's the first one that was sort of usable it was stable it was much
01:04:09 ◼ ► of OS 10 weren't there until 10.2 and I think that's that's a pretty big win for this release
01:04:18 ◼ ► it's good I I have a different one that I think of as the first usable version I should
01:04:35 ◼ ► have old computers you and I I actually bought some old computers so I could do that now
01:05:02 ◼ ► of time with them you've been witnessing the evolution of Mac OS 10 and fast forward yes
01:05:07 ◼ ► yeah 15 years of history in six months that's pretty cool also a lot of brush metal man
01:05:12 ◼ ► it's a lot yeah I think the number one thing that I like about about Jaguar is that Steve
01:05:18 ◼ ► Jobs always pronounced it Jaguar yeah it's weird right yeah how did you how did you end
01:05:38 ◼ ► nobody called it Mac OS 10 10.2 Jaguar probably not I'm gonna pick 10.8 mount line ooh ooh
01:05:48 ◼ ► outline so a couple reasons one is the line broke a lot of stuff yeah yeah line was weird
01:05:54 ◼ ► um yeah and as a podcaster I will tell you they completely overhauled the the sound subsystem
01:06:01 ◼ ► in 10.7 and broke everything like everything like we at Mac world I believe when I left
01:06:09 ◼ ► Mac world we still had our podcast room iMac running 10.6 snow leopard because lion broke
01:06:21 ◼ ► still a bootable 10.6 it was it was not good so mountain lion fixed it not everything that
01:06:27 ◼ ► lion broke but a lot of stuff that line broke got addressed but my my number one reason
01:06:56 ◼ ► I for those of us who are now on the the annual update wagon right where it gets announced
01:07:02 ◼ ► WWC it ships in the fall there were no rumors that there was a full-on new version of OS
01:07:08 ◼ ► 10 coming and this happened in like June or July it was not it was not tied to WWDC nobody
01:07:39 ◼ ► and they said yeah we have a new version of OS 10 and shipping next week and you're under
01:07:43 ◼ ► embargo and I'm also proud to say nobody blew the embargo I think there was a story that
01:07:51 ◼ ► mentioned there might be a new version of OS 10 coming the night before and it was like
01:07:56 ◼ ► a one-liner in a larger column but basically it didn't leak and that led to a very funny
01:08:02 ◼ ► moment when people didn't believe me I posted my story and I tweeted saying you know OS
01:08:17 ◼ ► a joke right like no and then you know Jim Dow Rimbels posted and and you know all these
01:08:24 ◼ ► other people posted theirs and then that was the moment where we're like oh yeah mg Siegler
01:08:28 ◼ ► who I actually ran into coming out of my briefing and and he and I shared shared a look and
01:08:34 ◼ ► I will remember forever which is like what just happened like neither of us could believe
01:08:45 ◼ ► update stuff let's fix a lot of bugs kind of midpoint release that tend to be the favorites
01:08:50 ◼ ► because they focus a little bit more on the on not taking big steps but instead sort of
01:08:59 ◼ ► surprise brand new version of OS 10 you didn't even know it was here now it's here it it
01:09:04 ◼ ► was high on my list for those reasons it also brought notification center and messages so
01:09:11 ◼ ► it again is a release that sort of added things that we now just view as like core tenants
01:09:22 ◼ ► way than in my mind reminders some other stuff so yeah it was a good pick Jason it's good
01:09:33 ◼ ► things in sync there's a lot of that in there too yeah what do you have a lemon though lots
01:09:42 ◼ ► I'm gonna pick snow leopard yeah just taking this long it's really only two picks and I
01:09:57 ◼ ► beginning yeah I mean it's not up right what more can you say right it is I think by far
01:10:02 ◼ ► people's most favorite version of Mac OS I'm not sure that's completely earned it wasn't
01:10:08 ◼ ► as buck free as people remember it being but of course if it's it's famous for no new features
01:10:13 ◼ ► that really wasn't true because it included exchange support included lots of under the
01:10:18 ◼ ► hood stuff so open CL we counted it was it was it was either more than 100 or more than
01:10:23 ◼ ► 200 new features if you counted yeah so despite the no new features thing that they said it
01:10:37 ◼ ► on like a big marketing feature right it was also notable is the first release that dropped
01:10:42 ◼ ► power PC support so snow leopard is what was much smaller in terms of disk space from leopard
01:10:48 ◼ ► that's because they got rid of all the power PC stuff but also they did some file system
01:10:53 ◼ ► encryption stuff for the first time so kind of layering in some stuff that's now really
01:10:59 ◼ ► core to the the underpinnings of Mac OS but you know everybody everyone loves snow leopard
01:11:08 ◼ ► snow leopard you gotta you gotta put it in the draft yeah no I think I think you're playing
01:11:19 ◼ ► maybe there's a parade moving along outside your house I don't know I'm I'm going to counter
01:11:34 ◼ ► years writing about OS X as this kind of theoretical construct Rhapsody the public beta and even
01:11:41 ◼ ► the 10 10 0 beta or the 10 0 which was basically a beta and it was slow it was not something
01:11:47 ◼ ► it was the thing you installed on a separate partition and booted into and said oh yeah
01:11:57 ◼ ► and then 10-1 came out and I remember distinctly because I wrote the this the first OS X that
01:12:03 ◼ ► I wrote the I wrote the big article in macworld about the 10-0 I edited it but there was a
01:12:08 ◼ ► different writer and the 10-1 I wrote it and I remember sitting there thinking yeah you
01:12:20 ◼ ► and and those early days of OS X every release was faster for a while it's kind of amazing
01:12:26 ◼ ► when you think about it now that we think about OS is they get older and they get slower
01:12:30 ◼ ► unless you've got new hardware but these were faster on existing hardware because they kept
01:12:35 ◼ ► optimizing them but 10-1 was the one where I was like it was pretty slow 10-0 is pretty
01:12:50 ◼ ► it's faster the interface is better and it's actually got more software on it than 10-0
01:12:56 ◼ ► so what I said back then in 2001 was the first version of OS X that's truly ready for general
01:13:01 ◼ ► use and I will stand by it although I will point out the very next sentence is although
01:13:07 ◼ ► it's still not a feature for feature match for OS 9 it's still missing things right that
01:13:24 ◼ ► of the other stuff you had to leave behind but and I will say in proof that some things
01:13:30 ◼ ► never change Apple's line about 10-1 was it's all about performance. I'll say this one thing
01:13:43 ◼ ► initial because this is in the era where where OS updates cost like cost 50 or 60 bucks 100
01:13:48 ◼ ► bucks whatever it was right yeah I mean Apple charged 129 dollars for the majority of it
01:13:53 ◼ ► in his life how about that it's hard to believe now again but that there was and this one
01:14:13 ◼ ► it was not like I said it was more of a curiosity and like what the future was going to be and
01:14:18 ◼ ► so Apple in being very considerate I think said if you already bought 10-0 you get 10-1
01:14:28 ◼ ► there was a package that was basically like the free upgrade from 10-0 yeah I've got it
01:14:41 ◼ ► the reason it was free is that really they're like no no no stop using 10-0 we're sorry
01:14:46 ◼ ► here's 10-1 right well that they you you have a very limited window to make a good impression
01:14:51 ◼ ► of your of your new OS that you've been talking about for four years and 10-0 didn't fulfill
01:14:57 ◼ ► those promises 10-1 I think was them trying to bring people bring people on board a little
01:15:03 ◼ ► bit more I'm gonna go with my last pick I'm gonna do something a little more modern but
01:15:10 ◼ ► weird I'm gonna go with 10.10 Yosemite huh brought obviously a new user interface so it
01:15:18 ◼ ► was the end of sort of the really like lickable aqua that have been downplayed over the years
01:15:24 ◼ ► but you look at 10-9 Mavericks and 10-10 Yosemite they're very different and 10-10 is flat it
01:15:30 ◼ ► also holds the title of the only release of Mac OS X to use Helvetica as the system font
01:15:36 ◼ ► which boy is it weird looking now we're used to San Francisco which they did just a year
01:15:41 ◼ ► later but there's it's strange to see Helvetica everywhere I kind of like it but it's the
01:15:48 ◼ ► only one and I think that that makes it special it also brought continuity to the Mac so you
01:16:01 ◼ ► the photos app so replaced iPhoto with photos which also brought Apple's photo management
01:16:17 ◼ ► photos is part of the core OS so it brought photo management into the OS really for the
01:16:21 ◼ ► first time and it brought with that new design that brought sort of what we now call baby
01:16:32 ◼ ► dark not at all what we see in Mojave of course but a big perhaps the biggest visual overhaul
01:16:40 ◼ ► Mac OS X has ever seen the rest of it was sort of a slow evolution you're dropping brush
01:16:50 ◼ ► that we're still in that era and I think that I think that makes it worth worth a draft
01:16:59 ◼ ► pick over some of the others it's nice that's good one for my last pick and the last pick
01:17:04 ◼ ► of this little mini draft you know if I hadn't picked Puma I would go back to the old days
01:17:10 ◼ ► because I feel nostalgic about the public beta it was so weird and yet at the same time
01:17:16 ◼ ► that was the moment the public beta that was the moment where Apple was saying here's the
01:17:22 ◼ ► future of the Mac and and it has proven out to be yes that look like for two decades this
01:17:29 ◼ ► is it this is the Mac that it is now eclipsed the classic Mac OS in terms of being kind
01:17:35 ◼ ► of like out in the world the primary Mac OS so I I thought really hard about picking it
01:17:41 ◼ ► but but I think Puma it has gotten me covered on that end so I'm going to go on the other
01:17:46 ◼ ► end and I'm just going to be a shameless crowd pleaser and say Mojave I think Mojave as we've
01:18:00 ◼ ► like Apple is really putting some effort into its conception of what the Mac is going to
01:18:04 ◼ ► be today and going forward and I think there are a bunch of features in it that are really
01:18:13 ◼ ► are interesting in and of themselves and then the running iOS apps on the Mac even if it's
01:18:20 ◼ ► just those four apps like it points the direction for the future and it is a huge not just a
01:18:38 ◼ ► to be a product in their lineup but they are making an effort because this is Apple saying
01:18:43 ◼ ► no the Mac is important it's important for pro users and it's important for kind of their
01:18:47 ◼ ► long term computing strategy in some way how do they fit the Mac and iOS together without
01:19:04 ◼ ► that has two totally different operating systems so that's a bit that's a big deal so I think
01:19:08 ◼ ► in the end Mojave will be proven to be kind of like the branching off point although if
01:19:13 ◼ ► I really wanted to pick like how history views like major OS updates I should probably pick
01:19:49 ◼ ► os10 or the Rhapsody stuff didn't it was basically next step yeah yeah yeah but public beta was
01:19:57 ◼ ► like yeah okay here we are we weave although public beta public beta still had the Apple
01:20:01 ◼ ► logo in the middle of the menu bar that didn't do anything right no that was just Rhapsody
01:20:06 ◼ ► or was that the public I think no I think it was a developer preview maybe oh yeah John
01:20:10 ◼ ► Syracuse was already I was already yeah yeah okay yeah okay my only one that didn't get
01:20:21 ◼ ► of like core stuff that we think about being os10 was present in Panther fast user switching
01:20:28 ◼ ► expose file vault the sidebar and finder finder in 10 01 and 2 is really weird because you
01:20:52 ◼ ► sense and it sort of put the user at the center of the computer and not the local hard drive
01:20:58 ◼ ► at the center of the computer when you went to navigate for stuff so Panther I think is
01:21:02 ◼ ► my runner-up but I think this is good this was a lot of fun I was very excited when you
01:21:12 ◼ ► summer fun this is this is why we do fun things we do fun things all year round but in the
01:21:16 ◼ ► summer there the summer fun that's it's more fun I want to do some ask upgrade quickly before
01:21:21 ◼ ► we go yes you got your lasers run at a different frequency than my lasers but I'll accept it
01:21:34 ◼ ► not me says face ID on iPad means iOS 12 is definitely going to have support for multiple
01:21:46 ◼ ► a to be yeah I I agree I think I think the suggestion there is that on iPad iPad is more
01:21:53 ◼ ► of a multiple user device although Apple has not proven that since they even you know they
01:22:02 ◼ ► kind of super weird and janky for school use the iOS 12 beta has this additional appearance
01:22:09 ◼ ► kind of thing for faces and I think that is their way of letting you get multiple faces
01:22:17 ◼ ► in there in some way but I think that's probably it unless there's like a an announcement that
01:22:22 ◼ ► goes on with like new hardware that says we're explicitly going to support multiple faces
01:22:28 ◼ ► on new hardware and I think that only makes it like I don't really think the iPads multiple
01:22:39 ◼ ► support for everybody and think you know hold my breath for a while longer I think yeah
01:22:46 ◼ ► I actually checked slack to see if John Siracusa had already complained to us now he's got
01:22:51 ◼ ► a job yeah he's not listening to us now he'll complain later but it's like the developer
01:23:05 ◼ ► that's good I've been very consistent with this it's my front right pocket with nothing
01:23:20 ◼ ► leg not first is not first is bottom up yeah you said bottom down bottom but the top goes
01:23:39 ◼ ► to break the back than the front screen and feels much better to my mind so that's a good
01:23:45 ◼ ► point I hadn't even thought of that because yeah for me it's a left pocket and it is notched
01:24:04 ◼ ► my left hand and pick it up and I got my phone good question though Daniel wants to know
01:24:12 ◼ ► will Apple be able to fix the MacBook keyboards without the seemingly essential step of making
01:24:17 ◼ ► the devices thicker haven't they painted themselves into a thinness corner could they could they
01:24:23 ◼ ► stomach thicker MacBook pros I mean I think this may have come in before the the announcement
01:24:29 ◼ ► but I think there's a truth in this right which is if they wanted to do something truly
01:24:47 ◼ ► introduce more key travel I am confident that the that the Wizards at Apple could do that
01:24:52 ◼ ► but they won't do it in the existing hardware generation because I think there's just that's
01:24:56 ◼ ► way too complex to tweak something that major and keep everything else the same at that
01:25:01 ◼ ► point you're just redesigning the entire case and so I think if it happens at all it would
01:25:06 ◼ ► have to happen a year or two out when they do a new hardware generation agreed I totally
01:25:13 ◼ ► agree okay Zach wants to know a serious post wedding question who was the Apple related
01:25:28 ◼ ► who did we designate to carry on for us and I was thinking about it's like like you know
01:25:33 ◼ ► there's a bunch like grouper I guess Dan Moran Merlin there's you know there's lots of there's
01:25:41 ◼ ► lots of podcasters out there who aren't who aren't the entire cast of relay who was there
01:25:47 ◼ ► yeah Myke doesn't have Myke doesn't co-host a podcast with everybody it would have been
01:25:52 ◼ ► fine just most people yeah no ATP would have been gone there ATP would have been eradicated
01:26:07 ◼ ► cut off one podcaster and two will take its place so don't don't worry about it there's
01:26:14 ◼ ► always more podcasters very messy but it is how it works yeah that's totally how it works
01:26:23 ◼ ► a compact iPhone in the spirit of the old candy bar size phones possibly running a beefed
01:26:32 ◼ ► two 199 to 249 price point no I don't think Apple cares about that market you know there's
01:26:40 ◼ ► a report out today that they're like bleeding money in India I just don't think I don't
01:26:45 ◼ ► think this is a product they want to make I I agree with you I think that I think that's
01:26:54 ◼ ► lot of money and creating almost a different platform just to make a $200 phone I think
01:26:59 ◼ ► they would rather try to sell the iPhone from three years ago in those markets or something
01:27:13 ◼ ► running Mac OS because they're not interested in that market they're just they're never
01:27:18 ◼ ► going to do that that's why there's also not going to be a $99 iPad not interested yeah
01:27:22 ◼ ► just that's not the that's not Apple's business model Corey wants to know will we see USB
01:27:40 ◼ ► is thicker than what they what lightning requires and we all know Apple likes thinness I don't
01:27:48 ◼ ► know what USB C gives them that lightning doesn't because you can do fast charging over
01:27:59 ◼ ► live through another port transition and those of us who around during the dock connector
01:28:04 ◼ ► to lightning switch we all have scars from that because everyone freaked out and I don't
01:28:27 ◼ ► more power through that cable and they're going to have a bigger adapter and it's great
01:28:34 ◼ ► the trouble Apple new USB C was coming and they went to all the trouble of making lightning
01:28:37 ◼ ► I'm not sure if they had known and didn't do anything like I it would seem like a really
01:28:44 ◼ ► weird sidestep for them to now move and lightning serves their purposes better on those devices
01:28:49 ◼ ► than USB C that said I'm gonna I'm gonna put this out there again wearing my hat as sorry
01:28:56 ◼ ► that's gonna make you feel like you're unconnected for a minute where where my hat is an iPad
01:29:07 ◼ ► part of the transition in the iPad Pro to truly being a kind of like professional level
01:29:11 ◼ ► device over time maybe not this year but sometime is have a little bit better USB device support
01:29:17 ◼ ► and that has to be in the OS and then have a USB port and like it's like a computer because
01:29:23 ◼ ► there's stuff that uses USB and you know it would be like oh you don't need to buy a dongle
01:29:32 ◼ ► I think the best we can hope for is that there will be a little a little dongle that will
01:29:46 ◼ ► even has a USB port but the problem with that is that that actually requires a major iOS
01:29:53 ◼ ► update to support more USB devices than they currently support but you know some of it's
01:29:57 ◼ ► already there they could do more and I would like to see it on that side but I think that's
01:30:05 ◼ ► with a USB port or if they made an iOS laptop at some point that iBook mythical iBook that
01:30:15 ◼ ► can go with that uh Bosey wants to know to wrap us up how's Myke handling England's World
01:30:22 ◼ ► Cup loss to Croatia I mean he's not even here he's so torn up about it yeah I don't think
01:30:30 ◼ ► Myke cares he does he Myke literally you know there are two kinds of nerds in our our community
01:30:35 ◼ ► the ones who care about sports or sport and the ones who don't and Myke is firmly in the
01:30:40 ◼ ► ones who don't to the point where I'll put it this way Myke and Adina's wedding reception
01:30:46 ◼ ► we mentioned this last week was on it happened during England's World Cup match with Sweden
01:30:53 ◼ ► and the venue for the reception said we could put a TV somewhere if people really want to
01:30:58 ◼ ► watch England and first Myke is thinking well most of the people here are from not all but
01:31:03 ◼ ► many of the people like what 80% of the people at the wedding 90% of the people at the wedding
01:31:08 ◼ ► are either Americans or Romanians so they don't care very few Swedes some English people
01:31:16 ◼ ► and then second he didn't want that to become the center of attention of his wedding reception
01:31:40 ◼ ► was because he just doesn't care and that's fine I think that was the right call regardless
01:31:44 ◼ ► but it made easier by the fact that he didn't care well that is all of ask upgrade Stephen
01:31:50 ◼ ► Hackett thank you so much for joining me as my special guest in the summer of fun while
01:32:02 ◼ ► I can't believe he's taken almost four years for soon upgrade to go well you know it was
01:32:06 ◼ ► at the beginning it was like well I could always use Stephen as the guest host but it's
01:32:32 ◼ ► on in space we care and we're not rocket scientists and then every week we do we do download together
01:32:48 ◼ ► put it together which is part of the the subnet plan as well because you're watching the headlines