189: Obsolescence Isn’t What It Used to Be
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From Relay FM, this is Upgrade, Episode 189 for April 16, 2018.
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I am Jason Snell, and I am not usually the person who reads this part, but Myke Hurley is on assignment.
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He's in the United States for the Atlanta Pen Show, and you can check out that special live episode of The Pen Addict.
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This episode, by the way, brought to you by FreshBooks, Pingdom, and Peacalc.
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And my special co-host for this episode, returning triumphantly, is Mr. Merlin Mann.
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Hey, buddy. How's it going? Thanks for having me on.
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It's pretty good. Pretty good. Thanks for joining me. I really appreciate you coming on my podcast,
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because Myke abandoned me.
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Having a pretty busy day today?
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Yeah. Well, listen, nobody cares about any of that. It's important that we get to Snell Talk.
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We have a question this week for Snell Talk. This is from listener Meher.
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Listen to me here, we'd like to ask Jason, how's the weather today?
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Good question, excellent question. I like this a lot. I'm so glad Myke's not here.
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I picked this one up myself.
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So it was a really nice sunny day, a really nice spring day yesterday.
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Today, clouds are rolling in, wind's picking up, it's gonna rain later.
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For you too, because we share the weather, you and I.
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Well, thank you to listen to me here. This is a trick question because it also gives me the chance to say thank you
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To Jason who gave me much help in picking out. I've been envious of your weather setup for a long time
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Well, not your weather that you get but envious of your weather monitoring panopticon for a long time and you're right
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Robot that floats around in my backyard measuring wet. I'm very wet again and
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So you were very instrumental and it was actually a challenge on another show I do to do something about the weather and
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And you really were very helpful and now I have a weather station and I can without looking outside
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I can find out like how foggy it is. It's really nice. Yeah, it's cool. I like it, too
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I'm always fascinated by the weather and I keep remembering
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It's gonna be a sad day when my weather station finally dies
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But like I installed it when my son it was my during my paternity leave when my son was born and you know
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he's about to go into high school. So that thing's been out there a long time and it still works,
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which is pretty great. And I'm glad, so welcome to the world of the weather stations. You got a,
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it's come a long way since 2004. - It really has, the prices have come down. And I mean,
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the thing that I always want to say to people, this is why I sought you out as my rabbi,
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is that you do have to be careful, read very carefully.
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And in my case, I had two bullets
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that really I needed to hit.
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One of them was that a lot of them that you get,
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they're really a weather monitor,
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where it just goes to an ugly screen in your house.
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So A, I wanted one that would be able to connect
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to the internet and would be compatible
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with the Weather Underground network.
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And it wasn't the easiest thing in the world to set up,
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but you just set it up once and it goes.
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And now I can see my weather from anywhere.
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It's the best.
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- Yeah, the weather underground is the big thing.
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When I got mine, first off,
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mine came with a really ugly console, which we still have.
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The nice thing about it is that that's got
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like a little interface plug that used to go
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to your PC parallel port or whatever.
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- That used to be the only way.
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- Right, and then your PC would run the software.
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And one of the nice things that's allowed me
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to keep using this 2004 vintage weather station
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is that they, that company, still uses that same technology for their console and everything,
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and they released, a few years ago, they released an IP module that's basically like an Ethernet
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port. And so now that's plugged into the console, and the console receives the data from the weather
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station and just sends it down my home network to the internet. And that's great. Like, that solves
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so many problems, because back in the day, it was all about just being on the computer. And now,
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these lower-cost weather stations, and some of them are just monitors and they'll give you a
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little screen that you can look at, but some of them, you know, if you get the ones that are kind
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of Wi-Fi enabled or they've got a little smart home base station or something, they'll talk to
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the internet and they'll either, you know, work with like software that you can install on your
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Mac if you want to do it that way, but most of them will go to a cloud service and a lot of them
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will go to Weather Underground, at which point, you know, you're in their little network of
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of personal weather stations and they generate a page for your station that sits there and
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you don't have to build your own page like I had to do back in the day. They've got a
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personal weather station page.
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And you're giving back to the community a little bit. It's nice. I mean, you're helping
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people to... I mean, one nice thing, I just sent you the very ugly monitor that I bought
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for this that I can't believe my wife lets me have in the house. But one thing that's
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nice is you get this nice kind of like arsenal of tools like between general weather underground
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plus dark sky, plus this, plus I got to say IFTTT.
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It's really super handy.
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So I can do stuff like say, hey, let
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me know if the temperature tonight is going to drop--
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my station's going to drop below,
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like I think I said arbitrarily, something like 64 degrees.
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But tell me if it's going to be cool enough
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that I might want to turn the heat on before bed.
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You know, and we'll just leave it on all the time.
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But I realize this is weather nerd stuff.
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But I did want the opportunity to publicly thank you for that.
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I'm actually really, really enjoying it.
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I'm glad you are, and of course I'm happy to help people with their weather station
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needs because I'm apparently that guy.
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I should also mention I have a thing called BitBar, which is this open source utility
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you can search for.
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I think it was designed by a guy who wanted to track Bitcoin prices, but it's actually
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What's a little more power here?
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And I think he realized that it had wider applications, so he revised it to be a little
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can I'll put a link in the show notes to it but bit bar is cool because it's it'll
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put anything in your menu bar like literally it'll put anything in your menu
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bar that you can tell it is a little bit like like like the late belated status
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bar or status the piano the panic app that doesn't work that's killing me
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right now well that was like pretty this is like it puts it in your Mac menu bar
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so it's basically like but you can put anything there so he built he wrote it
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for like Bitcoin prices but it's it just uses you can use like command line to
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put anything in your menu bar and so I now have my current temperature for my
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weather station in my Mac menu bar which is which is cool because it's literally
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my weather station software has a I could probably query like the API for
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weather underground but my weather station has a file it generates every
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two minutes that's literally like just the temperature and all the script does
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is say, "Hey, love that file. Put that in the menu bar." And that's all it does. There's
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some emoji that pop up for, like, if it's raining or whatever. And it actually has a
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little thing in parentheses that's like the temperature diff between now and this time
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yesterday, which can be very useful where it's like, "Whoa, it's way colder today."
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Like, I like that stuff.
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You also market marketed me a little bit here because you put in one simple line of text
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and I've already ordered something.
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Oh, my God. I need you so much.
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Did you buy a metric time?
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maybe. Tell people about this. This is so nerdy and cool. So I have for a long time,
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we used to have those, first they were slim devices and then they were Logitech squeeze
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boxes, the music players. And that was our before Sonos. That was kind of how we did
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digital music in our house. And I love those things. And then Logitech bought them and
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ruined them because that's what Logitech does. But I kept one around because it's got a plug-in
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for a custom clock and so we had this place in the living room right above the TV that
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showed the current time and the current temperature based on the weather station. It was really
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cool. And it's gotten to the point now where those things are all kind of dying, but we
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still have a couple that work. But I don't use them for music anymore. They're literally
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they just sit there turned off with the clock showing because it's something that we use.
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and I talked to my wife about it and she's like, "Oh yeah, I look at that all the time."
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And I bought a little sensor to stick outside and a couple little plastic things that you
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can just look at to see the outside temperature. It's not the same. They don't have the same
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application. And it was big, like the text. You could sit on the couch and you could see
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the time and the temperature. And then I was up at Twit the other week. Well, this actually,
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a few months ago, I was up there doing screensavers with Leo Laporte. And right behind their set
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for screensavers, they've got a whole bunch of junk like screens and little gadgets and
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stuff and they had this little box that's showing the time and it's these little white
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squares in a grid. If you're old enough, if you're as old as we are, you'll remember this.
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It looks kind of like the display on the Goodyear blimp. Yeah, that's right because it's a grid.
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I used to, I had a model Goodyear blimp when I was a kid and you could color in the things
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and slide them in and then turn it on and it would make a little... I totally had that.
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you know kids want to run the scoreboard on the side of a blimp.
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We were just down in San Jose and we saw the Goodyear blimp. It was just there. It was just there hanging out.
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It's very blocky but look at all the stuff that this thing does.
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And it's super bright and part of it's capable of being in color.
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And it seems to be designed as a desk clock and it's got buttons on it so you can have a bunch of different plugins that show different kinds of data.
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And you can have them rotate or you can have an interface.
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And I think there's a music player aspect and it'll connect to Bluetooth.
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There's a bunch of other stuff that it does.
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But I just saw it as a screen, and I was really worried when I was up at Twit that this was
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some like Arduino or Raspberry Pi project that involved soldering, because let me tell
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you, I'm not interested in projects that involve soldering. That's where I draw the
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line. If hot metal, molten metal is involved, I am out. I'm out of there. I can't do
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that. So I'm up there a couple weeks ago, and I say to Leo, "What is this thing?"
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I finally remembered to ask, because I just had it in the back of my mind, like, "Oh,
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I wonder if that is a solution to my problem." And I'm girding myself for the, "Well, there
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will be soldering," kind of moment. And he says, "Oh, yeah, it's the thing, it's the
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lometric time. It's, yeah, you can just buy it online." He said, "It's a little expensive,
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though." And I thought to myself, "Oh, geez, I'm going to go there and I'm going to find
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that it's the perfect solution. It's going to cost $700." And it's $200. It's not cheap.
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right." But at the same time, I thought about it and I was like, "No, but this is the answer,
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literally the answer to this thing. I have Google searched so many different things to
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find something that will do what I need. I've looked at so many different things that say
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they're connected displays that turned out to be something you put outside of Walmart."
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Which is like, "No, no, that's overkill for my living room."
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Like one of those Costco open-close signs. Yeah, it's a scoreboard for a baseball park.
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That's too much. So I did what you may have just done, which is while I was standing there
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prepping the show that we were about to record for Twit, I just bought it. And I had to build
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an app, which like literally is just loading again another text file. It's like a little
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JSON formatted file on my server that shows the temp and the time. It took me about half
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an hour to figure that out. And that's it. The squeeze box got pulled out. The
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lometric time is now where it used to be. It's brighter. The display is lower
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resolution, but it's so big and bright. It's really easy to read. And all it is
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doing is saying like 222, 61 degrees. That's all it's doing. And it
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totally does it. So that was a fun little project and also weather-related. So
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there you go. It's a fun gadget. If it was not sitting up above my TV, I might
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actually play with some of the other plugins and stuff, but for now it's like
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that's all I want is I want a really bright display that shows
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the time and the current temperature from my own weather station.
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I don't know any other product. But you could find out how your Bitcoin's doing probably.
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I could. I certainly could. In fact, the Limetric website shows you all sorts
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of interesting things you can do with the Limetric time, many of which are completely ludicrous.
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I like the one with the big exclamation point that says "Gas leak!"
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That's my favorite too. In case you don't notice that there's a gas leak, your clock will say "gas leak" on it.
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So that's useful.
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So we should probably thank listener Meher very much for the question.
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And if people have questions for you, Jason, what do they do?
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They go onto the Twitter and they use the hashtag SnellTalk.
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Yeah, and it can be about anything, even the weather.
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Even the weather.
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It's true. We have much more to talk about, actually.
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But we have a little bit of follow-up. But I made you blue 20 minutes on weather.
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Yep, I love it. It's great. The cat's away, the mice are playing, that's just how it is.
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Let's talk about some follow-up first, which is old speakers. We just put this in right before
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the show started, old speakers, because I was telling you about this Verge story from
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Heim-Gartenberg. That is, it's a funny story, which is my Airplay speakers have become obsolete
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because their app hasn't been updated in four years, subhead mistakes were made. And the
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idea is basically he's got these AirPlay speakers that are on his Wi-Fi network and he says,
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"I can never change my Wi-Fi network's name or password ever again, or my speakers will
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stop working because the only way to set their settings is to use an app and the app is 32
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bit so it doesn't run anymore." Amazing, right?
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It is, and I think this is a problem we're going to start seeing more and more of. I
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I mean, I already feel this pain with IoT stuff.
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I mean, just coming into the whole internet of things
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environment, I mean, it's generous to call it the Wild
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When you get into things like-- is it Arduino?
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Is that what it's called?
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I don't know.
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Does it involve soldering?
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Don't ask me.
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No soldering.
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No soldering allowed.
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Hey, how comfortable are you with Linux?
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You get that stuff, you get the Raspberry Pi.
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It's the soldering of computers is what Linux is.
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Computer equivalent of soldering, yeah.
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I mean, I haven't gone that far, but it does kind of frustrate
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me a little bit that some stuff, you know,
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for various Apple reasons doesn't work with HomeKit.
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HomeKit is not on the Mac yet.
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There's frustrating things about that.
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But there's also just this idea that I
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suspect that one reason people are
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reluctant to get into this, privacy stuff aside-- very
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important, very much understand the privacy concerns.
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But also just the fact that there's not--
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it's sort of like--
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I don't even remember what the other one's called anymore.
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Blu-ray versus--
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Right, there has not been--
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I found one of those the other day.
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I was like, oh, look.
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my HD DVD that I can't play anywhere.
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BetaMax versus VHS, that really has not shaken out except in this case there's at least three
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or four big players.
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And in the case there was that one dingus that Google bought out that was like the be-all,
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do-all meta hub and then they just kind of discontinued support for that.
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And that can be real frustrating.
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You're not going to, I mean, what if you went out and invested something along the lines
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of a Sonos system and then all of a sudden they just lost interest in updating the app.
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I mean, now you're kind of stuck.
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and I have talked about this, but it's like I really don't like the idea that my purchase
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of a thermostat two years ago suddenly will dictate all future like purchases I have to
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make for my home because it turns out that I have fallen into a, you know, a Wald's garden
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without my knowledge and now I'm stuck inside it. This case is interesting. Somebody pointed
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out by the way and tweeted at Neely Patel from The Verge that the good news is that
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these Knox speakers even though their app is 32-bit so you can't run it anymore. You
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could maybe find an old phone somebody's got, but they also run an apparently un-passworded
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web server in them. So if you can find their IP address on your local network, you can
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just go there and change the settings there, which that's the good news. The bad news is,
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yes, your speakers have been running an unsecured web server for the entire time that you've
00:15:57
◼
►
had them. So, you know. But I'm the guy with the iPod Hi-Fi, so what do I know?
00:16:04
◼
►
Yeah, I still got some old jam boxes kicking around that we actually don't use too much now that we listen on.
00:16:13
◼
►
I mean, we do some Bluetooth speaker-ing, but most of it is with speakers that are capable of other things as well.
00:16:19
◼
►
And I was really amazed. I just fired a couple of these up the other day and charged them and they still work.
00:16:23
◼
►
I have not had luck running the Jawbone app to do the full update.
00:16:28
◼
►
That's being a little bulky for me. And the truth is, you have to be a pretty canny Googler.
00:16:33
◼
►
I don't think they make those speakers anymore.
00:16:36
◼
►
They're all in on the-- what are they called?
00:16:39
◼
►
Like little Fitbit-style dingus.
00:16:41
◼
►
I forget what it's called.
00:16:42
◼
►
But that's what Job Bonus is all in on now.
00:16:47
◼
►
So you do have to do a little bit of canny Googling
00:16:49
◼
►
just to even find the app that you need.
00:16:50
◼
►
And then once you run the app, it runs in your menu bar.
00:16:53
◼
►
It wants to be on all the time.
00:16:54
◼
►
And then when you click on My Devices,
00:16:56
◼
►
it actually takes you to a web page on the web
00:17:00
◼
►
that then I guess is handshaking somehow with the app on your Mac.
00:17:03
◼
►
And of course, now I have, because I have a MacBook,
00:17:06
◼
►
I have numerous dongles just to get to even that point.
00:17:09
◼
►
So it becomes hard to trace exactly what you need to do to get your speakers up to date.
00:17:14
◼
►
- Yeah, and this is the thing that smart tech is cool,
00:17:18
◼
►
but you are putting yourself at risk of being obsolete for computer reasons instead.
00:17:25
◼
►
Like, again, the iPod HiFi, yeah, it's got a dock connector on top,
00:17:28
◼
►
and that's dead and it was charging by a fire wire so it was did actually even
00:17:32
◼
►
before the dock connector was out it was really incompatible but it's got the
00:17:35
◼
►
it's got the three and a half inch plug which is not yet incompatible with my
00:17:39
◼
►
computer so that's good it's savage but it works I saw somebody over the weekend
00:17:43
◼
►
saying something along the lines of oh this is my life now I just had to reboot
00:17:46
◼
►
a light switch yeah oh I I did a I did a light bulb firmware update at one point
00:17:51
◼
►
and that was like well this is so it's come to this you gotta make sure they're
00:17:55
◼
►
all on make sure they're talking about my little metric time clock thingy i
00:17:59
◼
►
mean the difference between that in the squeeze box is the squeeze box ran some
00:18:03
◼
►
server software which while while branded by logitech it the way that slim
00:18:09
◼
►
devices put it together originally it's an open source project and it runs in
00:18:12
◼
►
pearl so theoretically if you maintain this squeeze box hardware you might have
00:18:18
◼
►
to write some stuff yourself or you might like loose features they used to
00:18:21
◼
►
support more streaming services and all of those api's died and there's nobody
00:18:24
◼
►
there to update them from a corporation that can make a deal, so they all kind of died.
00:18:28
◼
►
I mean, there's stuff that died, but the core server is in Perl. It just runs, and it runs
00:18:33
◼
►
fine. And that's my fear with the Limetric Time stuff, is like, I have to kind of go
00:18:37
◼
►
to their app, and although I can make an app on their website, and I can point it at--all
00:18:43
◼
►
it's doing is calling my server, I do have this moment where I realize if that company
00:18:47
◼
►
goes out of business, unless they're very, very nice in relocating the intellectual property
00:18:53
◼
►
somewhere, that thing will just die and there's nothing I can do about it. And that's just--
00:18:59
◼
►
it bugs me, but at the same time, that's the trade-off. It's like, so much of what we have
00:19:04
◼
►
now, you are making a trade-off for privacy or you're making a trade-off of inconvenience
00:19:09
◼
►
or being in a walled garden, or you're taking a risk, whether it's something like this or
00:19:13
◼
►
it's a Kickstarter project, you're taking a risk like I hope they don't die and don't
00:19:17
◼
►
get bought by somebody who kills all the products, which is what happened when Logitech bought
00:19:20
◼
►
slim devices. So you know, you're making gambles all over the place. So obsolescence isn't
00:19:25
◼
►
what it used to be. That's what I'm really saying here.
00:19:29
◼
►
Obsolescence 2.0, yeah. Yeah, that's right. Now about to be replaced
00:19:33
◼
►
with 3.0 beta of obsolescence. But I don't know, old speakers. Casey Alissa's dad's old
00:19:40
◼
►
record player probably still is fine. That's all I'm saying.
00:19:44
◼
►
All those records still sound so warm. Yeah, they do. It's the ritual, Marlon. It's
00:19:47
◼
►
the warming ritual. We have a lot to talk about on this show and we're just getting started. So
00:19:53
◼
►
let me tell you about our first sponsor. How do sponsors work on upgrade, Merlin? I don't know.
00:19:57
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Jason, why don't you tell me about something you like? You know, I do a lot of freelance work. I
00:20:00
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need people to pay me money for things and I'm always wondering, what do I do? I'm sitting here
00:20:03
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with my invoice in my hand. What am I going to do? I'm going to Microsoft Word. I'm going to pull up
00:20:07
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a template. Let me tell you what you do. What do I do? You use our friends at FreshBooks. FreshBooks.
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I don't know how they calculated that out.
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00:20:26
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They're ridiculously easy to use.
00:20:28
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I have people who use Fresh Books to invoice me, and I pay those invoices immediately,
00:20:34
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basically, because it's so convenient.
00:20:36
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The invoice comes, and then I pay it, and we're done.
00:20:40
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they know that I've seen it and they know that I paid it.
00:20:42
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It will reduce the time that freelancers need to deal with their paperwork.
00:20:50
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More than 10 million people who deal with this stuff.
00:20:53
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And it's not why you get into this business, whatever business you're in.
00:20:56
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Like, nobody says, "You know, I'm going to quit my job and go out on my own as a freelancer
00:21:00
◼
►
because I really like invoicing.
00:21:01
◼
►
That's the thing that I want to do."
00:21:04
◼
►
Nobody does that.
00:21:05
◼
►
You don't say, "I don't like to bug.
00:21:07
◼
►
I want to bug people who haven't paid me.
00:21:09
◼
►
I want late payments. Like, I love late payments that I can bug people and try to
00:21:13
◼
►
catch money out of them that they own.
00:21:14
◼
►
I think there's a cat in one of the Richard Scarry books, and that's all it
00:21:17
◼
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aspires to be is to be someone who bugs people about getting paid.
00:21:21
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But FreshBooks lets you, it automates the late payment reminder so you can
00:21:25
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spend less time chasing those payments and more time doing your job, which is
00:21:28
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the way to do it. And when you email a client an invoice, you do get to see
00:21:32
◼
►
that they've seen it. So they're like, "Oh, I don't know. I must have missed
00:21:35
◼
►
that one you could you can this is now a personal choice but you can say well
00:21:39
◼
►
actually three days ago you open that email so give me my money but you know
00:21:44
◼
►
it's a tool in the arsenal because in the end you can do what you love but
00:21:49
◼
►
you got to get paid got to pay the rent you got to buy food and that is
00:21:52
◼
►
something that FreshBooks helps you do if you're not using FreshBooks yet guess
00:21:56
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what try it try it now you can try for 30 days for free because you're an
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That lets them know that you heard about it here. Thank you, FreshBooks, for supporting
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Upgrade for up to 192 hours.
00:22:19
◼
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Just a great sponsor. In some ways, it's a shame that they frame it as invoicing, because
00:22:24
◼
►
the invoicing part is, you know, just computers do that. But the way that they provide you
00:22:27
◼
►
those payment gateways, that changes everything. You know, you're not out there waiting for
00:22:31
◼
►
a check like a sucker. I mean, people can just pay it. They want to use a credit card,
00:22:34
◼
►
could do that. It makes it so easy. Very nice. This is a segment we do, if you're not familiar
00:22:40
◼
►
with the upgrade program, Merlin, called Upstream. Upstream. It's a new-ish segment where we
00:22:46
◼
►
talk about the, you know, Apple is, we talk about Apple a lot and Apple is making this
00:22:53
◼
►
foray into video streaming services. It's going to have its own service next year sometime,
00:22:58
◼
►
probably. That's the story now. And there's a lot of action going on there. Now you know
00:23:03
◼
►
I talk about this with Tim Goodman from The Hollywood Reporter on TV Talk Machine, a podcast
00:23:08
◼
►
I do with him on Fridays.
00:23:10
◼
►
But Myke and I try to talk about it from the kind of bringing it to the tech podcast world
00:23:15
◼
►
and talking about it in that context and what Apple's up to.
00:23:19
◼
►
And last week, Apple was up to something because they made a deal with, I guess, the estate
00:23:24
◼
►
of Isaac Asimov to get the rights to a TV show based on the foundation books, which
00:23:32
◼
►
have basically never been adapted. A bunch of people have tried and failed, but this
00:23:36
◼
►
is now set up with a production company. And David Goyer and Josh Friedman are the creatives
00:23:43
◼
►
behind it. And so Apple, I guess, didn't make the deal with Asimov Estate. Apple made the
00:23:47
◼
►
deal with a production company that had already made that deal. But it's like a whole chain
00:23:50
◼
►
of deals—I hope they use FreshBooks—that let them do this thing. And it's fascinating
00:23:56
◼
►
because Foundation—I read this, and Foundation was a very important early science fiction
00:24:02
◼
►
It's been incredibly influential. But if you go back and read them, and I did a couple years ago for The Incomparable,
00:24:08
◼
►
what you find is it's not really written for, I would say, a modern audience. Asimov was an ideas guy, and he was brimming with ideas.
00:24:20
◼
►
He was not really a characters guy or a plot guy. So you read the books and you're like,
00:24:28
◼
►
it's almost as if Gene Roddenberry dropped down like the Bible for Star Trek, but no
00:24:32
◼
►
episodes and then walked away. Or like two episodes, like a couple pilot episodes, and
00:24:38
◼
►
that was it. And so I actually think this Foundation thing might be a good idea because
00:24:44
◼
►
it puts the responsibility of kind of creating the details of the story, the characters,
00:24:51
◼
►
and the plot lines in the hands of the creative TV people using Asimov's work as kind of just
00:24:57
◼
►
the base instead of having like a whole bunch of well-loved characters everybody
00:25:01
◼
►
knows them they know what they look like they know what they're supposed to do
00:25:03
◼
►
they know exactly what the plot is sort of like Game of Thrones was like up
00:25:07
◼
►
until they ran out of books and so like I think this may be better like it's
00:25:12
◼
►
it's still a gamble because everything is a gamble but I think this might be
00:25:16
◼
►
better I don't know if you've read foundation or not but I haven't but I
00:25:20
◼
►
read your article a very good article about on six colors and I I think I
00:25:24
◼
►
I agree with you. First of all, if Tim, for whatever reason, can ever not make it onto
00:25:31
◼
►
the podcast and you need somebody to sit in and have red wine, please have me because
00:25:34
◼
►
I love that show. The Times of Confusion, Platinum TV.
00:25:36
◼
►
So much television out there.
00:25:38
◼
►
I'm so interested. I feel like you, me, and Joe Steele could just do a show about this
00:25:43
◼
►
stuff because I am finding it increasingly very interesting, not specifically with regard
00:25:49
◼
►
to Apple and Foundation, but just the way that stuff like Netflix--
00:25:53
◼
►
I talked about this on some show.
00:25:56
◼
►
I want to say back to work recently.
00:25:57
◼
►
One of the many podcasts that you're on.
00:25:59
◼
►
But I was talking about how, for one thing--
00:26:03
◼
►
oh, no, it was Systematic with Bret Terpstra.
00:26:05
◼
►
And I was thinking how it's in the same way
00:26:07
◼
►
that I think people don't think of themselves as computer users and Apple
00:26:12
◼
►
users as much as they used to.
00:26:13
◼
►
We do still think about ourselves as consumers of content.
00:26:16
◼
►
And in an age where you can get Netflix on almost any kind of device, like if it's got
00:26:21
◼
►
a light-up screen, you can pretty much get Netflix on it.
00:26:24
◼
►
And I feel like that's sneaking in.
00:26:26
◼
►
Everybody gets that Netflix is a big deal.
00:26:29
◼
►
We have that experience.
00:26:30
◼
►
We had this experience yesterday.
00:26:31
◼
►
We turned on Netflix.
00:26:33
◼
►
Lost in Space.
00:26:35
◼
►
I can watch it with my kid.
00:26:36
◼
►
I had no idea this was coming.
00:26:37
◼
►
Here's this thing on there.
00:26:39
◼
►
And I don't know.
00:26:40
◼
►
I mean, I know this is just a quickie for Upstream, but can you update me?
00:26:45
◼
►
I understand the TV landscape flawlessly, but I thought you might want to explain to
00:26:48
◼
►
your listeners.
00:26:49
◼
►
Where do you think Apple is going with the addition of stuff like this?
00:26:54
◼
►
Do you think they're going to get more into...
00:26:57
◼
►
I mean, this is interesting because there are people who've read these books and love
00:27:00
◼
►
them, and I know they're very influential, but it's not the same kind of nostalgia reboot
00:27:06
◼
►
update idea that you see with a lot of things.
00:27:08
◼
►
And what you're describing here, this can be heavily modernized for a current world.
00:27:12
◼
►
I mean, do you think--
00:27:14
◼
►
I don't know.
00:27:14
◼
►
I'm just curious what you think about how this fits in.
00:27:16
◼
►
I consume a ton of Hulu, a ton of Netflix,
00:27:20
◼
►
giant amounts of YouTube.
00:27:21
◼
►
I'm still struggling to understand
00:27:24
◼
►
where the Apple TV offering is going to fit into my world.
00:27:27
◼
►
And I know you've talked about it,
00:27:29
◼
►
but as you get more pieces to that puzzle,
00:27:31
◼
►
where do you see it fitting into the, if not today's,
00:27:35
◼
►
ecosystem, the emerging ecosystem
00:27:37
◼
►
of streaming services?
00:27:38
◼
►
I think the reason this is the platinum age,
00:27:39
◼
►
and the reason there's too much TV,
00:27:40
◼
►
because it's a land rush, because everybody's realizing that the digital revolution means
00:27:47
◼
►
that you don't need access to a cable system in order to get your content out there and
00:27:52
◼
►
to build a business. And actually Disney's really excited about it because they released
00:27:57
◼
►
their new streaming service, ESPN Plus, which is like a $5 a month or $6 a month streaming
00:28:02
◼
►
service. And they talked again, as they've talked for a while now about this idea that
00:28:07
◼
►
They want to become increasingly direct-to-consumer company, eliminating the middleman and saying,
00:28:14
◼
►
basically, "You pay Disney, and Disney gives you content."
00:28:17
◼
►
And they like that, right?
00:28:18
◼
►
They like just, "Yes, give us the cash, and we'll give you your Star Wars shows, and we'll
00:28:22
◼
►
give you your Marvel shows, and we'll give you ESPN, we'll give you some hurling and
00:28:29
◼
►
rugby and things, the second division soccer on ESPN Plus."
00:28:34
◼
►
And they are able to do that now because they've got, you can just use the internet for streaming.
00:28:41
◼
►
And Apple wants to be in that conversation.
00:28:43
◼
►
I think that's a big part of this is, I think it's unrealistic to think that in five years
00:28:49
◼
►
or ten years, there are going to be dozens and dozens of $10 a month video streaming
00:28:55
◼
►
services, all of which are paying top shelf creators to do 20 shows a year of, 20 series
00:29:04
◼
►
of 12 or 10 episodes a year for billions of dollars. It's not sustainable, I think.
00:29:09
◼
►
It makes this feel a little bit like the Pets.com era, where we know it's a loss leader to deliver
00:29:15
◼
►
this giant cat food for free or for $5 or whatever.
00:29:19
◼
►
I think there's going to be a crash where the people who are working in television now,
00:29:24
◼
►
I think a lot of the jobs will go away eventually because I think in the end it won't be sustainable
00:29:30
◼
►
to the degree it is now. I don't know how brutal a crash it will be, but I think there
00:29:33
◼
►
be one. And this is when I talk to people and they're like, "Another streaming service?
00:29:36
◼
►
I don't want to spend another $10 a month for another streaming service." And I mean,
00:29:41
◼
►
first off, they're not mandatory. It was just like if you heard about a great show on HBO
00:29:46
◼
►
and you weren't paying for HBO, you could grouse about it. But there was a solution,
00:29:50
◼
►
which is you could pay for HBO and get it, or you just don't and you don't. And those
00:29:53
◼
►
are kind of your choices. But I do think that in the long run, we won't be paying for 15
00:30:00
◼
►
streaming services, stuff's going to get bundled together, and you're going to be sort of cutting
00:30:06
◼
►
the cord eventually. Everybody is going to not be thinking of television as like paying
00:30:11
◼
►
for cable TV. It's all going to be streaming services. Amazon's aggressively bundling services
00:30:16
◼
►
together inside of Prime Video already. Stuff like that's going to continue happening where
00:30:21
◼
►
you can buy services inside of other services or you can buy bundles. And Apple wants in
00:30:26
◼
►
on all that. Apple wants something exclusive, I think, that will probably only run on their
00:30:31
◼
►
stuff. I think they want that.
00:30:32
◼
►
Okay, that's key. That's key. So you feel like this will run probably on Apple TV? You
00:30:37
◼
►
don't think this is something you'll get on Roku?
00:30:39
◼
►
I don't think it is. I think that would be really interesting if that happened, but it
00:30:43
◼
►
would be contrary to all of Apple's strategy up to now. I think the only reason Apple Music
00:30:47
◼
►
is on Android is because Beats was on Android, and so they decided to keep it around. But
00:30:51
◼
►
I think ultimately this is the reason Apple is spending this money is primarily to attach
00:30:55
◼
►
people to Apple's platforms. And Apple wants to be in the game and Apple wants to be considered
00:31:01
◼
►
and Apple wants to be one of those big players and help set the scene here. And they want
00:31:05
◼
►
to be, ultimately, they want to be one of the last ones left standing when the music
00:31:10
◼
►
stops, because there will be a reckoning. And Apple has the money to be a player. I
00:31:15
◼
►
think that's what you see with a lot of this stuff is who's got the money to ante up for
00:31:20
◼
►
this game because it's a high-stakes game and if you aren't paying top-notch creators
00:31:25
◼
►
and getting great content and you know the story is that Jeff Bezos told the people at
00:31:29
◼
►
Amazon he wants the next Game of Thrones. He doesn't want like little quirky comedies
00:31:35
◼
►
that win Golden Globe Awards as much as I liked Mozart and the Jungle which just got
00:31:38
◼
►
canceled. It was not going to be a worldwide phenomenon and that's the shifting to a blockbuster
00:31:47
◼
►
to it, like I want that Game of Thrones, I want that Blockbuster, I think that's all
00:31:51
◼
►
part of this, which is people want the huge hits, the must-watches, because they want
00:31:56
◼
►
to be indispensable, because there will come a time when there are so many different services
00:32:01
◼
►
that people are going to be forced to choose which ones they're going to stay with, and
00:32:05
◼
►
that's going to probably kill, you know, not necessarily kill the niche players that are
00:32:09
◼
►
kind of like, you know, like something like Acorn that's just like British TV and other
00:32:14
◼
►
European TV and other Commonwealth TV. Or like, for people younger than us,
00:32:19
◼
►
Crunchyroll. Exactly right. I see Crunchyroll show up on Roku or Apple TV or
00:32:24
◼
►
whatever and I don't think about it but my daughter's friends watch tons of anime.
00:32:29
◼
►
And those I think have a real chance to succeed although they might also get
00:32:33
◼
►
kind of bought and sucked into a bigger player but like the big players who are
00:32:37
◼
►
like the game they're playing is prestige television scripted. Like, how many of those
00:32:45
◼
►
can make it? There was a time when there was literally just HBO and Showtime, and now we
00:32:50
◼
►
have kind of this increasing number of people playing that game, and Netflix has taken it
00:32:54
◼
►
to a whole, you know, even higher level. And you can do that for a while, but in the end
00:33:00
◼
►
I don't think the world is going to accept ten of those or whatever. So I think there
00:33:08
◼
►
will be a reckoning at some point. But Apple wants to be in the game. Apple wants to be
00:33:12
◼
►
talked about. And I think Apple really does want something to break through where everybody's
00:33:15
◼
►
like, "Oh my God, I need that Ron Moore sci-fi show," or "I need amazing stories," or "I
00:33:20
◼
►
need the Jennifer Aniston Reese Witherspoon drama that is a buzz-worthy drama," or whatever
00:33:27
◼
►
breaks through or shows breakthrough because that's good for them because then they're
00:33:31
◼
►
like well yeah you can you can only watch that on your iPhone or your iPad or your Apple
00:33:35
◼
►
TV. The only thing that, gosh I got a lot of thoughts about this and I know we're still
00:33:39
◼
►
early in the show, but it feels like they're doing a play like with Amazon Prime in some
00:33:45
◼
►
ways it seems like they're maybe skating where the puck was. It feels like they're doing
00:33:49
◼
►
a little bit of an HBO play where they they want the the prestige. It's just that HBO
00:33:54
◼
►
run on a lot of different things. The thing that I find concerning, again, we haven't
00:34:01
◼
►
seen much, there's nothing to look at yet to evaluate this, but it just feels like that
00:34:06
◼
►
Venn diagram gets pretty tight of people who have Apple products and would want this particular
00:34:10
◼
►
thing. They're closing off a lot of the markets. It's a little bit like the days when Steve
00:34:15
◼
►
initially didn't want iPods to work with Windows, that kind of thing.
00:34:20
◼
►
I agree that the like, if they wanted the streaming service to be the most successful,
00:34:25
◼
►
it could be as a streaming service you'd want it everywhere. I'm not sure that Apple as
00:34:31
◼
►
a company is investing in a streaming service because they want to have a successful streaming
00:34:36
◼
►
service business, right? Like maybe they do. Maybe they've completely changed their approach.
00:34:40
◼
►
And the services line in their budget is about like anything. It could be literally anything
00:34:46
◼
►
you could think of as a service. It doesn't have to be tied to Apple's hardware or platforms
00:34:50
◼
►
in any other way. But I have a hard time believing that. I think in the end they see it as a
00:34:55
◼
►
means to an end, which is getting people in their ecosystem and not just making whatever
00:35:01
◼
►
$10 a month off of somebody who's using a Roku box. But I could be wrong. I mean, that
00:35:05
◼
►
would be a very different thing for them. It contributes to developing and growing.
00:35:11
◼
►
I hate when people use that verb that way, but basically trying to get more of a halo
00:35:15
◼
►
effect. The idea is like you love your iPhone, now check out these other things.
00:35:18
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, and maybe a little bit of like, "Oh, that's a really buzz-worthy show, but
00:35:22
◼
►
you got to have an Apple device to watch it, or you have to wait." And that they want that.
00:35:26
◼
►
Kind of like the Star Trek show, sort of, with CBS a little bit?
00:35:29
◼
►
Yeah, well, I mean, with CBS, they're really just trying to build a business. I think the
00:35:35
◼
►
smart thing, because that makes Star Trek fans really angry about the fact that in the
00:35:38
◼
►
US, it's Netflix everywhere else but the US and Canada, but Star Trek fans in the US are
00:35:43
◼
►
really grumpy that that show got on CBS All Access and not on something else. It was basically
00:35:48
◼
►
you need to pay for this one show.
00:35:50
◼
►
That sounds like nobody particularly loves using that app.
00:35:53
◼
►
Yeah, well, yeah. So the funny thing about it is, though, that was, I think from a business
00:35:58
◼
►
perspective, as far as I can tell, a great success for them because they got a lot of
00:36:04
◼
►
people to sign up for CBS All Access, their streaming service, and they're trying to build
00:36:09
◼
►
that service. And they got names, and they got people to advertise to, and some of them
00:36:12
◼
►
maybe stayed as subscribers and some of them will come back next time. And they did it
00:36:17
◼
►
all with a show that the Netflix purchase basically paid for. So everything was about
00:36:22
◼
►
building a future business and making a profit on it. And it was an investment for them.
00:36:28
◼
►
And it would have been easier for them to take a bigger profit and be on Netflix everywhere
00:36:34
◼
►
in the world. But in the US they're like, "Yeah, but we want to build our own. We want
00:36:37
◼
►
to have our own thing." And CBS doesn't do it the way other companies do it, but they
00:36:41
◼
►
They do have a strategy and they have been very successful as a business.
00:36:45
◼
►
There are a lot of stories about how, you know, there's rumors about Viacom and CBS
00:36:49
◼
►
coming back together because they used to be together and they got split apart.
00:36:53
◼
►
And the funny thing about the story is that 10 years ago when they got split apart, CBS
00:36:58
◼
►
was viewed as this legacy business that it was like, "Good luck Les Moonves, head of
00:37:02
◼
►
CBS, with your legacy network business," whereas the cable TV business was viewed as this.
00:37:07
◼
►
Like that was the shining growth opportunity.
00:37:10
◼
►
now when the owner or like majority shareholder of both is trying to get
00:37:15
◼
►
them both together again, Sherry Redstone, the perception is like CBS doesn't want
00:37:19
◼
►
to touch Viacom because CBS has actually been very profitable and successful and
00:37:24
◼
►
Viacom is seen as being troubled. That's one of my favorite running observations from Tim
00:37:28
◼
►
on TV Talk Machine is just that idea of like, "Hey, CBS, you know, you may not make
00:37:33
◼
►
it into the power rankings too often but like keep doing what you're doing." It's
00:37:36
◼
►
not for me but like it's working. It's a successful business and that's the thing about
00:37:39
◼
►
Star Trek is like Star Trek fans are grumpy about it being on that show being on CBS All
00:37:43
◼
►
Access but it was a good business move like it was a really smart business move I think
00:37:47
◼
►
the real question is do they have the budget and do they have I know they've got some ambition
00:37:51
◼
►
but do they have the budget to build that thing into something that people keep as a
00:37:55
◼
►
subscription year round and they have like three or four original shows on it now so
00:38:00
◼
►
I keep thinking and as a Star Trek fan I will admit that this is also some some wish casting
00:38:05
◼
►
happening here, but I keep thinking you own Star Trek, you have a streaming service, why
00:38:11
◼
►
are you not developing multiple Star Trek shows now? You launched one, you got a second
00:38:16
◼
►
season of that coming, like, put your money in here, because this is a franchise you could
00:38:20
◼
►
run with and get people to subscribe, but instead they've got like the Star Trek thing
00:38:26
◼
►
and they've got like the Good Wife spinoff and they've got a comedy show and I think
00:38:31
◼
►
there's another drama that's coming and it's just kind of scattershot now. So that's the
00:38:35
◼
►
question for CBS is not that it wasn't a bad move it's that like what's your big
00:38:39
◼
►
plan here is it to just are they are they hoping to get a lot of I mean isn't
00:38:44
◼
►
there isn't it fair to say that their demo tends to skew a little older on
00:38:48
◼
►
network but I think I'm on stop on streaming there there it's a much
00:38:53
◼
►
younger audience they said but times of confusion it is a wacky time I have one
00:38:59
◼
►
other upstream thing I wanted to mention which is something that also came up on
00:39:02
◼
►
on TV Talk Machine, which is FanTV, which is a really great app. It used to be FanHatton.
00:39:07
◼
►
It's a place where you could go and like find out like where's that movie? Where's that
00:39:10
◼
►
TV show? Where's it available? What streaming services is it on? Is it for rent or for sale
00:39:14
◼
►
at iTunes or Amazon? Is it on cable? Where is it? And it died. It's already well and
00:39:22
◼
►
truly dead. I think it died today. I think today is the death of FanTV. And it got bought
00:39:29
◼
►
by TiVo or maybe Rovio, which became TiVo, and it just got sucked into the maw of that
00:39:34
◼
►
intellectual property whirlwind and is gone. So a lot of people were asking like, "Well,
00:39:41
◼
►
what app should I use or web service should I use to track my shows?" Whether it's like,
00:39:45
◼
►
"What shows should I watch now?" or whether it's, "Can I stream this in this place or
00:39:50
◼
►
in that place?" And I have a few recommendations for people. Like, I heard from a bunch of
00:39:55
◼
►
people last week about this that just watch dot-com is great that there's
00:40:00
◼
►
tracked dot TV TR a k t dot TV TV time dot-com and their apps for most of these
00:40:06
◼
►
things to somebody recommended can I stream it which is literally can I
00:40:10
◼
►
stream dot it
00:40:12
◼
►
although last time I used it it was not reliable for me it was saying things
00:40:16
◼
►
were not streamable that were can I stream it use was the first one I knew
00:40:19
◼
►
of for doing that, but it's been pretty undependable.
00:40:23
◼
►
The Just Watch has something I like a lot,
00:40:26
◼
►
which is once you go in and get your account set up,
00:40:28
◼
►
you get to basically pick which of the streaming services
00:40:31
◼
►
you want, which makes it a lot easier to go in and find stuff.
00:40:34
◼
►
So you could say, well, I'd be willing to buy it from here,
00:40:37
◼
►
but not from there.
00:40:37
◼
►
And then when you bring in something like-- what's
00:40:39
◼
►
Movie-- I know this is movies, not TV, but movies anywhere.
00:40:42
◼
►
Have you talked about that much here?
00:40:44
◼
►
We talked about it a little bit.
00:40:45
◼
►
I mean, boy, such a fascinating time right now.
00:40:49
◼
►
when you get your stuff like where where does that exist where can you get it
00:40:52
◼
►
where does it live you know Siri on Apple TV helps with that an okay amount
00:40:57
◼
►
it doesn't gobble up all of the apps but that's that's the trick right is like
00:41:00
◼
►
who are the apps willing to put themselves in the search my Tivo
00:41:03
◼
►
honestly and this is why they bought fan TV I think my Tivo does a great job my
00:41:08
◼
►
Tivo actually has a pretty good job of knowing what streaming based on the
00:41:11
◼
►
streaming services it supports anyway it can say so I could get I could get
00:41:15
◼
►
Seinfeld reruns from any of these places and it'll say this show's current season
00:41:18
◼
►
is on CBS but the past season's on Hulu and it'll show you all the episodes and
00:41:22
◼
►
the ones that are on Hulu will play on Hulu and the ones that are on CBS you
00:41:26
◼
►
can record on CBS and it does it that way for everything which is pretty clever.
00:41:29
◼
►
TV Times cool too. I don't use the website much but I do use it on my phone.
00:41:34
◼
►
That really wants to be like I guess like all of these it really wants to be
00:41:38
◼
►
kind of a maybe along the lines of letterbox for movies it wants to be a
00:41:42
◼
►
social network it wants to be something where you're sharing it with people and
00:41:45
◼
►
And they're seeing your reviews and stuff.
00:41:48
◼
►
But TV time's pretty good.
00:41:49
◼
►
I just loaded up with all the shows, especially ones
00:41:51
◼
►
that aren't-- like, like, when's Doctor Who come back on,
00:41:53
◼
►
and stuff like that.
00:41:54
◼
►
All the shows, Marlin?
00:41:55
◼
►
All the great shows.
00:41:57
◼
►
They're all in there.
00:42:00
◼
►
I also just want to mention, this is not strictly germane,
00:42:03
◼
►
but if you don't know about this, listeners,
00:42:05
◼
►
Flixable is very, very good.
00:42:08
◼
►
It's not for tracking, but it does one thing very well.
00:42:12
◼
►
And that is, it is a website that shows you, basically,
00:42:15
◼
►
sorted by date when stuff got added to Netflix. So if like me you've ever struggled to figure
00:42:20
◼
►
out what's new, you know there is new stuff, but in their infinite scrolling interface,
00:42:24
◼
►
the infinite carousel of hell, Flixable is really great. They have a tab for movies,
00:42:29
◼
►
a tab for TV, and it's a great way to just pop in every week or two and say, "Oh, did
00:42:32
◼
►
I miss anything?" Like here's this spate of Indian subcontinent sitcoms that they've added
00:42:38
◼
►
or whatever. But you'll also see there's Wild Wild Country, here's stuff that was recently
00:42:41
◼
►
added to keep you from losing your mind as a Netflix user try flexible f l i x a b l e
00:42:47
◼
►
dot com I have some other topics for us to talk about but let me say some words about
00:42:53
◼
►
our next sponsor this is Pingdom Pingdom awesome people at Pingdom and why are they awesome
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because they keep websites online they keep the sites you love and your sites from crashing
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who emails you or tweets at you and says, "You're sight's down?" I had this happen with
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◼
►
The Incomparable the other week where Greg Noss was doing a software update and the server
00:44:08
◼
►
went down and I got this and I was at, where was I? I was like at a baseball game or I
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was at a movie or something like that and I emerged and it was like, "Oh, what is wrong?"
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I had this whole thing. Greg had already taken care of it and I'd already gotten a Pingdom
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warning. I got a Pingdom warning and I got Greg saying, "Yeah, I broke the site but it's
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about to go back up and then it was fine again but you got to know that because yeah the
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last thing you want the best move the best move is you hear about it it gets fixed and
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nobody noticed like nobody had time to send you that email saying I think your website
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►
is down is it just me or is it down you're like nope we got a backup it's not even down
00:44:46
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►
you were just seeing things that's that is great I have done that every now and then
00:44:49
◼
►
where it's like, "Is your site down?" and I'll reply, "No, it's up. Just go. It's fine.
00:44:54
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What are you talking about? I don't have any idea what you mean because we've got to back
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up as quickly as possible." All you have to do with Pingdom is just give them your URL
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use the code upgradedcheckout and you'll get 30% off your first invoice.
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Whew, that's a lot of percents.
00:45:22
◼
►
Thank you, Pingdom, for supporting this show in Real AFM and presumably making it so that
00:45:27
◼
►
if Steven breaks the Real AFM website, we hear about it before you do.
00:45:31
◼
►
Because that could happen.
00:45:33
◼
►
It's happened before is all I'm saying.
00:45:35
◼
►
Steven: It happens.
00:45:36
◼
►
Jared: Uh, some news we should talk about.
00:45:38
◼
►
I wrote a, I did a dumb thing just because I thought it would be funny and it kind of
00:45:43
◼
►
turned into a bigger thing.
00:45:46
◼
►
It starts with this story, though. Apple put a time bomb in the latest version of Mac OS.
00:45:52
◼
►
It's kind of weird. 1013.4 came out a couple weeks ago, but they put a time bomb in for
00:45:57
◼
►
like Thursday the 12th at midnight local time. And after that point, if you launched an app
00:46:04
◼
►
that was a 32-bit app—
00:46:05
◼
►
This is in High Sierra.
00:46:06
◼
►
Yeah, so High Sierra only, the latest version of High Sierra. 1013.4. So, such a catchy
00:46:13
◼
►
set of numbers that is. It will put up a little box that says basically this is an old app,
00:46:22
◼
►
email the developer, shame them, which you shouldn't do. You should check on your developer's
00:46:29
◼
►
website and see if they've already made a statement about it. And then if they haven't,
00:46:34
◼
►
you could send them a very nice email. I imagine that's what most people do. They probably
00:46:37
◼
►
go and check. They probably do, yeah. It says this app is not optimized for your Mac. It
00:46:41
◼
►
to be updated by its developer—again, it's not you, it's them—to improve compatibility.
00:46:47
◼
►
Also, by the way, 32-bit Apple apps don't get this warning, because Apple does not want
00:46:53
◼
►
you to contact them about their apps that are not being updated. And this is—now,
00:46:58
◼
►
there's a lot of panic that could happen here, and it doesn't need to happen. In fact,
00:47:01
◼
►
I was kind of talking Marco down via sending text messages to Casey when they were doing
00:47:06
◼
►
ATP last week about this, because it had just sort of broken right before, and I'd written
00:47:09
◼
►
my article about it, that even though—so Apple has said in the past, this is not news,
00:47:16
◼
►
that in a future version of Mac OS, 32-bit apps won't run anymore. They have said that.
00:47:22
◼
►
But a key thing—
00:47:24
◼
►
On the infinite timescale.
00:47:25
◼
►
Exactly right. On an infinite timescale. Well, no software is going to run on an infinite
00:47:30
◼
►
timescale, except for Unix. It will be around forever. But what they said at WWDC last year was,
00:47:36
◼
►
in the next version of macOS, so the one that comes out this fall, 32-bit apps—well, let's see,
00:47:45
◼
►
High Sierra, they said the one that's out now will be the last version of macOS to run 32-bit apps
00:47:52
◼
►
without compromise. And I checked on this, because there's some nuance here,
00:47:57
◼
►
because the implication from that is they will run, but there will be an unstated compromise.
00:48:03
◼
►
And I asked around and I can say that I was told yes, that interpretation is exactly right.
00:48:12
◼
►
This fall's macOS updates not going to not run them, but there will be an unstated compromise.
00:48:18
◼
►
Who knows what that is? It could be an annoying dialog box, even more annoying than this one.
00:48:22
◼
►
It could be that you have to, by default, they don't run and you have to reboot and do something
00:48:26
◼
►
and set something in order for it to run. And then Apple can say, "Haha, you don't get this
00:48:30
◼
►
awesome feature at 100% or at all because you're in the wrong mode. There's lots of
00:48:34
◼
►
complexity there that might make you not want to run them, but they're not going to be completely
00:48:40
◼
►
shut out this fall. But, you know, next fall, probably is my guess, right? Maybe not, maybe
00:48:46
◼
►
not, but probably, which means this is like an 18 month warning. This is a gentle transition.
00:48:52
◼
►
But it's definitely one of the, it's a classic, it's a classic warning shot from Apple. I
00:48:57
◼
►
I mean, Apple watchers will over time realize that when Apple issues this kind of, I guess
00:49:04
◼
►
you could call it a warning, but definitely a heads up.
00:49:06
◼
►
Make your way toward the exits.
00:49:09
◼
►
Make your way toward the exits.
00:49:10
◼
►
We're not saying that you have to run.
00:49:12
◼
►
There's plenty of time, but you will need to make your way toward the exits.
00:49:16
◼
►
I don't know if it's because of this particular computer I'm on because I'm an old man and
00:49:19
◼
►
I am very reluctant to update.
00:49:21
◼
►
My MacBook, adorable, has High Sierra, but I'm just running Sierra.
00:49:25
◼
►
So when you look at, so you can do this by going to system information and then going
00:49:32
◼
►
to the application section, subsection in hardware and see which ones are available.
00:49:36
◼
►
I'm seeing a lot, a whole lot of stuff, including a lot of surprising Apple apps.
00:49:44
◼
►
There's a lot of that's, that's why Apple, I mean, and to be fair, Apple's got the home
00:49:47
◼
►
field advantage here.
00:49:48
◼
►
App Apple can keep those 32 bit apps around as long as they want and keep them running
00:49:53
◼
►
or they can only update them to 64-bit when they release the version that only runs 64-bit.
00:50:03
◼
►
They're their own time table, right?
00:50:06
◼
►
But for example, do you feel confident that we'll still be able to, for example, run firmware
00:50:12
◼
►
password utility?
00:50:13
◼
►
They'll probably give that a little...
00:50:15
◼
►
I think not.
00:50:16
◼
►
I think not.
00:50:18
◼
►
Well that brings to...
00:50:20
◼
►
hardware and stuff like that is part of this story, right? Because it's not just old software,
00:50:24
◼
►
it's old hardware. Like I did, so the dumb thing that I did, because I thought it would
00:50:28
◼
►
be funny, is when I realized that Apple's apps didn't generate the warning, I filed
00:50:33
◼
►
a bug, because they always say file a radar. I filed a radar for QuickTime Player 7 saying,
00:50:40
◼
►
"Oh, QuickTime Player 7 isn't 64-bit, so you should do that." And that was closed with
00:50:47
◼
►
prejudice as we're not going to do that." It's like, "All right, fair." So then I wrote
00:50:52
◼
►
another bug report, which was, "Oh, QuickTime Player 10 doesn't have all these features
00:50:57
◼
►
that are in QuickTime Player 7, and since QuickTime Player 7 is going away, you should
00:51:01
◼
►
probably put them in QuickTime Player 10. Check and mate." Right? I'm waiting for that
00:51:06
◼
►
to be closed. It hasn't been closed yet, I'm sure it will. Or closed as a duplicate, because
00:51:10
◼
►
people have been complaining about this. It's the reason QuickTime Player 7, which is ancient,
00:51:15
◼
►
runs and is still kicking around is because just this weekend I used it to
00:51:20
◼
►
put an audio soundtrack on top of a video that I had that was a different
00:51:26
◼
►
soundtrack and then we did an incomparable like commentary track about
00:51:31
◼
►
Star Wars and I have a Star Wars mp4 and I have this wave file of our commentary
00:51:37
◼
►
you did two versions and I did yeah because there's a special editions which
00:51:41
◼
►
we didn't watch and I you know basically in QuickTime I just like add the audio
00:51:44
◼
►
track in and then export it out as an MP4 and boom I've got an MP4 with the
00:51:49
◼
►
new audio track in it was you know this is why we we keep it around but Apple's
00:51:54
◼
►
QuickTime API's never really got updated for 64-bit QuickTime Player 10 doesn't
00:51:58
◼
►
apparently really use the old QuickTime at all it's just kind of QuickTime in
00:52:02
◼
►
name only or for the most part Greg Pak the comic book writer and also
00:52:07
◼
►
sometimes filmmaker tweeted at me like oh does this mean Final Cut 7 is finally
00:52:13
◼
►
gonna die and I was like yeah actually yeah it does that's for all the people
00:52:17
◼
►
who are holding out and doesn't mean it's gonna stop working but it means
00:52:20
◼
►
that if you update to the version after the version that comes this fall it may
00:52:24
◼
►
not run anymore at all what about the old garage band you think the old garage
00:52:27
◼
►
band is garage band 6 or whatever that's 32 bed that'll stop running but so here's
00:52:33
◼
►
the thing it's not like if you're really committed to old software you can keep
00:52:36
◼
►
your old computer with your old software and not update and you can still use it
00:52:40
◼
►
and it's okay. The problem is that if you are fully dedicated to the Final Cut Pro 7
00:52:45
◼
►
lifestyle and you still edit all your movies on it and you don't care, you can keep buying
00:52:52
◼
►
computers that run it up to the point where Apple releases an OS that doesn't support
00:52:57
◼
►
it, at which point you have to just keep using your old computer forever. And that's where
00:53:03
◼
►
the incompatibility really hurts you is, "Oh, I can use Final Cut 7 and you use it for several
00:53:11
◼
►
years and you're like, 'Oh, it's fine,' and then your computer breaks and you're like,
00:53:14
◼
►
'Oh, I guess I need a new Mac.'" Uh-oh. Because it won't. And that's, I mean, this is life,
00:53:21
◼
►
right? I mean, software doesn't last forever. OSes always get updated and break old software.
00:53:25
◼
►
This is just a more dramatic kind of large-scale example of it. But this stuff happens. It's
00:53:32
◼
►
just if it's something that you love that is going away, it's hard. So it's not, again,
00:53:39
◼
►
you can make your way to the exit slowly, but this is Apple just continuing to push
00:53:45
◼
►
things along. I do wonder about that without compromise, though. I do wonder if by default
00:53:49
◼
►
they won't run and there'll be some whizzy new feature that they introduced this fall
00:53:55
◼
►
that will just not work in that mode. So that's the question, how painful will that compromise
00:54:02
◼
►
if you're still running 32-bit apps. Oh, the DVD player, by the way. DVD player is
00:54:06
◼
►
32-bit. Unclear whether Apple's gonna update that or just say, you know, run a
00:54:12
◼
►
virtual machine of Lion to get that. So many groupers title case
00:54:17
◼
►
service that I run. So many of the old Ecamm utilities. Yeah, well, they're all
00:54:22
◼
►
QuickTime. They can't go to 64-bit as long as they're based on QuickTime.
00:54:25
◼
►
What's gonna really suck, though, is this is also another pretty good
00:54:31
◼
►
example of as many warnings as they give to people. If there is a day where they just
00:54:36
◼
►
cut the cord, think about the terrible mixture of, let's say you're somebody who is using
00:54:42
◼
►
a Mac with these old apps and maybe you're not reading the trades, it's just going to
00:54:46
◼
►
be one day they're going to open it up and be like, "What happened to my Mac?"
00:54:49
◼
►
Right, right. Because that moment where it's, well, I think this is part of the compromises
00:54:54
◼
►
story though, is like this fall that'll happen is my theory. I think that's maybe the most
00:54:59
◼
►
likely thing is this fall you remember when they introduced gatekeeper and suddenly that
00:55:04
◼
►
app you downloaded from some shady place on the internet and you double clicked it and
00:55:07
◼
►
goes whoa you downloaded this from some weird place and by default I won't let you run it
00:55:11
◼
►
but you can go to the system preferences and change it so that I'll let you run it fine
00:55:16
◼
►
live dangerously right well I think I think maybe it'll be something like that where you
00:55:19
◼
►
open it up and be like okay I can't run 32-bit apps in this mode because this is super awesome
00:55:24
◼
►
mode of Mac OS, you know, Monterey Bay Otter. And then you're--but you can go in and turn
00:55:32
◼
►
it to less awesome mode and reboot, and everything will be kind of drab and gray, but you can
00:55:38
◼
►
run your old apps. And as a user, you're like, "Oh, hmm, okay, I'll do that." And so if you
00:55:44
◼
►
do that, then maybe the next year when you update again and it says, "Sorry, super awesome
00:55:49
◼
►
mode is the only mode now and you can't run 32-bit apps," you'll be a little less surprised.
00:55:53
◼
►
I think you still might be grumpy about it and you may be surprised, but I feel like
00:55:57
◼
►
this that actually is one of the values in doing the with compromises step.
00:56:03
◼
►
Is it like it's like, no, no, no, no, we're serious.
00:56:05
◼
►
This is going to go away.
00:56:07
◼
►
Like puts it in your fit.
00:56:08
◼
►
This is like, this is it puts it in your face.
00:56:10
◼
►
Once the next step will be to get it like where you're going to have to start changing
00:56:14
◼
►
settings to run it.
00:56:15
◼
►
And then the final step is it doesn't run.
00:56:17
◼
►
I don't know.
00:56:19
◼
►
It's going to frustrate people.
00:56:20
◼
►
It's a performance issue.
00:56:22
◼
►
Is that the idea?
00:56:22
◼
►
I think that's part of it. Metal is a 64-bit thing. It's performance to a degree, but I
00:56:29
◼
►
think it's also just maintenance. It will be easier when they can just say, "Everything
00:56:35
◼
►
in the system runs 64-bit clean. We don't have to translate. There's nothing we have
00:56:41
◼
►
to do. All the old crud goes away. All that 32-bit code." And that includes QuickTime.
00:56:46
◼
►
like it's gone, right? 32-bit QuickTime, gone. I imagine that that's less maintenance work
00:56:52
◼
►
and that the system will be better for it as a, you know, as a gestalt, as an overall
00:56:58
◼
►
system, right? You're ripping out the legacy stuff. The problem is when you rip out the
00:57:02
◼
►
legacy stuff, you take stuff people are using with it. And I mean, you could argue that
00:57:07
◼
►
that's one of the reasons Windows was so bad for so long is that Microsoft's customers
00:57:11
◼
►
did not let them rip anything out ever. I mean, it was very hard, much harder than Apple.
00:57:17
◼
►
Right, this might need to run on a set-top box in Vietnam, like, "We need to keep this."
00:57:22
◼
►
Yeah, exactly right. And so, you know, Apple's good at transitions, and this is actually
00:57:28
◼
►
kind of a long and kind one. I'm not saying that people who are angry about it can be
00:57:32
◼
►
angry about it, because if you're losing your favorite app, it makes sense. I will point
00:57:36
◼
►
out for a while now it's been legal to run Mac OS in a virtual machine and as ridiculous
00:57:44
◼
►
as it is if you have an app that you absolutely have to run and it's a 32-bit app you could
00:57:49
◼
►
probably make a virtual machine of High Sierra or Sierra or El Capitan or Yosemite or you
00:57:55
◼
►
know or anything that's covered by that license in VMware or Parallels and keep it around
00:58:02
◼
►
and it will run and it's legal to do that with old operating system versions.
00:58:06
◼
►
And that may be one way that people keep some of this stuff alive.
00:58:08
◼
►
I wouldn't recommend using Final Cut Pro 7 in emulation, right?
00:58:13
◼
►
Auntie Sue is not going to do that to keep her favorite Solitaire game going.
00:58:17
◼
►
Well, that's where the real bummer is going to happen.
00:58:20
◼
►
Now Auntie Sue may just keep her old computer.
00:58:24
◼
►
But until they put out that Mac Pro, she's been waiting for it.
00:58:27
◼
►
Exactly right.
00:58:28
◼
►
Finally, she says, "I've been using this G5 for 15 years,
00:58:32
◼
►
and now I'm going to upgrade to the Turbo Charger Solitaire. And then there's the thing that Myke
00:58:36
◼
►
and I have been talking about for a while now, which is there's also the rumors it's the elephant,
00:58:40
◼
►
because last week was all of the parables. Like the elephant in the room here is what's the future
00:58:46
◼
►
of the Mac, because there's like going to 64-bit and there's the rumors about leaving Intel behind
00:58:51
◼
►
and there's this question of like what do they do with, are they going to do something like the
00:58:56
◼
►
rumor about Marzipan where it's like iOS apps that also run on the Mac. All these things are swirling
00:59:01
◼
►
around because I have those moments where I think, I don't know, if 32-bit, old 32-bit
00:59:08
◼
►
Mac software maybe may not be the only thing we're going to be asked to leave
00:59:12
◼
►
behind on this platform in the next few years. I don't know. At some point if
00:59:17
◼
►
you leave everything behind there's nothing left. It's a platform
00:59:21
◼
►
transition and not just a software transition inside a platform, but Apple
00:59:25
◼
►
may test us on that one. Yeah, so anyway 32-bit apps, check it out. You can find
00:59:29
◼
►
out what apps you're running that are 32-bit. First off, if you're running
00:59:32
◼
►
1013.4, it will tell you now that we're past April 12th. It will tell you the first time
00:59:38
◼
►
you launch it, only the first time. I dropped in a little link to this. I mean,
00:59:42
◼
►
most people might not probably know how to do this, but OS X daily has a real quick little
00:59:46
◼
►
how-to on using your little Apple menu and finding where you can locate these.
00:59:49
◼
►
Yeah, about this Mac, click on System Report, click on Applications, and one of the columns
00:59:53
◼
►
is Intel 64-bit and it says yes or no. You can even sort it, sort it and then look at
00:59:59
◼
►
all the nos. All the Adobe apps. My Adobe Air updater, oh no. I know, I found some files
01:00:06
◼
►
that I had a welcome to Lion, or getting started with Lion app. Oh wow. Deep down in a really
01:00:15
◼
►
weird folder somewhere. I sent Stephen Hackett because I know he likes really old Mac things,
01:00:20
◼
►
a link to that. It was just, um, yeah, I had welcomed to know it was welcome to leopard.
01:00:26
◼
►
Wow. Welcome to tiger. And also a MacBook pro user's guide for a MacBook pro that included
01:00:32
◼
►
an apple remote, a DVI to VGA adapter and a CD drive. So that's like, great. How long has that
01:00:38
◼
►
been in my mini migrations of my, my Mac? Nobody needs those ports anymore. No, no, it's not that,
01:00:46
◼
►
not that important. I wanted to talk to you because you're on this podcast and I want you
01:00:53
◼
►
to explain something because there was news about how a new version of the app Drafts is coming out.
01:00:58
◼
►
There's Drafts 5 and they've got a Drafts Pro and you know I love drafts.
01:01:03
◼
►
That's funny. That's a good one. You get a ding for that.
01:01:07
◼
►
First pick in the draft, I'll pick the app Drafts. So I want to ask you about this because I have
01:01:13
◼
►
heard people extol the virtues of drafts, and I have to admit I think I've never
01:01:17
◼
►
really gotten it. And I'm somebody who writes things on my iPad and my
01:01:22
◼
►
iPhone, I write articles on my iPad, I do all sorts of stuff on iOS, and I know
01:01:27
◼
►
people rave about this, and now with this new version coming out, I thought I'm
01:01:31
◼
►
going to have somebody on who can probably talk to me about like why, you
01:01:36
◼
►
know, why this app works and, you know, does it change your approach to putting
01:01:40
◼
►
text into an iOS device?
01:01:42
◼
►
Yeah, I just dropped in a link to a podcast I did with Greg Pierce and visiting with Rene
01:01:50
◼
►
Ritchie to talk about drafts.
01:01:51
◼
►
But you know, everybody has such a different approach and a different mindset for how we
01:01:55
◼
►
use our various devices.
01:01:57
◼
►
And there's a pattern that I fell into on starting obviously with my phone that's been
01:02:02
◼
►
a very interesting pattern for me.
01:02:03
◼
►
So first of all, I mean, one of the things that's a little bit perplexing about drafts
01:02:07
◼
►
is that when you open it up, it's just kind of like a big text
01:02:13
◼
►
You're like, hmm.
01:02:13
◼
►
It's very blank.
01:02:14
◼
►
And there aren't a lot of buttons to click.
01:02:16
◼
►
It's not really clear what you're supposed to do next.
01:02:18
◼
►
And I think someone could be forgiven for thinking it's just
01:02:21
◼
►
like a little-- that it really stops at being
01:02:25
◼
►
a diminished version of notes.
01:02:26
◼
►
Like, you just type stuff in, and I
01:02:28
◼
►
guess that goes somewhere.
01:02:30
◼
►
The quick version is that under the hood,
01:02:34
◼
►
drafts can do a lot of stuff to your text.
01:02:37
◼
►
That could be text transformations.
01:02:38
◼
►
That could be sending it to someplace else.
01:02:41
◼
►
In the current version, it's not at the level of something
01:02:44
◼
►
like workflow.
01:02:45
◼
►
So the new version will do a lot of really, really interesting
01:02:53
◼
►
But rather than get too deep into that,
01:02:54
◼
►
listen to that podcast if you want to hear more.
01:02:56
◼
►
And I think Greg's going to be talking
01:02:57
◼
►
about this a lot in the coming week as the app comes out.
01:02:59
◼
►
But I can just tell you why it works for me.
01:03:04
◼
►
Not that it should work for everybody,
01:03:05
◼
►
but there's a funny thing I discovered about myself once I started using this app.
01:03:11
◼
►
Ordinarily in the past, if I wanted to send somebody a text message, I'd go to the message app and start typing.
01:03:18
◼
►
If I wanted to type an email, I'd hit C and compose a new message in Gmail.
01:03:24
◼
►
There are other kinds of things you'd think to put on the calendar.
01:03:27
◼
►
The first powerful thing that Drafts does is it can be a starting point for pretty much any kind of text.
01:03:32
◼
►
So I keep that in my little dock, click it, start typing.
01:03:36
◼
►
And then a common usage for me in the early days was,
01:03:39
◼
►
I've always had a particular fetish
01:03:41
◼
►
for being able to send email without seeing the incoming
01:03:45
◼
►
So for a long time for me, it's been a holy grail
01:03:48
◼
►
to not have to open an email app just to send an email.
01:03:50
◼
►
Because if I'm not in the-- well,
01:03:53
◼
►
I'm perhaps well known or notorious for this idea
01:03:56
◼
►
that you shouldn't be doing email all the time.
01:03:58
◼
►
You should be checking your email at times
01:04:00
◼
►
when you make time to do something about it.
01:04:02
◼
►
I still really believe that.
01:04:04
◼
►
I don't have any email notifications on.
01:04:06
◼
►
But I do need to send email sometimes.
01:04:07
◼
►
So just as one example, I have a little functionality in there
01:04:11
◼
►
where I type something.
01:04:13
◼
►
I type, you know, lunch downtown next week.
01:04:18
◼
►
I type two spaces.
01:04:19
◼
►
I type a little bit of text, hey Jason,
01:04:21
◼
►
do you want to have lunch at da-da-da-da next week?
01:04:23
◼
►
Love, Merlin.
01:04:24
◼
►
And this candy little script knows
01:04:26
◼
►
that in this context for this command,
01:04:29
◼
►
take that first line of text in drafts.
01:04:32
◼
►
that's gonna be the subject line of an email.
01:04:34
◼
►
Anything after that line is the body of the email.
01:04:37
◼
►
And so basically I can take my time
01:04:39
◼
►
to type in this little window,
01:04:40
◼
►
type the things I need to say, hit a button,
01:04:42
◼
►
and that then basically pops open a new mail
01:04:44
◼
►
where I can drop in the person's name,
01:04:47
◼
►
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
01:04:48
◼
►
So the first thing was that became very useful to me
01:04:51
◼
►
'cause there's lots of times where I want a quick way,
01:04:54
◼
►
like something I've seen Dan Morin suffer from
01:04:57
◼
►
that you suffered from.
01:04:58
◼
►
Any time you do stuff in a CMS, back in the day,
01:05:01
◼
►
You would learn not to type long things in a text area
01:05:04
◼
►
because you just couldn't trust it.
01:05:06
◼
►
The browser might crash, you lose your work.
01:05:08
◼
►
I imagine you ran into that in the past trying to be a cowboy.
01:05:11
◼
►
Don't write it in the CMS.
01:05:13
◼
►
Don't write it in the CMS.
01:05:14
◼
►
So the simple way that I found it very useful
01:05:17
◼
►
is that was a real neat way for me to know that whenever
01:05:20
◼
►
I needed-- even if I knew exactly where it needed to go,
01:05:24
◼
►
I would often start there.
01:05:26
◼
►
I had the same interface every time I was dealing with text.
01:05:29
◼
►
This is not for everybody, but this is for me.
01:05:31
◼
►
I didn't want to necessarily open the email app.
01:05:33
◼
►
I didn't want to open the message app.
01:05:34
◼
►
If it's an important thing, I want to look at it.
01:05:36
◼
►
I want to see if there's any red lines under it
01:05:37
◼
►
telling me it's misspelled.
01:05:38
◼
►
I'm going to look at it, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
01:05:40
◼
►
So I did that for a pretty good long time.
01:05:42
◼
►
A lot of times what I would just do is one of my scripts
01:05:44
◼
►
takes the first line of the drafts file and anything
01:05:50
◼
►
And so basically it takes the first line
01:05:52
◼
►
and creates a new text file on Dropbox with a date stamp
01:05:57
◼
►
This becomes a great way for things
01:05:59
◼
►
to get from the ephemeral world.
01:06:01
◼
►
I use draft fairly ephemerally.
01:06:03
◼
►
Many people use it for much more than that.
01:06:04
◼
►
I use it as a place to start text,
01:06:06
◼
►
and then I often send it somewhere else.
01:06:08
◼
►
And then I can go into NV alt, TextMate, or editorial on iOS
01:06:13
◼
►
and do other stuff with it.
01:06:16
◼
►
OK, so that in itself is pretty useful.
01:06:17
◼
►
I don't know if that's enough to make people want to buy it,
01:06:20
◼
►
but just that first pattern of always starting your text
01:06:23
◼
►
in this similar kind of area, it makes
01:06:26
◼
►
you careful about what you're doing and prevents mistakes.
01:06:28
◼
►
But then I noticed a fascinating thing start to happen
01:06:33
◼
►
that I would not have noticed if I always
01:06:34
◼
►
went to the supposed destination app to do it.
01:06:37
◼
►
So I discovered that a lot of times,
01:06:41
◼
►
something started as an idea.
01:06:42
◼
►
And then I started moving my fingers,
01:06:44
◼
►
and something happened.
01:06:45
◼
►
And once I was open to the idea that the text could
01:06:48
◼
►
go anywhere, and I had to think about where it went next,
01:06:51
◼
►
a funny thing happened.
01:06:52
◼
►
I realized that a lot of times, I'd
01:06:54
◼
►
start to write something that I thought
01:06:55
◼
►
was going to be a text message--
01:06:57
◼
►
yes-- in drafts.
01:06:58
◼
►
And I go, you know what?
01:06:59
◼
►
This is probably better as an email.
01:07:01
◼
►
I changed my mode of thinking.
01:07:02
◼
►
And now I'm writing an email in there instead of a text message.
01:07:05
◼
►
Other times, you're about to write somebody a really snarky email.
01:07:08
◼
►
And you go, oh, you know what?
01:07:09
◼
►
This would be better to just be a mean subtweet.
01:07:11
◼
►
Maybe I should do that instead.
01:07:13
◼
►
This should really be an angry blog post denouncing this person.
01:07:16
◼
►
But then there's other ones, too, where how often have you
01:07:19
◼
►
started to basically complain to somebody about something
01:07:23
◼
►
or request something from them?
01:07:25
◼
►
And you end up rubber ducking a little bit.
01:07:27
◼
►
And by typing, you start to realize the answer
01:07:29
◼
►
to your own problem.
01:07:30
◼
►
So you could go into drafts and start
01:07:32
◼
►
writing a long, mean email about this problem
01:07:35
◼
►
that somebody's caused for you.
01:07:36
◼
►
And as you're typing and rubber ducking, you suddenly go, oh,
01:07:39
◼
►
you know what?
01:07:39
◼
►
This actually could just be something
01:07:41
◼
►
that goes to a to-do list, something
01:07:42
◼
►
I can take care of myself.
01:07:44
◼
►
And then maybe sometimes-- how about this?
01:07:47
◼
►
Let's really pop the stack.
01:07:48
◼
►
Maybe you realize as you're about to communicate
01:07:50
◼
►
with somebody, you realize, you know what?
01:07:52
◼
►
I'm really talking to myself, and that's OK.
01:07:54
◼
►
This actually needs to go into a diary,
01:07:56
◼
►
or this needs to go into some kind of a running file.
01:07:58
◼
►
You see where I'm going with this.
01:07:59
◼
►
Once you open yourself up to that idea,
01:08:01
◼
►
I think an interesting kind of philosophical change
01:08:03
◼
►
in writing can happen, which is that you say,
01:08:06
◼
►
it doesn't matter where this will end up,
01:08:08
◼
►
really, it can start, it always should start in drafts.
01:08:12
◼
►
And once I'm done typing the thing that I like,
01:08:14
◼
►
then I decide what to do with it and where it goes.
01:08:17
◼
►
And so that's been really powerful for me.
01:08:19
◼
►
And it's not even getting into the redonkulous number
01:08:22
◼
►
of things that you can do with this.
01:08:23
◼
►
You can send it to Fantastical,
01:08:25
◼
►
or it'll be parsed for natural language.
01:08:27
◼
►
You could, as I say, send it to Dropbox.
01:08:29
◼
►
You could append or prepend to a list somewhere.
01:08:32
◼
►
And that's all available.
01:08:33
◼
►
You just kind of slide over to this little menu.
01:08:35
◼
►
And you can send stuff anywhere you want it to be.
01:08:36
◼
►
And yes, you can send it straight to an email app.
01:08:39
◼
►
You can send it to Messages.
01:08:41
◼
►
You could send it to wherever you want it to go.
01:08:43
◼
►
There's a rich collection of these things
01:08:45
◼
►
that people put together in a directory where
01:08:47
◼
►
you can find stuff that'll work for you,
01:08:49
◼
►
all the way down to things like markdown transformations, HTML
01:08:52
◼
►
previews. All that kind of stuff is in there and the language is too sophisticated for
01:08:58
◼
►
me to do from scratch but easy enough for me to change to do the kinds of things I want
01:09:02
◼
►
to do. So for me, Drafts is where all text starts.
01:09:05
◼
►
I like the idea, this is the part that I really get, which is instead it's a real shift, right,
01:09:12
◼
►
because we think in terms, at least, okay, we, I think, and I think a lot of us have
01:09:16
◼
►
been trained to think in terms of apps on our Macs and especially on our iOS devices,
01:09:21
◼
►
which is not "I need to write something." It's "I need to open notes for this kind of
01:09:26
◼
►
-- what kind of text is this?" Then I'll put it in notes. What kind of text is this? I'll
01:09:29
◼
►
put it in reminders. What kind of text is this? Gmail. This one goes to Fantastical.
01:09:34
◼
►
This one goes to Google Docs. This one goes to BB Edit, right? Like, in the end, I have
01:09:39
◼
►
all this overhead that is classifying what I think I'm going to do and pick the right
01:09:46
◼
►
tool for the job.
01:09:47
◼
►
It's almost like what app wants me to use it right now.
01:09:50
◼
►
- Right, right.
01:09:51
◼
►
And what you're saying is, if you kind of let go of that
01:09:53
◼
►
and just say, "I'm gonna start it in drafts,"
01:09:56
◼
►
that doesn't preclude you from finishing it somewhere else,
01:10:01
◼
►
but it means that you don't actually have to do
01:10:03
◼
►
that overhead before you start typey typing.
01:10:06
◼
►
- You put it very well.
01:10:07
◼
►
And I guess one part I should mention,
01:10:09
◼
►
'cause it's so important, is that it kind of wants
01:10:12
◼
►
to be ephemeral, but have a good memory.
01:10:16
◼
►
So you start typing in one of these.
01:10:18
◼
►
And first of all, these can all be synced.
01:10:21
◼
►
I think I was doing it through Dropbox.
01:10:23
◼
►
I don't even remember.
01:10:24
◼
►
But now, I mean, in the latest version,
01:10:25
◼
►
it just works great with iCloud.
01:10:27
◼
►
So on all of my devices, all my iOS devices,
01:10:30
◼
►
Drafts is running, as soon as I start typing,
01:10:33
◼
►
it's basically creating a new file, a new buffer.
01:10:35
◼
►
It just goes into the cloud.
01:10:36
◼
►
And at any time, you can go back.
01:10:38
◼
►
You can do a search for any string
01:10:39
◼
►
to find what you're looking for.
01:10:40
◼
►
The new version includes stuff like tags and flagging,
01:10:43
◼
►
if you like that sort of stuff.
01:10:44
◼
►
But what you're describing here is,
01:10:46
◼
►
let's say I get distracted and go somewhere else,
01:10:47
◼
►
but I don't have to go save it out of a browser window.
01:10:50
◼
►
It's already saved in there, and I can search all that stuff
01:10:52
◼
►
very easily.
01:10:53
◼
►
Another nice new thing-- not new thing, but a nice feature--
01:10:55
◼
►
is you can select the amount of time
01:10:59
◼
►
before it automatically creates a new blank page saving
01:11:02
◼
►
your old one.
01:11:04
◼
►
So you might want to set that to five minutes.
01:11:06
◼
►
You might want to set that to one minute, where you're like,
01:11:08
◼
►
I'll be working on this, move around on the phone,
01:11:10
◼
►
come back, copy, paste, do whatever.
01:11:11
◼
►
It's got a great extension where you can create a new file
01:11:15
◼
►
or append and prepend using iOS extensions, which
01:11:17
◼
►
is hugely useful when you're making show notes
01:11:19
◼
►
or something like that.
01:11:21
◼
►
But then there's a new thing he's added called,
01:11:23
◼
►
I think it's called Focus Mode, which
01:11:24
◼
►
is just always leave my last note up until I say otherwise.
01:11:28
◼
►
So yeah, it really can be adjusted
01:11:31
◼
►
to however you like to work.
01:11:33
◼
►
But all it really requires is-- all it requires
01:11:36
◼
►
is the vast change in thinking that
01:11:38
◼
►
says I'm not going to think about the app
01:11:40
◼
►
until I'm done figuring out what I have to say.
01:11:42
◼
►
- All right, thank you for that.
01:11:43
◼
►
- You know, and the guy works hard and it's a good app
01:11:46
◼
►
and I want to support him.
01:11:47
◼
►
These are the kinds of apps that have made my life good.
01:11:49
◼
►
And again, I'm not trying, I don't mean this as a sales job
01:11:53
◼
►
so much as to say like, you know, philosophically,
01:11:55
◼
►
if there are apps that mean the world to you, you know,
01:11:58
◼
►
get out there and support them
01:11:59
◼
►
because that's what it takes for them to stay alive.
01:12:01
◼
►
- That's true.
01:12:02
◼
►
- I'm all for people, you know, charging for their work
01:12:04
◼
►
and I would pay for this every year, no sweat.
01:12:07
◼
►
- All right, I will check out version five.
01:12:09
◼
►
I'll put links in the show notes to their blog posts about what they're doing.
01:12:12
◼
►
Uh, you ready for some ask upgrade?
01:12:15
◼
►
Oh, I certainly am.
01:12:16
◼
►
Wait, what's the sound for that?
01:12:18
◼
►
Is that choo choo choo?
01:12:19
◼
►
There's some lasers that happened, but they're warming up now because we have a
01:12:21
◼
►
sponsor before that.
01:12:22
◼
►
And I have to admit this is a breaking news in what may be a first for upgrade.
01:12:28
◼
►
We have a followup from a sponsor, James Thompson, the maker of Peacock.
01:12:34
◼
►
He wrote down here, the makers of Peacock.
01:12:36
◼
►
Well, James and Saskia are our TLA systems and they make Peacock.
01:12:39
◼
►
The scientific calculator, I doubt she approved this.
01:12:41
◼
►
- It's the Scottish "we."
01:12:42
◼
►
- I doubt that Saskia approved this text.
01:12:44
◼
►
Anyway, the makers of PCALC, the scientific calculator
01:12:47
◼
►
you didn't even know you needed, would like us to point out
01:12:50
◼
►
that the reverse Polish notation does not, in fact,
01:12:52
◼
►
involve any form of sausages,
01:12:54
◼
►
despite what I said two weeks ago.
01:12:55
◼
►
So just putting it out there.
01:12:57
◼
►
It does not, you don't actually turn around
01:12:59
◼
►
and eat a sausage,
01:13:00
◼
►
and that's not what reverse Polish notation is.
01:13:03
◼
►
I still don't know what it is.
01:13:04
◼
►
- It seems very misleading.
01:13:05
◼
►
- Let me go on, because this is basically,
01:13:07
◼
►
this ad is going to explain why I'm wrong.
01:13:09
◼
►
RPN is actually an alternative way of calculating where you enter the numbers
01:13:12
◼
►
first followed by the operator. So 6 enter 7 multiply would give you the
01:13:19
◼
►
ultimate answer of 42. It was popularized by Hewlett-Packard with their desktop
01:13:24
◼
►
calculators in the 70s and 80s and caught on especially with scientists and
01:13:27
◼
►
engineers, so now you know. But you don't have to use RPN with PCALC. Of course
01:13:32
◼
►
that's just one of the many options that let you customize it exactly as you wish.
01:13:36
◼
►
Our friend Dr. Drang has a nice post about how he built his own, like, you can build your own interface.
01:13:43
◼
►
There's an editing mode where you can move and resize the buttons, replace the ones you don't use.
01:13:48
◼
►
So you can literally, like, make PCALC's calculator.
01:13:51
◼
►
It doesn't—it's got a bunch of layouts built in, but you can customize all of them.
01:13:56
◼
►
You can change all of them. It's crazy.
01:13:59
◼
►
And if you bought a new iPad, you may be shocked to know the iPad doesn't come with a calculator at all.
01:14:04
◼
►
Seems like the kind of thing they'd want to include.
01:14:07
◼
►
Seems weird, yeah, but you can get Peacock.
01:14:09
◼
►
There's a light version that's free, contains no invasive adverts as they say in Scotland,
01:14:15
◼
►
or analytics as they also say in Scotland, whatsoever.
01:14:19
◼
►
And if you like it, you can upgrade to the full version and unlock all of the other features.
01:14:22
◼
►
Peacock is available on every single Apple platform.
01:14:27
◼
►
Not kidding. Not kidding.
01:14:29
◼
►
Although, James, it's not yet capable.
01:14:31
◼
►
Okay, let me phrase it this way.
01:14:33
◼
►
- We got it on HomePod, you can get it on Apple TV.
01:14:36
◼
►
- At WWDC, when they announce that you can do HomePod apps,
01:14:39
◼
►
I am telling you the first HomePod app that will exist
01:14:42
◼
►
will be, why don't you tell me that math problem
01:14:45
◼
►
by James Thompson.
01:14:47
◼
►
But it is on Apple Watch, it is on Apple TV
01:14:50
◼
►
if you need to do some calculations on your television,
01:14:52
◼
►
and if they ever release those AR glasses,
01:14:55
◼
►
Peacock will certainly be there
01:14:56
◼
►
with a giant augmented calculator in your face on day one.
01:15:00
◼
►
search the app store for pcalc or go to pcalc.com/upgrade for more details
01:15:05
◼
►
and if you're going to WWDC find James he has sweet pcalc pins that he will be
01:15:13
◼
►
he's a very nice man and I will also say sunday sunday at the sunburn monster
01:15:18
◼
►
trucks driving around in the about screen
01:15:21
◼
►
golden bananas
01:15:25
◼
►
I use pcalc this is they didn't tell us to say this I use pcalc every weekday
01:15:30
◼
►
afternoon because my daughter is 10 and she's learning some kind of monkey balls banana
01:15:33
◼
►
pants math that I don't understand. She does factor rainbows, she does all these things
01:15:37
◼
►
I don't understand what the hell she's doing. I don't know how to quote unquote help her
01:15:41
◼
►
but what I do know is when it is time to figure out some wackadoo division thing where she
01:15:45
◼
►
draws a rainbow and a grid I will open Peacock and I will check the math for myself in my
01:15:49
◼
►
head to make sure that I did it right. So thank you to James. Is it the new math? Oh
01:15:54
◼
►
God. It's so confusing. I don't understand it either. There was a whole thing that my
01:16:00
◼
►
both my kids did, whereas like now, you know, cluster the numbers or something.
01:16:03
◼
►
I'm like, what? Is that a new thing? Oh, yeah. You could make a part of the
01:16:07
◼
►
number family or the number story. You're like, well, you're just saying
01:16:09
◼
►
nouns. Like, that doesn't mean anything. What does that mean? They all nestle together and they
01:16:12
◼
►
love each other. When I was your age, when I was your age, we just had to
01:16:16
◼
►
memorize things. Watch out, Merlin. Lasers. Lasers time.
01:16:22
◼
►
Lister Matt says, "In the context of Marzipan and Apple leaving Intel, could
01:16:28
◼
►
apps contain both ARM and x86 instructions? Could apps that contain both be feasible?
01:16:35
◼
►
x86 instructions run by emulation on ARM, but an iMac/Mac Pro, you know, contain both
01:16:42
◼
►
ARM and x86 for native performance? He says we could call them Fusion apps. And what I'll say
01:16:46
◼
►
to Matt is we had these, actually, the last time. They're called fat binaries. We had them for the
01:16:52
◼
►
Intel PowerPC transition. And yes, I would imagine if we're going through a processor transition,
01:16:58
◼
►
one of the things that Apple will let people do is compile their apps for
01:17:05
◼
►
both processor architectures inside the bundle. Now that said, they have done some
01:17:11
◼
►
interesting things with app thinning on the App Store, so it's possible that on
01:17:14
◼
►
the App Store what you'll do is you'll upload both the binaries and based on
01:17:18
◼
►
what architecture your computer is running, only that one will download,
01:17:23
◼
►
right? That may be the modern version of the fat binaries that you upload all the
01:17:27
◼
►
binaries to the App Store and then only the right one comes down. But Fusion
01:17:32
◼
►
Apps, we called it "fat binaries" back in the day and it worked fine. Like, they were
01:17:37
◼
►
a little bit bigger, they were fat, not to shame them, but they were
01:17:40
◼
►
larger because they contain two executables inside. But the bottom line
01:17:43
◼
►
was, you just double-click. When I was younger, I was often
01:17:47
◼
►
criticized for my love of curvy apps.
01:17:49
◼
►
Yeah, well, you know, I love my curvy apps. Back in the day, when we were kids, you
01:17:53
◼
►
could have the like the regular app or the husky app. That was your other choice.
01:17:58
◼
►
They had a whole section for us at Sears. Absolutely, with the tough skins and the agar animals.
01:18:03
◼
►
I'm glad you explained that to listener Matt because I recognize those all as English
01:18:08
◼
►
strings. Remember fat binaries? That was the thing. Oh that I remember. Oh sure. Yeah but
01:18:12
◼
►
this is an x86 arm. There's a lot of confusion going on. It's times of confusion. That's
01:18:17
◼
►
what made me, oh it's absolutely platinum age. That's why when you were talking about
01:18:19
◼
►
the 32-bit stuff I was remembering back when was it not Rosetta what was it
01:18:25
◼
►
called where you could have an old version that would run not an emulation
01:18:29
◼
►
but like all the Microsoft apps hadn't been updated do you remember these times
01:18:32
◼
►
well so there were a couple there's Rosetta which was the code translation
01:18:35
◼
►
where it took a power PC app that didn't have an Intel version and ran it on an
01:18:39
◼
►
Intel processor there was the blue box or whatever they call a classic which is
01:18:44
◼
►
when they were you were running an OS 9 app inside OS 10 and basically in the
01:18:47
◼
►
background hidden away there was a copy of OS 9 running but it would unless you
01:18:54
◼
►
made it it wouldn't show it to you it would just show the app and that app
01:18:58
◼
►
behaves completely differently from all the other apps because it was running in
01:19:01
◼
►
in OS 9 in this emul- not an emulation layer but it was like a virtual machine
01:19:06
◼
►
kind of layer where was running a virtual copy of OS 9 inside OS 10 it was
01:19:10
◼
►
super weird. On the computer power of that time that's mental.
01:19:14
◼
►
Yeah, it worked okay, but again, I think it shows you that Apple's track record of sort
01:19:18
◼
►
of bending over backwards to smooth a transition as much as possible while not being afraid
01:19:23
◼
►
to make them. Like, if they follow that rulebook, then we could probably guess about how they're
01:19:28
◼
►
going to do it for any future transitions they're going to do. They're pretty good at
01:19:31
◼
►
it, historically, but not afraid to make them, but pretty good at taking all the steps and
01:19:37
◼
►
building in compatibility.
01:19:38
◼
►
And they took Kaleidoscope away.
01:19:40
◼
►
- That's true. I was thinking about how Microsoft's doing their ARM version of Windows 10,
01:19:45
◼
►
and it's the same thing. They've got a code translation engine for x86 apps.
01:19:49
◼
►
They run slow, but they run. And it's like, yeah, that's how you have to do that,
01:19:52
◼
►
as opposed to the old version of Windows RT that they tried, where it was like, yeah,
01:19:56
◼
►
it doesn't even try. Now they actually try. It's good. Lister Matthew wrote in to say,
01:20:04
◼
►
"Do you think if Apple do decide to use their A-series chips in the MacBook,
01:20:09
◼
►
they would enable cellular connectivity for Mac, something like an Apple SIM
01:20:13
◼
►
built in and LTE bands. So the idea that maybe one of the things you could pick
01:20:17
◼
►
up if you leave Intel behind is cellular Macs. And I don't think these
01:20:25
◼
►
things are particularly connected. I felt for a while now, like, the big
01:20:30
◼
►
problem to doing cellular connectivity on the Mac is that the Mac OS needs to
01:20:33
◼
►
be updated, to be smart enough to like control who uses the network connection when you're
01:20:39
◼
►
in a cellular mode, like add in a thing. Like I use Trip Mode and they could do something
01:20:44
◼
►
like Trip Mode, although it's a little bit fiddly where like literally you say, "When
01:20:48
◼
►
I'm on cellular, this app doesn't get to use the network because it's photos and it's going
01:20:51
◼
►
to kill my..." That's what's kept me from getting all in on it is it's a little bit
01:20:55
◼
►
like Little Snitch where there's a lot of breaking in time and configuring time. Yeah,
01:21:01
◼
►
in your face for a while when you're when you're configuring it. So now if Apple could
01:21:04
◼
►
do that, I think that's I think that's more likely the thing is Apple really evangelizing
01:21:09
◼
►
developers and saying we're going to do cellular max. And by default, your your apps aren't
01:21:14
◼
►
going to aren't going to be able to use the cell network. And you're going to have to
01:21:17
◼
►
opt in with these very particular things in order for us not to kill the data allowances
01:21:23
◼
►
of all of our users. I think that's what they need to do. Like listener Marco, I it seems
01:21:27
◼
►
it does seem on the one hand crazy to me that they can't do that, especially after you've
01:21:31
◼
►
had a cellular iPad. You know, it's hard to look back. It seems crazy. They can do it.
01:21:34
◼
►
They just have not ever prioritized it for whatever reason. I think it's strange, but
01:21:39
◼
►
they just haven't done it. Do you think part of its battery concerns? Uh, it could be.
01:21:43
◼
►
It could be the battery is part of it. Um, although the, you know, Mac batteries are
01:21:46
◼
►
way bigger than, than like phone batteries. Um, they, cause they use, they use more power.
01:21:51
◼
►
Um, I don't know. I it's, it's, I've heard people say that they thought it was licensing
01:21:56
◼
►
Well, I mean, just because it seems to stand to reason from a logical standpoint that you're
01:22:01
◼
►
most likely to use LTE when you're not plugged in.
01:22:04
◼
►
It's when you're somewhere that's not your house or somewhere that has Wi-Fi.
01:22:08
◼
►
Although sometimes, I mean, I use, now that I've got LTE in my iPad, I use it in my Starbucks
01:22:11
◼
►
and they've got Wi-Fi, but it's terrible and I just don't bother anymore.
01:22:15
◼
►
I think what blows me away is going and staying at a hotel or going anywhere with that terrible,
01:22:21
◼
►
you know, free Wi-Fi, unprotected Wi-Fi.
01:22:24
◼
►
And the first thing I do and when I'm doing the cost benefit of it, even if it's free
01:22:28
◼
►
is is just do a speed test.
01:22:31
◼
►
And last time we did that when we were in Los Angeles, it was mind boggling.
01:22:35
◼
►
I mean, it was something like 10 times faster to use LTE over the Wi Fi.
01:22:40
◼
►
Yeah, it was crazy.
01:22:42
◼
►
Listener Wayne wrote in to say, couldn't the the creatives that Apple has hired so that
01:22:48
◼
►
can observe them building products for the pro team be the ones who edit all of their
01:22:54
◼
►
TV shows. I don't think that's a good idea. Yeah, I think that's I think there's like
01:23:00
◼
►
in the lab. I think maybe Yeah, could Apple ask for access full access to the professionals
01:23:05
◼
►
who are editing their shows but the way it works is Apple is giving money to a production
01:23:09
◼
►
company and the production companies handing them a finished show that's happening in Korea.
01:23:13
◼
►
It's not a thing where there's in the middle there's some people over at Apple who are
01:23:19
◼
►
editing those shows for them. And I think that that, you know, maybe they could get
01:23:22
◼
►
access to those things, those people. Of all the things where we get frustrated with Apple,
01:23:26
◼
►
one of the ones that I find, and I'm not, I am not pining for a Mac Pro like as much
01:23:31
◼
►
as some of my friends are. I'd love to see it just to know that Apple's still in the
01:23:34
◼
►
game. But of all of the things, that's the one that sticks out the most to me of like,
01:23:39
◼
►
Like, you can't see how people would want a really, really tricked-out desktop machine
01:23:45
◼
►
and a really, really tricked-out laptop.
01:23:48
◼
►
That's the one where, like, that just—there's got to be something strategic behind why they
01:23:52
◼
►
are not doing—especially the kind of MacBook Pro that I'd like to have.
01:23:55
◼
►
Yeah, I don't know.
01:23:59
◼
►
I think they're doing—you know, I don't know.
01:24:01
◼
►
They have—I've had a couple people ask—this is not technically an ask upgrade question,
01:24:05
◼
►
I've had a bunch of people say it's sort of like the bigger conspiracy theory, which is
01:24:10
◼
►
that, could it be that the reason that the Mac development has been so sluggish for the
01:24:15
◼
►
last few years is that everything Apple is doing is for this transitional platform where
01:24:19
◼
►
they're going to switch everybody over and it's like we don't even want to make a new
01:24:23
◼
►
Mac over here because in three years you're going to be buying this new thing that's not
01:24:27
◼
►
quite a Mac and that's...
01:24:28
◼
►
This has become the Apple version of QAnon where there's this one thing that explains
01:24:33
◼
►
everything except it doesn't really make any sense.
01:24:35
◼
►
Yeah, and my answer is yes, it is possible. In fact, we know it is certain that there
01:24:41
◼
►
are people, I mean, I don't even have to go as far as secret. Like, I think that I think
01:24:45
◼
►
the answer is yes, Apple has retasked it a lot of its people to work on an ARM based
01:24:51
◼
►
platform. It's iOS, and the iPad and the iPhone. And that's what and that's what is happening
01:24:59
◼
►
there. You don't need a big conspiracy. Could there be people pulled off who are working
01:25:03
◼
►
on getting Mac OS on ARM ready to go or building kind of a proof of concept of future Mac hardware
01:25:10
◼
►
that is kind of hybridized or is running on ARM laptop but running a version of Mac OS
01:25:18
◼
►
or a hybrid of Mac OS and iOS. Yeah, I think it's entirely possible. I don't know if that
01:25:22
◼
►
is, you know, those people getting pulled off is the reason why your particular bugaboo
01:25:29
◼
►
about what Apple is doing is actually happening. That seems less likely, but it's possible.
01:25:36
◼
►
I'm sure they're working on Skunk Works projects, some of which we will never see, and some
01:25:40
◼
►
of which will be the Mac we're using in two years. I'm sure of both of those things.
01:25:46
◼
►
listener Cory wrote in to say, "I want to ask upgrade when we might hear more from a
01:25:51
◼
►
podcast tutorial segment. I would love your input." And my answer there is keep watching
01:25:57
◼
►
the skies, Cory. Myke and I are currently planning, I'm going to pre-promote it now,
01:26:02
◼
►
it's springtime. Myke and I are currently planning the Summer of Fun. The Summer of
01:26:08
◼
►
Fun is returning, the upgrade Summer of Fun. It is returning for a new season of fun in
01:26:14
◼
►
the summer. Fun takes planning. There's a bunch of things going on. So Myke's getting
01:26:17
◼
►
married this summer and going on his honeymoon. And that means that there are huge gaps in
01:26:23
◼
►
the upgrade schedule while he's getting married and on his honeymoon. And then not to mention
01:26:27
◼
►
the fact that I'm going to Europe with my family for a family vacation that ends the
01:26:32
◼
►
culminates in us going to London and being at Myke's wedding. So we have we have a whole
01:26:37
◼
►
mess of a summer schedule. The summer schedule being a mess is what causes the upgrade summer
01:26:41
◼
►
of fun because it forces us to pre record some stuff and come up with some evergreen
01:26:46
◼
►
topics and some special episodes like when we drafted old max that one time that was
01:26:50
◼
►
part of the Summer of Fun. So podcast tutorials right in your wheelhouse. So I think we're
01:26:54
◼
►
going to do a podcasting episode as part of the Summer of Fun. So, you know, I can't tell
01:26:59
◼
►
you when, but I think it will be during the Summer of Fun, so stay tuned for that, Cory.
01:27:04
◼
►
This is a great question. Listener Richard asked, "What's your ratio of compliments to
01:27:10
◼
►
moners for upgrade? Do you get a lot of haters?" And I'm going to say the same thing that I
01:27:16
◼
►
I think Marco talks about on ATP a lot, which is, you know, podcasts, it's a lot harder
01:27:22
◼
►
to be a hater of a podcast because you have to put in a huge time investment and it's
01:27:27
◼
►
harder to just drive by. You get them because it's the internet, but it's a lot harder.
01:27:33
◼
►
And I would say most of the feedback we get is very nice. People are helpful. They tell
01:27:37
◼
►
us things that we don't know. They tell us things that we do know. They give us nice
01:27:42
◼
►
compliments, they have a criticism about something, but I'd say they all, not all, mostly seem
01:27:47
◼
►
so invested in the podcast that they're trying to help or they're trying to provide constructive
01:27:53
◼
►
criticism and I don't mind the constructive stuff. And you know, people are people and
01:27:59
◼
►
they have, everybody's got their weird take on it, but what I really don't like is the
01:28:03
◼
►
people who are not invested, they don't know who you are, they don't know why you're doing
01:28:06
◼
►
what you're doing, there's no context. Like the guy who was complaining to me about my
01:28:12
◼
►
silly post about QuickTime Player 7, where it was like, "You don't understand the context
01:28:19
◼
►
of this, but why not just do a drive-by unloading on somebody else on the internet?" And podcasts,
01:28:25
◼
►
it's harder to do that, and that is one of the things that makes podcasts great.
01:28:29
◼
►
One thing I try to always keep in mind, and I'm not just saying this for clapping, but
01:28:34
◼
►
It's really nice that people listen and there's something special about podcasts and that
01:28:37
◼
►
people get a very strong relationship.
01:28:40
◼
►
If they end up liking it and listening often, you feel like you have a relationship with
01:28:43
◼
►
that person.
01:28:44
◼
►
And sometimes what one might say to somebody else, it feels like you know them well enough
01:28:49
◼
►
that they would know the tone that you mean to strike.
01:28:53
◼
►
So I think a lot of times it's just because people are very, very involved and they feel
01:28:55
◼
►
strongly about the topics that you're talking about.
01:28:59
◼
►
I mean, the only request that I would make is like, let's at least try and misunderstand
01:29:03
◼
►
each other in thoughtful ways. Let's try and assume that neither of us is deliberately
01:29:08
◼
►
trying to be a bad human being. And if we both agree to that, then you can have a dialogue
01:29:12
◼
►
with people. But you know, it's just people, I'm the same way. There's all kinds of times
01:29:16
◼
►
where I almost say kind of silly things to people because I assume they'll know who I
01:29:21
◼
►
am and will get my tone based on the fact that I've listened to hundreds of hours of
01:29:24
◼
►
their podcast when in fact I would just come off as a loon.
01:29:27
◼
►
Yeah, that is, we talked about that after Myke went to PodCon and I went to see the
01:29:31
◼
►
the Flop House Live where, and you were there too,
01:29:36
◼
►
at the Flop House and it was,
01:29:40
◼
►
that is something that is hard to do.
01:29:41
◼
►
- That was a really good conversation you guys had.
01:29:43
◼
►
- Thank you. - That was very good.
01:29:45
◼
►
- The asymmetry of the relationship between an audience
01:29:48
◼
►
and somebody who's making the thing.
01:29:50
◼
►
And it does lead to some weird moments where it's like,
01:29:53
◼
►
I know your voice, I know your anecdotes.
01:29:55
◼
►
Sometimes people know the anecdotes way better than I do.
01:29:58
◼
►
They're like, oh, it's like that time.
01:29:58
◼
►
- Usually, usually. - It's like that time
01:30:01
◼
►
in January of 2016 when you had a problem with your car.
01:30:04
◼
►
- I can't believe you didn't mention that summer job you had.
01:30:06
◼
►
- I'm like, "How do you even know that?"
01:30:09
◼
►
And he's like, "Well, you mentioned on Upgrade episode 28."
01:30:12
◼
►
And I'm like, "Oh my God," right?
01:30:13
◼
►
So that's the challenges, but I've seen it from both sides.
01:30:17
◼
►
So it's the example I gave the other day
01:30:19
◼
►
in Slack somewhere was, you know, I could meet Dan McCoy
01:30:23
◼
►
and I could say, "Hi, Dan.
01:30:25
◼
►
I like your cat, Archie, who I've never met,
01:30:26
◼
►
but I've seen you post your pictures
01:30:28
◼
►
on the Instagram of Archie, and he's great,
01:30:30
◼
►
and I'm sorry about your old cat who died. That was very sad. We were all very sad for
01:30:33
◼
►
you and it's like, yeah, I could do that. That's super weird. But the fact is I do know
01:30:37
◼
►
the name of Dan's cat and I have seen this cat.
01:30:40
◼
►
Oh, absolutely. My daughter and I were hanging out this morning and I got a notification
01:30:45
◼
►
at 9am on my phone that Griffin McElroy's birthday is in two days. And I experienced
01:30:52
◼
►
that on so many levels because my first thought was, oh, and my daughter and I were like,
01:30:57
◼
►
we should send him something with clowns or a mobile phone and like some kind of in-joke.
01:31:00
◼
►
We should send him a birthday present." And then I was like, "You know, we probably shouldn't send
01:31:03
◼
►
him a birthday present. And I probably should not have his birthday on my phone. What is wrong with
01:31:08
◼
►
me? Why do I need to know his birthday?" Now I feel like a creep. - Well, and that's the thing.
01:31:13
◼
►
I think that's, if you're a listener, you have to kind of strike that, that like they don't know you,
01:31:18
◼
►
but you know them and be, you know, walk, walk softly and be, you know, be careful.
01:31:26
◼
►
And then if you are on the other side of it, which I occasionally am, and it blows me away that I am
01:31:31
◼
►
that fortunate enough to have people who like come up to you and tell you they like the stuff
01:31:35
◼
►
that you do, because that is a super special, wonderful thing, right? It's incumbent on us
01:31:41
◼
►
and responsible for us to understand that there's asymmetry and that we are in their ears and that
01:31:46
◼
►
and that they know all these things about us. And that it isn't, it's unusual in terms
01:31:53
◼
►
of like how our brains are wired, but it's nice and normal. And that, and, and, um, I'm
01:31:59
◼
►
really bad at taking compliments. I'm terrible at it. It makes me want to go hide. It makes
01:32:04
◼
►
me want to run away. And I have gotten much better at being able to say it because the
01:32:09
◼
►
truth is I, it is very kind when people say nice things about you, but you have to remember
01:32:14
◼
►
like you don't know them but they know you and I feel like if all of us just know understand
01:32:20
◼
►
what the what the what the relationship is and that like you said these are people who
01:32:25
◼
►
are everybody here is a good person and we're having a good time then then it all works
01:32:30
◼
►
out fine but it is it is a little bit strange let's let's be excellent to each other and
01:32:34
◼
►
that but that's why I also like like being on the other side of it because that was like
01:32:37
◼
►
in short succession I got both sides of that of being you know going up to the people who
01:32:43
◼
►
are on a podcast that I listen to all the time and know all the details about and can
01:32:48
◼
►
say, "Oh, it's like that time," like I had that moment where Elliott Kaelin tweeted about
01:32:51
◼
►
how he was with his kid at Train Town in Sonoma. And I replied back and I was like, "Hey,"
01:32:55
◼
►
and all he did was show a picture of an object at Train Town. And I was like, "Hey, it's
01:33:01
◼
►
Train Town." And I wrote him again and I said, "I'm sorry, I am now Twitter stalking you.
01:33:06
◼
►
It's just that we used to take our kids to Train Town. I didn't mean to like out your
01:33:10
◼
►
location where the helicopters are coming now to get you. That's not what I was trying
01:33:15
◼
►
to do there. But I had that moment where I did cross the line. He was very nice. He was
01:33:18
◼
►
like, "No, no, no. It's a great place for kids. We're up here visiting my wife's family."
01:33:22
◼
►
And I didn't respond, "I know. Your wife's name is Danielle and her parents are from
01:33:26
◼
►
Sonoma County." A little too creepy.
01:33:30
◼
►
So you brought Sammy there?
01:33:32
◼
►
Yeah, that's right. You brought your son? His name is Sammy? Yeah. So anyway, it's a
01:33:37
◼
►
Funny world we live in. I got one more Ask Upgrade. We're going to go out on this one.
01:33:41
◼
►
It's listener Andy who said, "Hey, Myke," who's not here, "Are you planning on covering
01:33:46
◼
►
the Facebook testimony anywhere within the quiver of your podcast? It would be interesting
01:33:51
◼
►
to hear yours and/or Snell's," that's me. He used my last name, "extended take." And
01:33:57
◼
►
Andy, we haven't covered it here. I don't know if we will, given the timing of all of
01:34:01
◼
►
this, but I recommend the download podcast to you, which I do every week, and it posts
01:34:06
◼
►
on Thursday afternoon specific time and we recorded on Thursday morning specific time.
01:34:10
◼
►
It's at relay FM slash download and it's covering the news of the week across all sorts of tech
01:34:15
◼
►
topics and we have covered Facebook there like three out of the last four weeks because
01:34:19
◼
►
it's all Facebook all the time. So if you want to hear and I'm in there, I will endorse
01:34:22
◼
►
that podcast because first of all, the format for it is great. I mean you do a medium deep
01:34:26
◼
►
dive on two topics with really, really good guests. You get such smart. There's the one
01:34:32
◼
►
industry analyst woman you have on, I forget her name.
01:34:36
◼
►
Right, Natalie Jarvey from the Hollywood Report. That's what I'm thinking of.
01:34:39
◼
►
Streaming analyst, right?
01:34:40
◼
►
And of course you get Lisa. Lisa Schmeiser is on there all the time, yeah.
01:34:44
◼
►
Yeah, it's a really good show. Highly recommend it. Thank you, Marlon. All the great shows.
01:34:48
◼
►
Well, Marlon, thank you so much for being on Upgrade. Oh, thanks for having me on.
01:34:51
◼
►
It's always a pleasure.
01:34:53
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It was so fun, and we have like, there's so much more we could have talked about.
01:34:56
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I know. We could have gone on and on and on. We didn't talk about Apple leaks. We'll have to do that next time.
01:35:01
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Dark Sky says it's gonna start drizzling soon at my house.
01:35:03
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Yeah, that's right. That's right. See, we brought it all the way back around to the weather.
01:35:06
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It's, yeah, it's looking rainy out there.
01:35:08
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Thanks to listener Mihir again for having us talk about the weather.
01:35:11
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Now that we're, now that our cruel anti-weather overlord Myke Hurley is out of the, out of the room,
01:35:16
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we can talk about the weather on a podcast. This is what people tune in for.
01:35:20
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That's right.
01:35:21
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Thank you also to our sponsors FreshBooks, Pingdom, and Peacock.
01:35:26
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And of course, you can find me on Twitter @JSnell.
01:35:30
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You can find Merlin on Twitter @HotDogsLadies.
01:35:34
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And of course, Merlin is the host of Reconcilable Differences
01:35:38
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on this very podcast network.
01:35:40
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And I'm the host of a lot of podcasts
01:35:42
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on this very podcast network too.
01:35:44
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- It's John Syracuse's show, but he lets me come on.
01:35:46
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- That's nice.
01:35:47
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Which one of us was the bad cop today, Merlin?
01:35:49
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Was it me? Was it you?
01:35:50
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Am I in the barrel?
01:35:51
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- See, on this show, I think we're both the good cop.
01:35:53
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- I think we are, because as we just said
01:35:55
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about five minutes ago, the important thing is that just to act like everybody is the
01:36:00
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Yeah, man, we're all just people.
01:36:01
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Everybody's a good cop.
01:36:02
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Yeah, exactly right.
01:36:03
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Well, thanks to everybody out there for listening to this episode of Upgrade.
01:36:05
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Myke will be back next week to chastise me about all the ways that I ruined Upgrade this
01:36:09
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week, but I don't care.
01:36:11
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It's foggy out.
01:36:13
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Say goodbye, Merlin Man.
01:36:15
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Goodbye, Myke.
01:36:19
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(upbeat music)