37: I Don't Have a Production Staff
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From Relay FM it is time for Upgrade. Today's show is number 37 and it is brought to you by
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lynda.com where you can instantly stream thousands of courses created by industry experts,
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MailRoute, a secure hosted email service for protection from viruses and spam,
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and PDF Pen Scan Plus from Smile, which is the app for mobile scanning and O.C.
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My name is Myke Hurley and I am joined as always by the man with the plan, it's Mr.
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Jason Snell.
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- I will reveal my plan to you at a later time.
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Hello Myke, how's it going?
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- I'm very well, how are you?
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- It's good, it's Monday.
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I've been traveling so much the last couple of months that I'm really happy to be starting
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I know it seems weird to be like, "Yay, it's Monday, I get to do some work."
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But it's Monday and I get to have a week where it's like I'm not flying anywhere, I just
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can actually work for the whole week.
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And that's exciting.
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So I'm happy to start it with you, as always.
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It is a nice start to the week.
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It's time to upgrade the week.
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The week is upgraded for the rest of the week.
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Pretty good.
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So we have some categorized follow-up today.
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Well, the last couple of weeks you've been putting together, as I've been completely
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underwater with travel and finishing my photos book for Take Control and a bunch of other
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projects that we're going to talk about one of them in a little bit that you've been doing
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the show prep more than I was doing it for most of the time before and now you've been
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doing it the last few weeks and it's a I'm not going to get used to it because I want
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to contribute to the show prep and not make you do it all but boy that is a fine list
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of show notes there. I wish I wish the audience could see them but we can't give away our
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Yeah, because we call people names.
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Yeah, also it's a podcast, so they couldn't see it, because we can't do that.
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Well, that also means that if people have been upset with the last couple of weeks'
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episodes or upset with this one, then you can blame me.
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That's what's all my fault.
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That's right.
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If they've seemed off the last few weeks, it's because Myke has been planning them.
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So last week on Ask Upgrade, Adam wrote in to say that he was going to be ditching picture
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life and moving to photos but he was unhappy that he would be losing the kind
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of memories feature the flashback feature of picture life yeah we had a
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bunch of people right in with a bunch of different suggestions and we sort of
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shrugged and mentioned a couple of things and exposed our ignorance and
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then everybody wrote in to say you were dummies so a bunch of these suggestions
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we've got more than once, but I have five different suggestions for Adam. The first
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one comes from Tony, and Tony suggested that TimeHop would actually be a good answer, because
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we mentioned it's like, "Oh, TimeHop just does social," but actually TimeHop can look
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at your iPhones, photos, and videos, as well as other services, and show you things from
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previous times. So it can look at what's actually on your device.
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So, I hope they're going to do an update to TimeHop, although I'm not completely optimistic
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about that because if you're using iCloud photo library, it will show you every photo
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you took on that date and there will be dozens for some days. And this is what I discovered
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is, it's not really picking a few at random if you have like 30, it just shows you all
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30. And if they aren't downloaded to the device because you're doing saving space by having
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to be on the cloud, it just shows you the thumbnail at full size and it looks awful.
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Ah, okay. That's more of a problem.
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TimeHop needs to do some work here.
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If you're not using iCloud Photo Library, then it would probably be better.
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But it's not ideal, but it does work.
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It just sort of ruined TimeHop for me because I've got all these really bad looking thumbnails
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for a day instead of them kind of curating it.
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And I'd be happy if they just picked a couple, but the app doesn't do that.
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But still, TimeHop is an option.
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It's a fun app.
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it does look at your photo library.
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Even if it did show you all of them, which I agree isn't ideal, at least if you could
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see them properly, then it wouldn't be too bad.
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I think the worst part of that, that sounds to me anyway, is the fact that it's showing
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you low resolution images, basically.
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Yeah, yeah, it's not good.
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Again, it was written before there was the iCloud photo library, so again, they could
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probably do something where they say if they don't have the full-size version, I don't
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even want to show it.
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would require an update. And I'm not sure, I think Timehop doesn't even work in iPad
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mode. I think on an iPad it's still an iPhone resolution thing, so I don't know how committed
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they are to their iOS app, but it's worth a try.
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- Bart wrote in to say that there is a built-in search in iOS that will show you photos from
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- Yeah, apparently if you type in the search box one year ago, it shows you your photos
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from a year ago. That doesn't work on photos for the Mac. I don't know why. But Bart says
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that you can type one year ago in iOS photos and it will show you pictures from a year
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It's not showing me anything, so maybe I didn't take pictures a year ago.
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Maybe. I don't know.
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But okay. That's fine.
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Thanks Bart.
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Chris wrote in to suggest another app called Memoir. Chris says that it connects to a bunch
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of different services and it does the job for him for photo memories so that's
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one and Graham suggested another app called photo flashback which apparently
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does a similar kind of thing photo flashback looks at the looks what
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actually is on your device this I remember I said that I thought there was
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an app that might have done this and the reason I know this is because Graham
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wrote it up for Mac stories so that looks at your iCloud photo library and
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it will show you previous years there. And then Richard finally wrote in to say that
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Workflow, the app Workflow, has a workflow called Time Machine that lets you look at
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photos from a set time ago. So you can go in and say when do you want the photos to
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be and it will show you them.
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Now that's the way to work around the fact that things like smart albums will only let
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you set a specific date by saying, you know, using a workflow because workflow can do that.
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looks like it's a good option because it's got your photos and like Timehop
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it's gonna connect to your other photo services and float those to the top and
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those are all fun. So that was great feedback. Thank you everybody for doing
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what we could not. We'll just give Adam some answers.
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For what we horrifically failed to achieve. There will be links to all of those apps that we
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mentioned in today's show notes which you can find in your podcast app of
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choice or over at on the website relay.fm/upgrade/37. So moving on we
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spoke about Raiders of the Lost Ark last week and I don't want to I want to do my
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best to try and not spoil anything that we spoke about because I'm sure that
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there'll be some people that have not yet maybe seen the movie or maybe
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holding it or something like that you know I've seen that kind of stuff in the
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past people do that but basically the feedback that I have here that I wanted
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to give is that I think people should go back and listen to the incomparable
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episode about raises the last arc episode we're following out episode
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number eight we're following out back to 2010 yep we mentioned yes we mentioned
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it on the show and then I as soon as we finished recording put it to top of my
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overcast list and listen to it and really really enjoyed it so I recommend
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that people go back and listen to that. Jon Gruber was on it with Dan Morin and
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yourself. Yeah I look back at it and I can't believe we only talked for an hour
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but that was back when I imagined that the incomparable would be an hour long
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every episode and it's turned out to be more like an hour and a half now and I
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just don't care I don't I don't edit it down I try to wind the conversation down
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after an hour or 90 minutes or so, but sometimes it runs long. But yeah, and I was glad you
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mentioned, because I haven't listened to that episode in a while, and you mentioned it actually
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sounds pretty good. I mean, keeping in mind that's a podcast from five years ago. The
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whole idea with Incomparable is that they're all meant to be, more or less, they're all
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about works. And if you go back later and watch a movie, you should be able to listen
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to the episode about that movie and get something out of it, even if it was five years ago,
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Because we're not talking about the headlines of 2010, we're just talking about Raiders
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of the Lost Ark.
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So it was good to hear that you thought it sounded okay, because that was the eighth
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of those that I produced.
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And so probably something in the tenth or fifteenth podcast I had ever edited, so I'm
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glad it sounded okay.
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Yeah, and it was just fun to hear.
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But it was really interesting, because it just didn't sound like it was old.
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It sounded really good.
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So congratulations on the evergreen content.
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That's great.
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Next many people...
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So as a quick aside, I was talking about...
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We were talking a bit about utility belts and things like that.
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And I mentioned how in...
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In the Emma Jones's whip.
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I was talking about...
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I'd seen Star Wars that weekend as well.
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And I mentioned how Luke Skywalker seems to happen upon a grappling hook when he needs
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to swing across that like the cavern basically with Leia.
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Really designed cavern yes.
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So I you know I thought like why did he have a grappling hook and basically everyone that
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listened to the show commented to let me know that it probably came from the stormtrooper
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suit but then my next question my follow-up question is so why do stormtroopers have grappling
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hooks. I don't understand why anybody on the Death Star needed a grappling hook.
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So that's kind of all I have there about that. Yeah it's just more
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questions. Answer one question, ask another question. But I do like that it's
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not something I'd really thought of, that even though they ditch the Stormtrooper
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outfit he apparently keeps the the utility belt because you know maybe they
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could use it and they do. Yep he's like "this is great I'm gonna I'm gonna keep
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this thing's awesome there's a multi-tool on here there's a there's an
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electric screwdriver lasers everything lasers everything but yeah so there you
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go so maybe maybe stormtroopers have grappling hooks too but it doesn't make
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complete sense to me and then Brian also wrote in to say that in the 1977
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theatrical release Luke's grappling hook misses the first time he tries again I'm
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pleased that they did that and it's sad to see that it was Lucas right out of
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there. And then one last piece of follow-up I have today Jason if you
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remember about our Filipino boy band that was basically started in our honor
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that's not true at all. Gabriel created a artist's rendition of what
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the upgrade band could look like I don't know if you've seen this I think it is
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amazing and I wanted the world to see it because it is an incredible picture of
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me and you. I am I Myke with an I, yeah, I-M-I-C, and for a reason I'm not
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completely sure you you go by the name Manila Ice. I guess because of the
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Philippines, right? This is the Philippines, yeah. This is the Philippine boy band
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version of us. And you are singing a song of original composition called
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Myke at the Movies. Yes. And there are some great signs being held by our
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our adoring fan base in the audience. Yes, they all have hearts for eyes.
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They're very much like the the one student in that opening scene of Raiders
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of the Lost Ark in the classroom. So there's a heart upgrade
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sign and a "Yo Amo I, Myke" sign. It's great is what we're saying. So thank you, Gabriel.
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Yeah, excellent work. So I think we're actually at the end of follow-up. Yeah, I
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I think so. So I think what we've done today is that if I prepare follow-up it is efficient.
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It is. Yeah I am terrible at, I'm so excited by follow-up even now you'd think I'd be jaded
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that I just pack in so much follow-up. Also we have the genius move of putting ask upgrade
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at the end so we split our follow-up essentially in two and that's a that's a good move I think
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makes it seem like we have more self-control than we actually do. Yeah there's some great
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stuff in Ask Upgrade today actually. Yeah. I'm looking forward to that as always. But
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So let me take a break, we'll take our first break before we jump into some topics that
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we have today.
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This week's episode of Upgrade is brought to you by our friends over at lynda.com.
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They are the online learning platform of over 3,000 on-demand video courses to help you
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You can get yourself a free 10-day trial by visiting lynda.com.
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That's L-Y-N-D-A dot com slash upgrade.
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So, Mr. Jason Snell, you put together a little thing that you released this weekend, a project
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that you've been working on for The Incomparable.
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Do you want to explain to people kind of what it is and where the idea for that came from?
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Yeah, so this weekend, yeah, we dropped this episode.
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So David Letterman, the TV talk show host in the US for...
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He's been hosting a nightly talk show for 33 years.
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I guess you call them chat shows, would you?
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Yeah, we would call them.
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English people?
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Yeah, chat shows.
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Yeah, chat shows.
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Yeah, they talk, chat, whatever.
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Anyway, he's retiring after 33 years.
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His last show was Wednesday.
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And in the 80s, it was...
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The best way I could describe it, I think, is that during my formative years, as a teenager,
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kind of understanding and being exposed to different kinds of writing and culture and
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comedy and creativity and things like that and irony.
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I just absorbed a lot from David Letterman.
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I can't remember when I started watching him, but I was very rapidly watching his show,
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recording his show on a VCR and playing it back the next morning every day, every night,
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So it was a huge fan and it made a huge impact on me.
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With him retiring, I thought I want to do an episode of The Incomparable about that.
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I was thinking about getting together a panel.
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I know a bunch of people who are also David Letterman fans and I was going to get them
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all together and we were going to talk about it. And I had a moment where I thought, you
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know, I kind of want to do something special and I'm not quite sure whether I had been
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thinking do I want to try something in a little bit of a different format and I can't remember
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whether I actually said, you know, hey I want to live through what Myke lived through when
00:17:40
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►
he made Behind the App. I don't know if I did that or not but I thought it would be
00:17:44
◼
►
interesting. I have a love of formats. I have a love of making things to a format for hundreds
00:17:50
◼
►
of episodes like with Incomparable and as we're now doing with this show. But I also
00:17:56
◼
►
love breaking formats. I think one of the great things about having a recurring format
00:17:59
◼
►
is that when you break it, it's funny and interesting to do something unexpected. Honestly,
00:18:08
◼
►
thinking about it right now, probably something influenced a lot by David Letterman in the
00:18:13
◼
►
80s because he took what was by all accounts a normal talk show and then did extremely
00:18:17
◼
►
weird stuff with it. That was a kick. I decided to do that. I decided what if I did an episode
00:18:25
◼
►
of The Incomparable that was more edited and produced like an NPR show or like Behind the
00:18:30
◼
►
App where I did interviews with a bunch of different people and then sort of told a story.
00:18:34
◼
►
A big motivator for me too was that I had a real point of view for this story. Sometimes
00:18:39
◼
►
we talk about movies and I have an opinion but I think that the most important thing
00:18:42
◼
►
about it is the conversation. Everybody's got their different takes and there's a give
00:18:46
◼
►
and taken all of that. With this, I felt like there was some stuff I really wanted to say
00:18:51
◼
►
about David Letterman and about the arc of his career and about how it influenced me
00:18:57
◼
►
and what it all means to me that he's retiring. I felt like a panel discussion wasn't really
00:19:03
◼
►
the place for that. I wanted to exert a little more editorial authority over that topic.
00:19:10
◼
►
I decided to do that, to do the interviews and then write a script that I would narrate
00:19:19
◼
►
and interleave, drop in all of these little bits from my interview subjects.
00:19:28
◼
►
It's about an hour and six minutes long and it dropped on Friday night.
00:19:33
◼
►
It was a lot of work, but you know that because you did the same thing with Behind the App.
00:19:37
◼
►
I want to talk about the Incomparable episode a little bit. I know Letterman,
00:19:44
◼
►
like I am familiar with him. I've seen clips and stuff over the years but I've
00:19:50
◼
►
never seen an episode of either or any of his shows. I'm kind of
00:19:58
◼
►
tangentially familiar with him and I've seen some YouTube clips you know of like
00:20:01
◼
►
oh you should watch this type of thing. So I listened to the show and found it
00:20:06
◼
►
really interesting to kind of hear the history of this guy and basically I was
00:20:11
◼
►
like listen I listened to it today and was like pausing and going to YouTube to
00:20:16
◼
►
find things like what was the monkey cam I watched like his 9/11 monologue and
00:20:23
◼
►
right kind of stuff like things I thought about putting in more audio
00:20:26
◼
►
clips and quite frankly I ran out of time I just an energy I just couldn't I
00:20:30
◼
►
thought about putting in a lot of more audio and instead I've got it a couple
00:20:35
◼
►
at the section breaks but otherwise I just I just didn't do it it is all on
00:20:39
◼
►
YouTube basically all of it I was gonna say like I wish that you did it and then
00:20:43
◼
►
when I watched it was like you couldn't have put seven minutes in the middle it
00:20:47
◼
►
would have been weird like like that that monologue was I think quite
00:20:52
◼
►
important to watch to understand a bit about him so I kind of was just like
00:20:55
◼
►
searching around YouTube today and getting a bit familiar with it and I can
00:21:00
◼
►
see that like in your intention of creating this episode it was to celebrate
00:21:05
◼
►
the work that that man did and share it with like-minded people but for me you
00:21:11
◼
►
actually educated me about why letterman is an important thing to a bunch of
00:21:17
◼
►
people and I found it quite fascinating so it was excellent work.
00:21:21
◼
►
I'm glad you liked it one of the things I mean I I go back and forth between
00:21:27
◼
►
thinking it's it's targeted at nobody because it's about a subject that only
00:21:33
◼
►
only people who really care about it will want to listen to, and yet it spends a lot
00:21:36
◼
►
of time explaining who the person is. That's in my more negative moments. In my more positive
00:21:41
◼
►
moments, what I would say is, I tried to make something that would explain why he was important
00:21:45
◼
►
to me, even if he's not important to you, and why he was important to other people,
00:21:51
◼
►
the other people I talked to, and tell sort of an interesting story also about somebody
00:21:56
◼
►
who's influential at an early part in your life and an early part in their career, and
00:22:03
◼
►
also how the wheel continues to turn and the person who starts out as this influential
00:22:07
◼
►
rule breaker ends up as the man at the end, and how that's the path that we all kind of
00:22:11
◼
►
follow is Phil Michaels in the piece says something about Conan O'Brien and says, "People
00:22:17
◼
►
younger than me feel the same way about him, but I don't because people younger than me
00:22:22
◼
►
are awful," I think is what he says.
00:22:26
◼
►
That was part of it too.
00:22:28
◼
►
I've been interested to hear from a few people who don't like him or don't know anything
00:22:32
◼
►
about him that they got something out of the piece.
00:22:35
◼
►
That was part of the goal, was to tell a story that was partly about me and my influences
00:22:39
◼
►
and why I find this important.
00:22:42
◼
►
Putting it in my voice a little bit more, I felt, was one of the reasons to do that.
00:22:45
◼
►
If it was just a, "Hey, let's all talk about David Letterman," I'm not sure if people who
00:22:50
◼
►
didn't really like David Letterman would want to listen, but telling a story about why he
00:22:54
◼
►
was important and why a lot of people are really, consider this week to be a big deal.
00:23:00
◼
►
Why is that? Why do we think that this is a milestone that he's retiring? And so that
00:23:05
◼
►
I tried to put that in there.
00:23:06
◼
►
I wouldn't spoil it because people should listen to it but I really liked the personal
00:23:11
◼
►
stories that you threw in both your own opinions about him now but then also the story that
00:23:15
◼
►
you put in to explain how you feel. That was really really nice.
00:23:19
◼
►
That's my This American Life moment in there. There's a couple of those where I was I had
00:23:24
◼
►
the moment of like, "Oh, this is sort of like that," and it was this complete tangent about
00:23:27
◼
►
my own life, and I thought, "You know, actually these kinds of things do kind of thrive when
00:23:33
◼
►
people bring in some of their personal baggage."
00:23:35
◼
►
This is supposed to be kind of my personal story along with some other friends of mine's
00:23:40
◼
►
personal stories about this, so I threw it in there, and I'm pretty happy with it.
00:23:44
◼
►
There are a million things I would change if I wanted to spend another week on it, but
00:23:48
◼
►
I don't, and I don't have the time, and he's retiring Wednesday.
00:23:53
◼
►
So that we got we got it where you know I got it to someplace that I was I was I was
00:23:58
◼
►
pretty happy with it.
00:23:59
◼
►
But yeah I did try to make I also wrote the script.
00:24:03
◼
►
So that's you know it's me reading words that I wrote but it's me reading reading from a
00:24:07
◼
►
script and that that's an interesting challenge too because that's not the same as just speaking
00:24:11
◼
►
extemporaneously like this.
00:24:14
◼
►
And so that was that was also kind of interesting.
00:24:16
◼
►
So it was fun to do.
00:24:18
◼
►
I consulted you about how you put together Behind the App and then essentially ignored
00:24:24
◼
►
your advice.
00:24:26
◼
►
Because I had, you did a lot of Behind the App, I feel, where you sort of knew your interviews
00:24:32
◼
►
and knew where people said, knew that people said things that you were going to put in.
00:24:36
◼
►
So you'd write, right?
00:24:38
◼
►
And then you'd go find clips to illustrate what you were writing about.
00:24:42
◼
►
Is that accurate?
00:24:44
◼
►
I mean, I did all the interviews.
00:24:45
◼
►
all the questions, did all the interviews, then wrote the scripts. And most of the
00:24:53
◼
►
time I wrote the scripts and then went back into the interviews, re-listened the
00:24:59
◼
►
relevant sections and cut out the clips that I thought I would want to use. Then
00:25:03
◼
►
I recorded the audio of me reading the script, then I would stop at points that I
00:25:09
◼
►
wanted to add clips, listen back to the correctly categorized clips and drop
00:25:13
◼
►
them in where I thought that they were relevant.
00:25:16
◼
►
Yeah, which makes sense.
00:25:20
◼
►
So what I tried to do instead was I had Casting Words, which is a podcast transcript service,
00:25:28
◼
►
and I could have used some other services, but I just chose them because I've used them
00:25:32
◼
►
I had them do transcripts of all my interviews.
00:25:34
◼
►
And I posted, I should say, I posted the interviews, and Joe Steele in the chat room points this
00:25:39
◼
►
I know he liked doing this, and I've heard from a couple other people that the show is
00:25:42
◼
►
an hour long and it features me and then it features clips from these interviews I did,
00:25:46
◼
►
these five interviews that I did. Or the bonus track, you can actually listen for three and
00:25:51
◼
►
a half hours to all five interviews I did. It's just the interviews. So you can hear
00:25:56
◼
►
what I took out and what I kept because three and a half hours of interviews only leads
00:26:02
◼
►
to an hour of running time and that includes the ads and me who's not in the interviews.
00:26:07
◼
►
So it's a very different kind of thing. But anyway, so I transcribed those three and a
00:26:11
◼
►
and a half hours of interviews with time code. That's an option. You pay a little more per
00:26:15
◼
►
minute. And then I treated it kind of like a magazine article in that, you know, a lot
00:26:22
◼
►
of times if I'm writing an article with many, a news story or a magazine story that's got
00:26:26
◼
►
lots of quotes in it, which I don't do much anymore, but I used to do all the time, you
00:26:31
◼
►
end up with all your notes of all your interviews and you put them together and you find the
00:26:35
◼
►
common areas of conversation and you kind of organize those quotes and then you build
00:26:39
◼
►
the story around it. And that's what I did with this script. I used the... I knew that
00:26:44
◼
►
we had talked about when did you first see Letterman, why were those early days so influential,
00:26:51
◼
►
what about when he didn't get The Tonight Show, Jay Leno got The Tonight Show and then
00:26:55
◼
►
he moved to CBS and how did that feel. And then sort of like what's your relationship
00:26:58
◼
►
with the show now that it's been on for 20 years, do you still watch it every night?
00:27:03
◼
►
We had some buckets for those things. So I took what everybody said about those different
00:27:08
◼
►
topics from the transcripts and basically copied and pasted them together into different
00:27:13
◼
►
categories and those are basically the scenes of the show and then I wrote my narration
00:27:18
◼
►
around those transcripts and some of the transcripts were wrong so as I was editing the show and
00:27:23
◼
►
then I just go to the timecode and and cut out those bits and I color-coded them all
00:27:28
◼
►
and then I basically took the script and dropped them in recorded my narration and then dropped
00:27:33
◼
►
the clips in one by one. And at one point I found that they had transcribed me saying
00:27:38
◼
►
things as if it was one of the subjects. I was like, "Boy, I really agree with what
00:27:40
◼
►
this guy said here." It was me. So I had to rewrite and re-record a couple of things.
00:27:46
◼
►
But that was my approach to it, which I don't know if I would do that again, but it certainly
00:27:50
◼
►
made it a lot easier because I knew exactly what people said, you know, with a couple
00:27:55
◼
►
exceptions and could just kind of craft it. And as somebody who's written those kind
00:28:00
◼
►
of stories before, that was a format that was comfortable for me. The idea that I had
00:28:03
◼
►
all the text in front of me and I was just essentially choosing quotes like I
00:28:07
◼
►
was writing a story except it was a radio story instead.
00:28:11
◼
►
I really think that if I was going to do what you did now I would probably do it the way that you did it.
00:28:22
◼
►
Like if I was gonna do one episode that that method is a very smart way of
00:28:29
◼
►
doing just being able to find things because it was incredibly time intensive
00:28:34
◼
►
for me having to go back and listen again to the probably I think maybe 25 to
00:28:41
◼
►
30 hours of interviews. Oh my god yeah the I was able to do like searches in
00:28:46
◼
►
the transcripts and also discovering the casting words had a timecode option that
00:28:52
◼
►
was a huge one for me because then I would find an interesting thing and move
00:28:56
◼
►
it into the script with the time code. And that made it, when I put the show, it didn't
00:29:01
◼
►
take me, it took me most of Friday to put the show together, but it didn't take that
00:29:04
◼
►
much time because I knew at 30 minutes into Aaron Barnhart, he said this. I could just
00:29:10
◼
►
go there and clip it out and say, "That's what I need." So it was effective. I'm sure
00:29:17
◼
►
there are other ways of doing it, but since I don't have a production staff or anything
00:29:21
◼
►
like that. I used casting words as my production staff essentially to get me a transcript.
00:29:27
◼
►
It's funny, we take so much pride, I think you and I both, in the production of these things.
00:29:33
◼
►
When I'm doing an incomparable episode, I do a lot of editing for that, but it's all about
00:29:40
◼
►
simple editorial choices. You're tidying things up, basically.
00:29:45
◼
►
Yeah, exactly. And I'll remove tangents and all of that. So it's part of the creative process
00:29:50
◼
►
to edit it. And so I take great pride in that. This was different. The writing of the script was
00:29:55
◼
►
the creative process. And I realized later that with a couple exceptions, which I would have
00:30:00
◼
►
caught on a first listen, I could have handed the script to a production assistant and said, "Cut
00:30:07
◼
►
this," and gotten what I wanted, because the script was what I wanted. And that's very different.
00:30:12
◼
►
And I don't have a production assistant. I did it myself. But I had that moment as I was building
00:30:17
◼
►
the show on Friday that I had already done the creative part, which is not the case with
00:30:26
◼
►
most of the other podcasts I do where there's the creative part of the steering the conversation
00:30:29
◼
►
and then there's the cleanup and that you make some decisions there. All my editorial
00:30:33
◼
►
decisions with a couple of exceptions happened in the script. And that was just a funny moment
00:30:38
◼
►
to realize that as a control freak who's used to controlling everything in the edit, I realized
00:30:43
◼
►
my script was what I intended and I could literally have just handed the
00:30:48
◼
►
script in the files to somebody who's a competent audio editor and said do this
00:30:53
◼
►
and it would have been fine. So I had people like that I would send my scripts
00:30:58
◼
►
to to have them kind of looked at and chopped down or added to and that was an
00:31:04
◼
►
incredible help for me at least initially as it got towards the end I
00:31:08
◼
►
started to run out of time so I was the last couple of episodes the scripts were
00:31:12
◼
►
just 100% done by me but by that point I felt like I had a better guide for how
00:31:17
◼
►
to do it but I mean you know behind the app ran for 11 episodes and you know I'm
00:31:25
◼
►
doing the music thing now which is way easier to put together it doesn't take
00:31:30
◼
►
as much time to put together the edit is still a couple of hours but I mean
00:31:35
◼
►
editing an episode of behind the app like it you know they're about they're
00:31:39
◼
►
about 40 minutes on average. I mean just the assembly would take five or
00:31:44
◼
►
six hours. And I am really proud of it. But one of my feelings for
00:31:51
◼
►
this, and I wonder how you feel about it, what are the benefits of one
00:31:57
◼
►
style over the other? I mean a lot of it is about taste and is there a
00:32:02
◼
►
business benefit to one style or the other is something that I find very
00:32:06
◼
►
interesting and I wonder how you feel having done just this one if you even
00:32:10
◼
►
have a sense of that?
00:32:13
◼
►
Oh I don't know I don't know if I do I will I will say that I had I had a bunch
00:32:24
◼
►
of people say more like this.
00:32:29
◼
►
No no more like that.
00:32:31
◼
►
Like with the radio drama yeah as a one-off every now and then it was
00:32:36
◼
►
it's a lot of work to do something like this. And I know you felt this way, I
00:32:40
◼
►
mean I know how hard you worked on behind the app, so I don't know. I don't know.
00:32:48
◼
►
Well I feel like behind the app was really good and on the whole the
00:32:52
◼
►
feedback of it was was really good too and I'm very proud of it. But I mean I
00:32:56
◼
►
was talking about this on analog last this week. Kind of behind the app met all
00:33:04
◼
►
the goals that I set for it but I didn't anticipate the amount of work that was
00:33:10
◼
►
gonna be needed to do it. I didn't know it was gonna take the amount of work
00:33:14
◼
►
that it did. And it's interesting because you know I know it's like what is what
00:33:21
◼
►
is the better thing to do here because it's all about taste and and I wonder
00:33:25
◼
►
from a you know if you were trying to run an effective business like we are
00:33:29
◼
►
here. For me it was like where is my time best served?
00:33:33
◼
►
Because could I do a panel show which was as financially and successful and
00:33:39
◼
►
popular as Behind the App was? Yes, I do three of them basically. And this show
00:33:48
◼
►
and Connected for example, they take like a tenth of the amount of time to create.
00:33:55
◼
►
And it's interesting because it's like I would love to do more things like
00:34:01
◼
►
Behind the App and I will again in the future but there has to be an incredibly
00:34:06
◼
►
good reason to do it because when I initially did Behind the App I was like
00:34:11
◼
►
this is just what it's gonna be now I'm just gonna do these over and over and
00:34:14
◼
►
over again. I realize it's podcasting about
00:34:19
◼
►
podcasting now but also I think we're talking about making creative choices
00:34:22
◼
►
choices, which I think is interesting. I did the Letterman episode the way I did because
00:34:26
◼
►
I wanted to try that on for size, and I felt like it was an appropriate... I was trying
00:34:33
◼
►
it on and it fit what I wanted to do. So it was a good opportunity to try that because
00:34:39
◼
►
it was a good match topic-wise, and my intent was it was a match for it. But yeah, I mean,
00:34:46
◼
►
I went on a mini Twitter rant that I won't recap here, but the idea that one format is
00:34:52
◼
►
superior to another. I mean, just because it takes more work doesn't mean it's fundamentally
00:34:55
◼
►
better. It's just different. And if I had done a Letterman episode that was a roundtable
00:35:00
◼
►
in a classic style, it would have been interesting. It would have been different. There would
00:35:04
◼
►
have been some things that came up that would have been interesting areas to go in that
00:35:08
◼
►
didn't come up because the participants didn't speak to each other. They all spoke to me.
00:35:13
◼
►
It would have been different. It would have been good. It would have not been the same.
00:35:16
◼
►
And I feel like this is the challenge is I think that in the end to the listener, a lot
00:35:21
◼
►
of times, I know you can tell that something's had a lot of work put into it, but I think
00:35:29
◼
►
maybe there's not an understanding of just how much more effort it is. And the scale
00:35:35
◼
►
is different. Like an NPR podcast, I mean, the amount of effort that goes into every
00:35:39
◼
►
one of those shows and the staff that they've got, I think people, it's great that people
00:35:44
◼
►
listen to shows like this, but they have to understand that, you know, comparing a show
00:35:48
◼
►
like this to a show like This American Life, I mean, you and I could do this with Skype
00:35:55
◼
►
and essentially with free software and post it for almost nothing. And we have a little
00:36:00
◼
►
more than that, but it's essentially like that. And something like This American Life
00:36:04
◼
►
or any of the more highly produced NPR stuff, I mean, there are whole staffs of writers
00:36:11
◼
►
and technical people and reporters. It's just a huge operation. It's a totally different
00:36:16
◼
►
scale. And the great thing about this medium is that this medium can hold all these different
00:36:23
◼
►
kinds of approaches. But they are really different. And sometimes I think the professionalism
00:36:31
◼
►
that we can bring to a show like this maybe hides the fact that we're doing this on essentially
00:36:40
◼
►
a shoestring budget compared to something like that. And that's just how it is. There
00:36:48
◼
►
are different kinds of things. I was saying to John Syracuse actually the other day that
00:36:54
◼
►
I could do the incomparable like that every week if it was my entire job. But it would
00:36:59
◼
►
take all of my time. Literally I could not do a single other thing. And if I could do
00:37:04
◼
►
that and it could support my family, then maybe I would choose to do that. I probably
00:37:09
◼
►
because I like writing and stuff, but you know that's the amount of work it is.
00:37:13
◼
►
It's like a full-time job kind of work to do an episode and how you manage to do
00:37:16
◼
►
Behind the App for all those weeks with everything else, it blows my mind.
00:37:27
◼
►
Your mind is blown now. Your mind is also blown.
00:37:30
◼
►
It was really tough. It was really, really tough.
00:37:34
◼
►
But you're proud of the work and I'm proud of this episode
00:37:38
◼
►
and there's something to be said for that.
00:37:40
◼
►
And I think that's the argument is,
00:37:42
◼
►
are you challenging yourself creatively?
00:37:44
◼
►
And are you thinking, what's the best format for this?
00:37:47
◼
►
And I think if something came up and you said,
00:37:49
◼
►
you know, that would be a really great idea
00:37:51
◼
►
for a three-part documentary series,
00:37:53
◼
►
that you would do it.
00:37:55
◼
►
Because you've got another tool now,
00:37:57
◼
►
but you also know what all the ramifications
00:38:00
◼
►
of that creative decision will be,
00:38:01
◼
►
and so you can decide, do I want to do that or not?
00:38:06
◼
►
And I think that's one of the great things
00:38:07
◼
►
about trying something new is you get a better sense
00:38:10
◼
►
of how it works for you, what the issues are,
00:38:12
◼
►
and then you can make a decision
00:38:13
◼
►
about whether it works for you or not.
00:38:15
◼
►
I hope that this medium gets to the point
00:38:19
◼
►
where our businesses, essentially,
00:38:23
◼
►
are able to do shows like that
00:38:26
◼
►
and have them be sustainable.
00:38:28
◼
►
But I don't think we're of the size
00:38:31
◼
►
where we can do that now,
00:38:32
◼
►
because you were killing yourself over Behind the App.
00:38:35
◼
►
I mean, you could do Behind the App
00:38:36
◼
►
you had some production staff, but you know, you just quit your job to go full time. The
00:38:42
◼
►
idea that you would hire production staff to help, that's kind of a ways out, I think,
00:38:47
◼
►
right now. And so it's important to keep that in mind too, that there's ambition that sometimes
00:38:52
◼
►
exceeds what's possible, at least in the short term. But I would love to get there, because
00:38:57
◼
►
I do think that there's a lot of fun stuff you can do with audio that we don't do very
00:39:03
◼
►
much now because it's just so much so much work to do it that it's not
00:39:08
◼
►
practical. Indeed. I think that's probably enough inside baseball for today. I agree. Let's take a quick
00:39:15
◼
►
break and then let's talk about some other stuff that people might
00:39:18
◼
►
like to hear about like Apple Watch apps for example. This week's episode of
00:39:23
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00:42:10
◼
►
It's not funny that we've come to the point where your phone is your scanner.
00:42:15
◼
►
It's kind of crazy.
00:42:16
◼
►
Chris, just scan everything anywhere.
00:42:19
◼
►
It's pretty cool.
00:42:20
◼
►
It's madness that you just point.
00:42:22
◼
►
Like why even press a button when you can just point?
00:42:27
◼
►
It's unexpected.
00:42:28
◼
►
Talk about unexpected ramifications of having a camera on the back of your phone.
00:42:33
◼
►
The fact that you don't even need a scanner and you can scan any document.
00:42:38
◼
►
I suppose spies thought of that.
00:42:40
◼
►
It's a very spy thing.
00:42:42
◼
►
But for regular people to be like, "Yeah, I just do this and all my documents are there."
00:42:45
◼
►
just it's crazy. So a couple weeks ago, yeah thank you Smile, thank you very much.
00:42:51
◼
►
A couple weeks ago we had an Ask Upgrade question that I wanted to kind of spin
00:42:57
◼
►
out into a little bit of a topic today which is about Apple Watch apps.
00:43:01
◼
►
Daniel wrote in to ask of the watch apps that you installed initially how many of
00:43:06
◼
►
you kept on your watch? And I think to go to go with this a little bit further
00:43:11
◼
►
because I mean I know I still have some apps on here that I've never even opened
00:43:14
◼
►
because I know I might use them in the future.
00:43:17
◼
►
I kind of wanted to start, Jason, by asking you
00:43:19
◼
►
and then I'll do the same.
00:43:21
◼
►
What apps are you actually using on your phone,
00:43:24
◼
►
sorry, on your watch and why are you using them?
00:43:28
◼
►
- I would say very few.
00:43:30
◼
►
I can't say what is installed
00:43:34
◼
►
'cause I've got stuff installed that I don't use
00:43:36
◼
►
that is just there and I don't know why it's there
00:43:38
◼
►
and I'll get rid of it at some point.
00:43:43
◼
►
And what I'd say is mostly what I'm using is coming from the glances.
00:43:50
◼
►
So it's Overcast and the Major League Baseball app and the Fitness app.
00:43:59
◼
►
And that's about it.
00:44:03
◼
►
I will sometimes open the Fitness app to start a run or a walk.
00:44:09
◼
►
Yeah, but you know, Passbook when I've got a barcode or something like that.
00:44:16
◼
►
But I try not to use the apps.
00:44:19
◼
►
I'm really, and somebody, I think Mark Arment maybe said the other day that he became much
00:44:26
◼
►
more happy with his Apple Watch when he stopped, if it was Marco, if it's not, I apologize
00:44:32
◼
►
But somebody said, "When once you stop actively using apps and just kind of go back on notifications
00:44:39
◼
►
and glances, it becomes a much more pleasant product.
00:44:41
◼
►
And I agree with that.
00:44:42
◼
►
You know, not only the app's kind of not very well featured, but I find even the act of
00:44:48
◼
►
flipping over into the app view and scrolling around and looking for an app and launching
00:44:52
◼
►
it to be not a great experience and usually kind of fruitless because of the limitations
00:44:56
◼
►
of the apps.
00:44:57
◼
►
So what I end up doing is going into an app because I tap on something in a notification
00:45:02
◼
►
or a glance or a complication that kicks off an app.
00:45:07
◼
►
then I'll use the app. But routinely I don't use apps. I'm using
00:45:13
◼
►
Glances and looking at notifications. But even with Glances you have a very
00:45:20
◼
►
small amount installed there, don't you? I do. I think that you can overdo it. Well,
00:45:27
◼
►
the way you navigate Glances is with a swipe, right? So you can have a huge
00:45:31
◼
►
number of Glances and it's awful because then you can't find the one you're
00:45:34
◼
►
looking for because there's a huge list so I like I like keeping it keeping it
00:45:38
◼
►
small and what do I use the what do I use the watch for I mean honestly other
00:45:43
◼
►
than the remote control I could probably lose most of the rest of these glances
00:45:48
◼
►
too because they're not that important it's you know am I really going to
00:45:52
◼
►
reorder my podcast playlist from overcast and maybe but mostly I'm just
00:45:59
◼
►
gonna use the remote control of the now playing glance to control my phone and not worry about
00:46:06
◼
►
the overcast details of it. Likewise the Major League Baseball glance tells me the score
00:46:12
◼
►
and I can tap and open the app and tell me a little bit more but I don't really need
00:46:15
◼
►
more so I'm just trying to keep it I'm trying to approach this from like how how minimalistic
00:46:22
◼
►
can I keep this how how I don't want to be a super active watch user that's got I've
00:46:27
◼
►
got a lot of go-to apps. That's sort of how I'm approaching it is if I want to
00:46:31
◼
►
do something I will try to do it but I'm trying not to treat it like a phone.
00:46:39
◼
►
That makes sense. That definitely makes sense. I have way more installed than you because
00:46:45
◼
►
I've kind of only done maybe one or two clean outs of this stuff. So I have a
00:46:50
◼
►
bunch of apps on here that I've not even opened but there are some that I'll keep
00:46:54
◼
►
on there. For example, I have the apps of all of the airlines, like I have a bunch of
00:47:00
◼
►
airline apps installed, right? And I figure I'm going to keep them on the device because
00:47:05
◼
►
at some point they're going to be useful, like when I next take a trip with that airline.
00:47:10
◼
►
And I figure that it might be good to have those apps on here to get like boarding passes
00:47:14
◼
►
and that kind of thing. Like I have Passbook but sometimes, you know, I want to try them
00:47:19
◼
►
out but you can't really try those out until I actually have tickets in them.
00:47:23
◼
►
Right, so you're, you know, eventually you will use them so you've got them around.
00:47:28
◼
►
Yeah, so they're just there because I figured that they will be useful. But the apps that
00:47:34
◼
►
I guess I use the most, I use Overcast. Like these are third-party ones, like I use the
00:47:41
◼
►
Maps app more than I thought I would but obviously it's first-party. I use OmniFocus to see kind
00:47:47
◼
►
of what's going on. I check things off as well.
00:47:49
◼
►
Podometer++ I have installed because I just like that app a lot.
00:47:53
◼
►
I use Dark Sky because I think that the weather stuff that it uses is better, in my opinion, than the standard weather app.
00:48:02
◼
►
I use DUE. Are you familiar with DUE?
00:48:07
◼
►
It's like an advanced alarm and reminder app.
00:48:12
◼
►
app. Like it does some good stuff that I like. Like it will set off an alarm and
00:48:16
◼
►
it will just keep triggering until you get rid of it and it's got some really
00:48:19
◼
►
good options for like snoozing things and I use it for like quick alarms like
00:48:24
◼
►
to take medication or like if I you know want to remember to go out for a walk or
00:48:28
◼
►
stuff like that like it will continue to bug you and I quite like it. It does timers and
00:48:33
◼
►
alerts and I like it quite a lot and it works really well on the watch because
00:48:37
◼
►
you just say like "remind me to take medication at 4 p.m." and it just passes
00:48:42
◼
►
the text and puts the alert in. It's one of the better watch apps that I've used
00:48:47
◼
►
actually because it boils down the functionality of the iPhone app and puts
00:48:51
◼
►
it in there like you can snooze things and it's a really good app and I
00:48:56
◼
►
like it a lot. They're kind of I think the main apps that I have but I have a ton of
00:49:00
◼
►
of others on here. But in regard to glances, again I think I maybe have more,
00:49:07
◼
►
well I know I have more than you do. I have the battery one, although I'm kind of thinking about
00:49:12
◼
►
getting rid of that because it's not an issue. I haven't had an issue with battery. I'm actually
00:49:19
◼
►
going to get rid of it now. So the battery one's gone because basically I just open it and I just
00:49:23
◼
►
look at what the percentage is. That's all it is. Like I just like, oh that's what it is now.
00:49:28
◼
►
I have OmniFocus there, I find that to be quite useful as a way to quickly get into OmniFocus as
00:49:33
◼
►
well on the watch. I have Overcast and then Now Playing. I like the Overcast app as well actually,
00:49:39
◼
►
I think Arco did a great job with the redesign and I like having the, you know, it just has like the
00:49:45
◼
►
next artwork and stuff like that. I then have the Now Playing because that is really good.
00:49:50
◼
►
I have Dark Sky there, which because you know I like the glance is really great.
00:49:57
◼
►
Then I have activity, heartbeat, and pedometer.
00:50:03
◼
►
There my glasses. That's it? That is it. There my glasses. That's good. And I just took one out then
00:50:09
◼
►
because I had the official weather glance but I've just removed that because
00:50:13
◼
►
there was no point having dark sky and weather. This is the thing, every time I
00:50:16
◼
►
look at this I end up paring it down a little bit more and a little bit more and
00:50:21
◼
►
a little bit more. Like I have the Twitterrific app installed because you
00:50:27
◼
►
know I mentioned previously I think I may have to talk about this on connected
00:50:30
◼
►
that I want to get DM notifications so I just have those on for Twitterrific on
00:50:36
◼
►
my phone because I'm a Tweetbot user but I like it because you can see the DM in
00:50:40
◼
►
full you can reply to it on the watch and that sort of stuff if you want and I
00:50:43
◼
►
quite like that and I think they've done a good job with their app but that's
00:50:47
◼
►
kind of the extent for me and I don't know if that is good bad I don't know if
00:50:53
◼
►
it's what Apple intended? I'm not sure about that.
00:50:58
◼
►
Well I think it's a good question to say. You're coming from the perspective of starting
00:51:05
◼
►
with a lot and going down to a little and I'm sort of trying to minimize it as much
00:51:10
◼
►
as I can and then add them as I go. But I'm not sure Apple knows the answer. I mean like
00:51:19
◼
►
Like I said, I've found that I kind of like apps as things you kick off from, we said
00:51:24
◼
►
this the other week, things you kick off from a glance or a notification.
00:51:29
◼
►
And so I don't have a Twitter-ific glance or something, but if I get a Twitter-ific
00:51:33
◼
►
notification I can tap on it for more information and to reply.
00:51:37
◼
►
And that's how I launch that app, is through a notification only and not from going out
00:51:40
◼
►
and finding the app and saying, "Show me some things on Twitter," because I kind of don't
00:51:45
◼
►
want to do that.
00:51:48
◼
►
I've been really happy in general with the apps.
00:51:54
◼
►
So when there is an app like what we have with Twitterrific, I really like the way the
00:52:01
◼
►
notification launches into the app.
00:52:03
◼
►
I find that experience to be quite good.
00:52:07
◼
►
Oh, no, that really works for me.
00:52:11
◼
►
And that's one of the reasons why I don't feel the need to go out and launch apps directly
00:52:17
◼
►
because the notifications send me there.
00:52:21
◼
►
And that's a good, it can be a good experience.
00:52:24
◼
►
Twitterrific does a very good job
00:52:25
◼
►
where it takes you immediately to the thing
00:52:28
◼
►
that you were notified about and lets you reply to it
00:52:32
◼
►
or whatever you wanna do.
00:52:33
◼
►
I've used some other apps that will notify you
00:52:37
◼
►
and then you tap to launch those apps
00:52:39
◼
►
and they, like Slack is like this.
00:52:41
◼
►
The Slack app will say, hey, Myke just DM'd you in Slack
00:52:45
◼
►
and then I'll tap to open Slack and it'll say,
00:52:47
◼
►
"All right, here's Slack.
00:52:50
◼
►
Would you like DMs or mentions?"
00:52:53
◼
►
I'm like, "Well, I just tapped on a DM,
00:52:55
◼
►
so why don't you show me that DM and let me reply?"
00:52:57
◼
►
And it just, it fails at that.
00:52:59
◼
►
So Slack's watch app, I can confidently say,
00:53:02
◼
►
does a bad job at that.
00:53:03
◼
►
They did it wrong.
00:53:04
◼
►
And Twitterithic did it right. - Yeah, their app
00:53:05
◼
►
needs more work, like in general.
00:53:08
◼
►
It should be able to do way more than it does, I think.
00:53:11
◼
►
- Yeah, I agree.
00:53:12
◼
►
And not to over-feature it, but just like,
00:53:15
◼
►
what is the point of having this app if something as basic as it alerts you that you've got
00:53:21
◼
►
a message but when you tap on it, it just doesn't, it's like it doesn't even know that
00:53:26
◼
►
it sent you the alert and that's not good.
00:53:28
◼
►
That's not how it should be working and Twitterific shows how it should work in that example where
00:53:33
◼
►
I got a DM from somebody, I only have Twitterific set to notify me about DMs and I can actually
00:53:38
◼
►
reply using my voice from the watch and send a DM back to that person on Twitter.
00:53:44
◼
►
great. Slack does not do nearly as good a job on that front. Sorry Slack, I love you
00:53:52
◼
►
but your watch app needs work. I still like I was thinking about this the other
00:53:57
◼
►
day because like you know at the moment everyone's saying that the watch apps
00:54:01
◼
►
tend to suck which you know by and large they kind of do and it's not some of it
00:54:06
◼
►
is is fault of not having devices and some of it is fault in just watch kit
00:54:12
◼
►
right? Just not being enough. And I'm starting to wonder now, when we get
00:54:19
◼
►
native apps, is it gonna be like a marketing problem? Like is it gonna...
00:54:28
◼
►
Like the people that have watches or people that are thinking about watches,
00:54:31
◼
►
are they gonna just think that apps suck on the device and kind of, you know, the
00:54:37
◼
►
the horse has like left the barn at that point I think that's the right analogy
00:54:42
◼
►
like it yeah the horse is bolted like it's it's too far at that point people
00:54:47
◼
►
expect them to kind of suck I don't think so I don't think so I think it's
00:54:54
◼
►
an interesting question I don't think they suck I think they're not I think
00:54:57
◼
►
they're just kind of not they only do a limited amount of things but I wouldn't
00:55:01
◼
►
say like I said some of them are bad some of them are better I think Apple
00:55:06
◼
►
has plenty of time to allow the apps to get better and people be like hey the
00:55:10
◼
►
apps are better now and I think it'll any integrand scheme of things I don't
00:55:15
◼
►
think it matters. Yeah no I can see that but it is it's an interesting thing and
00:55:22
◼
►
I'm still not 100% sure why they decided to go down the route that they went down.
00:55:29
◼
►
Like it probably would have just been great if we could just have actionable
00:55:34
◼
►
notifications some kind of glance support like rather than the full apps I
00:55:38
◼
►
don't because the more the more I kind of go for it the best stuff lives in the
00:55:43
◼
►
glances and notifications yeah yeah yeah and we've talked about that before they
00:55:48
◼
►
have the idea that maybe there's a different approach to interacting with
00:55:53
◼
►
the apps like then what they've got now and and maybe they'll learn or maybe the
00:55:57
◼
►
apps will become so great that the the app screen makes more sense than it
00:56:02
◼
►
maybe does right now.
00:56:04
◼
►
But I just, I really like interacting,
00:56:07
◼
►
my computer beeped.
00:56:11
◼
►
I really like interacting with the notifications
00:56:15
◼
►
and glances because I feel like it's just contextual
00:56:17
◼
►
that and that's what the watch is supposed to be.
00:56:19
◼
►
It's say, hey, this thing happened.
00:56:20
◼
►
Oh, tap, maybe nothing, maybe reply and then move on.
00:56:25
◼
►
That, you know, I very rarely am in a situation
00:56:29
◼
►
where I'm like, let's launch a watch app.
00:56:32
◼
►
- Yeah. - This doesn't happen.
00:56:34
◼
►
- Like, because--
00:56:35
◼
►
- I don't think that's a failing.
00:56:37
◼
►
I think that's appropriate to the device,
00:56:39
◼
►
that that's not what it's for.
00:56:42
◼
►
- So sometimes I'm running into this,
00:56:45
◼
►
again, I'm not unique in this, right?
00:56:47
◼
►
But sometimes I'm running into this situation
00:56:49
◼
►
where I know that I can do something faster on the watch
00:56:53
◼
►
if the watch app will load fast enough.
00:56:58
◼
►
So it's like I feel like I'm taking a gamble every time I try and do something.
00:57:02
◼
►
Because it's like I know I can do this quicker if the watch app will respond.
00:57:07
◼
►
Because you know it kind of seems to be times a bit of potluck as to whether it's going to load or not.
00:57:13
◼
►
You know sometimes you'll open a watch app and it's like there straight away.
00:57:17
◼
►
Sometimes you open a watch app and like you're waiting for like three screen refreshes.
00:57:24
◼
►
You know, like the screen goes off, cons by cons, screen goes, you know,
00:57:27
◼
►
you're waiting for the app to load.
00:57:29
◼
►
And it's kind of, it's like there's just this thing there,
00:57:33
◼
►
there's this nugget of like this is so useful,
00:57:37
◼
►
but then other times it's like, "Ah, you're so annoying right now."
00:57:42
◼
►
- And my hope is that software will solve some of this,
00:57:44
◼
►
that the OS updates will make this more efficient,
00:57:47
◼
►
and maybe, you know, having native code running on the device
00:57:52
◼
►
will mean that a lot of that stuff will be less problematic than it is now.
00:57:56
◼
►
That's just a hope.
00:57:57
◼
►
I mean, it might or might not work, but I agree.
00:58:01
◼
►
There are those moments where you fall in the ... You think, "Oh, I can do this on the
00:58:04
◼
►
watch really quickly," and then you tap and nothing happens.
00:58:07
◼
►
Like I said, that feels like I'm falling back into using the pebble where sometimes an app
00:58:12
◼
►
just isn't there.
00:58:16
◼
►
You have to go to your phone anyway because you can't use it.
00:58:19
◼
►
Apple needs to be better at that because Apple controls the operating system.
00:58:22
◼
►
needs to you know work on on that so that if that my weather glance doesn't
00:58:28
◼
►
stop working because the app quit in the background and doesn't know to relaunch
00:58:34
◼
►
it it should know that I've got a weather complication let's say and know
00:58:39
◼
►
that that means that data needs to be refreshed every so often and it just
00:58:42
◼
►
doesn't do that sometimes mm-hmm so that's a bug hopefully one that will be
00:58:48
◼
►
fixed. Should we move on to the mask upgrade? I think that's a good idea. You know what
00:58:56
◼
►
time it is. It is time to listen to me tell you about some friends and with a
00:59:02
◼
►
little bit of a chime in for Myke I'm actually looking I do have an app to
00:59:06
◼
►
turn my light bulbs on and off from my watch so you know well we're living in
00:59:10
◼
►
the future now. Mm-hmm. There it is I turned them off. Oh they're back on.
00:59:15
◼
►
Anyway, yeah, there you go, technology.
00:59:20
◼
►
Ask Upgrade brought to you as often, not always, but often by MailRoute.
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My friends at MailRoute.
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MailRoute is a company that makes a service that filters out spam, viruses, and bounced
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Thank you, MailRoute.
01:01:13
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Thank you, MailRoute.
01:01:14
◼
►
So, like, every time you start the MailRoute read, I'm like, "What am I going to do this
01:01:18
◼
►
time?" I'm never 100% sure how I'm going to present mailbagging to the world.
01:01:24
◼
►
But that was a new one. I was in a cavern.
01:01:28
◼
►
That's a phrase that has never been spoken before in the history of humanity.
01:01:33
◼
►
I'm gonna start Ask Upgrade with a question from Nilesh.
01:01:36
◼
►
Nilesh wants to know, "Do you have any Safari extensions in your Safari browsers?
01:01:41
◼
►
If so, which ones do you have installed?"
01:01:43
◼
►
I feel like I'm going to break Nilesh's heart a little bit when I tell him that I don't
01:01:49
◼
►
I am a Chrome user, and I do have some extensions in Chrome that I use.
01:01:54
◼
►
I use the 1Password extension, and I use the Evernote Web Clipper for the times where I
01:01:59
◼
►
I want to clip something to Evernote, which is not very often, but when I do it's there
01:02:03
◼
►
and I'm happy that it's there.
01:02:04
◼
►
But for me, 1Password is the ultimate of all browser extensions.
01:02:09
◼
►
I love it very much.
01:02:10
◼
►
Jason, I am assuming that you do use Safari.
01:02:14
◼
►
I just want to say as well, I just, sorry, I asked you a question and then decided to
01:02:18
◼
►
answer an own question of my own that I didn't ask.
01:02:20
◼
►
I also use Safari on my iPhone.
01:02:24
◼
►
No, Chrome, sorry.
01:02:27
◼
►
I use Chrome on my iPhone.
01:02:29
◼
►
Chrome on my iPhone and Chrome on the desktop.
01:02:31
◼
►
I'm Chrome all over the place.
01:02:35
◼
►
I'm one of those people.
01:02:36
◼
►
I use Safari.
01:02:38
◼
►
I'm not one of those people.
01:02:39
◼
►
I'm one of those other people.
01:02:42
◼
►
And I'm looking at my list of extensions right now.
01:02:43
◼
►
They're not all turned on.
01:02:44
◼
►
I turn them on and off from time to time.
01:02:48
◼
►
I have Benjamin Mayo's Fireballed extension, which basically adds a fireballed.org link
01:02:54
◼
►
to Daring Fireball.
01:02:55
◼
►
So if a site, firebolt.org takes a local cache of anything that's linked to from Daring Fireball,
01:03:02
◼
►
so if a site gets fireballed, it basically adds a link after every page on Daring Fireball,
01:03:07
◼
►
after every link that is to the firebolt cache version.
01:03:12
◼
►
This is for if Grubber destroy the website.
01:03:14
◼
►
Yeah, you can look at the cache version instead.
01:03:18
◼
►
I use that occasionally, so I have it turned on.
01:03:20
◼
►
I currently don't have turned on because it kind of, it messes with the, with some search
01:03:27
◼
►
results on Google.
01:03:29
◼
►
But Lex Friedman wrote a plug-in called, or an extension called Affiliatizer, which basically
01:03:35
◼
►
takes every Amazon link that it sees on the web and puts an affiliate code next to it.
01:03:40
◼
►
And you can, you can put your own affiliate code or you can put the affiliate code of
01:03:44
◼
►
somebody else that you like.
01:03:45
◼
►
It actually ships with three affiliate codes that rotate, and one of them is Lex, and one
01:03:51
◼
►
of them is me, and one of them is Jon Gruber.
01:03:56
◼
►
So anyway, I use that sometimes with my own affiliate codes so that I get affiliate links
01:04:00
◼
►
on everything I buy on Amazon.
01:04:02
◼
►
I've got a bunch that are not turned on.
01:04:05
◼
►
One password is in there.
01:04:06
◼
►
It's obviously turned on.
01:04:08
◼
►
Greg Noss wrote a Safari extension called Damned Fireball.
01:04:12
◼
►
And all it does is when the Yankees are doing well and John Gruber puts the Yankees logo
01:04:19
◼
►
at the top of Daring Fireball, it replaces that image with a Yankees logo with a circle
01:04:24
◼
►
and a line through it.
01:04:26
◼
►
That's all it does.
01:04:27
◼
►
But I love it.
01:04:29
◼
►
And I keep it on even though the Yankees are not going anywhere this year.
01:04:33
◼
►
I have Footnotify, which basically takes HTML footnotes and makes them popovers, which I
01:04:44
◼
►
like because a lot of sites don't do that.
01:04:46
◼
►
They've got the footnotes at the bottom, including during Fireball, and it turns them into little
01:04:50
◼
►
popovers where you click the footnote link and it pops a little, the text of the footnote
01:04:54
◼
►
right there.
01:04:55
◼
►
So that's a fun one.
01:04:56
◼
►
I have ultimate status bar which is which creates a status bar that floats
01:05:03
◼
►
when you that appears when you float over a link with your your cursor so
01:05:08
◼
►
that's that's kind of a neat one and obviously instapaper and those are the
01:05:14
◼
►
big ones I've got some other ones that I'm not sure if they still work or not I
01:05:17
◼
►
have a thing called fastest tube that I use to download YouTube videos from
01:05:21
◼
►
YouTube but I only but it also hijacks all the ads on all the sites on the web
01:05:25
◼
►
So I only turn it on like I used it today because I had to download the total party kill
01:05:29
◼
►
session video because I used that as a source material for
01:05:34
◼
►
for the podcast and so I enable it I enable fastest tube I download it and then I
01:05:39
◼
►
Disable it again because I don't like the fact that it's also in addition to its actual features
01:05:45
◼
►
It's also rewriting all the ads that I see
01:05:47
◼
►
That's weird. Anyway, that's it
01:05:51
◼
►
Well, I'm trying my hardest to get all of these in the show notes.
01:05:58
◼
►
So, I'm frantically typing here and googling and finding things.
01:06:04
◼
►
So I'm going to ask the next question whilst I complete that task.
01:06:08
◼
►
Stephen would like to know, "Is there a way to teach voice to text the correct spelling
01:06:15
◼
►
For example, "gen," not "jen," or "ally," and not "alley," something like that.
01:06:25
◼
►
You have a link there to a Macworld article, which says in Siri how you can pronounce it.
01:06:34
◼
►
But I don't think that solves the voice-to-text problem.
01:06:37
◼
►
I couldn't find something for that, but I figured that maybe this could help.
01:06:41
◼
►
I don't know.
01:06:43
◼
►
So we'll put that link in the notes too, which is, you know, if Siri says a name wrong, you
01:06:48
◼
►
can actually say that's not how you say it.
01:06:51
◼
►
And then Siri will respond, how do you pronounce the name and that person's first name?
01:06:56
◼
►
And then you say it and Siri will try to give you some choices and you can choose which
01:07:02
◼
►
one is accurate.
01:07:04
◼
►
And then that should solve that for how Siri pronounces names.
01:07:08
◼
►
But that doesn't go the other direction in terms of spelling, alternate spellings.
01:07:11
◼
►
I don't know.
01:07:12
◼
►
I don't know if you, you know, you use Siri and it will often underline in blue, or you
01:07:17
◼
►
use voice to text, it will underline in blue for something that it doesn't have a high
01:07:21
◼
►
confidence that it got right.
01:07:22
◼
►
It's like spell check when you're typing, except it's for speech to text, and it will,
01:07:28
◼
►
it's nuance behind the scenes saying, "I might not have a high confidence in this word."
01:07:34
◼
►
And if you tap on that, you get other options.
01:07:37
◼
►
It's possible that if you type, if you say "Jen," you could correct it, but it's also
01:07:41
◼
►
possible that it's just gonna not do it and I'm not quite sure what you do. I don't think
01:07:46
◼
►
there's like a mode. Is there a mode? There are some modes in there where you can actually
01:07:51
◼
►
say things and they get like return or new paragraph or exclamation point or whatever
01:07:55
◼
►
that it will translate properly. I'm not sure if there's a way using the Nuance engine to
01:08:00
◼
►
force it to do you know capital G lowercase en and have that come out but you could try
01:08:08
◼
►
it. Sure could. No harm in it. It just may end up with something ridiculous but you can
01:08:16
◼
►
just delete it. @HarleyKen on Twitter kind of pointed out regarding the watch battery
01:08:24
◼
►
to keep in mind that batteries age and will decrease and because we charge them every
01:08:28
◼
►
day it could take battery away over time which is you know I understand that and I think
01:08:33
◼
►
that's in reference to us saying the battery life is so good which we mentioned again today
01:08:36
◼
►
But it's good right now and you know even if I lost 10% I would still be fine with it.
01:08:43
◼
►
Yeah I think this person was also suggesting that we um you know I was saying look I think
01:08:49
◼
►
they overshot and they could dial it back a little bit and I do think that's true and yes it is true
01:08:53
◼
►
that over time the battery life is going to decrease but it seems like right now they've
01:08:57
◼
►
they still overshot and frankly I don't want to feel like um like my watch experience is worse
01:09:06
◼
►
because in a couple of years it needs to be worse, right? I just I I'm not sure I
01:09:10
◼
►
can get behind that. So that was my thought there.
01:09:16
◼
►
Jimmy wrote in, "Do you have phantom entries before the watch arrived in your
01:09:22
◼
►
activity calendar too?" So this is something, and he included a picture, so I'll
01:09:26
◼
►
explain this. If you go to the activity app on your iPhone and you go back to
01:09:31
◼
►
before you got the watch, right? It's actually, you can see that there seemed
01:09:39
◼
►
to be like test entries or something that were going on before your watch
01:09:42
◼
►
arrived and it's just kind of interesting to see that my watch was
01:09:45
◼
►
alive and being tested. Yeah, like two weeks before there was a one day where
01:09:50
◼
►
there was a little bit of activity. Yeah. It's weird. I had that on the 4th, 5th, and the
01:09:56
◼
►
4th and 5th of April and yeah there something was happening with my with my
01:10:01
◼
►
device before it before it arrived with me. Also what was funny about that is I
01:10:05
◼
►
was not aware that the activity app was a thing that existed. Oh you didn't know? No I never
01:10:12
◼
►
realized that it was there. So I said where are you seeing that and he said
01:10:16
◼
►
well in the activity app and I said activity app? It was installed when the
01:10:22
◼
►
the watch app. Right. Right, so on the, I think that's right, on the 9th and 10th of
01:10:30
◼
►
April there was a very small, small activity noted. I had... And then nothing. On the 5th of
01:10:40
◼
►
April two calories were burned. Yes, two calories. So there you go. They were moving
01:10:47
◼
►
around on their own before they're even shipped out to us. Kyle has asked is
01:10:54
◼
►
there any place on the Apple watch either on the watch itself or in the
01:10:57
◼
►
iPhone app to check for watch OS updates? Yes there are in the app. In the
01:11:01
◼
►
companion app there is like an about thing and you can check for updates
01:11:05
◼
►
there. It was the first thing that I did when my watch came I just wanted to double
01:11:08
◼
►
check and so yeah you can do that it's in it's right at the top I think
01:11:12
◼
►
somewhere in general I believe. Yep you can go to software update and it will
01:11:17
◼
►
check for an update. And there isn't one. There isn't one. Spoiler alert. No, no, no
01:11:23
◼
►
update has been released. WatchOS 1.0. We're all still on 1.0. Jason's... A friend, a friend
01:11:31
◼
►
in the chat room who's, who has no vowels in his name says that the, that that app is
01:11:37
◼
►
installed with a watch app but not shown until you pair a watch. Oh, okay. And that's why
01:11:43
◼
►
I didn't notice it was there. I don't feel as bad now about not noticing the activity
01:11:46
◼
►
app. Good. Spencer would like to know what was the first compiled program that you
01:11:53
◼
►
wrote on your own? I will just come out and say I've never done that so I am no
01:11:58
◼
►
help. Me neither. Awesome. Awesome. Compiled program is the difference. I've done
01:12:04
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things that are not compiled but I've never compiled anything. I've never done
01:12:07
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anything. Basic programming and scripting and stuff but never anything compiled.
01:12:12
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This is not a developer show. There are other shows that feature developers
01:12:15
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those are available. There's ATP, _DavidSmith's got a podcast,
01:12:21
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there's Daniel Jalkett and Manton Reese do a podcast, there are lots of
01:12:28
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developer podcasts. This is not one of them. And then we have a question from
01:12:36
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Patrick, "Do you think that force touch trackpads could be a gateway to touch ID
01:12:40
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on Macs? Gateway. Yeah, I'm not sure Touch ID is worth it on a Mac.
01:12:52
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Interesting. Why do you say that? I mean, yeah, I mean you can password. It's
01:12:58
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easy to type in a password on the Mac. I don't know. I'm just, I'm not sure whether,
01:13:03
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because that's a sensor that has to be built in and it's not cheap and
01:13:07
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And it's not, it's like a little camera.
01:13:12
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So now you're gonna tuck that underneath the Force Touch,
01:13:15
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part of the Force Touch track pad,
01:13:16
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because I'm not sure that those go together.
01:13:18
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So now you're fitting another piece of technology in there.
01:13:21
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I guess it could happen, but I just,
01:13:23
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I'm not sure why it would be connected
01:13:25
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to the Force Touch track pad.
01:13:27
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And I kind of feel like it's more likely that we'll see,
01:13:31
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we'll see Touch ID verifying your Mac
01:13:34
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through something like what happens with the watch locking.
01:13:37
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where your iPhone's presence or your iPhone being unlocked
01:13:41
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in the presence of your Mac unlocks your Mac,
01:13:44
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or something that's NFC-based with new Macs
01:13:47
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that lets you touch with an unlocked watch
01:13:49
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or something like that and unlock your Mac.
01:13:52
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But I'm just not sure Apple thinks that typing a password
01:13:55
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to unlock your Mac is a big enough inconvenience
01:13:59
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that it needs to be solved with a piece of hardware like that.
01:14:03
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I'm not sure that they care that much.
01:14:06
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And our last question this week comes from Matt.
01:14:08
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What do you think about the prospect
01:14:10
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of a future circular watch from Apple?
01:14:13
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- Somebody did a story about this where they talked about,
01:14:16
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I mean, the interface challenges
01:14:18
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►
with the circular display are immense.
01:14:21
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Like a lot of the Android Wear watches have stuff cut off
01:14:25
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or cut off in some views.
01:14:28
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They look good.
01:14:30
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I wouldn't put it past Apple to at some point
01:14:33
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do a circular watch,
01:14:35
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But the problem with the circular watch
01:14:39
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is that the circle is really great for the clock part.
01:14:44
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But then when you try to design other things around it
01:14:46
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and you've got to drop text in various places.
01:14:48
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First off now, if your clock part is there,
01:14:53
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for things like complications,
01:14:54
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they've got to be on the inside instead of on the outside.
01:14:57
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It's assuming a circular watch face,
01:14:59
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which there are ones that are not, that are digital.
01:15:04
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►
it it makes design of that apps difficult because you know they can't
01:15:08
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►
the text can't be aligned really because it's all kind of radial
01:15:15
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i_d_i_'s kept driving apples gonna ride the square size and shape for a while
01:15:20
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►
and say we don't need to a p
01:15:21
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►
that round look
01:15:23
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►
uh... it's better for a digital device to to have the the square stuff but
01:15:27
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you never know
01:15:28
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►
you never know without all them they might go there but i i wouldn't be
01:15:31
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surprised if it's a long time before we see, if ever, before we see a round Apple
01:15:35
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►
watch. I don't feel like Apple's like, "God, the lack of roundness is a major
01:15:39
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►
compromise." I feel like they've got so many other things that they want to
01:15:42
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►
worry about before all of the development complications and design
01:15:46
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►
complications that would go into having a circular display.
01:15:50
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Mr. Jason Snell, that brings us to the end of our show today.
01:15:54
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I think it does. I think it does. Thanks everybody for their ask upgrade
01:16:00
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►
questions. That's always fun. Yeah don't forget you can always get those to us
01:16:04
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►
via Twitter just use the hashtag #askupgrade they go into a sheet and we
01:16:07
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►
take a look at them every week and we pick up some to answer on the show. And
01:16:10
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►
occasionally a boy band from the Philippines might crash our spreadsheet
01:16:14
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►
but that's okay it's all good. Every now and then. And then we will we will also
01:16:19
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►
work on a future planning what the future of Myke watches a movie is
01:16:25
◼
►
because we don't have any planned right now but we will announce on the
01:16:29
◼
►
show at some point, if we're doing another one, what that film would be.
01:16:33
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►
We definitely will. We just don't have a date in mind yet. Got WWDC looming.
01:16:39
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►
It's a special occasion, so we'll get back to it.
01:16:41
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►
Yep, we definitely will. If you'd like to find the show notes for this week's episode
01:16:44
◼
►
on the internet, you can do that at relay.fm/upgrade/37. There's a veritable cornucopia of links today,
01:16:52
◼
►
including lots and lots of apps that we've discussed throughout the whole episode. We'd
01:16:56
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like to thank Linda.com, Smile, and our friends at MailRoutes as well for helping us out with
01:17:02
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►
this week's episode.
01:17:03
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Mailbagging!
01:17:04
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Mailbagging indeed. If you'd like to find us online you can find Jason Ease @JSnell on
01:17:08
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►
Twitter J S N E double L and he is over at SixColors.com if you'd like to find his fantastic
01:17:15
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►
writing. You can find it there.
01:17:17
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►
Reviews of watch faces.
01:17:19
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►
Reviews of watch faces, as many as you could wish for over at Six Colors. Six watch faces
01:17:24
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►
maybe, maybe more, who knows.
01:17:27
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►
And I am @imike and I host many shows on Relay FM of which Upgrade is a part.
01:17:34
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Thank you so much for tuning in to this week's show and we'll be back next time.
01:17:37
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Until then, say goodbye Jason Snell.
01:17:40
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Goodbye everybody.
01:17:40
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[MUSIC PLAYING]