36: Menu Bar at the Top
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From Relay FM, this is Upgrade, episode number 36. Today's show is brought to you by Squarespace,
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Build It Beautiful, MailRoute, a secure hosted email service for protection from viruses and spam,
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Casper, because everyone deserves a great night's sleep and go to meeting.
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Make it easy to meet with your team whenever you need to, wherever you are. My name is Myke Hurley
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and I am joined as always by the one and only Mr. Jason Snell.
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- Hi Myke, how's it going?
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- I am Dandy, sir, how are you?
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- I'm doing good, doing good.
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- I'm in a good mood because we have a Myke
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at the movies today.
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- We do, we do, it's a big one.
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And as we'll remind everybody,
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because I think some people miss this,
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you don't have to listen to Myke at the movies.
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Some people write in and say, "Oh, it was so long
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"'cause you had the movie thing at the end."
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We promise there will be nothing other than,
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nothing like of technology value
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after we start Myke at the Movies.
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It's a bonus.
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It's like the ATP post show.
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It's a bonus and you don't have to listen.
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Nobody's gonna test you on it.
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There won't be a quiz on what happens there.
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Stuff before that, there will be a quiz.
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Check your box.
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But not the Myke at the Movies part.
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That's just extra.
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- Big one today as well, Raiders of the Lost Ark.
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- Today's Myke at the Movies.
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I do like Myke at the Movies days
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because I get to watch a movie for work, it's great.
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- Yeah, that's true.
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That's good.
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That's sort of my incomparable experience sometimes.
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It's like, oh man, I gotta watch this movie.
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I actually paid for the movie tickets
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for when we saw Age of Ultron last week
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with the incomparable gang.
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The corporation paid for the tickets.
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It was like, yep, this is a business trip.
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- Yep. - Business trip to see a movie.
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It actually was. - It was true.
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- Totally legit.
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Yeah, crazy.
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- We have some follow up.
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- So I would like to start off the follow up this week
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with a message from UpgradingEves.
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He has, he did a warning upon us and the listeners.
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- This is good stuff.
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I've done some follow up research as well,
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but explain what UpgradingEves is talking about here.
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- This is in regards to some,
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I think it was an Ask upgrade that we had last week
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from Robert about syncing his documents folder
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through iCloud.
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we both said "that seems fine, why not go for that?"
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This is why not.
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Eve says "I would strongly advise against letting the Documents folder sync through
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iCloud, Dropbox or anything else, like Chronosync in my case, at least when there is more than
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one Mac involved.
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Many programs save their preferences and/or working files inside the Documents folder
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and if they are synced between two or more Macs with the same programs, these programs
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may not be well prepared once these files change without notice."
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Just a quick aside, I like the e-schools and programs on the apps.
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There are exceptions, like 1Password should have a dedicated folder sync.
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In cases like this, a sync is welcomed.
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In all other cases, a user need either to decide on a case-by-case basis
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if a sync doesn't distribute problems between Macs,
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or should do a selective sync and omit the non-document folders of programs.
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- Yeah, so I've got a few things here.
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One is, I dispute the concept that many programs save their preferences
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inside the Documents folder.
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That's not true.
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Maybe some do, I'm sure some do,
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but most programs on the Mac save their preferences
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inside your library folder,
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which is not the documents folder.
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It's a different folder.
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And so I think there's less of an issue here than that,
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but it's totally true.
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There are programs that if you just dump everything
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in your documents folder into iCloud,
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you do risk having, or Dropbox or whatever,
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you risk having some weird behavior
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if you have two Macs that are running
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and accessing that information simultaneously.
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Things can get weird.
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And I actually did some research on photos,
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because somebody was asking me about this on Twitter too.
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A lot of people have asked about putting photos
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on a shared library, like on a server
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or in iCloud or in Dropbox.
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And the answer is you can't move it to the iCloud drive.
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it will error out. Unfriendly error, by the way, not like, "I'm sorry, you can't move
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it there." It's more like, "It can't be done!" You know, it's just a weird error. You can
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move it to a shared volume, and if somebody else tries to open that library while you
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have it open, it also gives you kind of a weird error. It basically says, "I tried to
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repair this and I can't," but it won't let you open it if it's open somewhere else. And
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if you put on Dropbox, it's really bad because you can absolutely open that library in both
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places in Dropbox, and that creates conflicted copies, which the Photos app doesn't see,
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and that's not good. So I do think you've got to be really careful when you sync your
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documents, and you need to be sure that you're syncing stuff that you actually want to sync.
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And you know, I just say caution. This is why I actually suggested last week that you
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start moving things over and see how it goes, rather than just sort of like select all of
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your documents folder and drag it into iCloud or Dropbox. But I think there are lots of
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cases where it works really well, and there are especially, there are also cases like
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Eve mentions with password where it's made to work really well, they have a sync system
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that they use. But there are other cases where it gets really weird, and I think Eve's advice
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is exactly right. If you want to sync something to Dropbox because you want to use that Dropbox
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workspace and have it available in the cloud and have it be kind of a backup for you, definitely
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consider using the Selective Sync feature and turning it off on all the other Macs so
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that they don't see it. For photos, that's what I recommend, is if you really want to
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have your photos library also on Dropbox just as a backup, that's okay, but put it in a
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folder, turn Selective Sync off on all the other Macs that you have who have access to
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that Dropbox, because you could get in some bad situations if you had multiple Macs trying
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to open and read that library file at once. And I would like Apple to, it would be nice
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if Apple wrote something into Photos that warns you when it tries to open something
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from something that looks like a Dropbox folder, or actually actively writes a file into the
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package that says, "This is open right now," that Photos checks and says, "Oh, it's got
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the 'This is open right now' file in there. Maybe I should warn the user that they should
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not open this. But, you know, there are various things that Apple could do, but, you know,
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I appreciate it. So I dispute some of the details of what Eve's saying here. I think
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it may be a little overblown, but in general, this is true. You should be really careful
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when you sync, because some stuff, especially packages, can get really weird. They've got
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databases in them, and then you've got different conflicted versions of databases, and things
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can get weird really fast.
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I do have a little bit more follow-up if you remember on last week's episode I
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mentioned that my girlfriend had purchased an Apple watch the day before
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and that it was going to be shipping in around sort of late May time the
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27th was the original shipping date a couple days after we recorded it moved
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up a week so it was going to be shipping by May 14th and then last Thursday
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evening it was out for delivery which was very surprising to everybody. It's the
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smaller model right? Yeah it's the 38 millimeter with the white sport band.
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Those seem not to be constrained in the same way that the larger models are. No
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not at all I mean it because it was you know originally was shipping in like two
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to three weeks but it was really interesting that like it said it would
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be the end of May then at the middle of May and then without any warning was on
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a truck like to be delivered. She was only able to pick it up today quite
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unfortunately we were going away for the weekend and it was being delivered to
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her office and we had to leave like so she picked it up today so she's kind of
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been been setting it up I think at work because I started receiving taps and
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heartbeats and doodles and things like that from my girlfriend today now Jason
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just sent me his heartbeat as I did now when I receive so this is something that
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that I found quite interesting and I'm not the first person to recognize this
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but it's a new thing for me. When I send my heartbeat to Jason or I send a doodle
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to Casey or I send some taps to Steven, the majority of the time we're joking
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around with each other like it's a lot of it's ironic and stuff like that but
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doing these things with somebody, what the person that I love like romantically
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because I love you all you know, it's a very different experience. It feels
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very different. There is something about it where it's like this is a different
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thing. This like receiving her heartbeat is a different like it just holds a
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different emotional connection and I'm and I'm feeling very positive about that
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I like that a lot I like that that is something that we now have in our lives
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now I guess it's my case to make sure that she keeps it because she's I think
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rightly said she doesn't she doesn't know how it's gonna fit in her life and
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she wants to make sure that it can fit in her life so she'll be taking advantage
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of the return window if necessary.
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That's great. I love that she's trying it out and it'll be interesting to see whether
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she does decide to keep it or not and how it fits into her life and how it fits in your
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life, your lives together too. I got mine too, the one that I ordered finally showed
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up. The black, the space gray with the black band showed up.
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So what are you wearing then?
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I'm wearing that one right now, but I'm still sort of in this position of not being sure
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which one I want to keep and which one I want to get rid of. I think my wife prefers the
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black model to the one. She says she didn't like the green band. I'm not so sure. I'm
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not so sure I like the black on black and maybe this is the influence of our friend
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Matt Alexander. But he's cautioned everybody about looking like too much of a nerd and
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wearing just this all black item that it doesn't really go with anything and it's really, you
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know, it's really heavy. And I have to admit, I kind of feel some of that. I feel like,
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you know, I really kind of liked the lighter look of the regular sport, not the space gray
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sport. And I like the look of this, and I like the black band, and yet I'm not entirely
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convinced that I like this better. The only band I would ever have for the other one was
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the bright green sport band. I would probably feel a little bit differently, but I'm planning
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on getting at least one other band. So I'm still not sure, but I'm trying it out for
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a week basically, and I'm gonna see whether I want to keep the Space Gray One or send
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it back, or instead sell off the one that I got on day one.
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I think that the more I think about the Space Gray One, like, you have less options to,
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add to it because less bands will go with it, I think.
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Well yeah, even the, even the, like the, there is a contrast between the, you know, silver
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aluminum sport and the stainless steel lugs on those bands, but it's less of one than
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I mean the space, the space gray is so dark that there will be much more contrast with
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every other band that you put on it.
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I think you could only really use the leather loops or the sport bands.
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Yeah I think that's true and I want to use the classic buckle so that's another thing
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that pushes me toward...
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I think the classic buckle would look okay but you know it's gonna be dark watch, dark
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face, dark band and then bright lugs which is weird.
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So I don't know.
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I'm open to it but you know what a problem to have, which Apple watch to keep and which
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one to throw back, man. But anyway, it's fascinating because I was sure that this is the one I
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wanted. I got the other one just entirely accidentally from a friend, and now I'm not
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sure that I made the right choice. And I might actually like that Greensport, like I said,
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not necessarily the green band, but the lighter-colored body.
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Because luxury. Because luxury!
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So it turns out that Universal owned the rights to do the standalone Hulk movies.
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So that's...
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It turns out.
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This was a thing, a few people sent this in to us.
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Well it's weird because yeah, so Universal released those and I guess Mark Ruffalo in
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an interview said something about that.
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Yeah, I'm unclear on the status because the Incredible Hulk is considered a Marvel Cinematic
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universe movie there was a there was a Tony Stark cameo and I believe General Ross from
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that movie is appearing Thunderbolt Ross is appearing they're gonna replace him with USB
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C Ross that's it's a shame the in in the Captain America Civil War thing so yeah it's yeah
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but it may be although I'm just unclear I don't know whether that means Universal says
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well you can use him but only for the only for the Avengers movies I'm a little unclear
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about why they wouldn't make a deal to move forward with a Hulk movie. Maybe Marvel is
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saying you can't have Mark Ruffalo, maybe Universal is saying, you know, we don't want
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to do this. It seems weird because it would seem like after the reception the Hulk has
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gotten in these two Avengers movies, you would think it would have rehabbed the reputation
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of the character from their two kind of lackluster features. You know, I was thinking because
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I really like the interaction between Banner and Black Widow and how that character arc
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has been interesting for Banner that, without spoiling more about Age of Ultron, you know,
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maybe that would be something as if they did do a Black Widow movie or they did some other
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kind of thing. I'd like to see more of Mark Ruffalo. I feel like they're just kind of—they've
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got him for four movies or whatever and they're going to use him sparingly, but it is kind
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of a shame that we can't get a broader canvas from him. Maybe, I don't know, maybe Marvel
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thinks that the Hulk is better when he's, you know, used sparingly in these Avengers
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movies instead of the two features that they made that were kind of flops. So I don't know.
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But yeah, Universal is involved, so it's not as simple as Apple. Marvel. I do that all
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the time, Marvel and Apple. Damn it. I do. I do. It's strange that Apple would not make
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a Hulk movie. Yeah, see? But Universal being involved changes the equation there. So that
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kind of makes sense that now it's a--they seem to have a friendlier relationship than
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like with the X-Men movies or the Fantastic Four movies, or the Spider-Man movies used
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to be, but it's still an issue. So maybe that answers the question.
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-It feels to me like they're probably at stalemate. Like, Marvel want the rights to lap so they
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get all of the control, but Universal don't want to let him go because they're hoping
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that Marvel will want to collaborate on a movie.
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Right, but Universal can't get Mark Ruffalo or something like that and they don't want
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to make a movie without Mark Ruffalo.
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Because it would be a marketing disaster.
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Disaster, yeah.
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Like a different Hulk.
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Can you imagine a different Hulk?
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That would be like having a Flash TV show and then introducing a totally different actor
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to play the Flash in a movie.
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Oh wait, they're doing that anyway.
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But it's not like what Marvel has been successful with.
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I guess we'll see. The Hulk is cool. Hulk was cool in Avengers. It's cool in Avengers 2.
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Good follow up.
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The last piece of follow up has come from Myke on Twitter.
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Myke has actually developed a T9 text input app for the Apple Watch.
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He currently has it running in the simulator and you'll find a link in the show notes
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which you can find at relay.fm/upgrade/36 or in your app of choice.
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which includes a GIF of him showing it working in the simulator.
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Myke went on to tell me, "My current plan is to have an input text
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and it saves us a note in an iPhone app for sharing later."
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And releases free or open source.
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That's pretty funny. It does seem to work.
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It's crazy. Shine on you crazy diamonds.
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Yeah, it's like such amazingness.
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Yeah, it's crazy, but that's awesome. So that's that's an awesome
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Ingenuity will say mm-hmm
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Absolutely, brilliant, right. Hey comes to the end the follow-up for this week
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We have a few topics that we want to get to so mr. Jason snow
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Could you please tell the world about Casper mattresses?
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so our first our first sponsor on upgrade this week is Casper and I get to talk about that why do I get to talk about
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this mic because I I
00:17:15
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I sleep on one. I think that's the reason you want me to talk about this.
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So if people don't know, Casper is an online retailer of premium mattresses,
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and their prices are great. A fraction of what you will find for a premium mattress if you go
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in the store. It's sort of like a high-tech reinvention of the mattress business. You order
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it on the internet, a box appears at your house. A strangely small box. And in there is a vacuum-packed
00:17:41
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Casper mattress. It's made of, it can get that small because it's made of latex
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foam and memory foam in layers, which you, when you open the seal, do it in the room that you're
00:17:54
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going to sleep on the mattress in because it expands, it sucks in the air, expands to fill
00:17:58
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the space, and now it's a mattress. Sized like a mattress, it's a mattress. And I've been sleeping
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on one for a few months and it's great. They use the phrase "just the right sink, just the right
00:18:08
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right bounce and it is really appropriate. I was shocked at how much my old mattress
00:18:13
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felt like kind of like a trampoline, like the cat would be on the other side of the
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bed and I'd sit on one edge of the bed and the cat would be like and like jump off the
00:18:20
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bed. And it's because the old bed was like way too weird and bouncy and stuff and this
00:18:24
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one is super soft and luxurious but it also doesn't feel like the weird memory foam feel
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and I know there are a lot of people who are really turned off by memory foam but by putting
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the latex foam layer on top, you get this really nice combination that works really
00:18:37
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well. When they talk about prices, premium mattresses can often cost more than like $1500.
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Casper's got a range of mattress prices, starting at $500 for twin, $750 for full, $850 for
00:18:51
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queen, all the way up to $950 for king. They're all made in the USA, right Myke? USA, USA.
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Okay, thank you. And you know, I really like the convenience of it. The fact that you can
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buy this over the internet, it comes in a box. And you can, if you don't like it, you
00:19:07
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can send it back. There's a hundred day period where you can return the Casper mattress.
00:19:12
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So if you're afraid to try a mattress that you get over the internet, because you don't
00:19:15
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know how it's going to feel, this is the beauty of the Casper system. You can actually send
00:19:19
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it back if you don't like it. Laying on a bed in a showroom is not going to tell you
00:19:23
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whether you like it or not, so sleep on it. Like, literally sleep on it and see what you
00:19:28
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think. And yeah, so I've been sleeping on my Casper mattress and I like it a lot. And
00:19:37
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they don't pay me to say whether I like it or not. That's me saying, "I like it a lot.
00:19:41
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You should try it out, especially given the 100-day try-on." So here is where you go.
00:19:46
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you go to casper.com, C-A-S-P-E-R dot com slash upgrade, and use the code upgrade to
00:19:52
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get $50 off any Casper mattress purchase. That's casper.com/upgrade. And thank you so
00:19:59
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much to Casper for supporting the show, all of Relay FM, and you know, I sleep on your
00:20:05
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mattress, so thanks for that too.
00:20:06
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- For supporting you at night.
00:20:08
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- Yes. Yes, they give me, literally, they are supporting me at night. Otherwise, I would
00:20:13
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be on the floor.
00:20:15
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So earlier, I think it was earlier this week, you published one of your articles that you
00:20:22
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write for Macworld.
00:20:23
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Are they editorial pieces?
00:20:25
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Like what are they classed as, just out of interest?
00:20:28
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I think, I don't know if they're classed as, are they, I think we're calling it a weekly
00:20:34
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Column, yeah that would work.
00:20:35
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And so, you know, I have, I don't know, it's a thing I write for them every week and they,
00:20:39
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you know, Susie Oakes over at Macworld comes up with some ideas and shoots them past me
00:20:44
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and I say yes and I write something and they pay me. It's a great system.
00:20:48
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Industry! The column, that was the word I was looking for. So in this column
00:20:55
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you talk a bit about Apple TV remotes because there's been some rumors, right?
00:20:59
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Which one of the newspapers had the rumors? I don't know. Let's just say
00:21:04
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Wall Street Journal. We'll just go with that. Oh no, it was Brian Chen, so it's the New York
00:21:08
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Times. No, Brian Chen. Former Macworld printing lab testing guy, now New York
00:21:16
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Times tech writer, Brian Chen. I want to take a very brief aside for just a
00:21:20
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moment, because you mentioned Macworld. If anybody has not yet heard the "Welcome to the
00:21:27
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Macintosh" episode about Macworld, it's just stupendous. It's at
00:21:32
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macintosh.fm, episode number four called "Page Turner," which features my
00:21:37
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co-hosts, Mr. J. Snell, Jon Siracusa, and Sir Andy Caldwell. That show is
00:21:42
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incredible and that episode is extra special, it's just brilliant. Such good work.
00:21:47
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Anyway, so yeah you kind of took this rumor and the rumor being that
00:21:54
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there could be a touchscreen on the Apple TV remote, right? Or that it could
00:21:58
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all be in and of itself just a touch pad of some description.
00:22:01
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Yeah, yeah, touchscreen is probably not accurate but a touchpad. The idea
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of a... there's this rumor that there's going to be a touch surface in the remote, the idea
00:22:12
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that you would, you know, you'd slide your finger along a surface and it would read your,
00:22:17
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you know, read your movements, and that would be how unclear whether that would be the only
00:22:21
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way of interacting or a way. There might be physical buttons too. It's kind of nebulous
00:22:28
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>>ANDREW: Because it would... I think it would be safe to assume it will probably not be
00:22:33
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a screen because it would, that would feel kind of pointless.
00:22:37
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Yeah, well, and it would be pointless. It would really use the battery. So you're, now
00:22:45
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you're docking your remote control every day. And at that point you've got an iOS device.
00:22:49
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I mean, like, if you really want that, you should use your iPhone as a remote. And we
00:22:53
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can get to that because I heard from a lot of people who love using their iPhone as a
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remote. I think it's fine for some things, including text input, but crazy for other
00:23:02
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things because I fundamentally I don't want to look down. I especially don't
00:23:05
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want to get my phone out of my pocket and unlock it and launch an app and then
00:23:10
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look down and make sure I'm touching the right place on the touchscreen when I
00:23:14
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could just like feel for a button and press it. But I think the nice thing
00:23:18
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about the idea of a touchpad that might even have some buttons on it at the top
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but there's also a place to hold it and just kind of like move your thumb up and
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down and side to side is you don't have to look. It's not a screen.
00:23:30
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all you're really doing is flicking your finger and or your thumb. That has appeal. I can understand
00:23:36
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that because I do when you get in that mode with an iPhone using the remote app and you're doing
00:23:41
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that to move around, it feels pretty natural. I could see how that could be something. And then
00:23:47
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there's also speculation about haptic stuff that it might also, you know, do some of the vibration
00:23:53
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stuff that we've seen in the Apple Watch and in the Force Touch trackpad. And maybe there's
00:23:57
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something there where it's giving you feedback as you move with your finger. I'm less convinced
00:24:04
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of whether that would be particularly useful or not, but the idea of a touchpad with maybe
00:24:08
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some buttons at the top, because I do like physical buttons, I think it really helps
00:24:12
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because you can orient your hand and your fingers on the remote without looking at it.
00:24:18
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Because when I'm watching TV I don't really want to look down away from the TV in order
00:24:21
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to press a button. So I think it's interesting. I think it's an interesting
00:24:26
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idea that Apple might put a touch area on their remote.
00:24:32
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So the more I hear people talk about this, in my mind, the image I'm drawing is
00:24:38
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like what people expected the iPhone was gonna look like, you know? Like a touchpad
00:24:43
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or some description and then a click wheel.
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Yeah, yeah, sure. I mean, I'm kind of viewing like a credit card, you know,
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or a little bit larger kind of thing that's got a touch area at the bottom
00:24:57
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and something like a strip of buttons at the top maybe.
00:25:00
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So guys, I keep hearing people talking about false touch being like the great savior of the button in this,
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and I don't really know how that would work. Like, I feel like people are saying that,
00:25:13
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believing that force touch could give the impression of buttons and I just
00:25:18
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don't think it could do that. Like once you click down on it you might be able
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to feel something but it can't give you the impression of a raised button. Like
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it can't do that, right? You have to be clicking constantly.
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Yeah or if it's doing haptics as you move across the, you know, you move the
00:25:36
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idea is like as you're moving through menu items might give you a little buzz
00:25:38
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but that doesn't really help you if you're watching something. And if you
00:25:43
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have to move your finger a few times in order to orient, like, are they going to say, "Well,
00:25:47
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to pause what you do is put your thumb on the remote and then go and move it down until
00:25:52
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you feel the third buzz and then click." It's crazy. It's just, no, that's not it. So I
00:26:00
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don't know. I feel like it's going to be something like the Apple remote is now that's got, you
00:26:06
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know, a play/pause button and a menu button or something, and then below it it's going
00:26:09
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have a touch area and that's how you're gonna do the directional stuff the up
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down left right and then maybe you know you squeeze it essentially and there's a
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force sensor that so when you squeeze it it it counts and maybe there's a haptic
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involved there so you know you're not actually moving the the trackpad when
00:26:27
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you click but you feel like a little buzz I could see that but like that's
00:26:30
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sort of all I can envision for this.
00:26:33
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There is this part of me that like here's an idea like this on
00:26:37
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wonders. I know what we say it can't be and it can be this, but then I think
00:26:42
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could Apple just go ahead and make a full touch device anyway? Like we all
00:26:47
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think we need buttons but they're just like "No but this is super cool look what
00:26:50
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it does!" Well it could have no buttons. It could totally have no
00:26:54
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buttons. It could also have no buttons but different force areas so that if you
00:27:00
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you know there's just a thing that says play, pause, or menu or whatever that's in
00:27:04
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the it that's in the corner but it's not actually a physical button that could be
00:27:09
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too there are lots of things they could do it'll be interesting to see what it
00:27:13
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is I you know in the in the piece I also throw out some other things that have
00:27:17
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happened in remotes lately that are kind of interesting like they like the Roku
00:27:23
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and I guess the ps4 have headphone jacks yeah because you mentioned you mentioned
00:27:29
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the Roku in there and I think basically it has a headphone jack in the remote so
00:27:34
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you can plug in headphones to watch.
00:27:36
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So you can watch something about disturbing people, right?
00:27:39
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So imagine that you're in bed or whatever
00:27:40
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and someone's sleeping and you can watch TV
00:27:42
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by plugging your headphones into the remote.
00:27:44
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And you mentioned in the article
00:27:46
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that it seems like an obscure feature,
00:27:48
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but I wanted to just point out,
00:27:49
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'cause I didn't know if you knew this,
00:27:50
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that PS4 controllers have a headphone jack in them,
00:27:53
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which is mainly intended for headsets for gaming.
00:27:58
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But it is possible in the PS4 settings,
00:28:02
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and I'll put a link in the show notes
00:28:03
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in case people need to know how to do this, to route all of the audio from the PS4 through
00:28:09
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to the controller.
00:28:11
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So you can just plug your headphones into your controller and you can play that way.
00:28:16
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Again in the same idea you can play a video game for a disturbing little person in the
00:28:19
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Which is fantastic.
00:28:20
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It's a great feature and I use it quite a lot actually.
00:28:25
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Because sometimes I like to play video games with my headphones because they're better
00:28:28
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than the speakers on my TV.
00:28:32
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So I play that way.
00:28:33
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So my son does that with the Wii U, because the Wii U gamepad, you can just play on the
00:28:37
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Wii U gamepad and it's got a headphone jack.
00:28:39
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Yeah, exactly.
00:28:41
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I think that's a cool idea.
00:28:43
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I doubt Apple will implement it, but it's kind of a neat idea, the idea that you can
00:28:50
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not bother everybody else while you're watching something.
00:28:53
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And then the other thing that's interesting is Amazon added a microphone into their Fire
00:29:00
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So that, you know, and again, I'm not saying like full on Xbox declaring everything that
00:29:06
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you want to, you know, want to do Xbox, pause the display, whatever.
00:29:11
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It's ahoy console, pause the movie while I go get some soda.
00:29:17
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But instead, the idea for things like voice search, because that was the number one thing
00:29:20
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that people brought up about using the iPhone as a remote is that nobody likes using the
00:29:24
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Ouija board, you know, where you have to move around and pick letter by letter.
00:29:27
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That's awful.
00:29:28
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And so what Amazon has done is said, you know, we support voice search.
00:29:31
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So if you want to watch Daredevil, you press the little button and say Daredevil, and it
00:29:36
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goes and finds Daredevil for you.
00:29:39
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That's good.
00:29:40
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That's a good feature.
00:29:42
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And I could see Apple doing something like that.
00:29:44
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Although you know, I wrote a speculative piece last year about Apple TV, where what I said
00:29:49
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was, I wonder if Apple TV will either have a Kinect style like, you know, microphone
00:29:55
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and camera that you can put on top of your TV, or whether it will be something like that
00:30:00
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that you put on top of your TV that has inputs that are intelligent enough that you can just,
00:30:06
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you know, talk to Siri like you talk to Dan's Amazon Echo, for example. Maybe you could
00:30:14
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do that, maybe that, you know, that would be an option for Apple TV. It's all out there.
00:30:18
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I mean, this is what's fascinating about what Apple will do with the Apple TV is all of
00:30:21
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these things were options for them. And it'll be interesting to see what they chose, and
00:30:26
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what they didn't choose, and why. Because they could totally make something that is
00:30:29
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a Siri kind of thing that sits and has a FaceTime camera, and sits on your TV, and listens for
00:30:36
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your commands and things like that. And if they don't do that, there will be a reason
00:30:40
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why. And if they don't have a microphone on their remote, there will be a reason why.
00:30:44
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They chose not to do that. But it's interesting to think about all the possibilities at the
00:30:49
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one of the reasons they would put it in my opinion in the in the microphone and
00:30:53
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it being invoked to a button is because Apple would never be able to use Siri in
00:30:58
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a TV ad anymore right? Because every time the TV ad comes on it activates
00:31:03
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everybody's Apple TVs and Microsoft had this exact problem. They'd be ahoy
00:31:07
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telephoning it. There's something they could do that would be clever but
00:31:11
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yeah that's it's possible. I mean that's the nice thing about the Amazon feature
00:31:14
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is that it's a button you press it then you say something and then it goes off
00:31:18
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and searches for it. It's not something that's just hovering in the room at all times waiting
00:31:23
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for you to say something that sounds like a hoy telephone but isn't a hoy telephone.
00:31:28
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So a hoy television. We're living in a world with lots of ahoys, Myke. There's a hoy timepiece,
00:31:34
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a hoy television, a hoy telephone, a hoy metal tube. So many ahoys.
00:31:39
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I did find it interesting that we didn't get the ISA anyway, one complaint about activating
00:31:45
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Amazon echoes?
00:31:47
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there aren't very many out there and since it's by invitation only right there aren't that many
00:31:51
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and we were way worse about that like than we were about about the the ahoy telephone scenario
00:31:57
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it was unfortunately just dan that we affected hey dan you're welcome um in regards to the apple tv
00:32:05
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um are you expecting that wwdc is going to be when we're going to see some of this stuff like
00:32:11
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especially presuming that we're probably also going to see a music streaming service at wwdc
00:32:16
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Is that too much? Yeah, I feel like the most important question, and again, Tim Cook's
00:32:23
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Apple, the rules are changing, but the question I always ask when we're looking at WWDC is,
00:32:29
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"Is there a developer story?" I feel like that's the number one thing, is like, "Is there a developer
00:32:32
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►
story?" Because you can launch anything at WWDC if you're Apple. You've got a platform, you've got
00:32:37
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got a keynote, great. But you need to launch things at WWDC where you're
00:32:45
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expecting the developers to get involved. I feel like that's like the the extra
00:32:49
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push. And so if you ask that question of every rumored announcement for WWDC, I
00:32:53
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feel like it can be illuminating. Like I said, maybe things are changing and it
00:32:57
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►
doesn't preclude them from making announcements, but generally they try to
00:33:00
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have a developer angle. So for example, music service. I don't see a developer
00:33:07
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►
ankle there. I see that maybe, you know, it's available because they're gonna,
00:33:11
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►
they're gonna, the rumor is put it in iOS 8.4 or whatever. It also wouldn't
00:33:18
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surprise me at all given that they make lots of entertainment announcements in
00:33:21
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the fall that it wait till the fall and then they announce, they announce it then
00:33:26
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maybe in iOS 9, maybe in an iOS 8.4 that comes a little bit before iOS 9 comes
00:33:31
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►
out to keep compatibility with devices that are not compatible with iOS 9 if
00:33:36
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if there's any change there.
00:33:38
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►
The Apple TV thing, it's the same thing.
00:33:41
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►
I feel like if there's a developer story,
00:33:44
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►
if they're gonna let you do apps,
00:33:45
◼
►
if you're gonna, the developers will actually be able
00:33:48
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►
to do something with Apple TV as a platform,
00:33:50
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►
then it makes sense for that to happen at WWDC.
00:33:53
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►
And if not, then they could kind of do it whenever.
00:33:56
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►
They can do it later.
00:33:57
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►
They can do it in the fall
00:33:58
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►
and have it be a big holiday seller.
00:34:00
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So I'm kind of up in the air on it.
00:34:03
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I feel like there could be a developer story there.
00:34:05
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►
I'm curious about the watch too.
00:34:07
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Like, will they make watch announcements?
00:34:08
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Will there be a watchOS 2.0 announcement as well?
00:34:12
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►
I kind of expect there will be.
00:34:13
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But Apple TV, maybe, I hope so.
00:34:17
◼
►
I've been waiting for Apple TV as a platform
00:34:22
◼
►
and I know developers have for quite a while,
00:34:24
◼
►
in that long time and it just hasn't happened.
00:34:27
◼
►
So maybe this will be the time.
00:34:28
◼
►
But if they're gonna do that
00:34:29
◼
►
and developers can write Apple TV apps,
00:34:33
◼
►
then yes, I think they have to do it at WWDC.
00:34:36
◼
►
- I think that there is a possibility for some development
00:34:40
◼
►
in the music service, but CarPlay-like development.
00:34:43
◼
►
Small group, accepted in.
00:34:46
◼
►
Because there are other types of services
00:34:49
◼
►
that you could integrate into that platform a little bit
00:34:52
◼
►
and also push some information out.
00:34:55
◼
►
Federico had some really good thoughts
00:34:58
◼
►
on this on Connected last week.
00:35:01
◼
►
There are some like, you know, you could have lyrics and you could put, you know, you could
00:35:05
◼
►
have Shazam integrating and stuff like that.
00:35:07
◼
►
By the way, if you've not yet tried the Shazam Apple Watch app, you need to try it.
00:35:12
◼
►
I don't understand how they're doing what they're doing.
00:35:14
◼
►
It's amazing.
00:35:16
◼
►
It's one of the most impressive Apple Watch apps that I've tried actually.
00:35:21
◼
►
Like the lyrics and all that stuff, it's madness.
00:35:23
◼
►
I actually don't know how they're doing what they're doing.
00:35:27
◼
►
But yeah, I see that if you're gonna do an Apple TV at any point, right, it's got to
00:35:33
◼
►
have apps now, right, because that's expected.
00:35:35
◼
►
If you're gonna make a serious move, like if you're not just gonna continually upgrade
00:35:39
◼
►
the box, like if you're gonna make Apple TV what Apple TV should be in 2015, apps is a
00:35:47
◼
►
big part of that, and if apps is a big part of that, then you need to talk about it at
00:35:52
◼
►
WPDC, right?
00:35:53
◼
►
It just seems logical.
00:35:56
◼
►
I don't know about the watch yet.
00:36:00
◼
►
I don't know if we're going to see anything more at WWDC,
00:36:04
◼
►
like in a real big way, other than a like, stay tuned.
00:36:08
◼
►
- Well, they promised that they will give developers
00:36:11
◼
►
access to more of the operating system.
00:36:13
◼
►
So there could be a stay tuned,
00:36:15
◼
►
and then they'll roll out more in the fall.
00:36:17
◼
►
They could also do, you know, watchOS 2.0
00:36:23
◼
►
and say, here's a beta of watchOS 2.0.
00:36:25
◼
►
this is gonna be out in the fall,
00:36:27
◼
►
you can start developing your apps now,
00:36:28
◼
►
the same sort of story that they do with OS X and iOS.
00:36:32
◼
►
That would be interesting.
00:36:34
◼
►
Likewise, the big iPad rumors,
00:36:36
◼
►
where there's this talk about like,
00:36:38
◼
►
oh, there could be a big iPad and all of that,
00:36:40
◼
►
that is different
00:36:42
◼
►
and that there are some different developer rules,
00:36:44
◼
►
that could possibly come,
00:36:45
◼
►
although again, more likely it'll come in the fall
00:36:47
◼
►
when they traditionally release all the iPads,
00:36:50
◼
►
and that developers will have no time to plan for that.
00:36:52
◼
►
But it's not beyond the realm of possibility
00:36:55
◼
►
if that product is ready, that they could release that product or announce that product
00:36:59
◼
►
in the summer, along with changes that developers could write to.
00:37:05
◼
►
More likely, they'll have lots of mysterious APIs and lots of mysterious changes to how
00:37:09
◼
►
you can build iOS apps that they will say nothing about why, but it's very obvious to
00:37:16
◼
►
observers that something else, an iPad of a different screen size is coming, because
00:37:22
◼
►
that's basically what happened with the iPhone the last couple of years, is it was very
00:37:24
◼
►
clear that there would be bigger iPhones because they were starting to talk about different
00:37:29
◼
►
tools and different ways of laying out apps. And why would you need that unless you were
00:37:34
◼
►
doing a bigger iPhone at some point? So we may see some of that too, one way or another.
00:37:40
◼
►
That's the fun thing about WWDC. There's the stuff that gets announced, the stuff that
00:37:43
◼
►
doesn't get announced, and then the things that are hinted at in the details but not
00:37:50
◼
►
Considering we were less than a month away there's gonna be a lot more WWDC
00:37:54
◼
►
talk on the way and I'll ask this question. I don't really I don't really
00:37:58
◼
►
think we need to answer right now but it's just something you know circulating
00:38:01
◼
►
in my brain as we talk about this stuff. OS 10, 10.11, iOS 9, Apple TV, Watch 2.0
00:38:09
◼
►
and maybe HomeKit and a music streaming service potentially. Is that too much stuff?
00:38:15
◼
►
stuff like just if you just look at the developer platforms in there if you if
00:38:21
◼
►
you ignore homekicks I'm just trying things in to make the list longer like
00:38:24
◼
►
if you look iOS 9 OS 10.11 assuming it will be that right watch 2.0 and Apple TV
00:38:36
◼
►
1.0 it's a lot it's a lot right that like that is just but do we not think
00:38:43
◼
►
that they're not building all those things? I think we all think that they're building
00:38:45
◼
►
all those things.
00:38:47
◼
►
Is it too much for Apple? Is it too much for developers? Is it too much for the event?
00:38:50
◼
►
Both. I just wonder if it all needs to happen at the same time. I mean, and this goes back
00:38:55
◼
►
to the age-old discussion of do we need to do these every single year? Does it need to
00:39:01
◼
►
And do they have to happen all at once? Do you really need to use WWDC as the platform
00:39:06
◼
►
to launch all of your developer initiatives? They didn't announce the watch there, and
00:39:11
◼
►
or 5,000 or whatever will watch apps at launch day, right?
00:39:14
◼
►
They didn't need to do that there.
00:39:16
◼
►
So you could totally do watch OS 2.0 in the fall as a beta
00:39:21
◼
►
and say you're gonna ship it at the end of the year
00:39:24
◼
►
or in January and you could totally do that.
00:39:27
◼
►
Will they do that or will they say,
00:39:29
◼
►
"Oh, but we can announce it now.
00:39:32
◼
►
We got with WWDC, we gotta do it now."
00:39:35
◼
►
And sometimes I think that there is an actual push and pull
00:39:38
◼
►
within Apple that's like that,
00:39:40
◼
►
which is there are people who are like,
00:39:41
◼
►
"This is our time, we should do it now.
00:39:43
◼
►
Give it all to the developers now."
00:39:45
◼
►
And then there are other people who are like,
00:39:46
◼
►
"It's too much, let's just do this later.
00:39:48
◼
►
There's nothing stopping us, look what happens.
00:39:50
◼
►
The developers are gonna love this stuff
00:39:52
◼
►
regardless of when we drop it on them.
00:39:54
◼
►
Why do we need to drop it on them now
00:39:55
◼
►
when we're doing like eight things at once?"
00:39:58
◼
►
It goes back to the age old software quality discussion too,
00:40:01
◼
►
which is maybe getting these things not all
00:40:03
◼
►
on a announced new version in June,
00:40:06
◼
►
ship it in September schedule might be good, right?
00:40:10
◼
►
Maybe stagger it a little bit.
00:40:11
◼
►
But the downside of that is if you've got watchOS 2.0
00:40:16
◼
►
and the features that will take advantage of that
00:40:19
◼
►
would, if they would be better on iOS 9, let's say,
00:40:24
◼
►
which is a good question.
00:40:27
◼
►
Would they require, if you're using iOS 8
00:40:31
◼
►
and there's a new watchOS update,
00:40:33
◼
►
would they bar you from installing it?
00:40:36
◼
►
if you weren't running iOS 9? I would think not, but it's an interesting question. I don't
00:40:42
◼
►
know. These are all the questions that—you're right, we'll be swirling out there that we
00:40:45
◼
►
can talk about more as we get closer, because we're, what, a month away now.
00:40:50
◼
►
Mm-hmm. Yeah, just as—one last point—just as someone who has been knee-deep in iPhone
00:40:56
◼
►
history recently, I do really feel like we're gonna get a Watch Roadmap event like we did
00:41:04
◼
►
with the iPhone SDK.
00:41:05
◼
►
- Ah, it could be.
00:41:07
◼
►
- I think that they'll say,
00:41:08
◼
►
we have stuff to say about the Apple Watch,
00:41:11
◼
►
you know it's coming this year,
00:41:12
◼
►
we're gonna have an event shortly,
00:41:14
◼
►
which you'll hear more about
00:41:15
◼
►
where we outlay some of that stuff.
00:41:17
◼
►
That's what I think we're gonna see,
00:41:19
◼
►
but we'll wait and see what happens.
00:41:21
◼
►
- It could just be in the keynote.
00:41:22
◼
►
I mean, and it could be that simple of,
00:41:25
◼
►
we said that, you know,
00:41:27
◼
►
thank you for making all these WatchKit apps.
00:41:30
◼
►
We said that by the end of the year,
00:41:31
◼
►
we would let you make full apps,
00:41:33
◼
►
we're on track for that, stay tuned.
00:41:37
◼
►
- Yeah, that's what I think it's gonna be.
00:41:38
◼
►
- It could be that simple.
00:41:40
◼
►
And whether they do a special event for that,
00:41:41
◼
►
or it's just part of some other event,
00:41:44
◼
►
or no event at all, right?
00:41:47
◼
►
'Cause with a developer message like that,
00:41:48
◼
►
they can do no event at all.
00:41:49
◼
►
- Like when the WatchKit stuff came out the first time.
00:41:53
◼
►
- Which is, here's a bunch of stuff.
00:41:54
◼
►
- Boom, here it is.
00:41:55
◼
►
And everybody absorbed it and wrote thousands of apps
00:41:58
◼
►
without having even touched the hardware,
00:42:00
◼
►
or maybe touched it in a lab in a few cases.
00:42:03
◼
►
Right, talking about TV stuff, you bought a new TV.
00:42:08
◼
►
Let's talk about that.
00:42:09
◼
►
But before that, let me thank our second sponsor for this week's episode, and that is Squarespace.
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I have MykeHurley.net which is just a website which has my name on it right because you
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So I have Myke Hurley.net there because it's a very easy way for me to have a very good
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Squarespace's templates are beautiful, they have responsive web design built right into
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that's like you know where to store on the blog there it's because we didn't
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want to build a blogging part into our CMS for podcasts so we just thought why
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don't we just go to the place that we know it's gonna work so we went to
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Squarespace very simple and also the same thing do we really want to build
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or the infrastructure for a store, no, we'll just put it on Squarespace.
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really beautiful. So indeed beautiful Squarespace. No, don't like that one?
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I don't think Squarespace would go for that, for our singing. Well
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we'll see. It's extra, we have church extra if we sing. Exactly. We couldn't, so
00:45:40
◼
►
we don't. So right, let's move on. So you bought a TV. Why did you buy a new TV?
00:45:47
◼
►
It's a big purchase, a TV, not necessarily in cost, it's just, you know, people don't buy TVs that often.
00:45:53
◼
►
So, while I was traveling, my wife was watching TV in our living room, and she's just watching a show,
00:45:59
◼
►
and in the middle of the show, suddenly, our TV that we've had for five years,
00:46:02
◼
►
our 42-inch LG TV, just says, "No signal." Like, okay, that's not good. You know, maybe it's the
00:46:12
◼
►
maybe it's the switcher, maybe it's the TiVo, she switches to other inputs, and it
00:46:18
◼
►
all says no signal. Yeah that's the problem, it could be a million things
00:46:21
◼
►
right at that point. And I'm gone and you know I'm the person who set all this
00:46:26
◼
►
stuff up so she's like, "Well it didn't, it didn't, it doesn't work anymore, I think
00:46:30
◼
►
it's broken, I gave her some things to try, nothing worked." And she said, "All right
00:46:36
◼
►
well, you know, I hope that when you come home you find out that it's broken
00:46:39
◼
►
because I would hate for this to just be that I pressed some button and didn't understand
00:46:43
◼
►
it. And in fact, she was completely validated. It was busted. And I did some internet searches
00:46:48
◼
►
and found out people saying, "Well, essentially what's happened here, you know, on these kind
00:46:52
◼
►
of models is that something happened like on the logic board basically, and you might
00:46:56
◼
►
be able to get somebody to fix it for, you know, a few hundred dollars." And I had that
00:47:01
◼
►
moment where it's like, "I'm already unhappy with the picture quality of this TV because
00:47:04
◼
►
five years old and I bought a TV for a different room last year that was a cheap, you know,
00:47:11
◼
►
it was a cheap TV. It was, I think I got it at Amazon, but it was a cheap TV and the black
00:47:16
◼
►
levels on it, although not at like plasma level, John Siracusa will tell you, but were
00:47:20
◼
►
so much better. It's like you could see so much how the technology has evolved in five
00:47:24
◼
►
years. So I was already looking at this TV like all the blacks look really gray, you
00:47:29
◼
►
know, it just isn't and I wish it was bigger and because we bought it to fit a space where
00:47:35
◼
►
a TV used to be and I think I kind of underbought I thought oh well you know 42 inches or whatever
00:47:40
◼
►
is plenty enough but there was room for more and I had been thinking that so I had that
00:47:44
◼
►
moment of like you know what I'm not going to throw more money at this at this TV that
00:47:49
◼
►
is I already don't like and just broke I'm going to let's look and get a new TV so we
00:47:56
◼
►
we went to Costco.
00:47:59
◼
►
I decided, then I did the whole like,
00:48:02
◼
►
do I wanna invest in like a really expensive TV
00:48:04
◼
►
that I'm gonna have forever?
00:48:06
◼
►
And I thought, you know, I kind of don't.
00:48:08
◼
►
I kind of wanna get something that's kind of,
00:48:11
◼
►
you know, reasonably priced.
00:48:13
◼
►
And if I can find something at Costco,
00:48:16
◼
►
that is where you find a cheap or reasonably priced TV
00:48:19
◼
►
that will last a few years.
00:48:21
◼
►
And if it lasts longer, I'll move it to another room.
00:48:25
◼
►
and that room will have a nice big TV on it.
00:48:28
◼
►
So we went to Costco and indeed,
00:48:31
◼
►
we found a TV that was,
00:48:34
◼
►
I felt was reasonably priced.
00:48:36
◼
►
And what was funny about it is it's a,
00:48:39
◼
►
so it's a Vizio, which is an interesting TV manufacturer
00:48:43
◼
►
that proves that advertising can elevate you
00:48:46
◼
►
from being, you know, Sampo
00:48:48
◼
►
to being a brand that people recognize.
00:48:50
◼
►
But Vizio to me means, you know,
00:48:53
◼
►
pretty decent quality, but cheap.
00:48:55
◼
►
And I did some, you know, CNET searches,
00:48:57
◼
►
'cause I know all the TV nerds out there
00:48:58
◼
►
are gonna be like, "Oh God."
00:48:59
◼
►
Like right now, John Syracuse is polishing his,
00:49:02
◼
►
I don't know, you know, his laser beams to destroy me
00:49:06
◼
►
for making a bad purchase.
00:49:08
◼
►
But I did some research online
00:49:10
◼
►
and found that this was actually
00:49:12
◼
►
a pretty good quality TV for the price.
00:49:15
◼
►
And compared to some of the other 50-inch TVs
00:49:18
◼
►
that were available.
00:49:21
◼
►
Also the wire cutter doesn't have any recommendations
00:49:23
◼
►
right now because they're shifting model years,
00:49:25
◼
►
so there was no consensus for what the best,
00:49:27
◼
►
you know, really high quality TV was anyway.
00:49:30
◼
►
So for a pretty good price, I got a Vizio 50 inch LCD
00:49:34
◼
►
that is, that turns out is a 4K model,
00:49:41
◼
►
for basically the same price as a 1080 model from Samsung.
00:49:46
◼
►
And bought it, brought it home, hooked it up, looks great.
00:49:51
◼
►
five years difference from the last one. Doesn't look as good as my mom's giant plasma TVs
00:49:55
◼
►
that she's got, but you know, they don't make those anymore. And, but it looks so much better
00:50:00
◼
►
than the old one did, and it's bigger, which is really nice. We watched a movie on Saturday
00:50:04
◼
►
night after we bought it, the whole family, and that was a lot of fun, because it was
00:50:07
◼
►
a, it was a, it was the Avengers, because we were going to go see Avengers 2 the next
00:50:11
◼
►
day. And it's rumbly, and there's lots of stuff flying around. It was really great.
00:50:15
◼
►
And then after the kids went to bed, we watched Daredevil on Netflix in 4K, which was also
00:50:24
◼
►
interesting because they have the 4K streaming built into the TV and there's not a lot of
00:50:28
◼
►
4K content out there, but Netflix does it.
00:50:31
◼
►
And so we watched that and that looked really good.
00:50:33
◼
►
My internet connection is apparently fast enough to support the 4K stream.
00:50:38
◼
►
And it looked really nice because this is essentially a 2160p monitor.
00:50:43
◼
►
- 2160p. That one hasn't crossed my mind. That isn't in my memory yet, like the other
00:50:51
◼
►
dimensions, you know? 1080 and 720.
00:50:54
◼
►
- 1080. Well, so this is double 1080 is what it is, which is what they're calling, you
00:50:58
◼
►
know, Ultra HD kind of display. It's a double 1080. But, you know, that was sort of beside
00:51:06
◼
►
the point. I think, I don't know whether there's gonna be a lot of 4K content out there or
00:51:09
◼
►
not, but TV looks good, it was a good price. Hopefully it will last longer than the old
00:51:15
◼
►
one or as long as the old one. The old one lasted five years. And the Netflix -- playing
00:51:20
◼
►
with the Netflix 4K stuff has been fun. I want to do some more before I kind of render
00:51:24
◼
►
a final judgment about whether it's just a gimmick and whether highly compressed 4K video
00:51:30
◼
►
is any better than slightly less compressed 1080 video. But maybe, I mean, I think it's
00:51:36
◼
►
a higher bitrate for sure, so maybe in the end it looks better. But yeah, new TV in the
00:51:43
◼
►
house. 50 inches. It's nice. Nice to have a larger TV.
00:51:47
◼
►
Are you able to switch between HD and 4K on Netflix? Like, can you choose which one you
00:51:58
◼
►
I don't—well, you—one Netflix plan supports it and one doesn't. But on the box, I don't
00:52:05
◼
►
think you can force the HD and non-4K version.
00:52:10
◼
►
I guess it would just do what Netflix does, right?
00:52:12
◼
►
It just streams best quality.
00:52:13
◼
►
Yeah, you press the info button and then you can actually watch and see what resolution
00:52:17
◼
►
you're getting.
00:52:18
◼
►
And it'll go, you know, 480, 720, 1080, 2180, and then you're all the way up there.
00:52:25
◼
►
And then your TV takes off and shoots into space, I think.
00:52:29
◼
►
I mean, this is really difficult on a podcast, but are you able to describe, like, what are
00:52:35
◼
►
what looks better? Is things just crisper?
00:52:37
◼
►
Do the colors look better?
00:52:38
◼
►
Like what is so, like 4K, like I don't really.
00:52:42
◼
►
- Well 4K, I mean, there's more lines of resolution
00:52:46
◼
►
is the idea.
00:52:47
◼
►
So it's like, I mean theoretically you could say
00:52:49
◼
►
it's like retina.
00:52:50
◼
►
I mean, they shoot it in 4K or the effects rendered in 4K.
00:52:54
◼
►
I think that our friends in the effects business,
00:52:57
◼
►
sometimes they do the effects at a lower resolution
00:53:02
◼
►
and then scale it up.
00:53:03
◼
►
But you know, the Daredevil stuff looked good.
00:53:06
◼
►
It's more resolution.
00:53:07
◼
►
There's always this debate of like,
00:53:08
◼
►
can you tell the difference between 720 and 1080?
00:53:10
◼
►
Some people can, some people can't.
00:53:12
◼
►
Can you tell the difference between 1080p and 1080i?
00:53:15
◼
►
Some people can, some people can't.
00:53:16
◼
►
Can you tell the difference between 1080 and 2160?
00:53:19
◼
►
You know, it looked better to me,
00:53:21
◼
►
but I don't know whether that's a placebo effect or not.
00:53:23
◼
►
And that's why I wanna spend some more time with it.
00:53:25
◼
►
And then I'll see.
00:53:30
◼
►
'Cause also I'm paying whatever,
00:53:32
◼
►
or three dollars more a month for Netflix to have access to it. So I want to decide whether it's
00:53:37
◼
►
even worth doing that. But it's kind of a fun thing to play with. And yeah, I do think we chase—in fact,
00:53:43
◼
►
I read an article that said that Netflix is working with some like TV manufacturers and stuff about a
00:53:49
◼
►
high dynamic range spec, because there's a thought that having more dynamic range in a picture is
00:53:55
◼
►
actually much more noticeable to people than more dots at this point. So what's the frontier of
00:54:00
◼
►
of higher quality images. I don't know. But, you know, like I said, the Daredevil episode
00:54:05
◼
►
we watched looked great. And they've got some demo stuff. It's very much like the early
00:54:09
◼
►
days of HD where, you know, most of the content that's available is like demos of, you know,
00:54:14
◼
►
people in the ocean or like HDNet. Yeah, HDNet, which was at one point the only HD channel
00:54:23
◼
►
available used to have a show that was like the sunrise. And it was literally somebody
00:54:29
◼
►
set up an HD camera at sunrise in a beautiful location somewhere in the jungle or in Hawaii
00:54:36
◼
►
and then for half an hour or 15 minutes or whatever it would just be that one shot of
00:54:43
◼
►
the sunrise. It's like the windows in Back to the Future 2, right? Yes. Yeah, you can
00:54:51
◼
►
tune it in to be anything. So that was in the early age of HD, it was like how do we
00:54:56
◼
►
impress people with this.
00:54:57
◼
►
Oh, I know nature photography, we'll do nature photography.
00:54:59
◼
►
It's a little bit like that.
00:55:00
◼
►
Like Netflix has a show that is essentially that,
00:55:02
◼
►
which is nature, high definition pictures of nature.
00:55:05
◼
►
There's a 4K show that is all of that.
00:55:08
◼
►
But then there's some movies
00:55:09
◼
►
and all of the Netflix originals now are being shot in 4K
00:55:11
◼
►
'cause Netflix is pushing this as a format.
00:55:14
◼
►
It's funny, you can't watch 4K on Netflix
00:55:18
◼
►
on the, on my retina iMac here
00:55:20
◼
►
because they don't support streaming the high res stuff
00:55:23
◼
►
to PCs mostly, I think,
00:55:25
◼
►
because they're afraid, probably rightly,
00:55:28
◼
►
that people will intercept that stream
00:55:30
◼
►
and then have this super awesome high-definition version
00:55:34
◼
►
of the show to put on BitTorrent.
00:55:37
◼
►
So it's only appearing, for now at least,
00:55:40
◼
►
in locked-off devices like this embedded in my TV set.
00:55:43
◼
►
-I think there was one thing that made me smile
00:55:49
◼
►
when you were talking about the Sunrise thing.
00:55:51
◼
►
When we were in Romania, there was a TV channel.
00:55:55
◼
►
I can't remember the name of it, but basically it just showed a garden with a lake in it.
00:56:02
◼
►
That was the channel, which is very amazing to me.
00:56:06
◼
►
And Joe Steele in the chat room mentioned that this could be an interesting way for
00:56:09
◼
►
you to test.
00:56:10
◼
►
The Apple TV does not support UHD, which is 4K Ultra HD, so you could set up...
00:56:16
◼
►
What box were you using, just out of interest?
00:56:19
◼
►
Well, actually, these days I've been mostly watching Netflix on my TiVo, because it's
00:56:23
◼
►
integrated into the TiVo interface, so you press it and then it launches the TiVo app.
00:56:27
◼
►
So yes, I could do that, although the challenge there is you couldn't really do it simultaneously
00:56:31
◼
►
because I think the 4K stream would degrade if there was yet another video stream on the
00:56:36
◼
►
line at the same time, but I could definitely use that to kind of go back and forth and
00:56:40
◼
►
see with the same episode of something and see if I noticed the difference.
00:56:45
◼
►
I don't know if the Sunrise show is available in just HD or whatever it is, the plants and
00:56:51
◼
►
animals that are highly defined. Yeah, we'll check it out. But it's a little
00:56:58
◼
►
like the fireplace log shows that are on at Christmas time that are just...
00:57:03
◼
►
it's a log in a fireplace. If you don't have a fireplace, turn on your TV. Pretend
00:57:08
◼
►
it's a fireplace.
00:57:10
◼
►
For all the family to gather around.
00:57:12
◼
►
Yeah. It's very exciting when they get... when the log burns out and they put in a new log.
00:57:16
◼
►
That's people... that's riveting television.
00:57:19
◼
►
It's like when the DVD screensaver goes to the corner, right?
00:57:24
◼
►
That thing. You familiar with that?
00:57:28
◼
►
Should we move on to Ask Upgrade?
00:57:30
◼
►
Is it that time?
00:57:31
◼
►
I think so. I think it is that time.
00:57:35
◼
►
Great. So we have our sponsor of Ask Upgrade this week,
00:57:37
◼
►
which is our friends over at MailRoute.
00:57:39
◼
►
Jason, would you like to tell the people about the MailRoute?
00:57:43
◼
►
I would love to tell the people about MailRoute.
00:57:46
◼
►
Did you say the MailRoute?
00:57:48
◼
►
the mail route, it's a route that the mail takes
00:57:51
◼
►
to get to you.
00:57:52
◼
►
What is the mail route?
00:57:53
◼
►
The mail route goes through mail route.
00:57:56
◼
►
Mail route is a system that intercepts your mail
00:57:59
◼
►
before it gets to your server.
00:58:01
◼
►
So basically you sign up,
00:58:03
◼
►
change what's called an MX record,
00:58:05
◼
►
which is a, it's a domain-y thing,
00:58:07
◼
►
but if you're running a mail server,
00:58:09
◼
►
you probably understand what that is.
00:58:11
◼
►
It basically says,
00:58:11
◼
►
where does all my mail go for my domain?
00:58:14
◼
►
And you change that to point at mail route.
00:58:15
◼
►
And so mail route takes your mail in,
00:58:17
◼
►
it analyzes it and then passes through only the good mail
00:58:20
◼
►
and leaves the spam and viruses and bounces
00:58:22
◼
►
and stuff like that.
00:58:23
◼
►
They just never get to you.
00:58:24
◼
►
They're kept in a holding bin at mail route.
00:58:26
◼
►
This also means that mail route servers are,
00:58:29
◼
►
they're taking care of them.
00:58:30
◼
►
They're updating the hardware and the software.
00:58:31
◼
►
You don't have to worry about any of that.
00:58:33
◼
►
They get to see all this spam as it comes in.
00:58:36
◼
►
And I think that improves their intelligence
00:58:38
◼
►
in figuring out what's good and what's bad.
00:58:40
◼
►
If there is something that is valid
00:58:43
◼
►
that got filtered by mail route,
00:58:45
◼
►
and that does happen occasionally,
00:58:46
◼
►
although it's very occasionally.
00:58:48
◼
►
You can get an email sent to you
00:58:50
◼
►
with a list of all the spam that mail route filtered out
00:58:52
◼
►
so you know that it's working.
00:58:53
◼
►
And with one click, you can have that mail delivered
00:58:55
◼
►
and even have the person who sent it white listed
00:58:58
◼
►
so they're never spam blocked again in the future.
00:59:02
◼
►
So since you don't have to install or maintain everything
00:59:05
◼
►
and the servers that you do have now
00:59:07
◼
►
are not getting pummeled by spammers,
00:59:09
◼
►
which is a thing that happens.
00:59:10
◼
►
And my email server that I used to run
00:59:12
◼
►
just got killed by all the spam coming in.
00:59:15
◼
►
I would still be running my own mail server, frankly,
00:59:17
◼
►
if I had mail route back then,
00:59:18
◼
►
because having somebody to sit between me and the spammers
00:59:21
◼
►
would have saved me a huge amount of network traffic
00:59:25
◼
►
and burden to the server.
00:59:27
◼
►
Large organizations use mail route,
00:59:29
◼
►
universities and corporations.
00:59:31
◼
►
It's got all of the things that an email administrator
00:59:34
◼
►
or an IT professional would want for mail tools.
00:59:37
◼
►
There's an API for easy account management
00:59:38
◼
►
and it supports LDAP, Active Directory, TLS,
00:59:41
◼
►
outbound relay, and mail bagging.
00:59:43
◼
►
- Mail bagging.
00:59:45
◼
►
I went Batman this week.
00:59:47
◼
►
- Yeah, that's good.
00:59:48
◼
►
Everything you want from people handling your mail.
00:59:51
◼
►
You can start a risk free trial.
00:59:52
◼
►
Don't even have to put a credit card down.
00:59:54
◼
►
You sign up, change those MX records and that's it.
00:59:57
◼
►
Your mailbox and hardware are completely protected.
00:59:59
◼
►
So there's no reason not to try it
01:00:01
◼
►
because it's a free trial.
01:00:02
◼
►
So all upgrade listeners will get 10% off,
01:00:04
◼
►
not just for a little while
01:00:05
◼
►
but for the lifetime of the account.
01:00:07
◼
►
Here's what you need to do.
01:00:08
◼
►
You need to go to mailroute.net/upgrade now.
01:00:11
◼
►
Mailroute.net/upgrade for the 10% off.
01:00:14
◼
►
offer and thank you to mail route for sponsoring upgrade and relay FM and me and filtering
01:00:20
◼
►
out my mail and Batman.
01:00:22
◼
►
I did assume.
01:00:23
◼
►
Thank you upgrade and mail route.
01:00:27
◼
►
I did assume right that if Batman had an email account of his own you're like bat@batman.com
01:00:34
◼
►
or something or not brucewayne@batman.com.
01:00:39
◼
►
bat.man. New domains all the time, right? Maybe there's bat.man, super.man, spider.man.
01:00:46
◼
►
Male@bat.man. Merlin.man. I just assumed that he would get a lot of spam, right? So he would
01:00:53
◼
►
use mail route to help him. You know, like those utility belt companies, they send a
01:00:58
◼
►
lot of spam email. Yeah. Anyway. I'm sure, also like, you know, service on the Batmobile.
01:01:09
◼
►
like get an oil change on your Batmobile, things like that.
01:01:13
◼
►
Batman doesn't want to put up with that crap.
01:01:15
◼
►
- Nope, that's what Alfred's for.
01:01:17
◼
►
Now we're out, it's kind of like Alfred.
01:01:21
◼
►
- Anyway, I want to thank everybody
01:01:25
◼
►
'cause I went into our Ask Upgrade sheet this morning, Jason,
01:01:28
◼
►
and we only had a couple of Ask Upgrades
01:01:31
◼
►
from last week's episode, so I tweeted about it,
01:01:33
◼
►
and I think we now have enough for the next six months, so.
01:01:36
◼
►
- Yeah, I think so.
01:01:37
◼
►
Did you notice, by the way, that we got,
01:01:40
◼
►
that spammers found #AskAffcraff.
01:01:42
◼
►
- Oh yeah, I saw that.
01:01:43
◼
►
I cleared them out from the Google document today,
01:01:46
◼
►
but that was fun to go through.
01:01:48
◼
►
I don't know what was happening.
01:01:50
◼
►
I think we ended up getting inadvertently caught
01:01:52
◼
►
into some sort of Spanish Q&A session.
01:01:56
◼
►
I don't really know what happened,
01:01:58
◼
►
but that was an interesting thing to go through.
01:02:01
◼
►
- It was very strange, yes,
01:02:03
◼
►
in language I don't understand.
01:02:06
◼
►
And I couldn't decide whether it was intentional
01:02:09
◼
►
or whether we like got trending somewhere accidentally.
01:02:14
◼
►
And then that gets picked up by spammers.
01:02:17
◼
►
But in the end we have this just amazing like chain.
01:02:21
◼
►
There's some of the tweets are just completely
01:02:25
◼
►
like there's nothing there.
01:02:27
◼
►
Remember me, what?
01:02:29
◼
►
Which is, oh, okay.
01:02:32
◼
►
So here it is.
01:02:33
◼
►
So these, it seems like it's a link to the Twitter account Upgrade Official, which is
01:02:40
◼
►
from the Philippines, and it looks like it's a boy band.
01:02:44
◼
►
Yeah, I think what happened was, people were saying like, "Ask something."
01:02:48
◼
►
Like it was like a name of one of the people in this boy band, and then he tagged "Ask
01:02:55
◼
►
So I'm concerned now that this might happen.
01:02:58
◼
►
But you know, we might be okay.
01:03:02
◼
►
But our hashtag has been has been coerced by a Philippine Filipino boy band.
01:03:08
◼
►
Boy band. As long as they make us members, Myke.
01:03:12
◼
►
I'm okay with it.
01:03:13
◼
►
We did sing a moment ago, so that was our audition.
01:03:18
◼
►
I don't even know what to do anymore.
01:03:21
◼
►
Derek, on the "No More Events" label that pops up on the Apple Watch,
01:03:27
◼
►
Derek has suggested, and Jason I'm interested to see what you think,
01:03:30
◼
►
What about a one-minute daily appointment called blank?
01:03:33
◼
►
Just some spaces for $23.59.
01:03:35
◼
►
So it would always say, you know, $23.59 blank.
01:03:39
◼
►
Would that work until Apple maybe or maybe not issues a fix?
01:03:43
◼
►
Would you do that?
01:03:45
◼
►
- I wouldn't do that. - I wouldn't do that either.
01:03:46
◼
►
Because it's just going to say $23.59 and then nothing.
01:03:49
◼
►
Yeah. Just a reminder that--
01:03:51
◼
►
That midnight will come.
01:03:55
◼
►
And then after midnight, it probably will just tell you
01:03:57
◼
►
what your thing is in the morning.
01:03:59
◼
►
but I won't say no more events.
01:04:01
◼
►
But, yeah, it's a nice hack, but I wouldn't do it.
01:04:06
◼
►
-Neither would I.
01:04:08
◼
►
-I've come to terms with just not having my next calendar event
01:04:11
◼
►
on my watch, and I'm okay with it.
01:04:12
◼
►
I was really excited that it was a possibility.
01:04:15
◼
►
And if I was still in an office and I had, like,
01:04:16
◼
►
10 events during the day, I would probably do it.
01:04:18
◼
►
But right now, I just don't have a calendar event
01:04:20
◼
►
on my watch face.
01:04:23
◼
►
-I haven't decided if I'm gonna keep it.
01:04:27
◼
►
doesn't bother me. No more events doesn't doesn't bother me anymore.
01:04:33
◼
►
And I think I like having my next event there but I'm not
01:04:38
◼
►
100% sure that I do. Do you know what I mean? Like I think that I like it there
01:04:42
◼
►
but I actually don't know how often I use it but...
01:04:48
◼
►
There we go. So let's move on because that one did not fly. So we have
01:04:55
◼
►
Chris, sorry Derek, with mobile boarding passes on the watch are there
01:05:00
◼
►
issues at the display sleeping when you turn the watch to scan? Right, so if you're
01:05:04
◼
►
going on a plane and you bring up Passbook and you bring up your boarding
01:05:08
◼
►
pass, if you usually like if you turn the watch away from your face the screen
01:05:12
◼
►
goes off and you see in all the videos and stuff people turning their watch
01:05:16
◼
►
like away from them face down onto the scanning thing. So one I was gonna ask
01:05:21
◼
►
Jason do you know and two what happens with Apple Pay? Yeah so I really like
01:05:24
◼
►
this because Apple did something very smart which is when you scroll to the
01:05:29
◼
►
barcode in Passbook the watch face stays on if not forever then much longer and
01:05:36
◼
►
it goes to full brightness. Yeah okay that's what I'd expected because when
01:05:42
◼
►
you go when you're in Passbook on the iPhone it like and you go to that point
01:05:45
◼
►
and you open a pass it like ramps the phone up to full brightness anyway. Yeah
01:05:50
◼
►
all the other UI drops away it's just the barcode and it's at full
01:05:54
◼
►
brightness and then when you move your hand away it stays on. So it's a
01:06:01
◼
►
special mode for scanning that happens there. Apple Pay is all NFC so you know.
01:06:07
◼
►
Oh of course. Yeah. So you don't actually need the screen to do
01:06:12
◼
►
anything you just kind of wave it and it does it. I bought two hot dogs with
01:06:16
◼
►
Apple Pay last week. Oh yeah at the baseball game? Yeah it worked. It worked although
01:06:22
◼
►
Although the scanning, the passbook didn't work, but the guy was like, "Oh, this scanner
01:06:27
◼
►
is bad at devices, you should use her scanner."
01:06:30
◼
►
And I ended up scanning my passbook on my phone instead of the watch because I didn't
01:06:33
◼
►
want to make people wait in line behind me at that point.
01:06:37
◼
►
But it totally worked to, Apple Pay totally worked to buy hot dogs.
01:06:42
◼
►
That's like half of the Apple Pay purchases I've made have been hot dogs at a baseball
01:06:46
◼
►
But you know, hey, it works.
01:06:48
◼
►
I would be surprised if this is the first time you've had this next question.
01:06:52
◼
►
comes from Adam. Adam has said, "I'm abandoning Picture Life for now for the
01:06:56
◼
►
new Photos app, but I want to keep the Memories feature." So like many of these
01:07:00
◼
►
photo sharing services, Picture Life will send you like, "on this day" kind of
01:07:06
◼
►
pictures. Do you have any suggestions for this? Has this crossed your path yet?
01:07:12
◼
►
No. You know, in our little document you suggested Timehop, which
01:07:18
◼
►
mines your Twitter and Facebook feeds for pictures. And I would throw in that ThinkUp
01:07:24
◼
►
does that too. ThinkUp does a lot more than that, but one of the things that ThinkUp does
01:07:29
◼
►
is tell you about things that you did in the past. Timehop is very good at that. That doesn't
01:07:36
◼
►
help -- it doesn't mind like your whole photo library, only the things you share socially.
01:07:41
◼
►
I know there was -- I can't remember the name of this app, but it won't solve the problem
01:07:45
◼
►
anyway but it was a I think it was something that looked at Dropbox and did
01:07:49
◼
►
that for you but again that's also not probably gonna help in this scenario so
01:07:54
◼
►
it feels like there isn't anything maybe maybe there's an iOS app of some
01:07:59
◼
►
description that can look at in your photos library I don't know I don't know
01:08:04
◼
►
and I don't think you can set up a smart album to be you know show me everything
01:08:09
◼
►
that happened on today's date I don't think it works that way I don't think
01:08:13
◼
►
the smart albums feature lets you select, you know, it wants you to have very specific
01:08:19
◼
►
days, not like a rolling selection of a year ago today or whatever. It's a good question.
01:08:26
◼
►
I think Timehop is a great suggestion. If you've got photos that you shared, Timehop
01:08:30
◼
►
is great. It will tell you what your tweets and Facebook posts of the past on this day
01:08:35
◼
►
are. And it's an app and there's also an email. I like it.
01:08:39
◼
►
- Yeah, but it's unfortunately...
01:08:41
◼
►
- It's not all your stuff though.
01:08:42
◼
►
Because maybe some most of the stuff you want to remember is the stuff you don't share right the real
01:08:47
◼
►
personal moments. It's surprised, not surprises me, but this feels like something Apple could do and it feels like an Apple-y feature, right?
01:08:54
◼
►
It's bringing the personality into the photos.
01:08:57
◼
►
If the scripting support were better and maybe it can get better because they often will improve the scripting support.
01:09:03
◼
►
There is some at launch, but there could be more. If they made the scripting support better
01:09:08
◼
►
then you could have an app that, you know, basically poked your photos library and
01:09:13
◼
►
said, you know, look at this date in the past here and then did something and, you
01:09:17
◼
►
know, put together a slideshow or something like that. But right now
01:09:21
◼
►
there's nothing like that.
01:09:24
◼
►
Sorry Adam. Jonathan has asked, "Would it be helpful for the
01:09:28
◼
►
watch to have a network connectivity complication?" Now I had to go back and
01:09:33
◼
►
forth with Jonathan a little bit on this to try and understand what he was asking
01:09:37
◼
►
because I was saying, well, you know,
01:09:38
◼
►
if the watch can't connect to anything,
01:09:39
◼
►
it shows that little red thing with the cross through it.
01:09:43
◼
►
But he's saying, well, sometimes, it's right,
01:09:45
◼
►
sometimes the watch is connected to the phone,
01:09:47
◼
►
but the watch doesn't know that the phone has no service.
01:09:51
◼
►
I've seen this.
01:09:52
◼
►
So I think, my feeling on this is yes, in theory,
01:09:55
◼
►
it would be good to know,
01:09:56
◼
►
but I think the watch just doesn't know.
01:09:58
◼
►
So even having the complications is not gonna help
01:10:00
◼
►
because I just think sometimes the watch doesn't know
01:10:03
◼
►
it's not connected to the internet.
01:10:05
◼
►
It sounds to me like what really should happen here is that the phone should be passing whatever
01:10:10
◼
►
it passes to say, "We're not on the internet.
01:10:14
◼
►
We're not connected to the watch," for that same notification, or a different one, or
01:10:21
◼
►
a different icon.
01:10:22
◼
►
But I feel like a complication is too much.
01:10:23
◼
►
I feel like they've got the little alert spot in the top of the watch face where you'll
01:10:28
◼
►
see a red dot if there's a notification, or you'll see an alert if there's...
01:10:31
◼
►
- Or a little airplane, if you're in airplane mode.
01:10:34
◼
►
- Or the little, like is it an hourglass or something?
01:10:37
◼
►
Or a moon when it's do not disturb, right?
01:10:40
◼
►
It's a moon.
01:10:42
◼
►
- Yes, a moon.
01:10:43
◼
►
- So I could see it there,
01:10:45
◼
►
or continuing the existing warning note.
01:10:50
◼
►
It seems really fiddly to have something
01:10:52
◼
►
more complicated than that.
01:10:53
◼
►
It would seem to me better that the iPhone is more aware
01:10:57
◼
►
like I don't have service right now.
01:10:58
◼
►
I'm not on Wi-Fi, I don't have cellular service, and would just tell the watch, you know, it's
01:11:04
◼
►
one of those times where we're having connectivity problems.
01:11:06
◼
►
It's a good question, though.
01:11:08
◼
►
I have not experienced this situation, but I think that that would be the right way to
01:11:14
◼
►
do it, right?
01:11:15
◼
►
It's just the phone knows whether it's connected or not.
01:11:16
◼
►
So the phone should share that information as appropriate with the watch, and the watch
01:11:20
◼
►
should be able to adjust accordingly.
01:11:21
◼
►
Rob has asked "Could we see an option in settings to allow the watch to stay on longer than a few seconds, battery permitting?"
01:11:29
◼
►
This is something that we think we're gonna, that we will see. I don't see it happening because you know, if you increased it, like if you increased it by a quarter of the amount of time or twice the amount of time, you were probably decreasing the battery life by a quarter or a half.
01:11:45
◼
►
and they're just not gonna do that.
01:11:48
◼
►
I mean, I have to say, right, now, you know,
01:11:50
◼
►
I've had this watch for a couple of weeks now,
01:11:51
◼
►
I'm happy to say that, I really like it.
01:11:54
◼
►
And my battery life, I mean,
01:11:55
◼
►
sometimes I get to the end of my day,
01:11:57
◼
►
and my days can be quite long,
01:11:58
◼
►
and I'm at 50%, like, quite frequently.
01:12:03
◼
►
So, you know, I wonder,
01:12:04
◼
►
maybe give me an extra couple of seconds,
01:12:06
◼
►
but I think an extra couple of seconds
01:12:08
◼
►
is not gonna make much of a difference.
01:12:10
◼
►
I feel like it would probably need to be, like,
01:12:12
◼
►
twice the amount of time, and then at that point,
01:12:14
◼
►
you're cutting the battery life in half,
01:12:15
◼
►
I don't want to do that. It's a trade-off and I think looking at what's at hand, I think
01:12:21
◼
►
Apple just made what they consider to be the best trade-off.
01:12:24
◼
►
I think, so my prediction is going to be Apple's going to loosen up a little bit on the battery
01:12:29
◼
►
life moving forward because I feel like Apple was terrified of being dinged for having not
01:12:36
◼
►
being able to get through a day.
01:12:38
◼
►
And maybe there are people out there who are using this thing or maybe this is in anticipation
01:12:42
◼
►
of having more native apps come down the road. But right now, I feel like they overshot.
01:12:47
◼
►
And again, other people may have different experiences, but everybody I've talked to,
01:12:50
◼
►
and certainly my personal experience, is I don't run out of battery on the phone or on
01:12:54
◼
►
the watch. It's not even close. And so yeah, could they, as an option or even as a default,
01:13:00
◼
►
stretch it a little bit? Put a little, you know, let that watch face stay on a little
01:13:07
◼
►
bit longer before it decides to shut off? Because I do get annoyed that it's, you know,
01:13:12
◼
►
oh, it's already off.
01:13:12
◼
►
No, no, no, I, I, you know, come back, right?
01:13:15
◼
►
I wanted you to come back.
01:13:16
◼
►
Why did you just turn off right there?
01:13:18
◼
►
They could tweak that a little bit,
01:13:20
◼
►
seeing it out in the world
01:13:21
◼
►
and realizing that maybe they overshot.
01:13:23
◼
►
Maybe they could tune it a little bit more,
01:13:26
◼
►
either as an option or just as the default.
01:13:28
◼
►
So it wouldn't surprise me
01:13:29
◼
►
because I feel like everybody's basically saying,
01:13:31
◼
►
hey, it lasts through the day, no problem.
01:13:34
◼
►
Then again, they may be saving up all that battery life
01:13:36
◼
►
because they know there's gonna be a, you know,
01:13:38
◼
►
a wave of native watch apps down the road
01:13:40
◼
►
that's gonna make it more, you know, more power use
01:13:44
◼
►
in the device and drain that battery faster.
01:13:47
◼
►
I don't know.
01:13:48
◼
►
- I wonder, right, if the pulling for,
01:13:50
◼
►
I mean, I don't know, I have no idea,
01:13:52
◼
►
but when I open overcast and in overcast,
01:13:55
◼
►
like the watch is sending a thing to the phone
01:13:59
◼
►
to try and get data and they're exchanging stuff back,
01:14:01
◼
►
that seems to me like a battery draining process.
01:14:04
◼
►
That just feels like all that data being passed
01:14:07
◼
►
backwards and forwards every time I open the app, it feels like there's gonna be a
01:14:11
◼
►
lot going on there. So you know, I wonder what's gonna happen with
01:14:16
◼
►
the battery life. I mean, I guess different things are gonna affect it
01:14:19
◼
►
differently, but it might still be okay. It might be, but I do feel like
01:14:25
◼
►
that it's possible that there'll either be a setting here to keep the screen on
01:14:29
◼
►
a little bit longer, or that they might even tweak it themselves, because if my
01:14:34
◼
►
impression is correct, watch battery life has not been a problem. And, you know, and
01:14:41
◼
►
I would definitely set the time out a little higher than it's set right now in my own personal
01:14:47
◼
►
life because I don't--I've never come close to running the battery down, and I have had
01:14:51
◼
►
on several occasions been frustrated that it went to sleep a little bit too fast.
01:14:55
◼
►
-Sure, yeah. No, I agree with that.
01:14:58
◼
►
-We'll see, but it would not--it would--honestly, I think it's more likely that Apple would
01:15:03
◼
►
just tweak this then it would be an option in settings only because Apple
01:15:06
◼
►
likes to avoid adding fiddly options and settings but it's possible.
01:15:11
◼
►
So this last upgrade for this week comes from Lex, not that Lex.
01:15:17
◼
►
Not that Lex. And Lex wants to know how do you treat your Mac Docs, for example
01:15:24
◼
►
screen location, what are the apps you keep in them, what are the folders, that kind of
01:15:27
◼
►
I'll go first. I will talk about my MacBook Pro, which I consider to be my Mac.
01:15:33
◼
►
The Mac Pro is like this dinghy over there doing its production stuff.
01:15:38
◼
►
So I don't really have it set up the way I would. So I have my
01:15:45
◼
►
dock is on the left. Where's your menu bar? Is it on the top? My menu
01:15:51
◼
►
bar is on the top today. Sometimes I move it to the bottom, you know, just to mix it up.
01:15:55
◼
►
to mix it up. I don't recommend that. Today my dock is on the left. I have it
01:16:02
◼
►
down... Are those pop-up menus, drop-up menus when it's on the bottom?
01:16:06
◼
►
They are. What do you call those menus? They are. Pop-up menus.
01:16:11
◼
►
Yep. Mm-hmm. Good. I have, naturally, Finder. I have the App Store there. Not 100% sure
01:16:19
◼
►
why looking at that, why I have it there, but it's there. I have Chrome, System
01:16:23
◼
►
preferences, mailbox, messages, tweetbot, lingo which is my IRC app, slack, omni
01:16:29
◼
►
focus, clear, Skype, Evernote, byword and Spotify. I then have a downloads folder
01:16:37
◼
►
which is in the grid configuration and displayed as a stack and then I have
01:16:45
◼
►
naturally the Recycle Pin. Or trash. I guess it should be called. I too have my menu bar at the top. Oh.
01:16:54
◼
►
Yeah, that's where I like it. Trendsetter. It's traditional. It's, well, it's, you know, I've been
01:16:58
◼
►
using the Mac a long time. You know, the original Mac had the menu bar at the top,
01:17:01
◼
►
so. You get stuck in your ways, you know. Yeah. In my dock, I have my dock pin to
01:17:08
◼
►
the right, I'm one of those people, Finder, BB Edit, Safari, Mailplane, iTunes,
01:17:18
◼
►
Messages, Twitter, Photos, because I'm writing a book about photos. I'm done. I
01:17:25
◼
►
wrote the book. They're producing it now. It'll be out soon.
01:17:28
◼
►
Reminders, and then below that is stuff that's open, so right now Skype,
01:17:35
◼
►
lingo and Slack. One of these days I will probably make Slack a permanent, in fact
01:17:40
◼
►
I'm gonna make Slack a permanent resident now. Yeah. I'm gonna put it right next to
01:17:44
◼
►
Twitter there. And then below that I've got documents, downloads, and Dropbox
01:17:47
◼
►
folders all listed. Just, I have a question on my own, but a really good
01:17:53
◼
►
question in the chatroom from Rafola. How does the doc on the right affect
01:17:57
◼
►
Notification Center? What happens? Does it just push everything over? Well, in
01:18:03
◼
►
Yosemite Notification Center doesn't push anything, it just slides over, so when
01:18:06
◼
►
when you activate Notification Center it slides over the dock as well as
01:18:11
◼
►
everything else that's over on that side.
01:18:15
◼
►
I was gonna ask, MailPlane.
01:18:19
◼
►
Not mailbox.
01:18:21
◼
►
No, I'm using MailPlane. You know, I...
01:18:25
◼
►
So I wrote the article about like alternatives to Apple Mail, and I said,
01:18:29
◼
►
well, I think mailbox is my favorite of all of the ones
01:18:32
◼
►
that are sort of like general, of general use.
01:18:35
◼
►
But I use Gmail, and so I use Mailplane,
01:18:39
◼
►
and I've been sticking with it.
01:18:41
◼
►
It's, Mailplane is a wrapper around Gmail
01:18:45
◼
►
that makes it more Mac-like.
01:18:46
◼
►
You can drag in stuff, and it's got Mac keyboard shortcuts,
01:18:50
◼
►
and it's just a little more Mac-friendly interface
01:18:53
◼
►
on the Gmail web interface.
01:18:55
◼
►
And I'm finding myself just using it all the time.
01:18:57
◼
►
I've sort of not gone back to Apple Mail.
01:19:00
◼
►
And Mailbox, I really like the organizational features of it.
01:19:03
◼
►
I feel like the Mac version of Mailbox is, you know--
01:19:08
◼
►
- It's finicky tea, but it is a beta.
01:19:10
◼
►
- It is a beta, will it ever be a final?
01:19:13
◼
►
I really like features of it,
01:19:16
◼
►
but I also get frustrated by some
01:19:18
◼
►
of the other features of it.
01:19:19
◼
►
And I, since I'm using just Gmail at this point,
01:19:24
◼
►
on my own domain, but it's still just Gmail,
01:19:26
◼
►
that's what I'm using. I, you know, I go back and forth, I try other stuff, but I find that
01:19:31
◼
►
right now I'm spending more time using MailPlane than anything else for email.
01:19:37
◼
►
Cool. I mean, you can just use a web browser too, but I like MailPlane because it adds
01:19:41
◼
►
some Mackie stuff and runs in its own app, and you can set it as the default mail app,
01:19:46
◼
►
and so if you click a mail link, it opens a new Gmail mail window. That's really nice
01:19:52
◼
►
to have all that.
01:19:54
◼
►
- It always interests me when people use mailbox
01:19:56
◼
►
on one device but not on all devices.
01:19:59
◼
►
- Yeah, and I am still using mailbox on my iPhone.
01:20:03
◼
►
- And I like it there.
01:20:04
◼
►
I like the swipe to classify.
01:20:06
◼
►
That's the thing is that all of the classifications
01:20:09
◼
►
of mailbox are just folders in Gmail, labels in Gmail.
01:20:12
◼
►
So I have access to all that same stuff.
01:20:15
◼
►
What I'm not using as much is the snooze features
01:20:19
◼
►
because they don't really work.
01:20:21
◼
►
- I'm also a big fan of the reordering.
01:20:24
◼
►
Right? Right. I don't do a lot of that, but it's one of those things that I wish the mailbox version on the Mac was a little more stable and had a little more attention given to it, because I really like it.
01:20:37
◼
►
But, you know, it's—mail playing for me because I'm in Gmail all the time is—and I'm kind of used to the interface—I do like it.
01:20:48
◼
►
mailbox on the Mac, it does weird things and whenever they release a new
01:20:54
◼
►
update for the beta it fixes the weird things but introduces more equally weird
01:20:58
◼
►
things. Like at the moment I have it in full screen right? If I open a new email
01:21:03
◼
►
previously it used to just put that the compose window over the top of the full
01:21:09
◼
►
screen window right? It just kept it within the application but now it opens
01:21:13
◼
►
a separate full screen window which is just the worst it's the worst possible
01:21:19
◼
►
thing to do and like also if I open the preferences it opens another full screen
01:21:24
◼
►
window with black around it and it doesn't have a close button like it's
01:21:29
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just yeah and I emailed them about it and they were like thanks for the
01:21:33
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►
feedback and it's like that was not the response okay bug report like thank you
01:21:40
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►
That's like, "Hey, buddies."
01:21:43
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- Yeah, it's too bad because I like so many things about it.
01:21:48
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►
And then there are things that are just super weird
01:21:50
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►
and I feel like, you know, come on, you're a male client.
01:21:55
◼
►
- Wait, what?
01:21:57
◼
►
- Yeah, wait, what?
01:22:00
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Oh, come on.
01:22:02
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- Okay, right.
01:22:04
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It's time for Myke in the movies.
01:22:05
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- Okay, so we're releasing you.
01:22:08
◼
►
If you don't want to hear Myke talk about Raiders of the Lost Ark, you can leave now. It's okay.
01:22:12
◼
►
But before you leave, there's something Myke needs to tell you.
01:22:16
◼
►
It's very important before you leave that you stay to listen to me talk about GoToMeeting from Citrix,
01:22:22
◼
►
because they can do awesome things for you.
01:22:25
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If you think about all of the time, the money, and the hassle it can take to hold a meeting,
01:22:31
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►
these things can be atrocious. Like, I used to be in a big company,
01:22:35
◼
►
and we used to hold lots of meetings, and if I used to think about—
01:22:37
◼
►
I went to Scotland for a meeting once. I got on a plane to fly to Scotland for a meeting.
01:22:42
◼
►
That's insanity. And the main reason is because they didn't want to do it on a call. They wanted
01:22:47
◼
►
to see me. Well, if we were to just use GoToMeeting, they could have seen me because you can turn on
01:22:52
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►
your webcam and with HD quality, you can talk to each other. GoToMeeting can... It's not just
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a money saver. It's also a hassle saver. If you think about having to... Say you've got four
01:23:05
◼
►
meetings in a day, right? Rather than traveling from place to place to place or even from
01:23:09
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►
like different floors in the buildings and like disrupting yourself and you forget your
01:23:13
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notebook because you left it on your desk and it ices you out all the time. GoToMeeting
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can take all of that stuff away from you. It is the best way to meet with clients and
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co-workers online. It's just a smarter way to meet. You can do it from any computer,
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any tablet, any smartphone. You don't have to worry about travel expenses like I mentioned.
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You don't have to worry about traffic. GoToMeeting can take that away from you. You can draw
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to join a meeting. Anyone on your team can join a meeting by just clicking a link. If
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you don't need any sign ups they make it as easy as possible for people to join. You can
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even share screens to present, review and get feedback all in real time. Because with
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GoToMeeting everyone sees what you're seeing so your team can get on the same page and
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just get going. I want you to sign up for GoToMeeting today. You can try it for free
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for 30 days with nothing to lose. GoToMeeting.com so visit GoToMeeting.com and click the try
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Try it free button.
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If you do it now, you'll have your first meeting up and running in just minutes.
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So that's gotomeeting.com for your free 30 day trial.
01:24:12
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Thank you so much to Citrix GoToMeeting for supporting this week's episode of Upgrade
01:24:18
◼
►
and Myke at the Movies.
01:24:23
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Myke at the Movies.
01:24:24
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We're going to the movies with Myke.
01:24:26
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What did Myke see this time?
01:24:28
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It's Raiders of the Law.
01:24:29
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I can't do it.
01:24:30
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I can't be Elliot Kaelin singing the, uh, it's Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the
01:24:35
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Lost Ark, which is not its title, but it's how it's marketed now.
01:24:38
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It's just Raiders of the Lost Ark.
01:24:40
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Steven Spielberg.
01:24:41
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Yes, so this is one of the things that I noticed originally, it was just called Raiders of
01:24:45
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the Lost Ark.
01:24:46
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And then when I searched on IMDB to find some names of the characters for my notes, it took
01:24:50
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me a moment to find it, because I was looking for Indiana Jones and it wasn't coming up
01:24:57
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and then realized that, oh, it was just called Raiders of the Lost Ark because nobody cared
01:25:02
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about Indiana Jones before the movie came out, right?
01:25:06
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Why would you care?
01:25:07
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Oh, Indiana Jones?
01:25:08
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I haven't heard of that guy before.
01:25:09
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I'm going to love that movie.
01:25:11
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And they probably, I'm going to assume, didn't know that it was going to be a franchise,
01:25:16
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Well, I mean, I'm sure they hoped.
01:25:20
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I mean, this is Steven Spielberg and George Lucas at the...
01:25:23
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I don't know about the height of Steven Spielberg's career because he went on to have
01:25:27
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this amazing career after this, but this was like the height of their fame as these young
01:25:31
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producers and directors who had made these giant blockbuster films, and they decided to collaborate
01:25:38
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on Raiders of the Lost Ark, and everybody went crazy like, "Oh my god, it's the next big thing."
01:25:43
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So I imagine they thought it would be a big franchise.
01:25:46
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And Han Solo.
01:25:47
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And starring Han Solo. Exactly right. Who was, I think, reluctant, Harrison Ford was initially
01:25:53
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reluctant to be in this movie because he felt it was too similar to Han Solo, but he did it.
01:25:59
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►
So before, kind of before going in...
01:26:02
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Tom Selleck was going to be Indiana Jones by the way, but he couldn't do it because of Magnum P.I.
01:26:07
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Yeah. Yeah. I know. What a world. There's a parallel universe out there where Tom Selleck
01:26:13
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was in Raiders of the Lost Ark. I can imagine that. I mean, I'll talk about the character
01:26:18
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►
in general in a minute, like as I go through, but I can imagine Tom Selleck also fitting that role.
01:26:23
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►
Like in my mind I get that. Okay so, before I watched this movie, there were a couple of
01:26:35
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things that I knew about Indiana Jones. Right? Okay. I knew the character, right? I knew,
01:26:43
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you know, I know, I know Indiana Jones as a character.
01:26:46
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Um, I know about-- Good start.
01:26:48
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I know about the boulder, right? I know about the face melting, and I know about
01:26:53
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sliding under a closing door. You know about,
01:26:56
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about what? The face melting. What was the first one? The boulder.
01:27:01
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Oh, the boulder, okay, yes. I, I, you know, I almost heard,
01:27:04
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►
I know about Ebola. That's not really relevant to this at all.
01:27:08
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The boulder, the boulder, the roll-- giant rolling boulder.
01:27:11
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►
Didn't you get the Ebonus subplot of Francis of the Last Dawn of Jason?
01:27:15
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►
I missed the subtext there.
01:27:17
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►
So I'm gonna go through and as I do and and talk through my notes
01:27:22
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►
I do very much enjoy doing this, but it is very peculiar
01:27:26
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►
I'm sure you feel sort of time to to watch a movie and take notes on the movie because I don't know how you do
01:27:32
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►
Pause the movie and make some notes in a start again. Do you do that when you take notes and movies?
01:27:39
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►
No, because it's generally no I just generally just keep taking the notes
01:27:43
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►
So if something really amazing happens immediately after something other amazing and noteworthy then I might miss it in which case I would back
01:27:50
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►
It up I suppose. Yeah, cuz I felt that sometimes I'd lose I like it's like 20 minutes later
01:27:55
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►
And I don't know what's happening. It's because I realized I lost 30 seconds, but those 30 seconds
01:27:59
◼
►
Something really important happened in them like that's happened to me. So that's why I pause
01:28:02
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►
So I don't end up with more confusion later
01:28:07
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►
So yeah, my first note is I was, you know, noting Indiana Jones. There is no Indiana Jones in the title.
01:28:13
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►
And this is, my next note that I have here is something that I feel was pretty,
01:28:17
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►
pretty, a pretty consistent feeling that you're gonna hear me mention quite a bit. But whilst I think a whip is super cool,
01:28:25
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►
I don't think it's
01:28:27
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►
probably the most effective weapon in any instance that he uses it.
01:28:31
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►
Well, it's, it's,
01:28:33
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►
It's tool. I think it's not his only tool. It is kind of his trademark, but it's not his only tool.
01:28:38
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And I don't know, archaeologist, you're getting in and out of scrapes and funny areas,
01:28:43
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►
and obviously it's quite versatile with what he does with it. He's very good at the whip.
01:28:48
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►
Yeah, that's my thing though. It's like I don't think anybody could be that good.
01:28:52
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►
Well, this is a little like when you're playing Dungeons & Dragons and somebody says,
01:28:57
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►
"I'm going to do something with rope," right? It's like rope doesn't do that.
01:29:00
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►
Sure, you could try to do that.
01:29:02
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►
What do you think this rope is, this magic rope?
01:29:04
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►
Because rope is very limited in its utility, and I think whips are similarly limited.
01:29:10
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►
Yeah, it's like any time a grappling hook is used to cross a cavern in any movie, grappling
01:29:15
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hooks do not do that in the one go.
01:29:18
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►
I saw Star Wars, I watched Star Wars this weekend, and when Luke and Leia are going
01:29:25
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across that cavern you know in the Death Star and he like throws up this
01:29:30
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►
grappling hook from his Batman utility belt which apparently Luke had for the
01:29:34
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►
rest of the movie that nobody bothered to mention. I don't know where, it's never explained.
01:29:39
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►
I need to cross caverns sometimes.
01:29:42
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►
And you know he uses that and he throws it up there and in one it like goes around and hooks on perfectly.
01:29:47
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►
Yeah amazing. Just what you need for that in case you are trapped in a
01:29:53
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►
place where people work that has giant bottomless pits. These things happen.
01:29:58
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►
Workplace hazards, you know? But this isn't about Star Wars. No. I found the
01:30:03
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►
beginning of this movie to be very mysterious, like, there's no explanation
01:30:08
◼
►
to what is happening, right? You're just in in the jungle, and also, like,
01:30:13
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►
something that I found really interesting, and I wonder how people took
01:30:16
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►
to this when it first came out, because Indy is in this first scene, right, when
01:30:20
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►
they're going after the idol. There is no kind of clear explanation as to whether
01:30:26
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►
this character is a good guy or a bad guy.
01:30:29
◼
►
Well in fact, if you look you'll see that he's in shadow at the beginning and his back has turned to the camera
01:30:38
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►
and we don't actually see his face for a long time. He's mysterious at the beginning.
01:30:46
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►
Because then it's like the people that look like they're up to no good and they have accents, right?
01:30:52
◼
►
And then he's siding with these people and it's like, is this a good person or a bad person?
01:30:58
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►
I can see how that, you know, people might have thought that because I was when I was watching-
01:31:02
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►
He is the star of the movie so, you know.
01:31:04
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►
Yeah but you didn't necessarily- well okay, I mean, if you knew Harrison Ford, right?
01:31:09
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►
But I mean this is assuming knowledge of it, but anyway.
01:31:11
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►
It doesn't mean he's a good guy.
01:31:15
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►
then we go through the whole scene with Alfred Molina, who may be my favorite character in
01:31:21
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►
this movie. I think he is amazing. He's just so great. All of his terror, everything,
01:31:29
◼
►
is just brilliant. And they go and grab the idol. And so much of what I knew about Indiana Jones
01:31:37
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►
happens in this sequence. In that opening sequence, yeah.
01:31:41
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►
which is something that I found really interesting. I didn't expect to get both the boulder and the
01:31:46
◼
►
sliding under the door in the same movie, let alone in the first 10 minutes. And even like the
01:31:52
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►
replacing the idol with a bag of sand. All of these things have been played out so many times,
01:32:00
◼
►
but like watching them here, it's always difficult when you're watching a movie like this. Having
01:32:05
◼
►
seeing a bunch of movies that like use things that are probably unique to this
01:32:12
◼
►
movie like later that become tropes because when you watch them you have
01:32:16
◼
►
less appreciation I think so I try and leave those things at the door and
01:32:20
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►
appreciate the movie what it is but it is very difficult when you have all this
01:32:23
◼
►
like retroactive knowledge about the film.
01:32:27
◼
►
Although the film is itself a you know it's an homage to adventure
01:32:33
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►
just as Star Wars is really, to adventure serials of the 50s I guess and before. So
01:32:38
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►
it's not you know it's a re-spinning of some old tropes into things that would
01:32:43
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►
then became so influential that you saw them again afterward because of this.
01:32:48
◼
►
And then again another consistent theme along with the the whip is how gory this
01:32:54
◼
►
movie is. Surprised me. Well there are yeah so Zepito
01:33:01
◼
►
takes the takes the idol and doesn't give back the whip, but he is not careful and gets impaled by the
01:33:08
◼
►
spikes just as Forstahl, uh, Forstahl, not Straht-Forstahl, but Forstahl bought it here earlier and they find
01:33:15
◼
►
his skeleton and then and then as Indiana goes under the with his whip and goes under the the
01:33:20
◼
►
little dropping down door which is dropping for a very long time, he finds Alfred Molina impaled
01:33:29
◼
►
likewise on the spikes and says adios, Sapido, and takes the takes the idol and and then runs away.
01:33:36
◼
►
That's a pretty gory moment just just then, right? Yeah. And then later there's the face melting and
01:33:43
◼
►
things that happen at the end. It's not it's not there's not quite so much in the middle, but um
01:33:48
◼
►
oh well other than things involving the airplanes airplane propellers in the desert yeah okay fair
01:33:53
◼
►
enough yeah I'll give it to you. I've noted down more gory parts which I'll get to. That's the gory
01:33:58
◼
►
details is what you're saying. Indeed. Then of course we have the boulder, right?
01:34:03
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►
Which this is such a huge action moment to put at the start of a movie because
01:34:09
◼
►
it is so insane, right? This huge boulder chasing you and you're trying to escape
01:34:14
◼
►
from it. Lots of danger, lots of excitement, and this like real like rise
01:34:19
◼
►
of action right at the start of the movie reminds me of a James Bond film.
01:34:24
◼
►
he's going on this little adventure which sets up the character.
01:34:27
◼
►
That's definitely the model here. James Bond is absolutely one of the models for Indiana Jones and for this movie.
01:34:36
◼
►
You know, the flavor is a little different, but it's definitely one of the models.
01:34:40
◼
►
And then also it's that cliffhanger feel of a serial, of a movie serial, where you're coming in at the end of his adventure
01:34:45
◼
►
and seeing, you know, how will he escape the rolling boulder and you back up and sort of see the action that came before
01:34:52
◼
►
and now we'll see the resolution.
01:34:54
◼
►
And they're trying to give you that feeling too.
01:34:55
◼
►
But that's the same thing that James Bond does.
01:34:57
◼
►
It's the exact same thing.
01:34:58
◼
►
You're usually in those James Bond movies,
01:35:00
◼
►
you're catching up on something
01:35:01
◼
►
that isn't related to the movie.
01:35:02
◼
►
And it's just sort of like,
01:35:03
◼
►
here's what happened in this off-screen adventure
01:35:06
◼
►
that James Bond had,
01:35:07
◼
►
and now we're getting the resolution of it.
01:35:08
◼
►
But it's definitely very Bond-like.
01:35:10
◼
►
- Like Indiana Jones, I'm also scared of snakes, right?
01:35:14
◼
►
'Cause he has the snake that's in the plane,
01:35:15
◼
►
which also made me laugh,
01:35:16
◼
►
'cause there was a snake on the plane, which made me smile.
01:35:21
◼
►
So little did I know at this point that I was not set up for a good ride here.
01:35:26
◼
►
There were going to be a lot more snakes as the movie progresses.
01:35:29
◼
►
Yes, that is a, they're setting up his fear of snakes for later payoff.
01:35:33
◼
►
And then we have in a row here, we have two in a row, massive shocks to me about this movie.
01:35:39
◼
►
Shock number one is that Indiana Jones is a professor.
01:35:44
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►
I did not know this.
01:35:46
◼
►
And I was extremely surprised because at first I thought, oh, like,
01:35:51
◼
►
That's a surprise. He must have retired, right?
01:35:54
◼
►
And now he is a professor and he is going to be called back into action.
01:35:58
◼
►
But no, he is a professor who, as part of his professor duties, goes on massive adventures.
01:36:04
◼
►
Which I love the thought that there are archaeologists that are teaching archaeologists
01:36:09
◼
►
who are sent by "the museum" whatever that is, "the museum"
01:36:14
◼
►
to go out into the world and steal things.
01:36:17
◼
►
- I love the... - The university museum, I guess.
01:36:19
◼
►
university museum that we must protect. I also really loved in as 80s movies will
01:36:28
◼
►
be... this is in the 80s? Yeah it's 1981 I want to say. Okay great. In a great 80s
01:36:35
◼
►
movie fashion all of the girls are in love with him in the class to the point
01:36:41
◼
►
where I really really enjoyed the "love you" written on that one girl's eyelids.
01:36:48
◼
►
genius but and the guy puts the the male student puts the apple on the desk too
01:36:55
◼
►
I love that so everybody loves dr. Jones but I have to say Harrison Ford in this
01:37:01
◼
►
movie is an extremely handsome man like there are points in this movie where I'm
01:37:06
◼
►
like oh my god look at you absolutely no actually it's quite a shock right we've
01:37:13
◼
►
seen them all scruffy in in the jungle and then you cut to him writing on the
01:37:18
◼
►
chalkboard and you're like whoa whoa whoa what just happened right yeah cleans up
01:37:23
◼
►
he cleans up kind of nice and that's how we we meet Dr. Jones and his element for
01:37:28
◼
►
the first time and I do you know now I feel having seen these movies that
01:37:32
◼
►
Indiana Jones is more attractive than Han Solo oh yeah yeah I agree so he's
01:37:39
◼
►
He's just a scruffy looking nerf herder.
01:37:44
◼
►
The next huge surprise for me that I was not expecting was the Nazis.
01:37:48
◼
►
I didn't know that the Nazis were going to be in this movie.
01:37:52
◼
►
1936 did not set off any alarm bells.
01:37:55
◼
►
I just didn't expect it.
01:37:58
◼
►
I was very surprised that my now I know him as an archaeology professor is going to be
01:38:03
◼
►
fighting the Nazis in this movie.
01:38:07
◼
►
And you know, this ties into these two points tying to "archeologists are cool."
01:38:13
◼
►
- Archaeologists are...how many archaeology careers were launched with Raiders of the
01:38:17
◼
►
I don't know.
01:38:18
◼
►
But it's...and it's a nice...I mean, it's not...he ends up fighting the Nazis, right?
01:38:22
◼
►
But it's really about the Nazis and the Nazis are after an archaeological item and the U.S.
01:38:29
◼
►
government says, you know, "We don't want him to get this item."
01:38:33
◼
►
And so Indiana Jones is on the case at that point.
01:38:35
◼
►
So it's sort of like, who's going to get the item?
01:38:37
◼
►
Who's going to get the Ark of the Covenant?
01:38:39
◼
►
And then the globe-trotting adventure begins.
01:38:42
◼
►
And the Nazis, pre-war Nazi Germany are the villains, which is interesting.
01:38:46
◼
►
So there are no open hostilities.
01:38:47
◼
►
He can move around the world, but it's very clear that the Nazis and Hitler are not...
01:38:56
◼
►
It's not going to go well, right?
01:38:59
◼
►
So they're good villains to have at that point.
01:39:01
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- Hitler is mentioned so much in this movie.
01:39:04
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I was waiting for him to make an appearance.
01:39:07
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- Yeah, he appears in "The Last Crusade."
01:39:10
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- In a jokey scene that I don't really enjoy,
01:39:13
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but it's funny, it's so broad that I don't,
01:39:17
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►
one of my criticisms of "The Last Crusade,"
01:39:19
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which is a very good movie,
01:39:20
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►
it's not at Raiders level, but it's a good movie.
01:39:24
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It's the other good movie in the series, I would say.
01:39:26
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That's gonna make some people sad,
01:39:28
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but the Nazis are much more slapstick villains in that,
01:39:32
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whereas they feel really menacing here, for the most part.
01:39:36
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-Yeah. There is a lot of slapstick in this movie.
01:39:38
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-Yeah. Hitler signs an autograph for somebody in "Last Crusade."
01:39:42
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It's not -- Anyway, yeah. Yeah.
01:39:45
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-Okay, so then we have -- We discover Marian, right?
01:39:51
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-Marian, yeah. Marian Raven-Wood.
01:39:53
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-She's drinking an awful lot of alcohol.
01:39:55
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She's having -- -She's drinking the other Nepalese
01:40:00
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or wherever they are, Tibetans are under the table.
01:40:03
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►
She recovers extremely fast from the amount of alcohol that she consumed as Indi arrives.
01:40:09
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She's really good at holding her liquor is the lesson we've learned about Marion.
01:40:14
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And then, you know, so then, so basically Indi is on his quest now to find the Ark of
01:40:19
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the Government, which is what the Ten Commandments were expected to be stowed into. There is
01:40:26
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There's a whole, you know, we set up the idea of there could be magic within here at this
01:40:31
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Yeah, let me pause you just to say, and we talked about this on the incomparable episode
01:40:35
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about Raiders, I think it's actually kind of a masterful scene, the exposition scene
01:40:38
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that happens where they're like in the auditorium at the college and it's Indy and his mentor
01:40:43
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and the two guys from the government.
01:40:47
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►
And they explain all this stuff about the Ark of the Covenant and all that.
01:40:51
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►
is the maybe my favorite exposition scene in any film because it's so
01:40:56
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►
dramatic and interesting and yet it really is like a guy on at a chalkboard
01:41:00
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►
explaining the Bible. But the other thing is it doesn't feel like I mean it is
01:41:04
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►
exposition it doesn't have the exposition feeling to it. That's why it's
01:41:08
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►
so good. Yeah it is being explained to these two people because these two
01:41:12
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►
people clearly don't understand what they're dealing with and it works it
01:41:17
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►
what I agree with you I didn't realize until now how well that scene actually
01:41:21
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►
worked because it kind of I just took it in as information I needed. So India has
01:41:26
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►
arrived and he has asked for it's like an amulet. The headpiece of the staff of
01:41:31
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►
Ra which is like on a necklace in Nepal. His old mentor Abner is dead but
01:41:38
◼
►
his daughter and Indy's ex-girlfriend Marion is running this
01:41:44
◼
►
bar and she says she knows where it is come back tomorrow. And then some evil
01:41:51
◼
►
German accents appear.
01:41:53
◼
►
- You know, the most evil that you could imagine
01:41:57
◼
►
a German accent to be.
01:41:58
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►
Like it's not just a German accent,
01:42:00
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►
there's also like a weirdness to the voice, like you know.
01:42:02
◼
►
- Oh yeah, well it's almost like a Peter Lorre kind of thing
01:42:04
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►
where it's, I think what Todt says, the Nazi in question,
01:42:08
◼
►
she's like gonna get a drink for you and your men
01:42:10
◼
►
when she realizes they're gonna be threatening her.
01:42:12
◼
►
And he says, "We are not thirsty."
01:42:15
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►
And it's like, oh my God.
01:42:17
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►
- Your fire is dying.
01:42:20
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►
- Yeah, so creepy, yeah.
01:42:23
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►
He's a bad guy, suffice it to say, that's a bad guy.
01:42:26
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- Not only is he wearing all black,
01:42:28
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and then later in the movie where he gets like
01:42:30
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the nunchucks coat hanger, like what is that thing about?
01:42:34
◼
►
- That's a pretty good gag though.
01:42:36
◼
►
Oh my god, what's it gonna do with that?
01:42:37
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►
Oh, he's just hanging up his coat.
01:42:39
◼
►
- So this is another point, again, whilst it's cool
01:42:42
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►
using a whip to grab a hot poker
01:42:44
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whilst it's in inches from somebody's face,
01:42:47
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►
I think bad idea.
01:42:48
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►
I think that that is a poor choice.
01:42:51
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The tools that are available at a time, I would say.
01:42:53
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►
He has a gun!
01:42:54
◼
►
Because he gets it out next.
01:42:56
◼
►
But he wants to pull the poker away so it doesn't burn Marion.
01:43:00
◼
►
I think that there's more...
01:43:02
◼
►
He could have just easily whipped her in the face at that point.
01:43:06
◼
►
Or whipped it forward into her face.
01:43:09
◼
►
That's what I expect, right?
01:43:10
◼
►
The force of the whip hitting the poker would have hit her in the face.
01:43:15
◼
►
Indiana Jones is that good.
01:43:17
◼
►
It appears so, wouldn't it? So this is where a lot of gore is occurring. There is a gunfight,
01:43:25
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►
that happens in the bar, and there is an incredible amount of blood here. There are
01:43:32
◼
►
lots of people on fire, and it's just surprising to me. There's one point where someone gets shot
01:43:39
◼
►
in the head, and it's not like what you usually see in a movie. The guy gets shot in the head,
01:43:45
◼
►
You see a gunshot wound immediately appear on his head. It doesn't move. He just falls forward which is actually I believe
01:43:51
◼
►
After watching mythbusters what actually does happen like you don't fly across the room when you get shot sure
01:43:57
◼
►
right, you just stop where you are and fall down and it's
01:44:00
◼
►
Real enough looking that it was very surprising to me
01:44:04
◼
►
There's lots of people with blood pouring out of their mouths after they're shot in the back
01:44:07
◼
►
You get you get the thing where Indy Indy thinks he's been shot by the guy
01:44:10
◼
►
But it turns out that that the guy has been shot and his mouth opens and blood pours out and he falls down
01:44:15
◼
►
Yeah, it was you know, it's not a complaint. It was just surprising. I was surprised by it
01:44:22
◼
►
I don't know what rating this movie was, but I in the US the US rating is PG. Yeah
01:44:28
◼
►
See that surprises me
01:44:30
◼
►
I feel like that you couldn't do this now and still be a PG. It would be a PG 13 now. Yeah
01:44:38
◼
►
In fact, the second movie in this series is what essentially created the PG-13 rating
01:44:42
◼
►
because it's even more far more brutal.
01:44:45
◼
►
Interesting.
01:44:46
◼
►
Interesting.
01:44:47
◼
►
James Thompson in the chat room says, "I saw this film when I was eight and it did traumatize
01:44:51
◼
►
So there you go.
01:44:53
◼
►
My notes jump quite significantly here.
01:44:56
◼
►
So I'm now straight at the point where they're having the chase in the desert town.
01:45:03
◼
►
I can't remember where they are.
01:45:05
◼
►
So what happens is that Tote tries to grab the medallion, but it's been in a fire, so
01:45:14
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►
it's burning hot, and so he screams and jumps out and puts his hand in the snow.
01:45:18
◼
►
I don't know why he jumps out the window.
01:45:19
◼
►
He just ran out the door, man.
01:45:21
◼
►
Yeah, he just runs out the window.
01:45:23
◼
►
He's driven mad.
01:45:25
◼
►
The thing's burning down.
01:45:27
◼
►
Karen Allen picks up the thing with a cloth and says to Indy that she's coming with him
01:45:32
◼
►
because they're partners and we follow the little, you know, the airplane on the map
01:45:36
◼
►
montage, which we saw to get to Nepal. Now leaves Nepal and goes to Egypt where they
01:45:41
◼
►
meet up with Salah, who is John Rhys-Davies, and he says that the Nazis are digging out
01:45:46
◼
►
in the desert because they think they found Tanis, the lost city out in the desert. And
01:45:52
◼
►
so is it the chase? Which chase are you referring to? Is it the first one where she gets, she
01:46:02
◼
►
she gets kidnapped.
01:46:04
◼
►
So the next point on my notes, so Marion at this point is in a basket being taken around
01:46:09
◼
►
by a couple of villains, right?
01:46:14
◼
►
And then I just liked the bit where this is another famous scene now that I've seen it.
01:46:20
◼
►
I know people are referencing it.
01:46:22
◼
►
You've got the huge tall guy who's throwing the sword around, right?
01:46:26
◼
►
Getting ready for the showdown and then he just shoots him.
01:46:29
◼
►
Which is great.
01:46:30
◼
►
The story is that Harrison Ford had the flu or something and was incredibly sick and they
01:46:33
◼
►
got to the end of the day shooting that and they didn't, you know, and he was like, "What
01:46:37
◼
►
if I just shoot him and we don't do a big fight scene?"
01:46:40
◼
►
And they said, "All right, let's do that.
01:46:41
◼
►
That's the story anyway."
01:46:43
◼
►
But it's a really, it's a funny moment that Indy is just, he doesn't go in for that kind
01:46:49
◼
►
of showbiz stuff.
01:46:50
◼
►
He's going to, "Whatever, I can just shoot you."
01:46:51
◼
►
- Well, unless there's a bullwhip involved.
01:46:53
◼
►
- Unless there's a whip involved.
01:46:54
◼
►
Yeah, he couldn't use the whip in that situation.
01:46:55
◼
►
- Just whipped him in the eye or something.
01:46:57
◼
►
- He was tired.
01:46:58
◼
►
- One of the things that happens with Indy in this movie
01:47:00
◼
►
and in general is that he gets beat up.
01:47:03
◼
►
Like, I like that about him.
01:47:04
◼
►
You root for him in part because he keeps getting beat up.
01:47:06
◼
►
He gets, he's, you know, he's punched, he's bloody,
01:47:09
◼
►
he's tired, you get the sense he's really tired
01:47:12
◼
►
and he wants to go lie down, but he can't
01:47:14
◼
►
'cause he's gotta fight the Nazis instead.
01:47:16
◼
►
- So, you know, at this point,
01:47:18
◼
►
Marion's put into the back of a truck full of explosives.
01:47:20
◼
►
I was not expecting her to be blown up.
01:47:22
◼
►
- Yeah, it is a surprise when she's blown up
01:47:25
◼
►
and it's very sad. - And I thought she was dead.
01:47:28
◼
►
- Yeah, well, I mean, the way it's edited,
01:47:31
◼
►
it's very hard to imagine how she wasn't put in the truck,
01:47:33
◼
►
but we just hear her voice and see the baskets
01:47:37
◼
►
and it turns out she's in another basket
01:47:39
◼
►
and not that basket, I guess,
01:47:40
◼
►
but it's unclear how she gets out of the truck
01:47:43
◼
►
before it explodes.
01:47:44
◼
►
But at that point, Indy is essentially suicidal,
01:47:47
◼
►
so he basically goes and finds Belloq, his tormentor,
01:47:49
◼
►
and is like, "Go ahead and make my day.
01:47:51
◼
►
"We'll both go, you know, we'll both die."
01:47:54
◼
►
And they save him and talk him out of it
01:47:58
◼
►
and convince him to go out into the desert
01:48:00
◼
►
and try to dig in the right place
01:48:02
◼
►
because we learned that the Nazis
01:48:04
◼
►
are digging in the wrong place
01:48:05
◼
►
because they've copied the headpiece
01:48:08
◼
►
from the burn on Evel German Todt's hand.
01:48:12
◼
►
And the instructions on the backside of it say,
01:48:15
◼
►
take away a couple of cubits.
01:48:17
◼
►
And so they're digging in the wrong place.
01:48:19
◼
►
So they gotta go,
01:48:20
◼
►
Jones has gotta go to the Well of Souls
01:48:23
◼
►
with his little stick and the little headpiece
01:48:25
◼
►
and find where to dig properly to get this artifact.
01:48:30
◼
►
- So a couple of points that I had
01:48:34
◼
►
leading in between these two points that we have here.
01:48:38
◼
►
There's one where, you know, after Marion has died
01:48:41
◼
►
and Indy's sitting at a bar and he's drinking
01:48:43
◼
►
and there's a lot of close-up shots of him.
01:48:45
◼
►
And it was at that moment that I decided
01:48:47
◼
►
that Chris Pratt should be the new Indiana Jones
01:48:49
◼
►
and they should reboot it.
01:48:51
◼
►
- Yep, that might happen.
01:48:53
◼
►
- Well, they've just announced Indy 5
01:48:54
◼
►
and for all intents and purposes it seems like it will have Harrison Ford in it so
01:48:58
◼
►
because it's Indiana Jones 5 but I feel like they could start again because
01:49:03
◼
►
Chris Pratt is perfect for the role in my opinion and looks enough like Harrison
01:49:09
◼
►
Ford I kind of wish that Shia LaBeouf kind of wasn't his son because Chris
01:49:13
◼
►
Pratt kind of is Harrison Ford's son you know they look very very similar and I
01:49:18
◼
►
would I would quite like to see that because I am a big fan of Chris Pratt I
01:49:22
◼
►
I like his work. I was surprised the monkey died even though the monkey is a
01:49:27
◼
►
traitor, a treacherous, treacherous traitor. He's a Nazi monkey.
01:49:31
◼
►
Even though he is a Nazi monkey he eats the dates like a silly Nazi monkey and
01:49:36
◼
►
then he dies. And then when we're up to the point that you're at
01:49:41
◼
►
Harrison Ford goes down into the pit, like the map room I think they call it.
01:49:47
◼
►
And he does all of his archaeological stuff, he points at things on the floor
01:49:50
◼
►
and he brushes sand away and he finds out, you know, where the the correct place needs to be.
01:49:55
◼
►
And then, you know, there's a "hoo-ha-ha" but he ends up getting out of there. And that's when
01:50:02
◼
►
Marion is alive and I wrote in my notes "she's alive!" because I was very excited about that and
01:50:07
◼
►
also happy. Yeah, but then he leaves her there. He's gonna untie her and then he realizes they'll know
01:50:12
◼
►
that he's there if he if he has her, helps her escape. So he says "I'm gonna leave you here"
01:50:17
◼
►
and that infuriates her quite rightly so and he leaves to go get his prize.
01:50:23
◼
►
That's smart though to me. You don't see that sort of stuff in movies.
01:50:27
◼
►
No it is it is smart but I also love that it infuriates her
01:50:30
◼
►
and yeah it's a that's a I like that I like that moment a lot
01:50:34
◼
►
that she's infuriated that he's going to leave her there.
01:50:39
◼
►
And then there's the whole basically that they're at the point now they've
01:50:44
◼
►
they know where they've got to go and they start digging
01:50:46
◼
►
Um, and then, you know, I don't know why they thought they wouldn't get caught, uh, getting
01:50:53
◼
►
the -- they find the Ark of the Covenant, right? Well, they --
01:50:55
◼
►
It's a big -- big desert. Yeah, but it's not -- it's not far from the site.
01:50:59
◼
►
Yeah. No, they can -- they can see them up there. They almost get away with it, but they
01:51:03
◼
►
don't get away with it. So they toss Indy and Marion into the, uh, into the -- the -- the
01:51:09
◼
►
pit after getting the -- the Ark of the Covenant out, and of course it's full of snakes down
01:51:13
◼
►
there. Ah, so it's very dangerous. You go first.
01:51:15
◼
►
- Yeah, there's a nice moment where Sala says,
01:51:16
◼
►
"You, yes, you go first."
01:51:21
◼
►
- Yeah, I didn't like all the snakes in this bit.
01:51:23
◼
►
One of my favorite points, again,
01:51:27
◼
►
this enforces the craziness of using a whip.
01:51:31
◼
►
Marianne burns in these leg thinking
01:51:33
◼
►
that the whip was a snake.
01:51:36
◼
►
- It's like, "See, whip is silly."
01:51:39
◼
►
I do like the whip, by the way.
01:51:40
◼
►
I don't want to see him as anti-whip.
01:51:43
◼
►
I just think that there are times where the whip works
01:51:45
◼
►
times with a whip doesn't work. And then you know they kind of get out and then
01:51:50
◼
►
there's like this horrific so basically Indy climbs up this big statue knocks it
01:51:54
◼
►
down creates a hole in the wall right and then there's this horrific scene
01:51:57
◼
►
right another like really and this one out of place.
01:52:02
◼
►
Well there's like desiccated bodies that are screaming that have been buried on the other side of the wall.
01:52:07
◼
►
And then there's the snake that comes out of the skull. Why does that happen?
01:52:13
◼
►
I can't get that image out of my mind.
01:52:15
◼
►
It's meant to be spooky and scary, yeah.
01:52:19
◼
►
But then pay no mind to that because even though this thing has been entombed for a
01:52:23
◼
►
thousand or two thousand years, through that wall is where there's people buried and then
01:52:27
◼
►
through that is like a window and you can just crawl out.
01:52:30
◼
►
And somehow it's remained undiscovered all of this time.
01:52:34
◼
►
But no time to think about that because it's going on a plane and we need to get to the
01:52:41
◼
►
set piece where they try to hijack the plane and there's a big Nazi who's like a bare knuckle
01:52:48
◼
►
boxer kind of guy, big bald Nazi who's trying to fight Indy while they're kind of like stuck
01:52:55
◼
►
in the cockpit and there's a gas leak and an open flame and you know all of these things
01:53:02
◼
►
are happening at once where there's a ticking countdown and there's a guy who's trying to
01:53:06
◼
►
kill Indy and there's the spinning--
01:53:07
◼
►
- Marion is mowing people down with a gun attached to the plane.
01:53:12
◼
►
- Yeah, a lot going on there.
01:53:14
◼
►
- And then more blood.
01:53:16
◼
►
- And then the guy gets chopped up in the propeller blade,
01:53:20
◼
►
which we don't see, but we see him go, "Ah!"
01:53:22
◼
►
And then we see like,
01:53:23
◼
►
- A bucket of blood.
01:53:25
◼
►
- Sound effect, and there's like a stream of,
01:53:28
◼
►
a splatter of blood.
01:53:30
◼
►
- And of course when they're fighting,
01:53:31
◼
►
there's blood all over them, right?
01:53:32
◼
►
They're getting busted open.
01:53:33
◼
►
- Sure, 'cause Andy's getting beat up,
01:53:35
◼
►
which again is one of his charms is that he gets beat up.
01:53:38
◼
►
He's not one of these heroes who's like,
01:53:41
◼
►
"I'm okay, I fell out of a..."
01:53:43
◼
►
Like in the Avengers,
01:53:44
◼
►
"I fell out of a four story building, I'll walk it off."
01:53:47
◼
►
Like Captain America says in that movie,
01:53:49
◼
►
"If you die, walk it off."
01:53:50
◼
►
- I like that line by the way.
01:53:51
◼
►
- Indiana Jones just gets the crap beat out of him
01:53:55
◼
►
and you feel bad 'cause you know it hurts.
01:53:57
◼
►
He's not one of those people who,
01:53:58
◼
►
even though yes, he does get up and he continues adventuring
01:54:01
◼
►
you just get the sense that he is taking damage.
01:54:04
◼
►
he is really unhappy with his predicament.
01:54:06
◼
►
And I think that's charming.
01:54:07
◼
►
I think that's one of the things people like about Indy.
01:54:09
◼
►
- I just said he's not tough.
01:54:10
◼
►
He is tough, right?
01:54:11
◼
►
But he's not invincible.
01:54:12
◼
►
He's a professor.
01:54:15
◼
►
And he's, I mean, and that's why we root for him
01:54:16
◼
►
is that although he's tough,
01:54:18
◼
►
he is getting the crap beat out of him
01:54:20
◼
►
and reacting like we would, presumably,
01:54:23
◼
►
or at least like a human being would
01:54:25
◼
►
and being like really unhappy about it.
01:54:27
◼
►
And later in the movie, there's that scene
01:54:29
◼
►
where Karen Allen asks where it hurt or it doesn't hurt.
01:54:33
◼
►
And he looked like his elbow and his forehead.
01:54:36
◼
►
There's very few parts that don't hurt on Indiana Jones.
01:54:40
◼
►
And his lips.
01:54:41
◼
►
And his lips.
01:54:42
◼
►
Well, that's his move.
01:54:43
◼
►
That's his big move.
01:54:44
◼
►
That was a good move.
01:54:46
◼
►
There's also more blood.
01:54:51
◼
►
I forgot one of my favorite lines.
01:54:52
◼
►
Truck chase.
01:54:53
◼
►
Yeah, it's a car chase.
01:54:54
◼
►
One of my favorite lines in the movie.
01:54:55
◼
►
I do not understand the delivery of this line, right?
01:55:00
◼
►
And I won't be able to effectively deliver it, but I still find it funny.
01:55:03
◼
►
So they get out of the plane or whatever and then, what's the guy's name?
01:55:08
◼
►
They help her, what's his name?
01:55:12
◼
►
So Sala finds Indy and Marion in a tent and he's like, "Oh, they're loading the Ark onto
01:55:18
◼
►
And he's like, "What truck?"
01:55:19
◼
►
Like, "I don't know why."
01:55:21
◼
►
He like delivers it.
01:55:22
◼
►
Like, "There's a truck here?"
01:55:24
◼
►
Like it was very peculiar.
01:55:26
◼
►
And he's like, "What truck?"
01:55:27
◼
►
And I was like, "I've never seen a truck before."
01:55:29
◼
►
It's very strange.
01:55:31
◼
►
Again, that's one of those transition moments where what the movie's really doing is propelling
01:55:34
◼
►
you to the next set piece.
01:55:35
◼
►
So he's just like, "What truck?
01:55:37
◼
►
I must find it."
01:55:39
◼
►
And so then he does.
01:55:41
◼
►
- Then there's a great car chase.
01:55:44
◼
►
There is one moment in this where Indy is in the driver's seat of the truck, right?
01:55:49
◼
►
He finds his way into the truck.
01:55:51
◼
►
And again, more blood, right?
01:55:52
◼
►
He gets shot and his arm gets shot, splatters of blood against the window.
01:55:56
◼
►
Which again, you don't usually see that in movies.
01:55:59
◼
►
They just get their arms shot.
01:56:00
◼
►
"Ah, my arm is shot."
01:56:01
◼
►
And you might see blood on the shirt,
01:56:02
◼
►
but like splattered blood.
01:56:03
◼
►
And then some of the craziest stunts
01:56:06
◼
►
I have ever seen in a movie.
01:56:08
◼
►
- I feel like even "Avengers 2" quotes this.
01:56:10
◼
►
'Cause there's a similar kind of thing
01:56:14
◼
►
with a battle on a vehicle.
01:56:17
◼
►
And Captain America keeps, he's on like on a truck.
01:56:19
◼
►
And he's moving around 'cause Ultron is battling him.
01:56:23
◼
►
And again, no spoilers here,
01:56:25
◼
►
but I felt like that movie was even quoting
01:56:28
◼
►
this same truck chase.
01:56:29
◼
►
because yeah Indy goes out the window, he gets shot, he goes out the window, he loses
01:56:34
◼
►
purchase on the hood ornament, it's Mercedes of course because it's German. He goes under
01:56:41
◼
►
the truck with his whip and is dragged along well, I mean there's a whole documentary about
01:56:47
◼
►
it but you know they had a stuntman who was kind of attached and so he's dragged along
01:56:51
◼
►
underneath and he's got his whip and then he's being dragged behind and he pulls himself
01:56:55
◼
►
back and then he gets into the truck that way and comes back and it's this whole, and
01:56:59
◼
►
Meanwhile, they're like, then they're slamming against other trucks and the trucks are careering
01:57:04
◼
►
off into like giant ravines that shouldn't be there because they're just out in the desert.
01:57:10
◼
►
And yeah, the whole thing.
01:57:12
◼
►
It's a great, it's a classic set piece, action truck chase thing where Indy is everywhere
01:57:18
◼
►
in that truck before finally driving it away to the secret location that's been waiting
01:57:23
◼
►
for him that is everybody is ready to be in the open air market.
01:57:28
◼
►
And so they drive into the little thing and the doors close and then everybody's there
01:57:31
◼
►
and the Nazis go, "What?
01:57:33
◼
►
But where did it go?"
01:57:35
◼
►
Then they're loaded onto a ship.
01:57:38
◼
►
Which is where Marion and Indy finally get to rest.
01:57:40
◼
►
And something I do not understand why this happens, and I wonder if you're going to know
01:57:46
◼
►
where I'm going with this.
01:57:48
◼
►
Marion is wearing a dress and Indy tells her it's nice and she looks in the mirror.
01:57:54
◼
►
And she flips the mirror over and it hits Indy in the face and then it goes out to the
01:57:57
◼
►
screams but there's a thunder it's a thunder at the same time so masks scream
01:58:02
◼
►
and she's like what was that and he's like you say something I don't I don't
01:58:08
◼
►
know why that happened I don't know why that I mean is it just I can see why
01:58:12
◼
►
they did it right they're like oh he's so beaten up he can't catch a break he's
01:58:15
◼
►
just getting hurt more but all of it was so weird yeah you know it's it's it's
01:58:20
◼
►
kind of it's kind of wacky and of course he falls asleep this is their big
01:58:24
◼
►
romantic moment, and he points out where she can kiss the parts that are not hurt, and
01:58:29
◼
►
he points it at his lips and all that, and then he passes out because he's exhausted.
01:58:33
◼
►
Then the Nazis find them in the worst submarine of all time. I'll come to why. That's my verdict
01:58:40
◼
►
in a moment. They come aboard, they get the arc, which at this point has started to burn
01:58:45
◼
►
out of the blocks, right? So you know there is evil magic in there, or something.
01:58:49
◼
►
Or is it good magic because it burns the Nazi symbols off the box?
01:58:53
◼
►
Oh yeah, that's a good point.
01:58:55
◼
►
Yep, God hates the Nazis, we know this.
01:58:59
◼
►
And then they take the box, they take Marion, Indy hides in the submarine and then swims
01:59:06
◼
►
across the submarine and gets on the roof of the submarine.
01:59:09
◼
►
The submarine, we then are treated to the submarine going across the globe, right, in
01:59:14
◼
►
a little map, and it arrives at an island.
01:59:17
◼
►
And Indy's still on the top of the submarine.
01:59:19
◼
►
So either Indiana Jones can hold his breath for days,
01:59:23
◼
►
or the submarine never submerged,
01:59:26
◼
►
even though they used the periscope.
01:59:28
◼
►
- This is one of the great, well,
01:59:29
◼
►
and they say in their movie German,
01:59:31
◼
►
'cause it's the simplest, it's like high school German,
01:59:33
◼
►
(speaking in German)
01:59:34
◼
►
which is dive the U-boat.
01:59:36
◼
►
That it's either, either they don't dive very far,
01:59:42
◼
►
or like, a flinch.
01:59:48
◼
►
Or I think the implication is that there's probably a scene
01:59:51
◼
►
that we don't see.
01:59:52
◼
►
And I think it might've even been storyboarded
01:59:54
◼
►
and like in the script where he fights his way into the sub
01:59:59
◼
►
and then like is on the sub in that little portion
02:00:03
◼
►
in the conning tower and then gets out before.
02:00:07
◼
►
But it's just waved away.
02:00:08
◼
►
Like suffice to say, Indy was fine
02:00:10
◼
►
and he had great adventures on the submarine
02:00:12
◼
►
and they didn't know he was there.
02:00:14
◼
►
And now we're at the island in the Mediterranean
02:00:16
◼
►
where this is all gonna happen.
02:00:17
◼
►
It is a beautiful moment that's completely baffling.
02:00:21
◼
►
- And then again, I wasn't expecting Nazis in this movie.
02:00:26
◼
►
And then when there were Nazis,
02:00:27
◼
►
I was still not expecting how much Nazi I was gonna get.
02:00:30
◼
►
- Like a giant Nazi base with big banners and stuff.
02:00:33
◼
►
- More swastikas than I think I've seen in any movie.
02:00:36
◼
►
Like they're everywhere.
02:00:38
◼
►
- There was a lot of Nazi in this movie.
02:00:41
◼
►
- And then they kind of go through this thing
02:00:45
◼
►
and they end up bringing the Ark to this cavern
02:00:48
◼
►
after Indy tries to blow it up,
02:00:51
◼
►
or like he has an RPG, like a rocket launcher.
02:00:53
◼
►
And he's, you know, he threatens.
02:00:54
◼
►
- And they're like, "You're not gonna blow it up.
02:00:55
◼
►
This is an archeological marvel."
02:00:57
◼
►
And he's like, "Yeah, you're right."
02:00:58
◼
►
- Yeah, and convincing, right?
02:01:00
◼
►
I totally bought all of that.
02:01:01
◼
►
He's not gonna do it.
02:01:02
◼
►
Like, he loves Marion, but he also loves archeology.
02:01:05
◼
►
And then they, you know, they basically tie them
02:01:10
◼
►
to this stick on top of a hill.
02:01:13
◼
►
and then we kind of get to the point where they open the arc.
02:01:18
◼
►
- Yeah, they do a ritual to open the arc
02:01:21
◼
►
and Belloq is dressed in like in Jewish ritual garb
02:01:25
◼
►
and the Germans don't like that, oh, this Jewish ritual,
02:01:28
◼
►
but he's like, well, it's Hebrew Bible, this is what we do.
02:01:31
◼
►
And Belloq is, they're like, oh, the Fuhrer wants this
02:01:34
◼
►
and Belloq is very much like, yeah, yeah,
02:01:37
◼
►
I'll give it to him when I'm done with it, right?
02:01:38
◼
►
'Cause Belloq's always got his own plan.
02:01:41
◼
►
So they open the arc, what could go wrong?
02:01:43
◼
►
- Everything.
02:01:44
◼
►
Everything is original. - And there's sand in it,
02:01:45
◼
►
so it's not a problem.
02:01:47
◼
►
And then, and this is, I think, a bold choice for this movie
02:01:51
◼
►
and I really like it, which is,
02:01:52
◼
►
what happens next is the wrath of God.
02:01:54
◼
►
Like, you know, if you're gonna believe
02:01:56
◼
►
that there is a covenant of the lost ark,
02:01:58
◼
►
or lost ark of the covenant, I mean,
02:02:00
◼
►
and there's the 10 commandments and all that is real,
02:02:02
◼
►
then at that point you need to believe
02:02:03
◼
►
that the Hebrew Bible God is real.
02:02:05
◼
►
And in this movie, he is,
02:02:08
◼
►
and he's really pissed off at the Nazis,
02:02:10
◼
►
And so he—these angels or demons or whatever they are,
02:02:15
◼
►
they, you know, appear and—
02:02:18
◼
►
-Shoot holes in everybody.
02:02:19
◼
►
-All the Nazis die horribly.
02:02:24
◼
►
But Indy tells Mary to close her eyes,
02:02:26
◼
►
and so they're unaffected.
02:02:27
◼
►
-I don't know why that is what helps,
02:02:30
◼
►
but closing your eyes apparently is all you need to do.
02:02:32
◼
►
-Well, like, looking on the face of God,
02:02:34
◼
►
I think is the idea.
02:02:35
◼
►
It's like it's too much, and it's going to destroy you.
02:02:37
◼
►
Plus, all the Nazis are bad, I guess.
02:02:40
◼
►
And so, you know, they're going to get wiped out.
02:02:43
◼
►
I don't think there was like,
02:02:44
◼
►
wonder if there's like one Nazi soldier
02:02:46
◼
►
who really didn't want to be there and hated everything
02:02:48
◼
►
and was thinking of defecting.
02:02:50
◼
►
And he did, maybe he got spared.
02:02:54
◼
►
He had something in his eye.
02:02:56
◼
►
I don't know.
02:02:57
◼
►
But yeah, so all the Nazis die
02:02:58
◼
►
and Indy and Marion are safe.
02:03:02
◼
►
The Ark is sealed again.
02:03:06
◼
►
And then that's it.
02:03:07
◼
►
We cut to Washington, DC,
02:03:09
◼
►
where the FBI men are told,
02:03:11
◼
►
"We're putting it in someplace safe
02:03:13
◼
►
where it's going to be looked after by top men,"
02:03:15
◼
►
to which Indy says, "Who?"
02:03:17
◼
►
Because Indy knows all the top men
02:03:18
◼
►
who would be looking at it, and they just say, "Top men,"
02:03:22
◼
►
and cut to a giant government warehouse
02:03:24
◼
►
where the ark has been put in a box
02:03:26
◼
►
and is being filed with millions of other boxes
02:03:28
◼
►
just like it in this huge warehouse
02:03:30
◼
►
never to be seen again.
02:03:34
◼
►
I like that, you know, that there's just this big box.
02:03:37
◼
►
this big box, like this big sort of storage facility
02:03:41
◼
►
with a bunch of boxes.
02:03:43
◼
►
I like that, I like that a lot.
02:03:46
◼
►
'Cause it's just like, oh, there's all this stuff
02:03:48
◼
►
that happens that you don't know about.
02:03:49
◼
►
- James Thompson says it's basically Costco.
02:03:51
◼
►
- Yep, TVs. - You are gonna be coming in
02:03:52
◼
►
maybe in Costco.
02:03:53
◼
►
- There was a lot of, for me, of unexpected,
02:03:58
◼
►
oh, we missed, you know, face melting and head explosions,
02:04:00
◼
►
of course, that happens with the wrath of God.
02:04:05
◼
►
That's what that that happens there. There were a lot of unexpected things in
02:04:10
◼
►
this movie. Like that seemed to be like a running thing for me. There were just
02:04:13
◼
►
lots of things that happened that I didn't expect to happen. They did happen.
02:04:16
◼
►
I'm not saying it's a bad thing. It's just something. And it was interesting to
02:04:20
◼
►
me considering that I felt like I knew this movie. How many things in it
02:04:25
◼
►
surprised me. Even just the way it was made. So did you like it? They do not make
02:04:31
◼
►
movies like this anymore Jason's now. That's true did you like it? I did like it.
02:04:36
◼
►
Oh good. So I think of all of the films so this is like the third right so I say
02:04:42
◼
►
all of but the three film films that I've watched the most this is the one I
02:04:48
◼
►
have liked the most but also the one that I had the most problems with but I
02:04:52
◼
►
think that those two things go hand in hand and but no and probably it's like
02:04:58
◼
►
Quibbles, 'cause I think, you know,
02:05:00
◼
►
Real Genius and Princess Bride,
02:05:04
◼
►
they were very easy, and Spinal Tap,
02:05:06
◼
►
they're very easygoing movies, and I liked them a lot,
02:05:09
◼
►
but I appreciated them for what they were.
02:05:12
◼
►
I didn't look at them like I did of Indiana Jones,
02:05:14
◼
►
being like, maybe this is one of the best movies ever made.
02:05:16
◼
►
Like, I didn't think that that wasn't what I was thinking
02:05:20
◼
►
as I was watching the others.
02:05:21
◼
►
So when I have that, when I put it at that level,
02:05:24
◼
►
when things happen in it that I find are strange,
02:05:27
◼
►
They kind of stick out to me more in my brain
02:05:29
◼
►
as weird things that are happening.
02:05:31
◼
►
But this is such an incredible movie.
02:05:33
◼
►
It's just so good.
02:05:36
◼
►
And like, I was thinking, you know,
02:05:38
◼
►
when I thought to myself,
02:05:39
◼
►
they don't make movies like this anymore,
02:05:41
◼
►
I was thinking, what movies can I think of
02:05:44
◼
►
that are like this?
02:05:45
◼
►
And I think maybe the one that is most like it,
02:05:48
◼
►
most recently for me, is "Guardians of the Galaxy."
02:05:51
◼
►
- Yeah, that's exactly right.
02:05:52
◼
►
That's "Spacing the Energon," sort of.
02:05:55
◼
►
- Yeah, I felt that.
02:05:55
◼
►
And Chris Pratt in that is also like this. He's not a super, you know, superhero kind of guy,
02:06:03
◼
►
right? He's just a regular guy who's doing super things and has issues and all of that. That is
02:06:08
◼
►
sort of like just like how Indy is, you know, he gets beat up and he's got problems and all that.
02:06:14
◼
►
You know, this is Steven Spielberg is considered probably one of the greatest directors in history,
02:06:22
◼
►
certainly Hollywood directors, right? I don't know whether he's in the top five or the top 20 or
02:06:27
◼
►
whatever. I would argue that this may be his best film. And that I think that just because it's an
02:06:34
◼
►
adventure movie and all of that, I think you need to take it—you don't have to take it seriously,
02:06:39
◼
►
but I think it is, as a piece of filmmaking, it is staggering. It is—the imagery in it,
02:06:44
◼
►
the shadows throughout, the lighting are—he uses shadows to tell so many parts of the story.
02:06:48
◼
►
I've seen this movie like 50 times. I think the script is fantastic. It's Lawrence Kasdan.
02:06:53
◼
►
The direction is great. And this is, I think, what happens when you have a world-class set of talent
02:07:00
◼
►
working on a film and taking it completely seriously, even though it is in this genre,
02:07:06
◼
►
action-adventure genre. This is when you get a work like this. That is, you know, are there better,
02:07:11
◼
►
more serious movies? Sure. But in terms of...including ones that Spielberg has made. But in
02:07:16
◼
►
In terms of the whole package and the fact that this much attention was brought to bear
02:07:21
◼
►
on a movie like this, yeah, it is absolutely one of my all-time top five, maybe top two,
02:07:27
◼
►
three, something like that, films.
02:07:30
◼
►
And I think we're really privileged to have a director like Steven Spielberg make a movie
02:07:34
◼
►
like this because he brings his A-game to this one.
02:07:38
◼
►
I think more than he did in some of the other big tentpole action adventure spectaculars
02:07:44
◼
►
that he made in the future.
02:07:45
◼
►
I think this one is the, it's just,
02:07:47
◼
►
I think it's a great work of art.
02:07:48
◼
►
I actually also think it's very personal
02:07:50
◼
►
and that's one of the reasons why it's so great is,
02:07:52
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the reason there are all these Nazis in it is,
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it is the, you know, it's the Jewish kid saying,
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you know, giving the middle finger to the Nazis.
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And, you know, later he made a much more serious meditation
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on the Holocaust with Schindler's List.
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But, you know, here he's, you know,
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he's sticking it to the Nazis
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and that is motivating Spielberg in making the movie too.
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So it's, yeah, I think I'm glad you liked it.
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I do think it is a spectacular film achievement
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that just because it's a silly adventure movie,
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you know, it can't be discounted as just being
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an amazing work of art on top of that.
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- Like I can't remember the exact moment,
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but it was about 20 minutes in and I was like,
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oh, this is really special.
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- And I look forward to watching it again,
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because when I watch it again,
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all of the things that surprised me and I found peculiar,
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I won't find surprising or peculiar anymore.
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And I think it was just because, and I think it was,
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I felt like I knew the movie going into the movie,
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but it actually turned out I didn't.
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So when things happened in it that surprised me,
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they were genuine surprises,
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and it kind of shook what I thought the movie was.
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But yeah, I mean, I wanna watch it again
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and look out and pay more attention
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to some of the cinematography and pay more attention
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to a lot of the scripts and stuff like that
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without just seeing the spectacle
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trying to follow the plot and the story. Right, well it holds up under repeated viewing.
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Like I said, I've seen it maybe 50 times. I'm always noticing other things. It doesn't
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get old for me. And I'd recommend at some point you listen to episode 8 of The Incomparable,
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which is me and-- It's now been bumped up to my list.
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Me and Dan Morin and Jon Gruber talking about Raiders of the Lost Ark for an hour, and you
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know, it was, you know, we call out a lot of the little details that we appreciate.
02:09:40
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I would say for your next viewing, one of the things to watch is watch the shadows.
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Just watch the shadows.
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Yeah, see, I didn't catch that.
02:09:48
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When you start noticing the shadows, you know, just it's crazy.
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Like in that first scene, how the shadows tell the story, like Indiana Jones appears
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as a shadow.
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That's the first time we see him and then throughout the way the shadows are used.
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Yeah, I mean Spielberg, it's a beautiful thing.
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And when I say The Last Crusade is a good movie,
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it is a good movie, but in my mind,
02:10:13
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this is on a whole other level from that.
02:10:17
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This is one of the best, if not the best,
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action adventure movie I think ever.
02:10:24
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- Yep, you got a fan.
02:10:25
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You're doing well on this, four for four.
02:10:27
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- Yay, woo-hoo!
02:10:29
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- These are all becoming not total favorites, but favorites.
02:10:34
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All of the three previous, I enjoy those movies.
02:10:38
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I will watch all of them again and I like them a lot.
02:10:41
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But I think Raiders has gone in there now
02:10:44
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as like a, you need to watch this again
02:10:47
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so it can become one of your favorite movies.
02:10:49
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That's how I feel about it.
02:10:52
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As I said, I found some things peculiar
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because it was a different time
02:10:57
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and maybe I'm used to different types of violence now.
02:11:00
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And funnily enough, that violence, whilst more brutal,
02:11:04
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is less glory in these types of movies.
02:11:07
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- It's, yes, this is, now we're in the sort of
02:11:10
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CGI superhero movie era, and the types of effects
02:11:13
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you can do with that are different.
02:11:15
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And they're not better or worse, they're different.
02:11:17
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And those stories that people are telling today
02:11:19
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are different, and the scale, like you look
02:11:22
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at an Avengers movie and so much of the violence
02:11:23
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in a movie like that is on a massive scale
02:11:25
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that speaks to, I think, our fears about terrorism
02:11:29
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and things like that, where we talk about cities
02:11:31
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being destroyed and buildings coming down,
02:11:33
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and that imagery is just endlessly played
02:11:36
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in superhero movies.
02:11:37
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And Raiders of the Lost Ark is not about that.
02:11:39
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It's about, you know, it's about other stuff.
02:11:41
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It's about some personal violence and some horror
02:11:46
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and the wrath of God, right?
02:11:49
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And things like that, which are supernatural.
02:11:51
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There's a much bigger supernatural element to Raiders
02:11:55
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than to a superhero movie.
02:12:00
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- All right, Myke and the movie is successful again.
02:12:04
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Very. I genuinely thank you for making me watch this movie because I may have never
02:12:09
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seen it because it gets to a point where it's like you haven't seen this
02:12:16
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movie you maybe will never see it. Do you know what I mean? Because it's Indiana Jones right?
02:12:21
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I'm 27 years old and I've not seen Indiana Jones. So I may have never
02:12:27
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seen the movie so I'm so happy that that this exists. That this section exists
02:12:34
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So I can find out all about all these great movies.
02:12:38
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So yeah, I look forward to the next one.
02:12:41
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Right, I think that wraps it up for this week's episode of Upgrade.
02:12:44
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If you'd like to find the show notes for this week you can check online at relay.fm/upgrade/36.
02:12:50
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If you'd like to find Mr. Jason Snell on the internet you can find him over at SixColors.com.
02:12:55
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On Twitter he is @jsnell, J-S-N-E-L-L. I am @imike, I-M-Y-K-E.
02:13:01
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Upgrade is part of the Fantastic Relay FM family.
02:13:04
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You can find this show and many of our others over at relay.fm.
02:13:07
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Thanks again to our sponsors this week, Squarespace, MailRoute, Casper and GoToMeeting, and we'll
02:13:12
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be back next time.
02:13:14
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'Til then, say goodbye, Mr Snell.
02:13:17
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Once again, Myke, we discovered that there is nothing that you possess that I cannot
02:13:22
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[MUSIC PLAYING]
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[BLANK_AUDIO]