42: Intellectual Ambiguity
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From Relay FM, this is Connected, episode number 42. Today's show is brought to you by
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Lynda.com where you can instantly stream thousands of courses created by industry experts,
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hover, simplified domain management and OmniFocus. Now on the Apple Watch.
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My name is Myke Hurley and I'm joined by Mr. Stephen Hackett. Hello Stephen Hackett.
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Hello Michael Hurley. How are you? I'm doing well. I should start the show with a thank you
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to my wife. It is our wedding anniversary and I am here recording a podcast with you instead of
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on a date with her. So she gets a high five from the connected nation, the international connected
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fan base. Thank you, Ms Hackett. Yes, but we're without Federico this week. No, yes,
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We should have mentioned that as well. We do have no Federica. It's just just me and Stephen
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However, we do have another accent joining us a little bit later on Federica's on the beach for a little bit of a holiday. So
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He's having fun fun in the Sun as the kids say I think it's was it Republic Day or something
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Yes, it's when Italy won its independence from the British. I don't think that is I
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Don't think that's how it works
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Like listen, you know if we want to start talking about empires you want to look at the Roman Empire and yeah
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We can go down that whole route if you want to yeah, really everybody is
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Gaining their freedom from Federico's people
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So we're gonna do some some follow-up so a
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Friend of the I'm gonna say friend of the network because I can do that
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friend of the network
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You say don't mm-hmm
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- Jamie Phelps, JXPX777.
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- That's a different movie.
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Wrote on his web blog about his Sony Ericsson T637.
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- Oh, look at that bad boy.
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- Yeah, I remember, do you remember these phones?
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They were awesome.
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A friend of mine had one and I was super jealous.
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So he writes on his blog about us talking
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about someone else's idea of calendar based
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not disturb. So if you remember this from a couple weeks ago the the general idea
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is that if I'm in a meeting my phone should know that because of a calendar
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invite and it should put itself and do not disturb you know if I set it up to do so.
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And turns out these Sony Ericsson phones did this way back in the day so not
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necessarily a new idea but I still think it's a really good idea. What do you
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think? Do you still want this? I do still want that idea. I used to have a phone
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that was kind of like this. I had like a Sony Ericsson Walkman phone. It was my
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last phone before I got an iPhone, before the iPhone came out, and it was black and
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orange and it had the... I don't know how... I don't know why they called it a Walkman
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phone. You could put music on it, like you could put music on basically any phone
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at that point. Right, the rocker kind of brought that into being a
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little bit. Well, we had more... we had phones here that could do that stuff before
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that was just you could plug that thing into iTunes like that's right there was
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like I had some Sony software that I could basically put music onto my onto
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my Sony Walkman phone I used to do it had radio on it and stuff as well you
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know it was pretty cool if if people want to see a link to jxpx777's
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blog post where could they go Myke oh they could go to relay.fm/connected/42
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The sound you heard was Myke scrolling back to the top of the document to see
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what episode number this is. It was actually, I swiped to the left with a
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four finger gesture to go back to the CMS to see it in big bold text. Nice
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that's a life hack that only really a handful of us can do. So we have some
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we have some nose tapping follow-up and like the browser history and like many
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other things over the three years of us doing a show together I am implementing
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a end of nose tapping follow-up I am instigating the reincarnation of the
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nose-dipping follow-up now so short-lived so Peter wrote in and and
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Peter apparently lives where does he say in Michigan I think so Michigan is in
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the very north part of the country where it touches Canada it's very cold they
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have like I don't know like moose walking around lots of snow and ice I'm
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very unlike the weather we have here that's hot very like the weather that
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you have in London which is I think just wet all the time so Peter writes in to
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say I've been nose tapping on the iPhone since day one and so is everyone around
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me because when you're outside during I love this eternal Michigan winter you
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have to keep your gloves on it's not new with the Apple watch and it's not weird
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and he said he was frustrated with us for not thinking about this and
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I would like to apologize to the people of Michigan and really all winter states
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But uh you know if it's 10 degrees out like he says it is then I think I would probably nose tap too if it
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Came down to it better than than taking a glove off to take care of something something simple I suppose
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So I think Myke I think what you're gonna need to do is
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We're gonna need to put one of us in like some sort of large
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Like a meat freezer and see if you're more prone to nose tap under cold conditions
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I will notice half under all conditions my friend
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Well your conditions we got to find somebody who hasn't nose tapped and I admitted to it last week again like Peter
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Under circumstances that were not normal. You're just doing it walking around like a normal human being I do at home
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well, I mean
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Privacy of your home. I know it's one thing. Have you done it in public you've done in public? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah
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It's like I talked to my watch in public
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Yeah, I can't
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I don't go crazy with it. But like I will I will whisper the occasional thing, you know
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Like replied to a text message or something. I'll totally do that
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Yeah, I do wish
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I do wish Siri could talk back or at least it could be an option for it to talk back
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So, you know, if you do see on your watch, it just gives you text back and it's weird not hearing the device
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Respond to you. Have you found that sort of strange or off-putting?
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Yeah, especially when it gives me some sort of funny response
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Yeah, you're just reading it. It's like yeah, it's like it's not funny when you're not delivering it
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Like I know there's not an awful lot of comedic delivery
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From Siri, but I don't know if just feels weird to just be reading jokes back from the computer robot
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I don't know. Robot or not huh? Yeah that's a different network. Yeah so thank you Peter
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for writing in. We wish you all the best and you know maybe maybe global warming will take
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care of you. So that's all my follow Myke. It's short and sweet this week. On that happy
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note should we take our first break for this week? That'd be great. This week's episode
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Lender.com is for people that want to solve problems.
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So we have a little bit of connected QA as topic zero. So you want to
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tackle this first one? Because I don't have a good answer for the first one.
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Neither do I. So this is from @zavaloth on Twitter. If computers didn't exist,
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what would you guys do for a living? I guess now right if you ask me right now
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I'd probably try and get into radio. Yeah I mean radio pre-exists to computers so
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I think intellectually your answer works. I think that's probably what
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I'd go for. Other than that I would I don't know maybe theater or something
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now like I've never I've never been an actor of any kind but I figured now I'm
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I'm too used to doing things that entertainment, you know?
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I'm too used to creating entertainment,
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so I'd probably have to try and create something like that
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again to be creative, and that's probably the only way
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I could do something like that, I think.
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- Yeah, it's hard intellectually,
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because you're saying that knowing what you do now,
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but the question doesn't specify,
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do computers suddenly go away?
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And so now you're like, oh, I gotta find something else
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to do, or like, who you are has been shaped
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by the fact that you grew up with technology,
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So it's hard to, it's a very tricky question.
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Very tricky.
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My best answer is something with my hands.
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So like thoughts I had was like a bicycle building,
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- You could play a trumpet.
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- I could play a trumpet.
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I'm not very musical.
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But like I, again, like to have computers disappear
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to they never exist, like I really enjoyed my time
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as like a hardware technician.
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And so I think doing something with my hands,
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taking things apart, putting them back together,
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sort of repair or construction I think would be would get me by just fine it's
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good it's a good question I like that there was intellectual ambiguity in it
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it's a good one okay and the next question comes from I'm gonna say eaten
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eaten Schulman on Twitter what watch app do you wish existed native ones really
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Is that the best you have for us?
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- I really do.
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So I've written about watch faces and glances on 512.
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I haven't written about the apps yet,
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but I'm really only using like three of them.
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And there's not one that like,
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I really wish I had that I don't have.
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I just, to me, the watch does what it does and that's fine,
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but there's not like a gaping hole in my watch workflow.
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I don't know. What about you?
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- My biggest one is Google apps,
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because I like to use Google apps on my phone,
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because I like to receive transit directions.
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That's my main thing.
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I've been hearing a lot of people
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talk about Apple Maps recently.
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Fundamentally, the main reason I cannot use Apple Maps
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is because I need transit directions.
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And Google, and the reason that I like to use one app
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for walking and transit directions
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is because I like to know how long it's gonna take me
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to get from one place to another.
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Like, I could go to a different app,
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and I've tried other apps like CityMapper and stuff,
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I don't like them.
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I like Google Maps, it's very easy.
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and it also has a better database and stuff. I just like going to Google Maps and doing all of that.
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At the moment, then when I get off the train or whatever and then I want to walk places,
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I go to Apple Maps and enter the location in Apple Maps because I love, love the Apple Maps
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integration on the Apple Watch. I think it might be my favorite feature. Like the tapping stuff.
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Tapping the beep beep beep beep beep.
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It's so good man. It's just so good.
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Yeah, I like it too.
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because my main thing is like I still haven't 100% worked out what the taps mean but like it just
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makes me look at my like I'm basically no oh I better look at my wrist you know and I really
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really love it I've been whenever I've been walking around London a few times over the last
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couple of weeks like just going to places I've never been before or like just taking some
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directions that I've never taken before and the Apple watch has just made it so easy because I
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always hated like walking around the streets with my phone out like I just don't like that
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Especially when you have a big phone as well,
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it's like, come with something, keep taking it
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out of your pocket, put it away, keep that pocket put away.
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- Myke was wrong.
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- It's frustrating.
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Nope, Myke was right because now I have the best
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of both worlds.
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- Yeah, you hear this, this is my six plus.
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That's right.
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- So I'm really, I really, really love it,
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but I would like to see Google Maps,
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but I don't think we'll get that until the native SDK
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because it's not gonna be good enough.
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- I think there's, I think that's a good example,
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maybe the best example I can think of,
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an app that maybe they're waiting until native apps. Maybe they're saying hey, you know what watch kit
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We can't do what we want to do. So we're just gonna
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Gonna sit it out
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but I do like the Apple Maps watch integration I
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drive a good bit during the week and some place, you know sometimes to
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To places that I don't know where they are
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so, you know use directions around town and and just the tapping and like be able to
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Just glance at my watch instead of like fishing my phone out of the cup holder
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To see where my turn is and that sort of thing is really great. I know not everybody
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Likes it but some people on Twitter talking about that. But I really do like that it that it mirrors what's on the phone and
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You know, there's rumors that I was 9 will bring transit directions. Maybe maybe your answer will be
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You know will come in a different form than you expect
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Yeah, and I'm I have heard that but I reserve judgment
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because I'm just I'm just not sure about it yet because Apple Maps walking
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directions can still be super wonky so I don't know how I feel about transit
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especially because we have complex transit here because we have lots of it
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you know so we have buses and trains and tubes and like National Rail over ground
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and transit has to be exactly right like yeah you can't mess that up that has to
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be bang on and in theory you can make it exactly right because at least in the UK
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Transport for London holds all of that data and they can license it in one big
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chunk. So we should actually be one of the easier places I think to get a lot
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of that especially in London then maybe some other cities would be in the world
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but that's what I expect anyway because I know people license it to make apps.
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If that's a that's fair it'll be interesting to see what Apple does with
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that and you know trains it's not really a big thing for me here but I could see
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that being a really frustrating, you know, feature not to have if you if you depend
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on it. So topic 0.5 is that our friends at Microsoft have made another
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acquisition. They sure have. They bought Wunderlist. Yeah, which is a little
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surprising to me initially but you know upon thinking about it it makes a lot of
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since and Federica wrote about it I think today or yesterday about that they
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acquired I see miss actually Vunderlist right not wonder list I just realized
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you live closer Germany than I do yeah cuz the company's name is six
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Wunderkinde because you know W's are pronounced that way in Germany yeah so I
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assumed it's it's Wunderlist and we've been calling it Wunderlist this whole
00:17:08
◼
►
time so I apologize to six Wunderkinde and now Microsoft this is like
00:17:15
◼
►
- Microsoft.
00:17:18
◼
►
- Get out, get out now.
00:17:20
◼
►
- You're gonna be alone.
00:17:21
◼
►
- Fine, I will take it.
00:17:23
◼
►
I can do it. - It's monologue.
00:17:25
◼
►
- I think this is genius.
00:17:27
◼
►
This is a genius move.
00:17:29
◼
►
This is like, Microsoft right now
00:17:32
◼
►
doing some really exciting stuff.
00:17:33
◼
►
They are strengthening their cross platform strategy.
00:17:36
◼
►
They are really digging deep on like making
00:17:39
◼
►
the Office ecosystem, I guess it would be, kind of,
00:17:43
◼
►
like stronger and stronger.
00:17:44
◼
►
'Cause I mean, they bought a Compley
00:17:46
◼
►
and turned that into an office product effectively,
00:17:48
◼
►
they turned it into Outlook.
00:17:50
◼
►
But Sunrise is still Sunrise.
00:17:53
◼
►
And it looks like at least for the time being,
00:17:56
◼
►
Wunderlist is going to remain Wunderlist.
00:17:59
◼
►
I'm going all in on that now.
00:18:00
◼
►
And that makes sense, right?
00:18:03
◼
►
Because a Compley didn't really have a brand behind it.
00:18:07
◼
►
It was new and I don't think a lot of people really used it.
00:18:10
◼
►
But these two, like Sunrise and Wunderlist, they do.
00:18:14
◼
►
definitely do and plus there is less of a fit because Microsoft don't have a
00:18:19
◼
►
office calendar app and an office task app so maybe in six months time they
00:18:24
◼
►
will rebrand them with these new you know we'll get like Microsoft agenda and
00:18:29
◼
►
Microsoft tasks you know as brands and they'll sit in the office suite but I
00:18:33
◼
►
think this is genius they're acquiring smart young nimble companies that are
00:18:38
◼
►
experimenting and doing exciting stuff rather than trying to build this stuff
00:18:41
◼
►
internally. I think this is a genius move and it makes them stronger and stronger.
00:18:45
◼
►
It makes them much more exciting and it's that you know they're buying
00:18:49
◼
►
companies that have strong iOS presences, strong Android presences, so they don't
00:18:54
◼
►
have to build three times. I just think this new Microsoft that they've
00:19:00
◼
►
been like showing over the last few months, I just continue to be more and
00:19:04
◼
►
more excited by it. I totally agree and I think you're right it helps round out
00:19:10
◼
►
their sort of consumer stuff because they do have made me outlook and exchange
00:19:14
◼
►
just calendaring but not the way sunrise does and you could do to-do list in
00:19:18
◼
►
outlook and exchange but not the way that that Thunderless does so it's it's
00:19:22
◼
►
them moving more to the consumer market you know there's been a lot of talk
00:19:25
◼
►
about like Google's apps on iOS we're talking about that today but I think
00:19:30
◼
►
Microsoft you know they're doing a lot again cross-platform you know going
00:19:34
◼
►
looking outside their own OS's to bring services and applications
00:19:40
◼
►
to a bigger market and that obviously makes a lot of sense because
00:19:44
◼
►
Windows Phone is really little. But yeah I hope that they continue to
00:19:49
◼
►
let these guys do good work. It's a great app. We named it our the best
00:19:52
◼
►
shared to-do list on the suite setup I think last year. And so yeah really
00:19:58
◼
►
happy for those guys and we'll keep an eye on it but I think
00:20:02
◼
►
I think Microsoft can handle this and handle it well.
00:20:07
◼
►
- So yeah, this is one of those Wall Street Journal
00:20:11
◼
►
reported stories that I think they said 100 million
00:20:13
◼
►
or something, and then I put it in the document
00:20:16
◼
►
and then before, in between me putting it in the document
00:20:19
◼
►
and I was starting to show it from the list confirmed it,
00:20:21
◼
►
or Six Month at Kinda confirmed it.
00:20:23
◼
►
So congratulations to them.
00:20:25
◼
►
Like, that's a lot of money.
00:20:29
◼
►
That's a lot of money.
00:20:31
◼
►
Would you sell to Microsoft for $100 million?
00:20:35
◼
►
I mean, all I can sell is half of Relay and 5V pixels,
00:20:40
◼
►
100% of that.
00:20:41
◼
►
I don't know if that's really in Microsoft's wheelhouse.
00:20:45
◼
►
Well, I mean, if Microsoft would like
00:20:47
◼
►
to give us $100 million, I think we would definitely
00:20:49
◼
►
entertain the idea.
00:20:53
◼
►
I would create a Microsoft podcast for $100 million.
00:20:58
◼
►
I would sell out for $100 million.
00:21:00
◼
►
I just want to put that on the table.
00:21:01
◼
►
- Yeah, see now we're gonna get emails
00:21:02
◼
►
from people who want a Microsoft podcast.
00:21:04
◼
►
- Well, they can have one.
00:21:05
◼
►
They just have to give me $100 million.
00:21:07
◼
►
That is my price for a Microsoft podcast, $100 million.
00:21:12
◼
►
- We should just move on.
00:21:14
◼
►
- Move on to receiving $100 million?
00:21:15
◼
►
This week's episode is brought to you by OmniFocus.
00:21:22
◼
►
And when we come back from this,
00:21:23
◼
►
we're gonna be talking to Russell Wojtowicz
00:21:25
◼
►
about Google Photos.
00:21:27
◼
►
I just love OmniFocus. My life is in OmniFocus. Without OmniFocus I don't think I could get
00:21:35
◼
►
through a day anymore. We have some huge projects that we're working on right now and I keep
00:21:41
◼
►
like either waking up in the middle of the night or stopping dead in my tracks in the
00:21:46
◼
►
middle of the street and having just a thought of "Oh god I didn't do this!" I open OmniFocus,
00:21:52
◼
►
I put it in there and then I don't need to worry about it anymore. I just take things
00:21:55
◼
►
out of my brain and put them into OmniFocus and then they're just dealt with.
00:21:59
◼
►
I do this on my iPhone, I do this on my Mac, I love the whole ecosystem there.
00:22:05
◼
►
There's been a universal update recently for the iOS apps and now the iPad and
00:22:11
◼
►
the iPhone live together. So it's just one universal app and the iPad app is
00:22:16
◼
►
still really good for forecast which is OmniFocus'
00:22:21
◼
►
system for being able to see what's coming up over the next few days and you
00:22:25
◼
►
can do reviews and stuff of what's happening in your task list.
00:22:29
◼
►
It's a really great feature. It's my favorite feature of OmniFocus is the
00:22:33
◼
►
forecast feature. So it lets me see at a quick glance what tasks I've got coming
00:22:36
◼
►
up today, what appointments I've got coming up today so I can schedule tasks
00:22:39
◼
►
around them and I can see a glance what's coming up over the next few days.
00:22:43
◼
►
It's great and the iPhone's got it, the Mac's got it, the iPad's got it. I love
00:22:47
◼
►
that feature. But today I want to tell you a little bit more about OmniFocus
00:22:50
◼
►
for the Apple Watch. So one of the things that I've been doing now is I check what
00:22:54
◼
►
tasks I have on my Apple Watch. I can add items to my inbox just by dictation in
00:22:59
◼
►
the app on the Apple Watch which is awesome which is really good for when I'm
00:23:02
◼
►
walking down the street and I have that idea that I have to throw in there. It
00:23:05
◼
►
comes for free with the universal version of OmniFocus. It's just waiting for
00:23:08
◼
►
you to install if you have it already so you can just install it now and be more
00:23:11
◼
►
productive on the go. It's a great way to get a glance of what you have due for
00:23:15
◼
►
today, what's upcoming, anything that's passed. You can very quickly and easily
00:23:19
◼
►
get a glance, no pun intended, of what you need to take care of. They have a glance,
00:23:23
◼
►
and they have an app and I have them both. I like the glance as well because it tells me the next
00:23:26
◼
►
upcoming thing that I have. You can even check things off right from within the Apple Watch app
00:23:31
◼
►
as well. Continuity picks up the last perspective, context or project that you were looking at on
00:23:36
◼
►
your iPhone. So it's make sure that you're always where you need to be. I just love it. This is just
00:23:42
◼
►
something else on top of the system that I already love so much. And the awesome people at OmniGroup,
00:23:47
◼
►
I don't even know how they did this, have created a pretty much full functioning demo of OmniFocus
00:23:52
◼
►
on the Apple Watch on their website so you can get a feel for how it works
00:23:56
◼
►
before you go and actually buy the universal version of OmniFocus and get
00:24:00
◼
►
the Apple Watch app. If you go to omnigroup.com/omnifocus you can play
00:24:03
◼
►
around with this demo. It's pretty fantastic. The OmniGroup back all of this
00:24:07
◼
►
up with an amazing support team and they are so confident that you are going to
00:24:11
◼
►
love OmniFocus. They even offer a 30-day return policy. This is not something you
00:24:16
◼
►
see a lot of iOS app developers do at all but Omni make it happen. So go and
00:24:19
◼
►
check out OmniFocus today go to omni group.com/omnifocus. Thank you so
00:24:24
◼
►
much to the Omni Group for supporting this show and all of Relay FM. So I'm so
00:24:29
◼
►
happy that we are now joined by Mr. Russell Ivanovich of Shifty Jelly,
00:24:33
◼
►
developer of the award-winning pocket cast. Hi Russell, how are you?
00:24:37
◼
►
Hi Myke, I'm just here fondling my new award. Yes, you're in San Francisco right
00:24:42
◼
►
now, right? I am indeed. I'm finally almost in your time zone.
00:24:46
◼
►
Well, I don't know if it works like that. I think you're about the same distance away.
00:24:52
◼
►
You're closer to me. Damn it. I fly across the world to try and get closer to your time
00:24:56
◼
►
zone and I just fail. You overshot it just a tad. So congratulations, if anybody doesn't
00:25:01
◼
►
know, PocketCasts was awarded a material design award in the inaugural material design awards
00:25:08
◼
►
at Google I/O. So congratulations. Why thank you, and if anyone doesn't know, probably
00:25:14
◼
►
Chris and Phil really deserve the
00:25:16
◼
►
Congratulations for that award. Although I did help just a tiny bit. Thanks. I'm gonna take someone to credit
00:25:22
◼
►
Yeah, okay. It's it's all me. I don't know who anyone else works for a team. It's a team of one
00:25:29
◼
►
It's well deserved. It's
00:25:31
◼
►
Parkhouses is beautiful and I've been playing with Android a little bit recently and it's
00:25:36
◼
►
It's kind of like my go-to app when I think about material design in my brain. So good job. Good job
00:25:44
◼
►
Occupying my my mind space if you will. Oh, thank you
00:25:51
◼
►
We thought we'd cover Google Photos today, so we have a course because we have to
00:25:56
◼
►
Yes, because we are the photo management podcast. Well, I gotta stop you if you cover this and it shuts down
00:26:02
◼
►
I'm holding you personally responsible
00:26:04
◼
►
Curse if the curse can overcome Google Photos then
00:26:08
◼
►
Then we're doing something very right or very wrong
00:26:12
◼
►
So at Google I/O now last week
00:26:15
◼
►
Google announced Google Photos which more or less and I want to get into this a little bit more or less is what Google Plus
00:26:22
◼
►
did with photos, but now it's sort of unbundled uncoupled because I think the Google Plus brand is
00:26:28
◼
►
not in great standing
00:26:30
◼
►
So so kind of
00:26:34
◼
►
High level what is what's Google doing in this in the space Russell?
00:26:40
◼
►
Okay, so pre Google Photos you had something called Google+ Photos which like you say was
00:26:45
◼
►
weirdly kind of embedded with the whole Google+ social network and I've been using that I
00:26:50
◼
►
think for at least a year now just to, it does the auto upload thing, all your photos
00:26:54
◼
►
go up, you know they're all there, it creates weird little stories out of them and does
00:26:58
◼
►
animated gifs and stuff.
00:27:00
◼
►
So I guess the new bit is they've broken it out into its own separate app and they've
00:27:05
◼
►
They've added some really cool, I guess, I don't know what you call it, categorization
00:27:10
◼
►
and it recognizes people, it recognizes places and it does all of this without you having
00:27:16
◼
►
to lift a finger.
00:27:17
◼
►
So I was one of those users that used to go into iPhoto and say, "Yes, this is me and
00:27:20
◼
►
this is my wife and we went here and try and geotag on my photos and all that."
00:27:25
◼
►
So this does all of that for you, which is just amazing.
00:27:30
◼
►
Just I mean, we're going to jump around a little bit now because I have a question that
00:27:33
◼
►
I've been meaning to ask someone and I can ask you.
00:27:36
◼
►
I'm uploading photos to Google Photos
00:27:38
◼
►
and I'll talk about that in a minute.
00:27:39
◼
►
And it hasn't done any face detection though.
00:27:41
◼
►
Do I need to do something?
00:27:43
◼
►
- No, it's just magical.
00:27:44
◼
►
So it doesn't know the names of the people.
00:27:47
◼
►
So basically if I look at mine,
00:27:48
◼
►
I see the people that I've taken the photos of most.
00:27:51
◼
►
So my kids are number one and two.
00:27:53
◼
►
And then there's myself and then there's my wife
00:27:55
◼
►
and there's a few other people, you know,
00:27:56
◼
►
I regularly stalk and take photos of like Philip.
00:28:00
◼
►
And it doesn't know who those people are,
00:28:01
◼
►
but it knows every single photo that they're in
00:28:03
◼
►
and it just kind of auto-categorizes it.
00:28:05
◼
►
So I'll give you a creepy example.
00:28:07
◼
►
Someone was asking me for a photo of Philip the other day.
00:28:09
◼
►
You know, they're like,
00:28:10
◼
►
"Oh, we have to have a photo of Phil."
00:28:11
◼
►
So I just went in there, I clicked on his face,
00:28:13
◼
►
and it literally showed me every photo
00:28:15
◼
►
that Philip's ever been in.
00:28:16
◼
►
I could find the one I wanted and send that off.
00:28:19
◼
►
- Where in the UI is that exactly?
00:28:21
◼
►
- Yeah, this is the weird part.
00:28:23
◼
►
So I couldn't find it for the first 30 minutes.
00:28:24
◼
►
It's in the search button.
00:28:26
◼
►
So the second you hit search, you get people,
00:28:28
◼
►
I think you get places and you get categories,
00:28:30
◼
►
then you can just free text search as well.
00:28:32
◼
►
Yeah, I only have places and things.
00:28:34
◼
►
Maybe it needs more data, I don't know,
00:28:35
◼
►
but I don't know people yet.
00:28:36
◼
►
But anyway, that's an aside that nobody else needs to hear.
00:28:39
◼
►
So there is some limits to what you can put in, right?
00:28:44
◼
►
'Cause it's unlimited and limited, is my understanding.
00:28:47
◼
►
It's kind of a bit peculiar in the way
00:28:49
◼
►
that that's broken down.
00:28:51
◼
►
Well, I guess if you use an iPhone 6 or a 6 Plus,
00:28:53
◼
►
it's effectively unlimited.
00:28:55
◼
►
You know, you have an eight megapixel camera
00:28:56
◼
►
that is unlimited up to 16 megapixel,
00:28:59
◼
►
I think 1080p is the video limit. So that's all the iPhone takes as well. So even someone like me who has
00:29:04
◼
►
Wink wink does not just slightly better camera on my phone in the s6
00:29:08
◼
►
It is it is honestly bad. We won't get into that today
00:29:12
◼
►
This is not why we invited you onto this show, yeah, I got that in there didn't I? Thank you Samsung for my check later
00:29:21
◼
►
No, so that takes 16 megapixels photos and it can take 4k video
00:29:25
◼
►
So assuming you go the free route, it will actually down sample that 4K video down to
00:29:31
◼
►
But I'm one of those people that pays, I think it's $12 a year to get, I want to say 100
00:29:36
◼
►
gigabytes of storage.
00:29:37
◼
►
So the cool thing about that, I'm hoping this still works the same way, is when you go over
00:29:41
◼
►
those limits, that's the only thing that counts against your storage.
00:29:44
◼
►
So I have about 120 gig worth of stuff in there, but I'm only being, I think, allocated
00:29:51
◼
►
for about 50 of it.
00:29:52
◼
►
Yeah, that makes sense to me now why, like what it says my allocation is seems way lower
00:29:59
◼
►
than, that you've just made sense to me because my allocation is some really small number
00:30:03
◼
►
but I know I have gigabytes of photos in there at the moment and it's like, you're like 500
00:30:08
◼
►
I'm like, I don't understand what's happening here.
00:30:10
◼
►
Yeah, so it's only the ones that go over that limit and those limits used to be, they used
00:30:14
◼
►
to have the same thing, they were just far lower.
00:30:16
◼
►
I think originally it was, I want to say 2048 pixels across and the videos were, I don't
00:30:21
◼
►
I don't know, maybe 720p or something,
00:30:23
◼
►
but they've upped both of those.
00:30:25
◼
►
- So I decided that I was gonna kind of go in with this
00:30:30
◼
►
and just upload some photos.
00:30:32
◼
►
'Cause I saw the presentation
00:30:33
◼
►
and I thought it looked really interesting.
00:30:35
◼
►
Because there isn't really anything about Apple's solution
00:30:39
◼
►
that really made me wanna jump.
00:30:43
◼
►
Like there just wasn't anything there for me
00:30:45
◼
►
that I thought was compelling enough.
00:30:47
◼
►
Like I could already get to my photos,
00:30:49
◼
►
I have them on Dropbox.
00:30:50
◼
►
I don't ever really look through them enough that that would be the main
00:30:54
◼
►
reason because that kind of seems to be the main reason is you can have all of
00:30:57
◼
►
your photos wherever you want them. I kind of have never really needed that.
00:31:01
◼
►
It's never really been a massive thing for me. I always looked for other stuff
00:31:04
◼
►
so like when I was using Everpix I liked the flashback features and some of
00:31:09
◼
►
the categorization stuff that they did so it was fun to use that but my Dropbox
00:31:12
◼
►
solution has done a pretty good job and you can get apps that can let you turn
00:31:16
◼
►
Dropbox into like a like you know can get apps that put like a viewer in front
00:31:20
◼
►
of Dropbox kind of thing that we've spoken about on the show before. But I saw the stuff
00:31:23
◼
►
that Google was doing and I was like that looks really interesting to me. Like yeah
00:31:27
◼
►
the ability to like search without there being any tagging and it finds things. So I was
00:31:31
◼
►
like I want to give this a go. So I've pointed like a few thousand photos at it so far and
00:31:38
◼
►
it's been sucking them up. The best way to do this I've found is to download this little
00:31:43
◼
►
Mac uploader which you can get from the photos website and it just sits there. You just tell
00:31:49
◼
►
what files, what folders you want it to suck in,
00:31:51
◼
►
so I just pointed my Dropbox photos folder at it,
00:31:55
◼
►
pulled out some that I didn't want.
00:31:56
◼
►
And then it gives you this really weird dialogue
00:31:59
◼
►
about duplication in Google Drive,
00:32:01
◼
►
'cause you can, Steven, you just found this, I think,
00:32:03
◼
►
that you can sync them to your computer
00:32:05
◼
►
via Google Drive, right?
00:32:07
◼
►
- Sort of, so it doesn't,
00:32:10
◼
►
so I did the same thing you did,
00:32:11
◼
►
I pointed at a folder with subfolders of images,
00:32:14
◼
►
and so you can go into Google Drive on the web
00:32:18
◼
►
and there's like a ad as a folder type guy,
00:32:23
◼
►
and so it'll syncs the photos back down,
00:32:25
◼
►
but they're just, it's just a flat structure.
00:32:28
◼
►
There's no organization or subfolders there.
00:32:32
◼
►
So what I was thinking, or what I was kinda hoping
00:32:34
◼
►
was it to be like Dropbox.
00:32:35
◼
►
So I could have local directories,
00:32:37
◼
►
I could have full res copies locally in my machine,
00:32:40
◼
►
and that just sort of get mirrored in the cloud,
00:32:42
◼
►
but it's not really the way it works.
00:32:43
◼
►
And in hindsight, of course,
00:32:45
◼
►
Google is very much a web first client second,
00:32:47
◼
►
in many ways.
00:32:49
◼
►
And so there's a sort of some of these edge cases
00:32:51
◼
►
you have to be aware of if you want to use this
00:32:54
◼
►
more like iCloud photo library.
00:32:59
◼
►
It's not really quite the same thing.
00:33:01
◼
►
- Yeah, it's definitely a little bit different to that.
00:33:04
◼
►
I mean, what I generally do is just once a month,
00:33:08
◼
►
I go to the Google takeout thing that they have
00:33:10
◼
►
and I just download a full backup of all my photos
00:33:13
◼
►
and then store that somewhere.
00:33:16
◼
►
That's the top tip.
00:33:18
◼
►
- That's the top tip.
00:33:19
◼
►
It is a big download.
00:33:20
◼
►
I mean, if you don't have good internet,
00:33:22
◼
►
good luck getting that.
00:33:23
◼
►
So I think I have, I wanna say 35,000 photos
00:33:26
◼
►
in there at the moment.
00:33:27
◼
►
And I think the thing that amazed me the most
00:33:29
◼
►
is I could just search for anything.
00:33:30
◼
►
I could say, show me pictures of the beach in 2012.
00:33:33
◼
►
Show me where I was for this picture.
00:33:36
◼
►
I did this funny one.
00:33:37
◼
►
I searched for Sydney Harbour
00:33:38
◼
►
and it found the Sydney Harbour Bridge
00:33:40
◼
►
in a picture of a picture.
00:33:42
◼
►
So I'd been to someone's house.
00:33:43
◼
►
I'd taken a picture of some pictures
00:33:45
◼
►
So they've taken it, it actually took, yeah, it's like, yeah, that's the Sydney Harbour
00:33:48
◼
►
Bridge and it does some amazing stuff.
00:33:52
◼
►
Just for a joke, I just search for pictures of sleeping, for example, and it shows you
00:33:55
◼
►
people sleeping.
00:33:56
◼
►
You know, pictures of babies, it shows you pictures of babies.
00:33:58
◼
►
And this is all, you've got to remember in your photo library that you haven't spent
00:34:01
◼
►
any time tagging.
00:34:02
◼
►
So I didn't have to go through and say, you know, this is a picture of someone sleeping.
00:34:06
◼
►
I searched for koala just for you guys as well, and that works as well.
00:34:09
◼
►
Because in my backyard I have some koalas.
00:34:14
◼
►
- Yeah, for someone who, I'm not gonna be moving
00:34:18
◼
►
to this full time, but in thinking about it,
00:34:21
◼
►
I sort of view it as, it could be a way
00:34:23
◼
►
to have my photos backed up somewhere else
00:34:25
◼
►
and give me a different way to get into them
00:34:27
◼
►
where I could, again, easily search.
00:34:30
◼
►
And I have folders and subfolders done by sort of event type
00:34:35
◼
►
or it's kind of a mix of events and people
00:34:37
◼
►
and this would give me a way to search sort of across
00:34:40
◼
►
all of that stuff and the search really, I think,
00:34:43
◼
►
is the most impressive thing about this.
00:34:45
◼
►
Like you said, it's very natural search,
00:34:47
◼
►
like, hey, you know, I went on vacation in 2008.
00:34:50
◼
►
Like it knows when it was and it kind of knows where it is.
00:34:54
◼
►
And it really is like,
00:34:57
◼
►
this is how Google can flex its muscle
00:35:00
◼
►
over anyone else in the industry, I think.
00:35:02
◼
►
- Definitely, if you want to look at, you know,
00:35:04
◼
►
what are the biggest differences between this
00:35:06
◼
►
and, you know, iCloud photos,
00:35:07
◼
►
it's definitely that search and categorization
00:35:10
◼
►
that Google's able to do, you know,
00:35:11
◼
►
on a massive scale on their servers.
00:35:12
◼
►
So I'll give you another example.
00:35:14
◼
►
I was doing just an interview with someone,
00:35:17
◼
►
just over email, and they said,
00:35:19
◼
►
can you give me a picture of your setup at work?
00:35:21
◼
►
What does your desk look like?
00:35:22
◼
►
So I just searched for computer monitor,
00:35:24
◼
►
scrolled down, there's my monitor at work
00:35:26
◼
►
with my Mac Pro next to it,
00:35:27
◼
►
and I just sent the guy the picture.
00:35:29
◼
►
Really handy.
00:35:30
◼
►
- So this is the exact reason why I decided
00:35:33
◼
►
I wanted to sign up for this,
00:35:35
◼
►
'cause I just think that that is so awesome.
00:35:37
◼
►
And it doesn't get it right 100% of the time.
00:35:40
◼
►
Sometimes I know there are things in there
00:35:41
◼
►
it's not finding but my feeling about this is the fact that you can do any of it is awesome
00:35:46
◼
►
and the longer I use this if I really do you know want to keep using it the better I know
00:35:51
◼
►
it's going to get right just over time this stuff will improve but the I think the thing
00:35:57
◼
►
that has that has impressed me the most right now is some uploading my photos and I get
00:36:01
◼
►
a push notification every little while we've made a collage for you or we've made an animation
00:36:06
◼
►
for you or we've made a collection for you and these are just these awesome things or
00:36:10
◼
►
Or they take a photo and they're like "We've enhanced it" and they've just made it look
00:36:14
◼
►
more artistic or they've corrected color or something.
00:36:19
◼
►
Or they'll say "Hey, what about that time you went to San Francisco?" and it's like
00:36:22
◼
►
showing me WWDC last year or it's showing me Atlanta and it picks up all the photos
00:36:27
◼
►
and puts them in this little story and it breaks them up by day.
00:36:31
◼
►
Or it takes a selection of images that were taken in quick succession and it turns them
00:36:36
◼
►
into an animation.
00:36:37
◼
►
And I know that this stuff has been around for a while, that like Auto Awesome I believe
00:36:41
◼
►
it was called on Google Plus.
00:36:43
◼
►
Yeah that's what it was.
00:36:45
◼
►
It's so fantastic to I think to just get these little things that pop up every now and then.
00:36:49
◼
►
And look I've had some weird ones, I've had ex girlfriends and stuff appear.
00:36:54
◼
►
But it's like I'm not going to blame Google for that because they have no, they can't
00:36:59
◼
►
So that's not an issue that I have.
00:37:01
◼
►
Actually they probably do but they just don't want to let me know that they know.
00:37:06
◼
►
Yeah they don't want to turn that on, they don't want to freak you out too much.
00:37:09
◼
►
But I found the same thing, so I've had this for years now.
00:37:12
◼
►
The best time honestly is when you go on a trip somewhere, like you were saying WWDC,
00:37:16
◼
►
like I went to an island just off the coast called Kangaroo Island and it literally made
00:37:21
◼
►
like a photo book of my journey which is something I used to love to get home and do like in
00:37:25
◼
►
iPhoto and it did a really good job.
00:37:27
◼
►
Yeah this is the thing that I'm most impressed with because it takes your photos and gives
00:37:31
◼
►
you little presents.
00:37:32
◼
►
Like, they give me little gifts every now and then.
00:37:36
◼
►
And it's just nice, I like it.
00:37:38
◼
►
It's something that, it just adds a bit of playfulness.
00:37:41
◼
►
And this is part of my overall feeling about Google Photos,
00:37:46
◼
►
especially where it is right now,
00:37:48
◼
►
is this is not a professional,
00:37:52
◼
►
like, this is not a pro user's tool, right?
00:37:55
◼
►
Because the unlimited stuff is for lower quality stuff,
00:37:59
◼
►
right, and/or they will take your photos
00:38:02
◼
►
and they will down res them a little bit,
00:38:04
◼
►
which I don't care about,
00:38:05
◼
►
but I know that there are loads of people that will,
00:38:07
◼
►
and that's fine.
00:38:08
◼
►
And then when they take your photos,
00:38:09
◼
►
they do fun things with them.
00:38:11
◼
►
Like, this is a consumer tool,
00:38:13
◼
►
and I am a consumer when it comes to photos.
00:38:15
◼
►
All of my photos are taken on my iPhone.
00:38:17
◼
►
Like, I'm totally happy with that.
00:38:19
◼
►
That's where they live.
00:38:21
◼
►
And I'm, the way that I've got it is,
00:38:23
◼
►
at the moment, I'm still doing my automatic upload
00:38:26
◼
►
from my phone to Dropbox,
00:38:29
◼
►
as I've done for years now,
00:38:31
◼
►
and then Dropbox sucks them in to Google Photos
00:38:36
◼
►
and that works for me 'cause it stays out of the way
00:38:38
◼
►
and then I get all these other cool features.
00:38:41
◼
►
- Yeah, no, that sounds like a good way to go
00:38:42
◼
►
and I definitely agree.
00:38:43
◼
►
If you're someone with a digital SLR
00:38:46
◼
►
that takes 40 megapixel raw images
00:38:49
◼
►
and you need to archive those
00:38:50
◼
►
'cause they're from weddings or whatever,
00:38:52
◼
►
this is not a tool for you.
00:38:54
◼
►
It's like you say, it's a consumer thing.
00:38:55
◼
►
It's for people like me.
00:38:56
◼
►
I go out, I take 99.9% of my photos on my phone
00:39:00
◼
►
and then I want some quick way to have access to those.
00:39:03
◼
►
And it's just really cool that, you know,
00:39:04
◼
►
in the background without you worrying,
00:39:06
◼
►
they just all end up in a central place
00:39:07
◼
►
and a central place that is now searchable.
00:39:10
◼
►
You know, I didn't have that two weeks ago.
00:39:15
◼
►
Real quick before we cut you loose,
00:39:16
◼
►
you know, there's been a lot of conversation
00:39:19
◼
►
and there always is with Google,
00:39:21
◼
►
especially in the Apple sort of camp,
00:39:23
◼
►
that Google is gonna do things with your data
00:39:26
◼
►
or they're going to, you know,
00:39:29
◼
►
your kids are gonna end up on an ad somewhere.
00:39:32
◼
►
You know, there's this really interesting article,
00:39:35
◼
►
if you guys saw it, over on Medium,
00:39:38
◼
►
Federico linked to it on Mac Stories a couple days ago,
00:39:40
◼
►
that talks about this, and basically,
00:39:42
◼
►
with the head of Streams Photos and sharing it at Google,
00:39:46
◼
►
basically, sort of sums up, Myke,
00:39:47
◼
►
your sort of stance on Google over the years of like,
00:39:51
◼
►
yes, they have access to a lot of data about me,
00:39:52
◼
►
but I get all these great things back,
00:39:54
◼
►
and I think you even just said that with the photos,
00:39:55
◼
►
like, you know, they can do all these little things,
00:39:58
◼
►
and you get all these really nice tools and stuff
00:40:01
◼
►
at your fingertips, but there's a part of me,
00:40:05
◼
►
and I'm using Google Photos, and I will continue to use it
00:40:08
◼
►
as just, like I said, another window into my photo library.
00:40:11
◼
►
But does that sort of stuff make you guys think
00:40:16
◼
►
differently about using this, or is it something
00:40:19
◼
►
that is not really a concern, or maybe it is a concern
00:40:24
◼
►
but not an important one?
00:40:26
◼
►
What are your thoughts on that?
00:40:28
◼
►
So I mean my take on that is that, you know, we, as part of what I do, like I run servers,
00:40:34
◼
►
I know where files go, I know how cloud hosting works, so any company that you're going to
00:40:39
◼
►
use that involves any sort of hosting, you have to implicitly trust them.
00:40:42
◼
►
So you have to trust Dropbox, you have to trust Apple, you have to trust Google, and
00:40:45
◼
►
if that's not, you know, something that you're comfortable with, then that's, you know, that's
00:40:52
◼
►
But I mean for me personally, I really do, you know, put a lot of trust in Google.
00:40:56
◼
►
I don't mind if their algorithms go through my email, I don't mind if their algorithms
00:41:00
◼
►
go through my photos.
00:41:02
◼
►
Because I know at that scale you can't have a human being sitting there and going, "Oh,
00:41:05
◼
►
yes, interesting.
00:41:06
◼
►
What did Russell talk about today?
00:41:08
◼
►
Page, page, page."
00:41:10
◼
►
It's just not a thing that worries me.
00:41:12
◼
►
And I mean if it is something that worries you personally, then that's fine.
00:41:16
◼
►
You don't have to use it.
00:41:17
◼
►
Yeah, I feel the same.
00:41:19
◼
►
And I also, I spoke about this on Upgrade recently.
00:41:24
◼
►
I feel utility in this stuff.
00:41:26
◼
►
And it's even like in the interview, Bradley Horowitz is talking about, let's say for example
00:41:31
◼
►
in the future they find some way that they're happy with to give this data in some form
00:41:39
◼
►
to companies.
00:41:40
◼
►
Let's say Tesla need to make a product recall.
00:41:43
◼
►
They can contact you directly because they can find out you own a Tesla because of your
00:41:49
◼
►
And he's saying, "Look, we have the proper controls and checks and all that kind of stuff
00:41:52
◼
►
imbalance and to make sure it's all okay and that the users find it.
00:41:56
◼
►
He's speaking kind of... it sounds like a little off the cuff but it probably
00:42:01
◼
►
isn't. But the idea of like that of course they'll make sure that
00:42:05
◼
►
people know what they're doing. Because this is the type of thing that
00:42:08
◼
►
if Google got silly about the company would shut down because they would be
00:42:13
◼
►
taken through every single court on the planet. If they just start selling
00:42:17
◼
►
people's photo data. There is a way to do this properly and I
00:42:23
◼
►
believe that they would do it properly. And people have been saying
00:42:27
◼
►
that this is like, and I think Google has said this as well, this is Gmail for
00:42:31
◼
►
photos and I am so on board with that as an idea for what this is. It just feels
00:42:37
◼
►
like that. This is just like doing for photos what Gmail did for email. It's
00:42:42
◼
►
just is like just an end-to-end solution it's simple and you have unlimited
00:42:47
◼
►
storage. I am finding something weird at the moment it's probably to do with my
00:42:50
◼
►
setup where for some... I don't understand what is happening on my phone on my iPhone I'm
00:42:54
◼
►
seeing duplicate photos but not on the web so something as weird is happening
00:42:57
◼
►
on my iPhone I need to diagnose but I think that's because I kind of have my
00:43:02
◼
►
photos rooting in and out again but I'll work that out later but they look it's
00:43:06
◼
►
perfectly fine on the on the Mac. But I'm excited about this. I'm happy that
00:43:12
◼
►
there is a simple solution that I get utility out of from a company that is
00:43:16
◼
►
not going to shut this down. Yeah I mean I'm the same I just hope that yeah
00:43:22
◼
►
the curse of connected doesn't strike again because I mean you guys are a bit
00:43:26
◼
►
infamous for this. You know that is a long-running joke of the show but there
00:43:31
◼
►
was a point of this Steven that I saw I think you make on Twitter this week
00:43:34
◼
►
that somebody was like, "Oh, but Google have a history of shutting stuff down," which they do.
00:43:39
◼
►
Yeah, someone asked me that. And people always say, "Well, Google Reader..." Yes, Google does
00:43:48
◼
►
do that, but I wouldn't worry about that with Photos. Photos is a need that everybody has.
00:43:54
◼
►
Only we care about RSS services. I think this is clearly something here to stay,
00:44:02
◼
►
Not only because everyone has photos, but especially if you know
00:44:04
◼
►
If you can install it on iOS or Android or an Android if it's automatic where I can just have my photos backed up to
00:44:11
◼
►
This thing automatically like that's gonna be such a value to so many people. I really I
00:44:16
◼
►
Don't remember. I don't remember who tweeted a couple people did actually I don't really worry about that with with Google stuff
00:44:22
◼
►
Yes, they shut stuff down sometimes but it's a they always give you a way to get your data back
00:44:27
◼
►
their Google takeout is really good and it's
00:44:31
◼
►
it's sort of too big and too important for them to brush this aside in two years.
00:44:37
◼
►
Because I think there was something that you said which I liked which is
00:44:44
◼
►
like photos are just they are part of every big company. Right, I mean
00:44:50
◼
►
Apple has their photos platform, Google has theirs, you can do stuff with
00:44:54
◼
►
OneDrive, Microsoft, Dropbox of course has carousel. I mean any big
00:45:00
◼
►
Amazon photos, I mean any big like platform company you can think of is
00:45:04
◼
►
doing something in this space that they can't they can't afford not to at this
00:45:07
◼
►
point. So I would I wouldn't let that worry your your sweet head.
00:45:12
◼
►
Yeah I think that's the same. I think that you know as integral as you know
00:45:16
◼
►
email is to our lives now I think photos has become the same thing and I think
00:45:21
◼
►
you know big companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft, you know Dropbox they all
00:45:24
◼
►
realize that. This is definitely not some you know 20% project like Google
00:45:29
◼
►
reader was so I think this is here to stay you know for the long run.
00:45:33
◼
►
Russell thank you so much for joining us. Where can people find you on the
00:45:37
◼
►
internet? They can find me in San Francisco. Come and say hi while I'm here
00:45:41
◼
►
but seriously you can find me @RustyShelf on the Twitters and you can
00:45:47
◼
►
see stuff about our company at ShiftyJelly.com. Awesome. Thanks so much for
00:45:52
◼
►
joining us. Thanks for having me. Right let me just take a last break for today
00:45:57
◼
►
and then we can get into talking about some WWDC predictions before we head into
00:46:03
◼
►
the keynote on Monday. This episode is also brought to you by Hover, the best
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►
it they'll either say you can buy it if it's available or they'll show you all
00:46:59
◼
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of the ones that are available or they'll show you some variations. They
00:47:02
◼
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say nothing's available at all none of the domains you want to get are there.
00:47:04
◼
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Then you've typed in some words into hover.com they will show you some
00:47:07
◼
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variations on it they have some super smart domain robots that do all of that
00:47:11
◼
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calculation in the background and then give you some suggestions and a lot of
00:47:14
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them are very smart and almost like way better than you would expect from these
00:47:19
◼
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types of services usually it's like they just say "free X" or "new X" but hover do
00:47:24
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some smart stuff to try and work out to give you a good domain to give you some
00:47:27
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good options there maybe it helps spark off some other ideas as well for some
00:47:31
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other avenues to pursue. All of Hover's domains include Whois privacy for free.
00:47:36
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Now this is so important if you don't have Whois privacy on your domain names
00:47:40
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people can find out your personal information that you have to register
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with ICANN. You don't want people to know this so if you have Whois privacy it
00:47:48
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just blocks that and Hover included for free. I bought a domain a couple of weeks
00:47:51
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ago at hover and noticed that they actually check the box like you don't even need to
00:47:56
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check a box you don't even miss it they check a box for you for you not to get who is privacy
00:48:00
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you have to uncheck a box which is kind of crazy so you'd never do that so don't do it
00:48:03
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I love that they do it for you.
00:48:05
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Hover have fantastic support they have a no hold no wait no transfer telephone support
00:48:10
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policy if you pick up the phone and call Canada which is where hover is you give them a call
00:48:15
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you will speak to somebody automatically on the phone you just pick up the phone and say
00:48:19
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say hi how can I help you and they'll help you. You don't have to be transferred to like
00:48:22
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25 different supervisors they'll just help you. But if you prefer communication via email
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they have great support as well via email which I've used a bunch. They also have great
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documentation and guides on their website in case you just want to, in case you know
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how to do this stuff you want to check something yourself you can do that. Or you can do what
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I did where oh I know what I'm doing and I know how to do domain forwarding on my own
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that's not a problem I'll just go in and do that. Oh I know how to do registering from
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another provider I can just do all of that no because if you're me you'll just
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get something wrong and then when you do get something wrong you can contact
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their email support team and they'll be like oh you just need to change this
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thing like oh I knew that just testing you they're really good with that sort
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of stuff they can help you out but you know what I should have done I don't
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know why I didn't do it this way instead of trying to transfer the domains on my
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own I should have just used hovers valet service they take all of the hassle out
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so much to hover for sponsoring this week's episode. So let's talk about
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◼
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Dub-Dub huh? Please stop. So we want to do some WWDC predictions. Can I start? Yes you please go
00:49:55
◼
►
first and then I am going to play I'm gonna read Federico's and
00:49:59
◼
►
simultaneously pull his apart as I read them. It's gonna be great. Yeah so whilst
00:50:03
◼
►
Federico couldn't be here he provided us with all of his predictions but I have
00:50:08
◼
►
some of my own. But I wanted to just get out there because one day I'm gonna get
00:50:11
◼
►
something right and then it's gonna be awesome. So the only really
00:50:15
◼
►
strong one for me is I think that we're gonna see a complete overhaul of
00:50:20
◼
►
notifications. I think that today widgets will be more
00:50:25
◼
►
powerful, there will be some rethinking and some extending and what
00:50:29
◼
►
they can and can't do. I think that we're gonna see notifications overhauled in
00:50:33
◼
►
general, like better and more actionable notifications, maybe more button
00:50:38
◼
►
choices, more stuff that can be activated about having to open the app to do it,
00:50:44
◼
►
right? It can just be done and it happens in the background. Maybe as well allowing
00:50:48
◼
►
messaging apps to use the quick replies, like so Slack could use that for example
00:50:53
◼
►
which would be awesome. I think that we're gonna see better notification
00:50:57
◼
►
settings for apps, I spoke about this a couple of weeks ago, like the global
00:51:00
◼
►
settings stuff, I think we're gonna see that. And also some more APIs for
00:51:04
◼
►
allowing granular notification support to help enhance the Apple Watch so you
00:51:09
◼
►
could have certain notifications sent to certain places and you could choose those
00:51:14
◼
►
in your apps of choice. I think we are going to see a music streaming service. I
00:51:19
◼
►
think that's gonna be a thing that happens and that's gonna be great. I
00:51:23
◼
►
think that's a pretty obvious one. I think we're only gonna see an Apple TV
00:51:26
◼
►
announcement if there'll be some content deals as well, some like additional cool
00:51:30
◼
►
stuff that we're gonna see on stage or just stuff that nobody really cares
00:51:33
◼
►
about but they're gonna do it anyway like you know they're gonna get some
00:51:36
◼
►
more streaming services or something like that I think we're gonna see some
00:51:39
◼
►
more of that kind of stuff that goes along with it maybe it'll be some big
00:51:43
◼
►
video games or something but I think that Apple TV will come with some other
00:51:47
◼
►
flashy presentations or announcements and but I think the thing that will get
00:51:51
◼
►
the most on stage time at this keynote is going to be watch OS 2.0 I think out
00:51:56
◼
►
of OS X iOS and the watch OS I think that they're gonna devote the most time
00:52:01
◼
►
to showing us the new features of 2.0 and also some examples of the types of
00:52:06
◼
►
apps that can be built with the native SDK.
00:52:09
◼
►
I agree on both points. You know notifications have always been vaguely
00:52:15
◼
►
frustrating on iOS and now you know you can, if you're an iMessage, you can
00:52:21
◼
►
reply and you can dictate or type right into the notification drop-down little
00:52:26
◼
►
guy but you can if it's something like slack or or email or something like that
00:52:32
◼
►
so it's a degree it's it's sort of time to open it up a little bit more and you
00:52:38
◼
►
know I think overall you know people say they want like universal VIP which I
00:52:43
◼
►
don't think is really possible
00:52:45
◼
►
I mean how does how does iOS know you know Myke you're an email VIP how do
00:52:50
◼
►
they tie that to Twitter and slack and other services but I do think a more
00:52:54
◼
►
common more you know powerful way to break these things down into sort of
00:53:01
◼
►
bite-sized chunks makes makes a lot of sense well I think some of the universal
00:53:05
◼
►
VIP stuff comes from like don't have like a friends list on the watch and VIP
00:53:11
◼
►
and that kind of stuff like give me you know you unify that at least you know
00:53:17
◼
►
right we'll see obviously watch OS is gonna get a lot of time they they have
00:53:23
◼
►
basically already said that native apps will be part of the keynote on
00:53:31
◼
►
Monday. So yeah, I think that's all. I think those are probably two really
00:53:36
◼
►
safe bets. Federico had that stuff, you know, access to the sensors and
00:53:45
◼
►
hardware which Apple said the SDK will have, that sort of thing. Apple will make it
00:53:53
◼
►
easy to migrate from watch kit to watch OS SDK.
00:53:55
◼
►
I'm not so sure he's right about that.
00:53:56
◼
►
I don't think Apple really cares
00:53:58
◼
►
if it takes you more time to rewrite your watch app.
00:54:00
◼
►
- Especially if they announce it now for like the fall.
00:54:03
◼
►
- I think that's definitely the case.
00:54:05
◼
►
I think it's definitely alongside iOS 9 in the fall.
00:54:12
◼
►
- It's interesting that he doesn't think
00:54:14
◼
►
there'll be a native SDK for the Apple TV.
00:54:17
◼
►
Like that seems like something
00:54:18
◼
►
that they would definitely do because of games.
00:54:20
◼
►
- Yeah, I think so.
00:54:24
◼
►
And maybe games, on iOS games have always had
00:54:29
◼
►
like weird status where they can run code bases
00:54:33
◼
►
that aren't Apple, there's always this weird muddy water
00:54:38
◼
►
with games and that may continue to be the case on the watch.
00:54:41
◼
►
I have yet to find a reason that I would want to play
00:54:43
◼
►
a game on my watch but maybe I'm the minority there.
00:54:49
◼
►
- So yeah, so, watch apps for sure,
00:54:53
◼
►
watch OS 2.0 or whatever it will be called for sure.
00:54:57
◼
►
You know, new OS X, San Francisco font
00:54:59
◼
►
showing up on iOS and OS X.
00:55:02
◼
►
- How do you feel about that by the way?
00:55:04
◼
►
- I'm not thrilled they're changing it again on the Mac
00:55:07
◼
►
or that it's rumored.
00:55:08
◼
►
I do think San Francisco is really nice looking
00:55:11
◼
►
and really easy to read, which I would appreciate.
00:55:14
◼
►
You know, like I said, it's weird that if they do it
00:55:19
◼
►
that Yosemite is the only version of OSN
00:55:21
◼
►
that was using Helvetica for the system font.
00:55:24
◼
►
But I could see why Apple wants to do it.
00:55:26
◼
►
And for a company that cares about every single detail,
00:55:29
◼
►
not having their own typeface in their UI
00:55:33
◼
►
has always seemed strange to me.
00:55:35
◼
►
So it seems like it's time.
00:55:37
◼
►
It's just like, why didn't you do this a year ago?
00:55:39
◼
►
Like why did you always know Helvetica
00:55:43
◼
►
was gonna be a stepping stone in OS 10?
00:55:45
◼
►
Or did you not think San Francisco was gonna be ready?
00:55:48
◼
►
you know, or what I think actually happened,
00:55:51
◼
►
if the watch was actually supposed to ship in the fall
00:55:54
◼
►
and it slipped, my guess is that Yosemite
00:55:57
◼
►
was supposed to use San Francisco initially.
00:56:00
◼
►
- Ooh, that's, I was just thinking like,
00:56:02
◼
►
why did they do it?
00:56:04
◼
►
That is smart.
00:56:06
◼
►
- And when they couldn't ship the watch,
00:56:07
◼
►
they didn't want to tip their hand with the font
00:56:11
◼
►
or with the typeface, and so they went with Helvetica
00:56:14
◼
►
as a stand-in, which is fine, like,
00:56:17
◼
►
I have a laundry list of problems with Yosemite's UI.
00:56:20
◼
►
Helvetica is not on that list.
00:56:22
◼
►
I really like it as a system font for the most part.
00:56:25
◼
►
So maybe they were just sort of backed into a corner
00:56:28
◼
►
with the timing.
00:56:29
◼
►
'Cause you know, it's a lot of moving parts, right?
00:56:31
◼
►
Like you're not gonna hold off your OS X redesign
00:56:34
◼
►
because your watch isn't ready to ship, so.
00:56:36
◼
►
Federica also says,
00:56:39
◼
►
and I agree more iCloud drive presence in the Finder.
00:56:42
◼
►
Right now you have that in the sidebar,
00:56:45
◼
►
but it's sort of janky and like it's hard to understand
00:56:48
◼
►
why it's different and it's hard,
00:56:51
◼
►
my big promise is it's hard to understand
00:56:52
◼
►
sync status of anything.
00:56:54
◼
►
I think it's just they need to continue
00:56:56
◼
►
to make that clearer.
00:56:57
◼
►
What is going on in iCloud Drive?
00:56:59
◼
►
What's there, what's not?
00:57:00
◼
►
What is the state of this document or this folder?
00:57:03
◼
►
And he says, Siri and Control Center come to OS X.
00:57:07
◼
►
You know, it'd be nice,
00:57:09
◼
►
I don't know if this is the year or not.
00:57:10
◼
►
I don't know why you would need Control Center.
00:57:12
◼
►
I don't know what it would do for you
00:57:13
◼
►
because you have the menu bar
00:57:15
◼
►
and you have media keys on your keyboard.
00:57:17
◼
►
They basically cover things like Bluetooth, Wi-Fi,
00:57:20
◼
►
you know, power stuff, volume.
00:57:23
◼
►
But Siri, I think it's probably time.
00:57:26
◼
►
There have actually been times where I wish I had Siri
00:57:28
◼
►
on the Mac if my hands were full and I could just say,
00:57:31
◼
►
you know, ahoy computer phone
00:57:32
◼
►
and have Siri do something for me, but.
00:57:34
◼
►
I'm gonna come back to iOS if that's okay.
00:57:41
◼
►
Federico, is that okay with you?
00:57:42
◼
►
Oh, we can't answer.
00:57:44
◼
►
- C, C, he said C.
00:57:46
◼
►
- So, he says other stuff, he says Swift 2.0,
00:57:50
◼
►
I don't know if it's like air quotes 2.0,
00:57:52
◼
►
but I think Swift will see, if not keynote time,
00:57:55
◼
►
I think definitely time in the State of the Union,
00:57:57
◼
►
which if you're not familiar with this,
00:57:59
◼
►
the State of the Union is the keynote Apple gives
00:58:02
◼
►
Monday afternoon, sort of after the public keynote,
00:58:07
◼
►
there's a break, and then State of the Union,
00:58:08
◼
►
it's available to developer members,
00:58:12
◼
►
so I'm a member so I can watch this on my iPad later.
00:58:15
◼
►
And it's sort of a--
00:58:16
◼
►
- I think it's everyone now though,
00:58:17
◼
►
that last year that was one of the videos
00:58:19
◼
►
that anybody could watch.
00:58:20
◼
►
- Was it? Okay.
00:58:21
◼
►
- Yeah, it was.
00:58:22
◼
►
- But, so anyway, so the State of the Union
00:58:25
◼
►
is a, it's sort of half, we are unpacking the keynote
00:58:29
◼
►
into more detail and like, this is some of the technical
00:58:31
◼
►
stuff going on behind the scenes.
00:58:33
◼
►
I mean, the keynote is designed for everybody,
00:58:34
◼
►
this is sort of one step closer to like,
00:58:37
◼
►
you're in a, you know, in an actual WWDC session.
00:58:41
◼
►
- Yeah, when we watched it last year,
00:58:42
◼
►
it was the first time we ever watched it.
00:58:44
◼
►
There are parts of it that I thought were really interesting.
00:58:46
◼
►
There are parts of it where I wanted to blow my brains out.
00:58:48
◼
►
'Cause for me, it was like, oh my God,
00:58:50
◼
►
he's writing code on stage,
00:58:51
◼
►
I don't understand what is happening.
00:58:55
◼
►
And it was horrible.
00:58:56
◼
►
And watching it in the room with people that understood it,
00:58:59
◼
►
they're like, oh, look at that.
00:59:00
◼
►
And I'm like, ah, it's just words.
00:59:02
◼
►
Words I don't even understand.
00:59:04
◼
►
- Yeah, so I think Swift might show up there.
00:59:10
◼
►
I think you probably actually will.
00:59:12
◼
►
New remote app for the Apple Music Service and Apple TV.
00:59:15
◼
►
Yeah, maybe.
00:59:16
◼
►
Demos of iWork apps, like maybe,
00:59:20
◼
►
I don't know if they're gonna do much with iWork or quote.
00:59:23
◼
►
- Well, there's extensions in iWork apps is what you're saying.
00:59:27
◼
►
- Oh, I can read.
00:59:28
◼
►
Yeah, if they do extensions.
00:59:30
◼
►
And then new parental controls in the iOS,
00:59:35
◼
►
in iOS and the Mac app storage, I think is definitely huge.
00:59:41
◼
►
Think overall we've talked about we've talked at great length on this show about the problems of the App Store
00:59:46
◼
►
You talked a lot about it on behind the app, you know, I definitely would like to see this sort of like curated
00:59:53
◼
►
Idea get spread to the App Store and better control and and all this stuff
01:00:00
◼
►
I think you know do we see is the time for Apple to do this?
01:00:02
◼
►
It's kind of like if this stuff doesn't happen next week. It's gonna wait for a year
01:00:05
◼
►
Apple's not going to roll out, I don't think, a large App Store change in October.
01:00:10
◼
►
Right, like this is the time to have everyone's attention and everyone's
01:00:15
◼
►
sitting there looking at the stage. This is when you make those announcements and
01:00:18
◼
►
when you make those changes. So some of this stuff, if we don't see it, it's just
01:00:22
◼
►
it's not in the cards for, you know, 2015-2016. So anyways, you want to go through
01:00:30
◼
►
some of this iOS stuff I feel like I've been rambling iOS iOS 9 yes so one of
01:00:37
◼
►
the main things that the Federico I know really wants and I'm not convinced we'll
01:00:44
◼
►
see it demoed WWDC is iPad multitasking so like split screen views or some
01:00:53
◼
►
additions to the iPad which show it's great for multitasking I think that is
01:00:58
◼
►
possible but I think that they might wait until the next iPads who knows but
01:01:02
◼
►
it would be nice to see it there I wonder if the mini will get that stuff
01:01:08
◼
►
I don't know like depends what they're gonna do but it would be be interesting
01:01:13
◼
►
to see something like that make me might make me want to use my iPad in in
01:01:17
◼
►
different sort of situations you know because it kind of will bridge the gap a
01:01:20
◼
►
little bit more say I want to do some research or something and write some
01:01:23
◼
►
notes because I would just like to be able to do that it might be nice to be
01:01:27
◼
►
through an iPad or something do you think we're gonna see that? I think if we
01:01:31
◼
►
do it's gonna be sort of like the split view controller stuff or like very
01:01:37
◼
►
clearly Apple is putting things in place because there's going to be a bigger
01:01:40
◼
►
phone but they can't say there's going to be a bigger phone and so it may be
01:01:44
◼
►
that like if you sort of put the pieces together in all the sessions like this
01:01:49
◼
►
is clearly coming but I agree with you I have a tendency to think that this might
01:01:54
◼
►
be one of those things where it's sort of held for later unless iOS 9 is not as
01:01:59
◼
►
wide-reaching as some people we know might like it to be and this is sort of
01:02:04
◼
►
like the big feature at that point I think we see it on stage but I think it
01:02:08
◼
►
just kind of depends on the positioning of it. A home app to manage home kit
01:02:13
◼
►
devices I think that's pretty solid now especially today saw a bunch of people
01:02:18
◼
►
reporting Federico had another write-up about this he writes a lot at the beach
01:02:21
◼
►
that's that's what I've learned today that there's there are some homekit
01:02:27
◼
►
devices now popping up so that's that's the thing that's happening so there
01:02:33
◼
►
will probably be more about that on stage keyboard tweaks including a
01:02:37
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redesigned shift key I don't know about the shift key I don't know for two years
01:02:42
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right yeah I feel like you're kind of all in on it now unless Apple were
01:02:49
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looking for like a quick chair on stage. Yeah like "hey we redesigned the shift key"
01:02:56
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You know where fist pump guy jumps up you know. If fist pump guy jumps up for the shift key then
01:03:01
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we greatly underestimated the power of the shift key design.
01:03:08
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We have, I've seen people saying about this like a Google Now type Siri so it's more
01:03:17
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visual and spotlight based and this would come along with, as Sepp Ferrico is mentioning,
01:03:22
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initial Siri and spotlight APIs because you'd be able to tie backwards and forwards for them.
01:03:28
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Which would make sense, you know, I think it would be interesting to see that. I don't know
01:03:34
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what Apple would be able to do here because they're not Google and they just don't have
01:03:41
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the data that Google has to be able to build Google Now. Yeah, unless this is searching just
01:03:46
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what's on device.
01:03:48
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- That seems like it would take a lot of power,
01:03:51
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processing power to do.
01:03:53
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- That seems like a very Apple thing to do.
01:03:56
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Or it may be that, you know, it may be the time
01:03:59
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where they say, look, if you have iCloud
01:04:00
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and you want the stuff, you can log into it.
01:04:02
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But maybe it's only, maybe it's only if you have iCloud
01:04:06
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and not if you use Gmail or Google Apps like we do
01:04:09
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or something like that.
01:04:09
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So I agree with you, like this would be really nice
01:04:12
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and there's a lot of things about Google now
01:04:13
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that I really like.
01:04:14
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But I don't know if Apple has the keys to the car
01:04:18
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with this sort of stuff because they,
01:04:20
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because of their stance on this stuff.
01:04:22
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I don't know, it'd be great, and it would be great
01:04:26
◼
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if Siri could go to the next episode,
01:04:30
◼
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the next download episode in Overcast, for instance.
01:04:33
◼
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And so that sort of stuff I think is more likely
01:04:35
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than a Google Now type thing,
01:04:39
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'cause I just don't know how Apple solves the data problem.
01:04:43
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It seems insurmountable almost.
01:04:46
◼
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- I mean, I feel like if they did have some API stuff,
01:04:50
◼
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you could have apps throwing information out
01:04:53
◼
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for Apple to collect, but even in that instance,
01:04:57
◼
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it still feels like it would be very simplified
01:04:59
◼
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because it's gonna be like that.
01:05:01
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►
I would be very interested to see
01:05:02
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if they're able to pull something like this off.
01:05:04
◼
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I feel like this would be something that Apple would do
01:05:06
◼
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to try and catch up to Google,
01:05:08
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►
but Google will always be ahead in this
01:05:10
◼
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because this is just what Google do.
01:05:14
◼
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This is what they make, you know?
01:05:16
◼
►
They make little robots that search inside of information
01:05:19
◼
►
and present it to you in different ways.
01:05:21
◼
►
But it does feel like it's something
01:05:23
◼
►
that Siri should be doing,
01:05:25
◼
►
because Cortana does a little bit
01:05:26
◼
►
of this kind of stuff as well.
01:05:27
◼
►
So it's time for Siri to pick up this kind of intelligence.
01:05:31
◼
►
Enhancements to the Mail app,
01:05:35
◼
►
which include extensions on iCloud Drive.
01:05:37
◼
►
This one feels like it has to exist.
01:05:40
◼
►
Not that I care because I use third-party mail apps but this one needs to exist in mail.app.
01:05:47
◼
►
It's kind of ridiculous that it wasn't there already.
01:05:50
◼
►
A couple of quick ones, new health app visualisations.
01:05:54
◼
►
Yeah, I suppose they'll do more there.
01:05:57
◼
►
Find My Watch, which you know, they have to find my iPhone on the watch.
01:06:01
◼
►
Find My Watch would make a lot of sense.
01:06:04
◼
►
Beats music streaming with popular celebrity DJs.
01:06:08
◼
►
Maybe this might be like Tim Cook's celebrity moment, you know?
01:06:12
◼
►
Here is the DJs that we're talking about this week.
01:06:14
◼
►
I do think we're going to see the music stuff.
01:06:17
◼
►
So I actually thought a lot about this today.
01:06:23
◼
►
You can think about WWDC in two ways.
01:06:25
◼
►
You can think about it being the developer conference where Apple does things like unveil
01:06:30
◼
►
Swift like they did last year.
01:06:32
◼
►
And they showed code during the keynote on stage.
01:06:38
◼
►
I think that's the primary way that I think about W2C.
01:06:43
◼
►
Maybe because I'm there and I'm friends
01:06:44
◼
►
with a bunch of developers and I care about that stuff.
01:06:47
◼
►
But W2C is one of Apple's only media times
01:06:52
◼
►
throughout the year.
01:06:53
◼
►
And so something like the music streaming service,
01:06:56
◼
►
if that is a completely consumer oriented,
01:07:01
◼
►
not open to developers type thing.
01:07:04
◼
►
And so I wonder, do they show it now
01:07:06
◼
►
or do they, or is this, what I'm increasingly thinking is,
01:07:10
◼
►
does this get bundled in with a phone announcement
01:07:12
◼
►
in the fall?
01:07:13
◼
►
You know, Apple for a long time did the music events
01:07:17
◼
►
in like September and October,
01:07:18
◼
►
kind of flip-flopped and moved around over the years
01:07:20
◼
►
with iPods, and they still do some of that.
01:07:23
◼
►
They had Bondo and Tim Cook doing the weird finger thing,
01:07:25
◼
►
which I'm now doing with my two hands, and I feel weird.
01:07:28
◼
►
Maybe beats and stuff, maybe that gets pushed
01:07:34
◼
►
to the fall when it's more of a consumer focus.
01:07:38
◼
►
I don't know, and they could do this on Monday
01:07:39
◼
►
and it not be weird at all, but I just,
01:07:41
◼
►
I have this feeling that it might not be next week
01:07:44
◼
►
and it might be in the fall instead.
01:07:46
◼
►
- No, I think that if Apple are really going
01:07:50
◼
►
for bug fixes and stability improvements,
01:07:53
◼
►
then that's why they do the music streaming service
01:07:56
◼
►
because they have a user-facing feature
01:07:57
◼
►
to talk about at WWDC.
01:07:59
◼
►
- I mean, maybe.
01:08:01
◼
►
I mean there's that has just as much possibility happening as my thing I think I think it ever also
01:08:07
◼
►
We're saying and the rumors are that this launches before the next iPhone and if they wait for the new iPhones
01:08:13
◼
►
That's longer than the new iPhone
01:08:15
◼
►
Because they did like the redesign music app is in 8.4
01:08:19
◼
►
Right, which is similarly we're gonna see next week. So
01:08:23
◼
►
Very has also said that there could be a workout app on the iPhone with workout types that are supported on the watch
01:08:30
◼
►
I don't know. I feel like maybe but I feel like that would be taking away a
01:08:36
◼
►
Agreed that the watch has you're taking away less of the watches reason to exist if you put the work app on the iPhone
01:08:42
◼
►
I agree, and I think it's you know, I really like having the activity app. So if you have a watch
01:08:48
◼
►
Activity app shows up on your phone
01:08:51
◼
►
automagically and it has got the rings and you can look at the you know
01:08:56
◼
►
Awards and everything and I really like that app and actually like the way it looks is like the first app with a dark
01:09:02
◼
►
UI that I've really have ever liked on iOS
01:09:05
◼
►
But I have a tendency to agree with you that like
01:09:10
◼
►
Showing activity on the phone is a is a status report, right? It's showing me what I've done
01:09:15
◼
►
So if my watch is not on me, I can kind of see where I am throughout the day
01:09:19
◼
►
But it's sort of a it's a read-only type thing
01:09:22
◼
►
I can't you can't go into activity as far as I know and like manually into a workout you have to do that on the
01:09:26
◼
►
watch and so I don't know like why would you take the sort of one of the primary
01:09:31
◼
►
things of the watch and bring it to the iPhone at least so early like I could see
01:09:35
◼
►
this making sense down the road I think right now it's still really early in
01:09:39
◼
►
this in this products life and I don't know if you want to take out a big you
01:09:45
◼
►
know a big leg out of it out of its out of its stool quite yet so last couple of
01:09:51
◼
►
things are some changes to the extensions that go beyond the share
01:09:55
◼
►
So, you know, like having on the copy and paste menu, for example.
01:09:58
◼
►
Maybe Force Touch will be something that brings this in the next devices.
01:10:03
◼
►
And, you know, leading in and touching on what we were talking about with Google Photos earlier,
01:10:08
◼
►
better faces and places support in the Photos app for iOS.
01:10:12
◼
►
Yep, I think in a lot of ways there's a lot of work to be done in Photos on iOS.
01:10:19
◼
►
Like if you have iCloud Photo Library and you open the Photos app or the photo picker,
01:10:24
◼
►
the photo picker your phone basically just sits there for eight seconds ten
01:10:27
◼
►
seconds while it is doing something hopefully. You know I think this is one
01:10:33
◼
►
of those weird things where photos sort of came out mid-cycle and I feel like
01:10:36
◼
►
there's a lot of rough edges still in in the iOS implementation of it so I think
01:10:42
◼
►
that but I think photos are gonna get pretty constant attention for a while
01:10:46
◼
►
till they get all this stuff worked out. So thank you Federico for sending us in
01:10:51
◼
►
your list and I like that you know because he's not here we can go no not happening.
01:10:56
◼
►
Yeah so the uh we didn't talk about the the Apple TV thing I do tend to think that new
01:11:06
◼
►
Apple hardware is on the horizon I I think that it will come hand in hand with either
01:11:14
◼
►
a native SDK or Apple's Web TV service.
01:11:17
◼
►
Like the the the Apple TV is basically
01:11:22
◼
►
an A5 I think it's 1080p. I've got one
01:11:27
◼
►
it's it's a fine little box. I mean it
01:11:29
◼
►
can be it can be buggy but the hardware
01:11:31
◼
►
seems it does what it needs to do you
01:11:34
◼
►
know it's it could be faster but it's
01:11:36
◼
►
not I don't want to like hit it with a
01:11:39
◼
►
hammer every time I use it. So I don't
01:11:43
◼
►
know what they gain from like releasing hardware now and it being another six
01:11:50
◼
►
months or the three months or the nine months until there's software to kind of
01:11:54
◼
►
like use the additional hardware. So my thought is when Apple TV gets a refresh
01:11:58
◼
►
it will be hardware and software at the same time and my guess is that some
01:12:02
◼
►
software will only be only be tied like to that hardware so hey the Apple TV web
01:12:10
◼
►
TV streaming service thing is out and you have to have a new Apple TV to play it because
01:12:14
◼
►
the as Joe Steele points out in the chat room the only single core A5 thing ever built can't
01:12:21
◼
►
So that to me is seems like a lock and step type thing and I don't think that's next week.
01:12:27
◼
►
I think a lot of people want it to be next week but I don't think it is.
01:12:31
◼
►
I think there's not enough smoke to prove there's fire there quite yet for me.
01:12:37
◼
►
- So you think no new Apple TV?
01:12:40
◼
►
- I think the Apple TV will go,
01:12:42
◼
►
if it is mentioned it would be very minor.
01:12:47
◼
►
I don't think there'll be a revision,
01:12:49
◼
►
I don't think there'll be a software update.
01:12:52
◼
►
The first 30 minutes will be about the Apple TV now
01:12:54
◼
►
because I've said that.
01:12:55
◼
►
I think the other hardware thing to consider
01:12:59
◼
►
is the Mac Pro which has been out for almost two years now.
01:13:03
◼
►
Or maybe two years since they announced it
01:13:06
◼
►
in like about a year and a half maybe since they shipped it.
01:13:08
◼
►
Maybe some of the chat room can correct me on that.
01:13:10
◼
►
It's been a while, it has not had a harder update.
01:13:13
◼
►
And I'm not, I don't follow the Xeon Intel drama
01:13:16
◼
►
as close as Marco does.
01:13:19
◼
►
So I'm not even sure if a Mac Pro update is possible
01:13:22
◼
►
at this point, but it does feel like that thing
01:13:25
◼
►
is maybe time for some sort of revision to the Mac Pro.
01:13:30
◼
►
Even if it's the same chips, you know, GPU,
01:13:33
◼
►
or at least a configuration change,
01:13:36
◼
►
It just seems like that's gotten a little stale again.
01:13:39
◼
►
And if there's any time to do a Mac Pro update,
01:13:41
◼
►
it is at WWDC.
01:13:43
◼
►
So I would like to see them do something with that.
01:13:48
◼
►
- That's it.
01:13:49
◼
►
iPod shuffle, yes or no?
01:13:51
◼
►
- Oh, definitely.
01:13:52
◼
►
- Definitely.
01:13:53
◼
►
You heard it here first and probably only.
01:13:58
◼
►
Yeah, it'll be good.
01:13:59
◼
►
- I think that's about it.
01:14:01
◼
►
Right, so we'll be there next week.
01:14:02
◼
►
We'll be recording on Tuesday.
01:14:06
◼
►
From our hotel room. From our hotel room, yep, and so you'll be able to hear that. We'll have
01:14:10
◼
►
coverage on upgrade on Monday, so if you want to hear mine and Jason's opinions a
01:14:16
◼
►
couple of hours probably after the keynote we'll have that up on upgrade
01:14:20
◼
►
and then we'll be ready for some more considered thought after thinking about
01:14:24
◼
►
things, finding out some more information, we'll be talking more about it on
01:14:27
◼
►
Tuesday on Connected, so you can tune in we're gonna have a bunch of coverage
01:14:31
◼
►
next week. Which I think you'll really enjoy, there'll be a few of us there, a few of the team, the
01:14:34
◼
►
Relay people are going to be in San Francisco so we'll have some stuff there and hopefully
01:14:39
◼
►
we'll be able to provide you with some great coverage next week of WWDC.
01:14:43
◼
►
So I hope that you'll tune in and keep it locked to Relay FM, we've got some great stuff
01:14:48
◼
►
coming that I think you guys are going to love.
01:14:51
◼
►
If you want to find our show notes for this week you should head over to relay.fm/connected/42
01:14:59
◼
►
probably at that page you will find the answer to everything. I think is that
01:15:05
◼
►
something about 42 right? About answers and questions and that kind of thing.
01:15:09
◼
►
If you want it you can find it there. Thanks again to our sponsors this week, our good
01:15:13
◼
►
friends over at Lynda, OmniFocus and Hover. If you want to find myself online
01:15:17
◼
►
I am @imike, I am YKE. Steven is @ismh. Our absent co-host who is probably buried
01:15:25
◼
►
in sand right now is @vitiici, V I T I C C I, Federico writes @maxstories.net and Stephen
01:15:31
◼
►
writes @512pixels.net and I host a cavalcade of shows at Relay.fm of which a show is a
01:15:39
◼
►
part. So thank you so much for listening and we'll be back next time. Until then, say goodbye
01:15:44
◼
►
Mr Stephen Hackett. Adios.
01:15:47
◼
►
[BLANK_AUDIO]