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Connected

522: I Consume All of My Dark Secrets

 

00:00:00   [music]

00:00:07   From Relay, this is Connected, episode number 522, recorded October 9th, 2024.

00:00:14   I am your guest host, Upgrade Draft Challenger Jason Snell, and I'd like to introduce

00:00:22   the Ricky Benchman and Upgrade Draft Champion, and co-founder, Challenge Champion, and champion

00:00:29   in his own mind, Mr. Mike Hurley. Look at that, I mean, I like these extra accolades now that we

00:00:35   have Jason. Hello, Jason, it's a treasure to have you on this episode of Connected. And this is a

00:00:41   Steven-started episode, so I got to go first, but our sponsors this week, by the way, are NetSuite,

00:00:46   Ecamm, and, uh, Celtrios? You nailed it, in one. All right. I am the Ricky Benchman and Upgrade

00:00:53   Draft Champion, and co-relay co-founder, Challenge Champion, Mike Hurley, and I would like to

00:00:58   introduce Mr. Fitichi. Hello, Federico. Hello, I gotta say, I think I like the new guy better

00:01:03   than Steven, because he gave us the date. Give us the date, which was a useful bit of information,

00:01:09   you know? Yeah, see, this is funny, because I started doing the date on Upgrade, and Jason

00:01:14   protested initially, but I feel like now that maybe, maybe Jason has taken the date on as a

00:01:19   part of this. I don't know. It's, well, we now know that there are people who listen to old

00:01:24   episodes, and they get out of sync, and all that, so it's kind of good to remind them that

00:01:28   it was October 2024 when these people said these things. I started doing the date when we had that

00:01:34   episode of Upgrade, where we recorded in advance, and then Apple announced all of the availability

00:01:41   information for the Vision Pro. Oh, right, after we recorded. After we recorded. So then I was like,

00:01:47   okay, I want to start putting the date on these episodes. So I feel like I need to set the mood

00:01:53   properly so that Jason feels right at home, unconnected. Jason, what is your darkest

00:01:58   computer-related secret? Darkest computer-related secret? Well, what I want to say is that I play

00:02:06   all my iPad games with the sound off. No, no, no. But for people, that would be, forget connectedpro.co,

00:02:12   for that, um, darkest computer-related secret. This is a safe space, we're not judging you.

00:02:17   The problem, Federico, is that I consume all of my dark secrets and release them on the internet

00:02:22   for content. I'm not sure there's anything left. I don't, I used to keep things scattered on my

00:02:30   desktop, but my desktop, Mac desktop is organized now. Okay, let me see if I got one for you.

00:02:37   Maybe like, what is the most expensive piece of hardware that you've used for a short period of

00:02:42   time and is now just on a shelf? Well, you really want him to say Vision Pro, huh? No, no, no,

00:02:49   we're gonna talk about that later. An older thing, an older thing. Like, I will go with mine,

00:02:54   I have an M1 iMac that I've just put in a box and put in the corner, and like, I never get rid

00:02:59   of it or anything. That thing should sit in there. I used it for not even a year, I think, and then

00:03:03   now it's just got put away. Yeah, okay, I've got a lot of, a lot of, uh, camera-related stuff. Like,

00:03:08   I bought a whole teleprompter rig that I've literally never used, um, for me to do videos

00:03:15   with a script on a teleprompter. I, I've not used that at all. There's probably a bunch of other

00:03:21   stuff like that where there's, like, I bought mounts for, like, putting cameras on the wall

00:03:25   or the ceiling or whatever, and then I, I look at it and I say to myself, nah, I just continue to

00:03:32   collect all that garbage. Yeah, there's a lot of that. I have some follow-up. The first piece comes

00:03:39   from Randall, who says, regarding the app icon's disappearing bug that Mike mentioned, you remember

00:03:44   my Photos app kept disappearing? Yes. Uh, Randall said, I've noticed that if I use Spotlight to add

00:03:50   an app to a home screen, it disappears from the home screen. However, if I drag it from the app

00:03:54   library, it remains, and this is exactly the case for me. So now it stays where it's supposed to.

00:04:00   Wait a second. Yeah. Something just dawned on me. Okay. But it's a, it's a bit of a stretch. Um,

00:04:09   do you happen to have any hidden home screen pages? Oh yeah. I wonder, because this is something

00:04:17   I noticed that probably changed in iOS 18. If, like, those icons are not actually disappearing,

00:04:23   they're moving to a page that it's not visible. Because sometimes when you drag an icon from

00:04:31   Spotlight, it's like actually moving an existing icon that's pre-existing on a different page.

00:04:39   I can't, I kind of would ask you to check your hidden pages and see if anything that's changed.

00:04:44   It doesn't look like it. I am looking at it now. Then it's a bug, then it's, then it's just a bug.

00:04:48   But it could be a bug that's related for people who do that, right? Who have like hidden home

00:04:53   screen pages. Maybe. That's just it. I have, it turns out I have three hidden home screen pages

00:04:59   that I didn't know were there. Yeah. That's good. That's great. I mean, if they're never visible.

00:05:06   They're hidden. If a home screen is hidden. Are they there? Does it matter if they're never visible?

00:05:11   Something like that. Peter says, "A big gratsi to Federico. Tichi Tabs has become my favorite app

00:05:18   of the year. I don't have the same needs as Federico. I downloaded the app mostly for the

00:05:22   Japes, but I ended up finding use for it that fits perfectly in my workflow. I am an avid language

00:05:28   learner and I, humble brag, and I used to always have the same online dictionaries open in Safari.

00:05:35   Now they can all live in Tichi Tabs and I can access them quickly from the widget on my home

00:05:39   screen." You see, there you go. Yeah. Changing lives valid use case. Yeah. Jason, do you have

00:05:45   six or seven websites? Do you have a collection of six or seven websites? I used to, I used to have

00:05:51   my, um, I'm a, I'm a big, uh, uh, what do they call it? They, do they call it the favorites bar?

00:05:58   I don't know. I'm a big favorites bar user. It's not a favibar. Where does this name come from?

00:06:06   Mike? It's never been used. It's never been used. Okay. It's me. We could do it now though. I mean,

00:06:13   we could start it. You could start the favibar movement right here. So I'm a big favibar user.

00:06:18   That's what I was saying. And, and this is, it used to be full of web pages. Um, but mostly now

00:06:27   it's like bookmarklets and stuff. I've got a little like folder full of, um, all the CMSs,

00:06:33   you know, and go to the incomparable or six colors or relay or, you know, whatever. I've got a big

00:06:37   folder full of those that are in the favibar. Nice. Okay. We're using it. All right, cool. But

00:06:43   most of my stuff, uh, and then there's pin tabs. I have pin tabs now for six colors, the incomparable

00:06:49   and my weather page, my weather station page, but all the stuff that used to be the regular

00:06:54   daily visits, like the six or seven websites. Um, a couple of years ago, I decided to, to go back to

00:07:01   RSS. Um, I actually use ReadKit, which every six months, I think, surely there's another RSS reader

00:07:08   that I would prefer to this. And I try them all again. And the answer is no, I still really like

00:07:12   ReadKit. And I'm using ReadKit for RSS as well as for all my newsletters, cause I use Feedbin.

00:07:19   So all of my newsletters are going in to, are getting forwarded to Feedbin. And then in the

00:07:24   morning when I wake up and I get my breakfast and all that, I use ReadKit to read my six or

00:07:29   seven websites and my six or seven newsletters. So that's what I'm, that's what I'm doing now.

00:07:35   It's always so fun when like someone mentions the name of an app and in my mind is like,

00:07:40   I've never heard of this app before in my life. No, I'm sure I have. I heard about it from Mac

00:07:44   stories. That's where I heard about it. We've got a quote here. Fedorico, the teacher from Mac stories,

00:07:48   if you use Feed Wrangler and have been looking for a desktop client, ReadKit is your best option.

00:07:54   Well, that's from many years ago. Many years ago, cause I'm not sure Feed Wrangler still exists

00:07:58   anymore. That's a quote for the ages. Okay, sure. This is what it's like, Fedorico. You do a website

00:08:07   for a long time and then people are like, oh, you wrote this. I get that occasionally. I was like,

00:08:11   Jason, you wrote this. Do you have an update on this? And I look at the story and I'm like, I have

00:08:14   no memory of this. The best one is like when you get a random email from somebody being like, hey,

00:08:19   do you still use ReadKit? And like the last time I reviewed, it was like in 2011. Like, I haven't

00:08:25   heard this name in a long time. No, send them to me. I use, I use ReadKit. And again, I get really

00:08:32   excited. I haven't tried, you know, some of the latest and greatest, but then I try them and I

00:08:36   think, yeah, I like the typography better or I like, it's got smart folders and I use that

00:08:40   sometimes. But mostly whatever reason on, and remember I'm reading on an iPad, a 13 inch iPad,

00:08:47   right? Like it's the one that fits the best, even though I, the great thing about using Feedbin is

00:08:52   that I could just go to any reader if I wanted to, but I'm still pretty happy with it. The one that,

00:08:59   an Apple intelligence feature I would like at some point, which they're never going to do,

00:09:03   but I would really like the ability to take the articles that are in my feed reader and write new

00:09:11   headlines that tell me what the actual article is instead of the bogus web headline that obscures

00:09:18   the meaning so that it will click. So basically a summary, right? So like an RSS that uses,

00:09:22   I mean, hopefully, I mean, who knows, but hopefully, you know, in probably iOS 19,

00:09:28   developers will be able to use that. That would be good, right? That like, instead of the similar to

00:09:33   the email, instead of the first few lines of the article, tell me what the article is actually

00:09:38   about. Yeah, I'll take that, right? Federico, I'm sorry, but Threads knows it has an engagement

00:09:45   problem and they're taking care of it. So you can say goodbye to all of your likes. Yeah, I mean,

00:09:49   Adam, come on. Just when he's cracked it. Why? I was doing so well with my bait. Why?

00:09:58   We've seen an increase in engagement bait on Threads and we're working to get it under control,

00:10:03   says Adam Mosseri. He got you, man. He knew you were the last straw. All I wanted was to make

00:10:11   Apple people upset with my hot takes and they're taking those away from me. No more hot takes.

00:10:17   All right. There was also a note in our document that Stephen left that said check on bet. Mike

00:10:23   said no Google Pixel 9 comes with a thermometer. So this was something I said when the Pixel 8 came

00:10:30   out because it had a thermometer in it, which could only measure the temperature of objects.

00:10:34   And I think what I was saying is like every single year, Google seemed to add a feature that they

00:10:40   then remove the next year because it doesn't go anywhere. Turns out they kept it. Not only does

00:10:44   the Pixel 9 have it, you can now measure the heat of a person. So good work, Google. Man. Remember

00:10:52   Stephen? No. Those are good times. So you can find out if you're H-O-T-T-O-G-O by taking

00:11:00   good temperature. From G-O-O-G-L-E. H-O-T-T-O-G-O-O-G-L-E. If Javelin's looking to get that

00:11:12   bag, she could just Google the call. Super catchy. Federico, are you a fan of Chaperone?

00:11:20   I have no idea what it is. Oh, so she's like the hot music act of the time. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

00:11:28   If you don't know Hot To Go, like that song, you would like that song a lot. I only know the one

00:11:33   song. Good Luck Babe. Hot To Go is real good. Hot To Go, I'm gonna tell the story now really

00:11:41   fast, which is there's a running back for the the Cal Bears named Jaden Ott OTT and Cal Twitter,

00:11:49   for people who don't know, the Cal-Gorithm as they're called, of my fellow Cal fans. Okay,

00:11:55   so this is fun. I've been getting lots of questions, Snail Talk questions about the Cal

00:12:01   Twitter account that I don't really want to get into, so now you can do it. All the Cal Burners,

00:12:06   they're just like, they're doing memes, the meme game is huge, and people are discovering Cal

00:12:12   because they're in a new conference, and they realize that the, guess what, kids who go to

00:12:15   Berkeley are smart and funny, but they, not only did they write parody lyrics for Hot To Go,

00:12:23   but they hired a singer, a real singer, it's not an AI version of the song, they hired a singer

00:12:28   named Mickey, I think, from Sweden, who they found on some website where you can hire talent, right,

00:12:34   to do like freelance work, and they made OTT To Go for Jaden Ott, we got OTTT OGO, we've got Jaden

00:12:44   Ott To Go, and then somebody else in the Cal Twitter community made a music video of OTT To Go,

00:12:51   and that was like early in the week, and by the time Saturday rolled around and the the premiere

00:12:56   college football tv show ESPN College Game Day came to Berkeley for the very first time in like

00:13:01   20 years they've never been to Berkeley, one of the few schools not to have ever been visited,

00:13:07   and by the time they got there the hosts started out by talking about OTT To Go,

00:13:12   so like super meme game, just so great, and as a Cal fan of long-standing I was really proud of it,

00:13:18   but also as an old person I was excited that I actually got the reference to Chapel Rowan, so

00:13:23   yeah OTT To Go. This episode is brought to you by NetSuite. What does the future hold for business?

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00:14:55   netsuite.com/connected. This guide is free to you at netsuite.com/connected. That's

00:15:02   netsuite.com/connected. Our thanks to NetSuite for their support of this show and Relay.

00:15:10   So, wild story, wild story that's happening right now. It appears multiple now, because me and Jason

00:15:18   spoke about this a little bit on upgrade on Monday, but by the time we're recording on Wednesday,

00:15:22   there are now multiple models of the new base level 14 inch MacBook Pro out in the world.

00:15:28   There have been a couple of different YouTubers that have made videos of these. They're both

00:15:32   based in Russia and there are reports and screenshots of around 200 14 inch MacBook

00:15:38   Pros that are as of yet unreleased available online. I believe this is real. I've seen some

00:15:46   people saying things like the packaging is old. I think the packaging probably maybe isn't 100%

00:15:53   complete and like there's some weirdness going on here, but I believe that the computers themselves

00:15:58   are real and there seems to be some kind of leak from China to Russia and this is something that

00:16:04   Jason was saying. Well, Apple doesn't sell in Russia, so it makes sense that there might be

00:16:09   some kind of flow, but these ones they've gotten out maybe a little earlier than they would otherwise.

00:16:14   Somebody thought of Palit somewhere. Also, they're the low-end M4 versions, so they're probably the

00:16:20   ones that they made in advance because I assume they've got lots of M4s because they have the iPad

00:16:25   Pro, but they maybe aren't yet. All the stories suggest that the M4 Pro versions of all of these

00:16:33   products might be available in limited quantity or a little later. So part of that probably is you

00:16:40   start producing the M4 ones earlier and so yeah, I think this is true when there was a Palit or a

00:16:47   box or however they that just got scooped up by somebody and lost in transit and taken to Russia

00:16:53   and resold. Well, I was also wondering if this might be like a result of Apple trying to ship

00:16:59   more stuff on boats, like that maybe if they can get some stuff shipped out sooner, maybe they

00:17:05   would do that. I know that's the thing that they've spoken about. Also, how about this? How about the

00:17:11   idea that this only is news because it's a new product that hasn't been announced yet, but I

00:17:16   wonder how often this happens with existing products where literally since they're not

00:17:21   available in Russia, they just make some of them disappear from a warehouse in China and take them

00:17:28   to Russia. I'm not saying Apple, I'm saying like crime. The crime is like get me some Apple products

00:17:35   that I can resell in Russia because they're not sold there anymore and that they just happen to

00:17:39   snag a product that doesn't exist yet. So this made me think of like, so I've been seeing some

00:17:45   people, I've been seeing a lot of people say like this is maybe the biggest kind of product leak

00:17:51   as such or like early release or whatever you might want to call it since the iPhone 4 because

00:17:57   things don't really get out. I mean and of course this is absolutely in no world as monumental as

00:18:04   the iPhone 4, but I thought that it might be fun today to think to remember back to the iPhone 4

00:18:11   and Jason, I had some questions I wanted to ask you about specifically of this, but I want to

00:18:16   start by giving a timeline of how the iPhone 4 leak went down. So we go back to March of 2010,

00:18:23   an engineer at Apple named Gray Powell, which is a name just like seared into my memory at

00:18:29   this point, accidentally left a prototype of their iPhone 4 in a bar in Redwood City, California.

00:18:35   The phone was disguised with like a case to look like a 3GS, right? So they put like a big case on

00:18:41   it. In April of 2010, the lost iPhone prototype was found by a bar patron who realized it was

00:18:49   something special after seeing features like the new front-facing camera, I think also the retina

00:18:54   display it had, maybe they could tell that out, I don't know, but in April they sold it to Gizmodo

00:18:59   for $5,000. On April 19th, 2010, Gizmodo published an article that detailed the iPhone 4's design,

00:19:08   its features, they had pictures, they had videos, and this was obviously the first time that anybody

00:19:14   had seen it. It had a brand new design, right? So we'd gone from like the rounded phones, this was

00:19:18   like glass front and back with the stainless steel in the middle. It's like what an iPhone looks like

00:19:22   now, in fact, pretty much. I'm happy that this article is still on the Gizmodo website,

00:19:29   even though it's like a little janky, it is still there, and I found that I put it in the show notes.

00:19:33   On April 20th, the next day, Apple sent Gizmodo a formal request for the return of the device,

00:19:41   saying it was stolen property, and Gizmodo complied and returned it. Then on the 23rd,

00:19:47   an authority body, they had like a strange name that I don't remember now, and I didn't

00:19:52   look it up, but it wasn't like the police, it was like some other police, like Silicon Valley police

00:19:57   or something, it had a name like that. Is there a Silicon Valley police? I'm gonna check this,

00:20:01   because it was weird. This is like the Fabi bar, okay. It's like the Fabi bar of police,

00:20:06   prompted. So Apple arranged this and sent them to the home of Jason Chen, the editor of Gizmodo.

00:20:16   They raided his home, confiscated his computers and other equipment as part of an investigation

00:20:22   into the incident. On May 16th, there was an email exchange between Steve Jobs and Chen that

00:20:30   was published. I want to read a quote, which I love this for what it is, but it's a vibe of a

00:20:38   time. "Steve Jobs, we're just doing what we can to try and make and preserve the user experience

00:20:48   we envision. You can disagree with us, but our motives are pure. By the way, what have you done

00:20:54   that's so great? Do you just criticize others' work and belittle their motivations?" I love how

00:20:59   he just like turns a sharp corner. This was the energy of those Steve Jobs email threads at the

00:21:05   time. Yeah, this is for sure. By the way, I've got the Fabi bar of police. It's REACT, it's a very

00:21:11   clever acronym, Rapid Enforcement Allied Computer Team. See, I knew it was like a weird, it was like

00:21:17   a weird thing. REACT, like the coding language? Sure, yeah. I mean, it's a acronym. Silicon Valley

00:21:25   police. If Steven were here, he would know like the space world is full of acronyms where somebody's

00:21:30   like, "Oh, we got to create a name for this space probe," and they get close and they just come up

00:21:34   with a word and then they insert sort of dumb words in to make it work. So, REACT, California

00:21:39   Task Force Commission to Investigate High-Tech Crimes, and Apple had a member on the steering

00:21:46   committee of the REACT task force. There you go. So that's how you get your friends, Silicon Valley

00:21:49   police, to go raid someone. And then in June of 2010, Apple announced the iPhone 4, and then in

00:21:54   July of 2011, the next year, this REACT police investigation concluded about any charges being

00:22:02   filed against Gizmodo or the individuals involved in selling the device. This was bananas. I

00:22:09   remember my first feeling about the iPhone 4 was that I thought it looked bad. I was like,

00:22:14   "That can't be real. It's ugly," was my initial thought. But that was just, you know, I think

00:22:20   that's the way a lot of these leaks go. You see a device and you're like, "That doesn't look good,"

00:22:23   and then when you see Apple's photos, you're like, "Oh yeah, it does look good." No, I remember

00:22:27   thinking that it looked great and very futuristic. I didn't like it. And I also remember the exact

00:22:33   moment when I saw the Gizmodo article appear on Twitter, because at the time, 2010, I just started

00:22:40   Mac stories, I spent, I don't even know how many hours, but I basically had Twitter always open,

00:22:47   always timeline streaming enabled. I think Tweety for Mac was around at the time. But yeah, I

00:22:56   remember this thing popping in and basically me going like, "What?" It was a crazy story. It was

00:23:03   like the talk for a couple of weeks. And especially after like with all the back and forth with Steve

00:23:10   Jobs getting involved and also like, no, it wasn't WWDC, but it was a late June event because Apple

00:23:16   used to announce iPhones in June. And I remember Steve Jobs sort of joking on stage being like,

00:23:23   "Stop me if you've seen this before, but believe me, you haven't really seen it."

00:23:27   I like everybody sort of, and Jason, you were probably in the audience.

00:23:31   - Yeah, sure. - Yeah, yeah. Man, what a time.

00:23:34   - So was it not WWDC then? Did I get that part wrong? Maybe I just conflated.

00:23:38   - I think maybe it was. - Was it WWDC?

00:23:41   - I mean, all the dates that we hold as sacred now were not like that back then.

00:23:46   - Like they didn't really have specific iPhone events then, right? Like I don't think it was,

00:23:51   we were at that time and June would have been a weird time to announce the phone.

00:23:54   - June WWDC San Francisco. Yeah, that's when it was, for sure.

00:23:58   - Jason, what do you remember of this? - I remember very clearly I was at,

00:24:02   and this is how I can tell that I have a clear memory of this is it's all about location. So

00:24:05   I was at a softball game, one of Jamie's softball games. I remember what park it was. Like I

00:24:11   literally remember that particular park in Terralinda that we took her to. And I saw this

00:24:17   thing on Twitter, presumably on my iPhone 3GS, I guess, right? Like, I mean, process of elimination,

00:24:23   it must have been. And I remember not believing it and then scrolling through the article and

00:24:29   thinking, "Oh no, this has got to be real. This has got to be it." Because it felt very

00:24:33   Johnny Ive to me. It felt very much like, you know, he was picking up kind of a Braun Shaver

00:24:40   kind of design cues with the flat metal sides and all of that. And I felt like, "Oh yeah,

00:24:45   this seems like it's a real thing." And it was. - What was your role at Macworld at the time?

00:24:50   Were you editor-in-chief then? - I think I was editor-in-chief, yeah.

00:24:53   - Did you have any, or like, do you have any kind of thoughts as the editor-in-chief of

00:24:58   Macworld? Like, would you have covered this? - Well, I would say that our game was not

00:25:04   this game, right? We did not consider ourselves the, you know, breaker of rumors and stuff.

00:25:12   And so, I mean, I'm sure we had a debate, which is, do we cover the fact that it leaked?

00:25:20   And I'm sure we did that in some form on the web. But like, if I had been, you know,

00:25:27   if I had been at a news source that was really trying to break news, which Macworld was not its

00:25:32   kind of bit, it would have been a different story, I suppose. But like, it was not really

00:25:37   our bag. So it was more, and that was always the dynamic. Like back in the early days,

00:25:42   when there was Macweek, as well as Macworld and Macuser, Macweek was the one that did that stuff,

00:25:48   right? They were the ones who broke news about unannounced products. And so they would have been

00:25:52   the ones to do it. And the Macworld and Macuser were sort of like, well, we're monthly and we're

00:25:56   kind of like at a little, we're not trying to break news. We don't fancy ourselves a newspaper.

00:26:00   We're a different kind of thing. And so I'd say culturally, that was still going on,

00:26:04   even when I was there. I'm convinced that Federico Vaticchio 2010 would have,

00:26:08   given the opportunity, would have wanted to break this news. You were so early, right?

00:26:14   I will disagree because I had been burned before. I think I've told this story on the show before.

00:26:24   In my first year of Mac stories, I was really basically throwing everything at the wall and

00:26:30   seeing what was sticking. And one of the things that I was doing was like completely disregarding

00:26:35   the NDA, regarding betas, Mac OS 10 betas and screenshots. And so I used to have articles with

00:26:43   like, mind you, like this was very different, right? There were no public betas. It was a

00:26:49   developer beta. There was an NDA screen that popped up, but like I didn't care. I was posting

00:26:54   screenshots, having roundups, whatever, until one day I noticed, well, why aren't the images

00:27:01   on this article about the latest Mac OS 10 beta working anymore? And so basically my hosting

00:27:09   provider had gotten an email, like a takedown request from Apple. I got myself a nice letter

00:27:17   from Apple's lawyers at the time, and that scared me for life. And so they lawyered the screenshots

00:27:27   out of me. So that's why we don't do those kinds of reporting anymore. It was enough.

00:27:33   Funny to remember that they used to do that, right? That like the beta was NDA'd. Because

00:27:37   then everybody will post screenshots and be like, somebody sent these to us. I'm like, okay,

00:27:42   whatever you say. Yeah, it got to the point where, I mean, as it usually happens with this,

00:27:46   where somebody who had the ability to post it and not get a takedown for whatever reason,

00:27:51   posted them. And then somebody else did it. I think one of the challenges about what Gizmodo

00:27:56   did was they, I mean, they were really argumentative about it. I think because they

00:28:01   were scared, but they were also kind of like trying to find a way to say, no, no, we're going

00:28:05   to do this. But like you could have the thing and take pictures of it and write a report of it

00:28:12   without one, buying stolen property and two, refusing to give it back to Apple, right?

00:28:17   They went down a whole bunch of paths here that were kind of a lot, but Apple to this day says

00:28:23   like, oh, well, you know, the public beta is coming out and we're going to give you a briefing

00:28:26   and we're going to talk about what's in the public beta. And keep in mind, everybody's already seen

00:28:30   it at WWDC, but they're like, you know, we want this to go out when the public beta goes out.

00:28:33   And like, it's weird because it doesn't really need to be that way, but there is some aspect

00:28:38   of it that is, yeah, but if you're playing ball with Apple and they're going to give you a

00:28:41   briefing and they're going to, you know, they're going to talk to you about it and they're going

00:28:44   to answer your questions and they'd rather those stories be embargoed until the public beta comes

00:28:49   out and you say, all right, like, okay, all right. In that case, I'll do it, but that's all that's

00:28:54   left, right? I mean, they know they used to stop us from live blogging events. They literally would

00:29:01   say no live blogging. And at that point, at some point it just got so, it was so porous that

00:29:06   there's no way that they could do that anymore. And they gave up. That's how it always ends up

00:29:10   happening is that they try to hold back the, the, the flood, but the dam bursts, like they can't

00:29:16   hold it back. And then they finally reluctantly give up. And like, you know, the reason that Steve

00:29:24   Jobs yelled at everybody to turn off their hotspots that one time is because Apple in an

00:29:32   attempt to clamp down on information spreading about their event, which is why, why, why would

00:29:39   you say, no, no, we don't want anybody to hear about this until later. They did not provide

00:29:45   wifi at events, even at events where there was wifi available, they would just turn it off.

00:29:50   They did not want people to have access to wifi at the event. And so everybody bought hotspots and

00:29:56   then they all clogged the space right in front of the stage where Steve was trying to do a demo.

00:30:01   And he yelled at everybody to turn them off, which by the way, I sat on mine, but I did not turn it

00:30:06   off because it's like, you're not the boss of me. You're going to tell me what to do. But I will say

00:30:11   the next event and every subsequent Apple event forever, there was good wifi because they realized

00:30:16   that it was their fault that it happened that way. But isn't that bizarre? They're like, no, no, no.

00:30:21   Oh, you and your audience want to report live about all of Apple's product announcements?

00:30:26   Please do not. What? How dare you? What? I don't know. So anyway, this is not quite that,

00:30:34   but it's a very similar kind of thing. I think Gizmodo, I don't know. I think that they did

00:30:38   good reporting and then they were also jerks about it. I think both of those things are true.

00:30:42   I think that they got real defensive and I think they wanted to, honestly, that culture of that

00:30:47   Gizmodo is very, very tabloidy organization in general, its whole culture. And so I think they

00:30:53   realized it was great publicity for them to be in a spat with Apple. I think that, and even if the

00:30:58   secret task force was called like, I feel like individuals in that organization were probably

00:31:04   terrified, but I think the organization as a whole loved the fact that they were getting all this

00:31:07   press. I mean, can't get a better scoop than that, right? Like you can't, if you, if you are in the

00:31:14   game of we will report rumors, right? Like getting the iPhone. And it's not even coming from an

00:31:20   Apple employee, right? Like it's, it's, it's just found in a bar. So you don't even have to be

00:31:25   accused of like ruining somebody's life or, or inducing them into breaking their NDA. It's like,

00:31:31   literally it just got left out. Because I think the story goes, there were a few publications

00:31:35   that got the emails and like with some photos, but Gizmodo were the ones that were willing to pay.

00:31:40   And so they did. And then, you know, I'm happy they did because then we have this great

00:31:46   thing to remember. Sure. And obviously, you know, Silicon Valley police.

00:31:53   This episode is brought to you by Ecamm. Ecamm Live is the leading video production and live

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00:34:15   connected with the code connected. Go there now and check it out. Our thanks to Ecamm for their

00:34:19   support of this show and Relay. Federico, you had a desire to talk about peripherals?

00:34:27   Yeah, because I feel like we only talk about the upcoming Macs, if there's going to be or not an

00:34:34   October event, you know, these new MacBook Pros, some of which you can buy in Russia. Apparently,

00:34:39   if you know where to look, the Mac Mini. I mean, you can literally buy them in Russia.

00:34:46   The Mac Mini, but I want to talk about the accessories. I want to talk about the peripherals,

00:34:52   because I feel like it's now or never, right? We were expecting some new peripherals at the iPad

00:34:58   event. They did not come. We were expecting them probably at WWDC. That wasn't the case.

00:35:05   They didn't show up in September. Well, now there's probably going to be a whole new lineup

00:35:10   of Macs. What better time to close out the year than to finally introduce new peripherals now?

00:35:16   And so I thought, let's talk about these accessories and let's share some of our wishes

00:35:20   in terms of things we want to see in these new peripherals. And I will go first by mentioning

00:35:25   something more broadly speaking that I would love to see here. It's been how many years since the

00:35:32   Magic Keyboard was introduced with Touch ID? Three, four years? The quick answer is too many,

00:35:37   but let me find that out. Still lightning-based, obviously. So obviously, USB-C is the simplest

00:35:46   answer. Apple should do USB-C charging for all these devices. But what I would like to see

00:35:52   personally is AirPods-like switching of these peripherals between multiple devices. I think

00:36:01   it's wild that if you buy a Magic Keyboard now, you can just use it with one computer at a time.

00:36:07   You either pair it with your Mac or you pair it with your iPad. Some people also pair keyboards

00:36:13   with their iPhones. Some people are into that. It's 2021, by the way. That's the answer to when

00:36:17   they put them. 2021, so three years. I would love to see... Just like Apple, Apple doesn't tell me,

00:36:24   "Look, you want to listen to music on multiple devices? Go buy five pairs of AirPods." They say,

00:36:30   "Just buy a single set of AirPods and switch between as many devices as you want." I want

00:36:36   to buy an Apple keyboard and I want to buy an Apple trackpad and I want to switch between

00:36:40   devices just like I do with AirPods. That's my big overall wish for these new peripherals.

00:36:46   But what you're not asking for is universal control, right?

00:36:50   Well, I guess you can go about this in two ways, right? I would say I'm asking for universal

00:36:56   control on the iPad's Magic Keyboard in the sense that if I'm using the iPad, and we're going to

00:37:03   talk about the Vision Pro later, but I think it's kind of silly that the Magic Keyboard on my iPad

00:37:08   cannot control Vision OS. But that's a different conversation. I think the simplest solution for

00:37:15   me would be, "Get a new keyboard, get a new trackpad, now you can switch from control center

00:37:20   just like you can with AirPods." It'd be interesting to see how they could work that out,

00:37:26   right? If you hit the key, where does it go? But there is an element of they made it work with

00:37:33   AirPods, right? There are ways to make that work, I guess. I would like it. I know I would like it.

00:37:42   Yeah. And it's just so dumb right now. I have this where I have a Touch ID, an orange Touch ID

00:37:51   keyboard that I bought on eBay because I wanted an orange. And I use that sometimes at my desk

00:37:58   in the back of the house with the laptop attached to an external keyboard or external display.

00:38:04   But I also use it with the Vision Pro. And it's so dumb. When I get in the Vision Pro and I want

00:38:10   to use that thing and it doesn't want to see it, it doesn't want to connect to it, sometimes I have

00:38:15   to unpair it and then repair it. And I don't even necessarily need, I mean, it would be nice if it

00:38:21   really intelligently sensed that I was close to the Vision Pro and it was in use and that that

00:38:26   was probably the device that I want to connect to. But there are so much room for improvement

00:38:32   in these things when you take them from device to device, and they just don't want to let go

00:38:36   of the other peripheral. And I wish that was a lot smoother than it is now.

00:38:42   They would never add physical switching, would they? Like a little button that you would press.

00:38:46   Like, I mean, that would give us what we wanted, but they would never do that, right? That you'd

00:38:50   set a little preset? I could see them hiding it under the globe key somewhere, you know,

00:38:54   globe F8 to toggle. But I don't know, they could. They did add an over-engineered button to the

00:39:01   iPhone. So, I mean, what's the harm in doing the same on a keyboard? Poor camera control. I think

00:39:07   camera control is getting too much. I think it's getting too much. I mean, have you used the thing?

00:39:12   Yeah, I used it to zoom. Let's do keyboard control. Keyboard control? I feel bad for

00:39:18   camera control, you know? Colors. Let me buy an orange keyboard. Let me buy a pink keyboard.

00:39:29   Can you still only? Yes. You can't buy them separate? Still? That's why I used eBay. That's

00:39:36   why I have an orange keyboard from eBay. If you use the store, it's only silver. So you have to

00:39:43   find somebody who bought an iMac and doesn't want their keyboard and puts it on eBay. That's what

00:39:47   you have to do. Yeah, so dumb. Just today, I was talking to a friend. I was at silver school, and

00:39:57   in the office, they have a MacBook Pro docked at a desk connected to a studio display, which I sold

00:40:05   them, by the way. That's my old Apple studio display. And the person using the computer uses

00:40:10   a magic mouse. And he's really into the magic mouse, which I don't understand, because the

00:40:17   thing is so small, gives me instant wrist pain. But looking at it when it was charging,

00:40:26   it reminded me just how silly that thing is when you need to charge it. So let alone,

00:40:32   I mean, the fact that it also needs USB-C. Please give it a new charging placement.

00:40:37   MagSafe. Put MagSafe on the mouse. Put MagSafe on the mouse. MagMouse. Call it whatever. Yes.

00:40:46   Or at the very least, put the port on the front and let people use the mouse while it is charging,

00:40:55   instead of, you know, you've got to put it on the side. And it's kind of silly. Just let me use it

00:40:59   when it's plugged in. Or MagSafe, like Mike said. There's a lot they could do with that mouse,

00:41:05   though. Like there is a lot, a lot they could do if they actually want to make a mouse. But although

00:41:11   I would just say, honestly, they shouldn't make a mouse anymore. Like Apple should just get rid of

00:41:17   the magic mouse and just make a trackpad. And anybody that wants a mouse, just go to Logitech

00:41:24   or like Razer. Apple does not need to make a mouse. Like they clearly don't want to. Right.

00:41:31   But like they do. And they are so in on trackpads now. Like they do so much great stuff with their

00:41:37   trackpads. Just let the mouse go and make, you know, let's just like make partnerships. Right.

00:41:44   Like do the thing where you get Logitech to make a mouse for you and just like stop making a mouse.

00:41:52   Because backend is gonna, backend is gonna make a mouse and it's gonna, it's gonna call it boost

00:41:56   charge pro mouse. You know, they're gonna do it. And let them, you know, because Apple, Apple,

00:42:01   you've lost your mouse making card. Like you're not allowed anymore. You've made a bunch of bad

00:42:06   mice. This current ones are terrible. You've left it this way forever. Let's, let's just get rid of

00:42:10   it. I will just throw out mentioning trackpads. I want them to put touch ID in the trackpad. I

00:42:16   still want that. That would be like under the trackpad. Just put a little, put it in the corner,

00:42:22   like a little button, right? Like, like, you know, just have it look like the little button or a

00:42:27   little spot. I mean, it's all glass, right? So you could just put the sensor on, like flush with the,

00:42:33   with the glass of the trackpad, like top right hand corner or something. Yeah, no, I would love,

00:42:38   I would love that as somebody, you know, Mike, you and I are both thinking I'm never going to use an

00:42:42   Apple keyboard, but I really want the touch ID button and I do use the magic trackpad. So it

00:42:49   would be really nice if they, if they did the magic trackpad there. I don't think they're ever

00:42:54   going to get rid of the magic mouse, by the way, for a couple of reasons. One is, uh, cause they

00:42:59   bundle it with the iMac and there are people who like a mouse. And also I think it's cheaper than

00:43:04   the trackpad and they can't not, unless they ship the iMac with literally no input devices. And I

00:43:10   don't think they want to do that. They're going to want to ship it with input devices. And I honestly

00:43:15   think the mouse is cheaper, so it's better to ship it with the mouse. Oh yeah, man, you have to pay

00:43:20   $50 more to get the magic trackpad. Yeah, it's, yeah, it's a lot cheaper. Well then, then if

00:43:25   you're going to force this mouse on people, make it better, make it better. I agree. I agree. I,

00:43:32   you haven't mentioned, um, Patently Apple wrote a story like a million years ago about a patent

00:43:37   to use the keyboard, uh, the surface of keys as a trackpad. And I thought that would be amazing,

00:43:43   right? The idea that you had that, you know, relatively flat Apple keyboard, and then you

00:43:47   just move your fingers across it and it moves the cursor. Didn't we see it, didn't we see like a

00:43:52   couple of months ago, a Kickstarter from a Chinese company that wants to do this. Yes. Well, they

00:43:59   better check with Apple's patent then. And nobody, nobody kind of believed them. I'm like, well,

00:44:05   let me rephrase. None of us backed it. And that's despite the fact that we tend, you know, the,

00:44:12   the three of us and also OTJ, like we tend to back a lot of Kickstarters despite our better judgment.

00:44:19   Um, but we didn't back that one because it seemed, um, uh, this, I found it. Um, okay.

00:44:26   The moquibo folio. Did it go anywhere? Are they making it? They, they have, as of March 28th,

00:44:37   2023, they had, it looked like, well, let me see where we have updates. The moquibo folio.

00:44:45   Apparently in May of 2014, they're shipping out. This is their ship. They're shipping out.

00:44:51   Apparently I'm going to check the comments. There are 2,800 comments, which is not a good sign.

00:44:56   Um, yeah, lots of people who've never received a keyboard here in the comments.

00:45:00   I don't know if anybody ever has received them, uh, because the com it's just full of people,

00:45:08   uh, not receiving anything, which is the way to go. So even though they're saying they're shipping,

00:45:14   uh, it doesn't, it doesn't seem like they may yet be Apple's got the patent. I mean,

00:45:20   this goes with when we're talking about vision pro and finding all those like plastic cases that let

00:45:25   you stick a track pad and a, and a keyboard together. Um, which is a thing they could do.

00:45:30   They could sell a combo, right? Which is just like the keyboard and the track and a magic track pad

00:45:35   in one unit, which maybe they could even get the price down on what they're doing and put that in

00:45:40   with the iMac and get rid of the mouse. I don't know, but it's a possibility. And then that would

00:45:44   be great for vision pro too, because you'd have the pointer attached to the keyboard. Um, so,

00:45:51   you know, stuff like that is good, but the track pad surface, which is a wild idea, but the idea

00:45:58   that you could use it as a fairly basic pointer, just by skimming your fingers across maybe multi

00:46:03   fingers across the keyboard and use it as a track pad. It's an interesting idea. I would also throw

00:46:07   out as my, my keyboard wishes, programmable key caps. I'm not necessarily saying the stream deck,

00:46:14   but like, I know that people have tried, you could have like, uh, keys that are, that have a color

00:46:20   under them that is changeable. Uh, or you could have, yeah, you could have a screen under the top

00:46:26   level. That's what the, what the, uh, touch bar should have been, uh, is something like that,

00:46:31   where it's physical keys, but you can customize them. And I know that they've also done,

00:46:34   people have done, uh, e-ink key caps, where the key caps label is changeable. And I don't know,

00:46:43   I think that would be kind of fun because I love my stream deck, but I like, I think there's value

00:46:46   when having a physical key that can be labeled whatever you want it to be. I don't think Apple

00:46:52   will do it, but we're getting wild here. I'll throw it out there. I've got to get some important

00:46:57   updates. The MoKibo, they have a website, they're shipping them that I'm finding videos on YouTube.

00:47:05   Like it's the thing that exists. They have a new version, apparently. I don't understand what's

00:47:10   happening over there on Kickstarter, but like, Apple should check this out. Apple should check

00:47:14   this out. Cause you can just buy it on their website. Now, Federico, I'm going to buy one

00:47:22   and Apple is going to sue me for whatever. I'm sending you a link. You can buy it. You can just

00:47:28   put, put it on your Fabu bar, put MoKibo on your, you put MoKibo on the Fabu bar. It looks,

00:47:33   it looks like it, you, it works and everyone's happy about it. You know, is MoKibo does it send

00:47:38   for more keyboard? Is that, is that the pun they're going for? MoKibo mo problems.

00:47:43   I think that's how that goes. I wanted to ask, are there any other peripherals that we think Apple

00:47:55   should make outside of this? And I will, I will, I will begin the bidding with a, with a webcam with

00:48:01   face ID in it, like an external one. They make a webcam. So forget about the bad webcams with a

00:48:10   face ID. 4k good with a center stage, high quality webcam that also has face ID sensors. So if you

00:48:21   really care, you can put it at the top of your display and get face ID on an external display.

00:48:28   Yes. Yes. Yes. That'd be sweet. I still kind of wish like the thing that you guys have done,

00:48:34   like taking apart a magic keyboard and making a standalone touch ID button out of it. I still

00:48:40   think that should be an actual product from Apple, even though they're never going to do it. Like,

00:48:44   let me, let me buy the touch ID button, you know, like, let me, let me, let me place it anywhere.

00:48:49   I don't know. It could double, it could double as a home kit accessory of sorts. Like,

00:48:53   it authenticates into your Mac and it's also something that you can click if you want to do

00:48:56   something. I don't know. It could be fun. The problem is I love Apple to sort of take the

00:49:02   Nintendo approach, not to go back to the pro show, but like Nintendo is a giant company and they're

00:49:07   still weird enough to make this crazy accessories like an alarm clock. The problem I think is that

00:49:15   Apple is too big and too self-conscious to get weird in that sort of sense. Like, I don't know.

00:49:23   I will have Apple to say, we made you a button. Now you can buy the touch ID button. We made you

00:49:29   a weird keyboard that you can use with the iPad and the vision pro, like this sort of like cheaper,

00:49:36   strange, unexpected Apple accessories. And the problem is that I think they are too self-aware

00:49:42   and too big and too scared to concern their investors to come up with these products because

00:49:52   every single... I feel like they think that every single product they make has to be a hit, has to

00:49:58   be world-changing, whereas I would like them to do the weird niche accessories and peripherals

00:50:05   and they're not making them. That's the problem. Well, I do hope that their home products might...

00:50:11   Do you know these rumored home products? I really hope that, yeah. Especially the robot one

00:50:16   that they're working on, the one with the big robot arm. I think that's going to be a big...

00:50:21   As we established, Jason loves the fact that it's a robot. It's not a robot arm, Mike. It's a robot.

00:50:28   It's literally a robot. It's a robot. It stands on your countertop and wherever you are, it walks

00:50:37   over there, steps on your plates, kicks your glasses off and just follows you around your

00:50:44   kitchen playing music at you or maybe an Apple TV show on its screen. I was very excited a couple of

00:50:50   days ago when, I don't know, the Echo was alerting everyone in the household that a package was

00:50:55   coming and I went and just pressed the button to get rid of it because it's also... My wife's

00:51:02   birthday is coming up and I'm ordering decorations and I don't want her to see what they are and I

00:51:08   know you can change settings on the Echo, but whatever. When I was doing it, Adina turned to me

00:51:14   and she said, "When are we going to get an Apple one of those?" I was like, "Yes." She's ready now.

00:51:20   She's also had enough of the Amazon Echo and the many ways in which it tries to sell you things.

00:51:24   Now, Apple, whenever you're ready, I will definitely be buying at least one of these

00:51:31   screen things because I want it big time. Please just let me get rid of this Echo.

00:51:36   The Google one is better because I dumped my Echo and got a Google one. The problem with...

00:51:42   It's better in that it is not as annoying in terms of trying to sell you things because all Amazon

00:51:47   wants to do is... You're a customer in good standing with Amazon. You buy a lot of stuff

00:51:51   from Amazon. It doesn't matter. By the way, I want to sell you more things and it just won't stop.

00:51:56   Even if you turn all the settings on, what happens is they push new settings that are on by default.

00:52:00   And so you're constantly fighting a battle with Amazon. I got a Google Nest Home Mini,

00:52:05   whatever. I don't know. It's got lots of different names that they keep attaching to their products

00:52:09   because Google doesn't know what it's doing. It's a lot less annoying. The screensaver with

00:52:16   the photos that are in a Google Photos album is really nice. There's a lot of things about it

00:52:20   that I like. The bad thing is that the hardware is all old and slow and bad. When I bought mine,

00:52:27   it had been out for more than a year and I read the Verge article and they said, "This is a great

00:52:31   product except it's too slow." They were right and they haven't updated it since then. There's a big

00:52:37   one and a little one, but they're both incredibly slow. I am better with it than I was with the

00:52:45   Amazon one because it's not actively annoying. Although, one of my favorite features of it is

00:52:51   it's got a sensor in it, a camera and a sensor. We use it for alarms in the kitchen, right? It's like

00:52:58   set an alarm, a chicken alarm, a chicken timer for 20 minutes. The chicken's here!

00:53:04   Okay. Federico will like this. If you do pasta, you say set a pasta timer for 11 minutes.

00:53:10   It does a little Italian thingy and with a chicken, it goes...

00:53:16   I love the cultural appropriation, but it's great.

00:53:20   Oh, yeah. It's a me. It plays a little sound effects, but when it's done, it starts making

00:53:30   this chime and you got to turn the chime off. There's three ways you can turn the chime off.

00:53:34   You can reach over to the thing with your dirty hands and touch the X and it stops it.

00:53:40   Or you can say to Google, stop it and it'll stop it, usually if it hears you. But the promise of

00:53:47   this thing is the sensor. You can take your hand and it's like talk to the hand and you can just

00:53:52   wave your hand in the air in the direction of the Google Home thing and it'll stop.

00:53:58   And it works sometimes, but it means that you're standing in your kitchen like an idiot waving at

00:54:06   a little box and it makes me feel stupid every time. But when it works the first time, I feel

00:54:11   like a magician. It's just that it doesn't usually work the first time. Anyway, please, yes, I would

00:54:16   love an Apple thing here instead. I would really appreciate that. And I'm sure Apple will not have

00:54:21   hilarious Italian sounds when you're making pasta.

00:54:24   It's a time for your pasta. Maybe Nintendo should make one.

00:54:30   It's sort of an alarm-o for the home, for the kitchen. Kitchen alarm-o.

00:54:36   Speaking of like, it isn't really speaking of anything, but Federico I saw,

00:54:40   I tried to do it and I couldn't get there. I saw on threads that you have got a Nomad watch band.

00:54:47   Right.

00:54:48   And I was intrigued about what you think of this. I think I mentioned this on the show before that

00:54:52   like I've always been hesitant of third-party watch bands. They're not going to attach right.

00:54:58   And so like I wanted to know what you thought. No, you can ignore those concerns. It attaches

00:55:05   perfectly. It looks like a regular Apple watch band. This is my second Nomad watch band. I had

00:55:10   one of their light gray, kind of similar rugged sport one that I got a couple of years ago.

00:55:16   And to match my iPhone 16 Plus, I got the, what do I call it? Blurple. It's like a blue purple-ish

00:55:26   one in collaboration with The Verge. And it's perfect. I'm using it with the Apple Watch Ultra.

00:55:32   And yeah, it matches quite nicely the ultramarine of the 16 Plus, but no, it just, it's got the same

00:55:39   lugs. It's got the same attachment of a regular watch band. You can get different sizes from the

00:55:44   Nomad website. Really fast shipping. I got it like three days. Yeah, you should, like there are

00:55:55   questionable options on Amazon from like these no-brand companies. I remember one time my mom

00:56:02   got one from Amazon that promised to be an equivalent to Apple's 50 euro silicon band,

00:56:08   but it cost like five euros. And so obviously my mom was intrigued and it gave her a rash

00:56:15   immediately. So probably try and buy from big brands like Nomad instead of like the five euro

00:56:24   band on Amazon. But otherwise, I mean, even the Chinese knockoff that my mom got,

00:56:30   it did attach correctly. But obviously the material was a bit problematic.

00:56:36   I love The Verge. I read The Verge every day. I listen to The Verge cast. I'm a big Verge fan.

00:56:44   There is something funny though, to me, about having The Verge logo on a watch band,

00:56:50   like that I would wear every day. I'm not sure exactly why I find that

00:56:54   to be like a funny thing, but that is like a funny thing to me. Oh, there is a Verge logo underneath.

00:57:00   I didn't even know. It's on the inside though, which is good at least. This is going to be

00:57:04   great. Get ready for it. Hold on to your hats. It's tichy bands and it's the bands of six or

00:57:11   seven website logos. Oh my God. The Verge will be there obviously, but like there'll be others too.

00:57:18   Tichy bands. Like seriously though, Nomad, call us. I would do a watch band connected or a tichy

00:57:29   tab, a tichy band. I don't know why it's funny, but it is just funny to me. I don't know why,

00:57:37   but Federico wears a watch band that has The Verge logo on it. It's nice and hidden.

00:57:43   Wow. Look, I love The Verge. Okay. It's a good website. It's a great website. It's one,

00:57:48   it would be one of my six or seven. I tell you that. Yeah. Many times I disagree with them,

00:57:52   but like I appreciate, I appreciate disagreeing with someone rather than ignoring someone,

00:57:59   you know, that's much worse. So what do you mean? Well, are you being spicy right now?

00:58:08   Do I want to know? Yes, I was. Yes, I was. Yes. I prefer to read and disagree with the website

00:58:16   than to not read the website at all. Okay. I like that. That's good. Um, I think I might be over

00:58:24   my desire for the Apple watch series 10. Oh, good for you. I agree. I think I'm gonna,

00:58:34   I think I'm going to wait. I, I still, uh, we've yet to, me and Evina have yet to go into a store

00:58:40   because she, she, she wants an upgrade and her watch is a couple of years old now. And so I

00:58:45   think she loves her Apple watch. So I'm very happy to upgrade it for her. And I still love the look

00:58:50   of the series 10, but I don't want to lose my battery life yet. I'm struggling. I'm struggling.

00:59:00   Who knows? I might go into the store, try it on and that's the end of me, but I don't know

00:59:04   what to, I'm really torn on it because I still stand by the idea that like, uh, like what is

00:59:11   going to happen to the Apple watch ultra? Like how often is it going to get updated? How behind is it

00:59:16   going to be like, but maybe I just need to wait for that to happen. You'll worry. Exactly. You'll

00:59:21   worry about it when it happens. When I need to worry about it rather than trying to make myself

00:59:25   worry about it now. Yeah. You don't have a problem now. No, I don't. Yeah. Yeah. I think you might

00:59:32   be right. I think you might be right. I did see though. I know that you were having battery life

00:59:36   concerns for very good. Did you see that 0.0 0.1 had reference to a battery drain? Oh no, I didn't.

00:59:44   Thank you. Okay. So interesting. Yeah. WatchOS was it 11.0 0.1. It references in the release notes

00:59:51   that like there was a battery drain issue on the, on, uh, 18.0. Okay. I'll make sure. Have I updated?

00:59:58   Uh, okay. It's up to date. Oh yeah. I guess I did it a couple of nights ago. Yeah. Cool. Awesome.

01:00:06   Well, my, my ultra one is a 90%, which is not great. I mean, it's, it's lost 10%. Um, battery health.

01:00:12   Yeah. Yeah. So it's, uh, it's getting worse, but it's still so much better than the series 10,

01:00:18   you know? So I keep it and I really hope that I can keep it at least until next September,

01:00:26   like for another year. I'm sure. And see what, and see what happens. I mean, the battery is so good.

01:00:31   Even like a 50% battery life on this watch would be a regular one. You're probably right. Yeah.

01:00:37   Jason, are you enjoying your series 10? I am. It's great. I had a seven, right? I had a seven black,

01:00:43   uh, titanium, and now I have a 10 black aluminum, a little shiny black and, uh,

01:00:50   loving the bigger screen. Nice to have a refresh battery after three years to, um, speaker is

01:00:58   interesting, but I found a weird quirk and this might be a bug. I wonder if it's going to be fixed

01:01:02   in the next version, but, um, you know, so, okay. Apple wants you to sleep with your Apple watch.

01:01:09   Right. And I have resisted. I have, I have resisted. I use it. I had the little thing

01:01:14   that Federico wrote about that time. That's the little thing that looks like a snow globe

01:01:17   and you slide your Apple watch in, like magnifies it and charges it. Do you remember that Federico?

01:01:22   I'm reminding you of so many things that you never remember that you wrote about. No, no. It was an

01:01:28   Apple watch accessory that was like plastic, clear plastic, but curved. And there was a, yeah, that's

01:01:34   it. And so you put the charging puck in the back and you slide it in and then it charges overnight

01:01:39   but it also kind of magnifies this, the nightstand. Oh my God. That was years ago. Yeah. And I bought

01:01:45   one. I bought one and I've been using it, but two new, two things. One very sad news. The new Apple

01:01:51   watch is, uh, has changed enough in shape that it doesn't charge reliably anymore. Uh, but two Apple

01:01:58   wants me to sleep with my watch on, which I've never done because they've got vitals and they

01:02:03   got sleep apnea detection. It's like, okay, Apple. So I'm committed to doing it. I moved the night

01:02:08   watch away. Uh, I just have a regular charging puck now and I try to do it when I'm in the shower

01:02:13   or when it yells at me in the middle of the day that it's about to run out of battery.

01:02:16   Um, and I, I'm, I'm trying to do that. So it's, it's just, I don't know. It's, it's weird to do it

01:02:27   that way. Um, but since I'm doing that and I, I have the sleep feature, sleep really, really,

01:02:33   really wants you to set a wake up time, right? They want you to have a wake up time with an,

01:02:38   and it has an alarm. And I've never done that. I get the tap. I've always gotten the tap at

01:02:42   night that says like, you should wind down and go to bed. And it's like, that's fine. I don't mind.

01:02:46   It's a little naggy, but I kind of don't mind it, but I never use the alarm in the morning because

01:02:50   first off I work at home and Lauren's got an alarm set, but I don't need to get up at the same time

01:02:54   and all of that. But I've, I'm embracing the sleep, the Apple way, the Apple sleep lifestyle.

01:03:00   Right? So this is what I did is I set it for 7 AM. Um, and I've worn my watch where alarms have

01:03:09   gone off before and they tap your wrist and it's kind of subtle. And what I found with a Series 10

01:03:15   on the .0 release of watchOS, when that alarm goes off, there's a setting that says don't make

01:03:22   noise. Like my phone, my watch is in silent mode. I never want my Apple watch to make noise.

01:03:29   That alarm goes off and it plays music. It taps my wrist, but it also plays music.

01:03:34   And I don't want, I don't want that. I do not want noise.

01:03:39   It is possible to have Apple's system have no alarm because I have this.

01:03:46   I know. I know. I just, I feel like there's, there's some advantage to having it know when

01:03:52   you wake up in terms of the sleep tracking features and all of that. I think there's

01:03:57   an advantage to it. I have, I just thought I would try this, but it's like a feature of the

01:04:02   Apple watch speaker that I do not want. I've, I've occasionally been somewhere where I didn't

01:04:06   have headphones and I'm like in the kitchen waiting for the toast to pop or something. And I,

01:04:11   I can listen to a podcast on my Apple watch. That's fun. That's interesting,

01:04:15   but I really don't want that alarm making any noise. And even though there's a setting to say

01:04:19   don't make noise, it still plays its little thing to wake me up in the morning. I don't,

01:04:25   I don't want that. I just want the tap on the wrist. That's all I want.

01:04:27   Nobody wants that.

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01:06:21   So finishing up today Federico put a note in the show notes that said "Vision Pro Check-In". So

01:06:31   I'm going to assume that you have somewhere you want to begin with this Federico? Yeah so first

01:06:35   of all I want to begin by saying that I've been recording the entire episode while wearing my

01:06:39   Vision Pro. Okay. Yeah. Okay. What? Yeah. Wow. You don't even sound like your nose is blocked so

01:06:47   that's good. No no no no I mean so I've been using the iPad connected to the MixPre as I've been

01:06:55   recording all my shows for the past two months and I've been using screen mirroring to see the

01:07:01   iPad's display in front of me. So I turned down the brightness of the iPad's physical display and

01:07:07   I screen mirrored to the Vision Pro and I made the iPad screen giant in front of me. And then I also

01:07:14   opened a bunch of Vision OS windows. Like I got Discord in compatibility mode on the left, I got

01:07:19   Messages on the right, Safari on the top. And so that was my teeny tiny surprise for today. I guess

01:07:26   in general I think over the past couple of weeks I've been thinking about the Vision Pro a lot

01:07:32   because this thing has been sitting in a drawer for like three months. I basically stopped paying

01:07:37   attention in May when I got the new iPad Pros. And then WWDC happened and then it was the summer

01:07:45   and I was going to the beach and when I was not at the beach I needed to work on the iOS and iPad OS

01:07:49   18 review and so I didn't really have time or the energy to think about the Vision Pro. But I still

01:07:54   felt bad about the fact that it was sitting unused because I still do think that there's so much

01:08:00   potential in this platform and I mean every time I use it, here's my thing, every time I use it

01:08:04   it brings me a little bit of joy. Like right now for example, the fact that I'm recording with all

01:08:10   these windows around me, it is kind of wild. At the same time it really bumps me out that the

01:08:17   Vision OS App Store is a little bit of a ghost town. And it also bumps me out that while Apple

01:08:27   has been working on these new immersive video efforts, they've been working to expanding the

01:08:33   list of compatible countries, the peripheral story, which is why I also brought that topic

01:08:40   to the show today, like the accessory story is just not there. And I'm really conflicted I guess

01:08:47   is what I'm trying to say. But over the past couple of weeks I think I've come to a realization,

01:08:52   which is what I also posted on Threads, that I think I've accepted that right now the Vision Pro

01:09:00   cannot be what I was hoping it would be last year. It cannot be my full-time computer. It cannot be

01:09:07   what replaces my iPad. And I think I'm fine with the thought for now of the Vision Pro being what

01:09:15   I use at night most of the time to watch movies, catch up on my YouTube queue, read some articles

01:09:22   in good links, basically watching Apple TV+ content, that sort of stuff, being my media

01:09:27   consumption device. And occasionally during the day when I feel like it, I can screen mirror my iPad,

01:09:35   which is the only option as an iPad user that I have. In absence of iPad virtual display,

01:09:42   I can screen mirror, which is not as good as Mac virtual display, but it's good enough.

01:09:48   And I think I've accepted this reality that I'm fine with using the Vision Pro

01:09:54   as a media device, an expensive media device, like a really expensive media device,

01:09:59   but it does bring me that joy. It does feel awesome when I use it. That said,

01:10:04   I would use it a whole lot more if the iPad was a first-class citizen in Vision OS like Mac OS is.

01:10:11   Can you explain to me how the screen mirroring works?

01:10:16   It's AirPlay. It's AirPlay. You're basically airplane to the Vision Pro,

01:10:20   just like you can AirPlay the iPad screen to an Apple TV or something. You can AirPlay

01:10:26   to a Vision Pro, which means you do get a bit of latency. Like right now, for example,

01:10:30   I can physically look in front of me and I can see like half a second of a delay.

01:10:35   But like you're touching the screen though, right? Like of your...

01:10:38   No, I'm using the Magic Keyboard. The iPad is in the Magic... Yeah, yeah, yeah. But when I scroll,

01:10:43   I can see that there's a tiny bit of delay between what I see on the iPad's physical screen

01:10:49   and what I see on the mirrored window in Vision OS. But it's good enough, you know? I have written

01:10:57   articles this way. I have gotten some work done this way. And it does feel nice to surround

01:11:04   yourself with windows and doing the things that Vision OS does. But still, at the same time,

01:11:10   I'm conflicted because the third-party app story just isn't there anymore. It kind of dried up

01:11:20   after the initial rollout of developers who really wanted to be on board on the Vision OS app store.

01:11:26   It's still not officially available in Italy, which means I still got to hold on to that fake

01:11:32   US Apple ID that I've been trying to move away from. But I got to keep using it because the

01:11:38   Vision Pro is not in Italy. And so, yeah, I kind of wanted to check in with you guys and see how

01:11:43   you're using it. I have found a few uses for it. I agree with you that the lack of the native apps

01:11:51   is brutal and iPad apps are a fallback. But I'll give you an example. I use OneWriter to write on my

01:12:00   iPad Pro. Really nice customizable text editor. I've got it wired into shortcuts to post my

01:12:08   story's directive into my CMS. And I've settled on OneWriter. It's good. It's my text editor.

01:12:15   It's BB Edit on the Mac, OneWriter on the iPad. And I can run OneWriter on Vision OS, but it's

01:12:22   in iPad compatibility mode, and it's just not as good. And so, I end up using Runestone by

01:12:28   Simon Storving, which is good and a native app. It isn't as full featured as OneWriter is at all,

01:12:35   but it doesn't matter because it's a native Vision OS app. And that means it's better. It's just,

01:12:39   it's clearer. The text is crisper. You can resize it, and it's not pretending that it's inside an

01:12:46   iPad shape. And so, it is frustrating that there aren't more of those. But I also don't blame

01:12:50   developers for it because I know that there's nobody out there using Vision Pro right now. And

01:12:55   so, you either have to sort of do it because it's a challenge and interesting to you personally,

01:13:00   but not for financial gain, or because you think that maybe this will lead you somewhere eventually

01:13:05   with Apple, which makes me come back to the fact that I feel like Apple needs to show more

01:13:11   commitment to this platform. It's really committed to it. And they can do that in a bunch of

01:13:16   different ways. The content, yes, the immersive content is amazing. And even 3D movies are great.

01:13:21   I don't watch them a lot because I usually want to watch that stuff with Lauren. And so,

01:13:26   you know, we're going to watch it on TV, on our couch. But occasionally I'll do it.

01:13:29   And when I was in Memphis, I watched a college football game on a gigantic screen in my hotel

01:13:34   room. And that was kind of fun to do. But like, so they, I know that their short film is coming out.

01:13:40   The first scripted short film is coming out tomorrow. So that's something, but it's been

01:13:45   really slow going. And a lot of things that we think might be great potential for this thing,

01:13:49   there's no content for it. They've been very limited with what they do there.

01:13:52   And then on the developer side, that's what I feel too, is like Apple needs to give developers

01:13:57   reasons to build these apps. And I know that they're doing something. There's something in

01:14:01   the show notes here. There's a piece about how Apple did a presentation at Apple park for

01:14:06   vision pro developers. And it's like, that's good. More of that more, I mean, maybe like

01:14:11   identify key developers who are laggards on the platform and come to them and say,

01:14:17   how can we help? Can we get you hardware? Like I would literally identify the top 50 iOS developers

01:14:24   in categories that matter. That would be good on vision OS. I would just target them and get them

01:14:29   hardware and say, please work with us on this. Right. Like, and maybe they're doing it and

01:14:34   there's no result, but I don't know. It sounds like they're not doing as much as they should

01:14:37   be doing to get the developers to make apps for this thing. Yeah. That, that, that event,

01:14:43   uh, developer Todd Heberlein, uh, posted a little blog post about it with some photos.

01:14:49   They had what was essentially like a one day WWDC kind of thing, real presenters on stage,

01:14:56   actually doing presenting, doing code. Like it looked kind of nice really, uh, to be honest. Um,

01:15:02   and they're also doing a bunch more events around the world. I don't think they're to this level.

01:15:08   Um, uh, I'm not sure if this one was, was like people were invited or you could apply to go.

01:15:13   Um, but that kind of, this is the, you're right. This is the kind of stuff they need to do

01:15:18   saying about like the big developers. I don't know if you saw, uh, Juno, the YouTube app has

01:15:25   been kicked off the store. That's because YouTube are making an app. It's coming out next year.

01:15:30   That's it. Why would Apple just let it go and take YouTube's word for it? It's because Apple

01:15:34   and YouTube clearly already have a deal to bring the YouTube app and, and to VisionOS. So they're

01:15:40   like, just let's just let this thing go away. But it's a shame because that's one of the best

01:15:44   VisionOS apps that exists. Yeah. The app still exists. It won't be updated anymore. I still got

01:15:49   it anymore. Yeah. But if you don't have it, you can't get it now. But that's why they're doing

01:15:54   that because they're finally getting Google to release some apps, which is good. I mean,

01:15:58   this is, this is the thing is look when, um, and you guys talked about this and thank you

01:16:02   for referencing the upgrade conversation about it too. The meta Orion and, uh, not even an

01:16:07   announcement, the showing off the prototype, which shifted the game. And I think it was really smart

01:16:11   for meta. And we all, we all talked about that last time. Um, the thing like Apple doesn't have

01:16:19   to, Apple doesn't have to do everything right now, but it needs to show commitment to where

01:16:24   it's going. It doesn't need to reveal that it's also dreaming of an AR future. I think the reason

01:16:28   the pass through is, is such a focus on vision pro is because it really is just kind of like an

01:16:33   AR glasses developer unit. It really is just kind of like, we want you to think in terms of

01:16:38   augmented reality, not virtual reality for it. Like that's all, that's all fine, but they need to

01:16:44   show that commitment. They need to, to do, they can't do what meta has done, but I just, I need

01:16:51   to see signs of life for them that this really does matter. And I know that it's not their

01:16:56   language to do prototypes. So whatever Apple's love language is, they need to speak it about

01:17:02   the vision pro so that everybody, and make an effort, even if, you know, they've said,

01:17:08   Tim Cook has said, AR is more interesting than VR and that the, you know, it's a place of interest

01:17:13   in all of those things. But like, I'd really like them to, to say, look, this is a longterm

01:17:18   commitment for us. It doesn't matter that this, that the vision, current vision pro is, is just

01:17:23   the start of the process. They've said some of that, but like their actions speak louder than

01:17:28   those words. And I just want to see them say, there are lots of reasons that people should be

01:17:33   developing software for this because this is going someplace. And, and the, the lack of shipping

01:17:41   content for the platform is one of those things that really gives me pause, right? Because then

01:17:46   the conversation is not, oh, the vision pro isn't a hit because it was never going to be a hit.

01:17:50   The conversation is, does Apple care about the vision pro? And that's, that's a big problem.

01:17:55   So when I saw this in the notes, I was thinking a bit about the vision pro, um, and like one of the,

01:18:03   you know, yesterday, uh, I had a call a few friends, Jason was on the call. We sometimes

01:18:08   hang out in vision pro just so we can use the special personas, which I think is the absolute

01:18:12   very best feature of the vision pro. And the thing that I was struck by is that like the vision pro

01:18:18   is like the coolest computer that I own and by a mile, like using that thing is unbelievable.

01:18:28   Like still yesterday I put it on and I'm using it and I'm flipping around some maps and like,

01:18:32   this is absolutely the future of computing. And I already own it. I just wish I have more to do on

01:18:39   it. And like I can and have like find things to do, right? So like, I want to use it more. I'll

01:18:47   find things to do kind of like what Federico is doing right now. Right? Like I will find something

01:18:51   to do because I want to use this, but like Apple has to meet us a little closer. Right. And, and I,

01:19:00   I do believe they will. Like I do not believe that they would just release this thing and then

01:19:08   they'll allow it to go nowhere, but they're, they're just being slow with it. And I think

01:19:12   that's okay. But I mean, if you see next year, I want to see vision of us three and it has a

01:19:18   bunch of cool stuff in it, right? Like I want them to keep pushing it. Like I'm not of the camp of

01:19:23   which there are a lot of people who are just saying it's dead. Like I don't believe that to

01:19:28   be the case at all. I just think that there are a lot of factors for this device that limit it,

01:19:33   like the price, the, the availability of it, like the interest of developers, it is limited,

01:19:40   but it doesn't have to be that way forever. Yeah. Yeah. And I feel like because of these problems,

01:19:46   now it's the time to be humble, reach out to developers, like Jason said, expand the options

01:19:54   in terms of accessories, expand the options in terms of countries. Like, yeah, taking your foot

01:20:01   off the gas now is the mistake that Apple can make with this platform. And so, um, yeah, I wanted to

01:20:10   mention three things, um, that I'm enjoying with the vision pro. One is an accessory that I think

01:20:17   you guys may like. I've already ordered it because I saw it in the notes and I ordered it already.

01:20:21   So this is the, this is the Spigen head strap. It's basically a top strap for the vision pro

01:20:28   that allows you to have the same setup that we had last year with the private demo at WWDC.

01:20:35   You're using the solo knit band in the back, but you have a head strap at the top. And I've been

01:20:43   using the solo top set up forever. The solo top is this system to have two solo knit bands. Um,

01:20:50   yeah. So solo knit straps, whatever they're called. Um, but this one is much less bulky

01:20:56   and much more comfortable because you only need to worry about adjusting the band with the,

01:21:02   with the dial that sits in the back of your head. The one at the top, you can just set to one, to,

01:21:08   uh, to a position that feels right to you and you don't need to worry about it anymore. It's

01:21:14   perfect. I got it from Amazon. Yeah. I have high hopes for this because the solo top did not work

01:21:18   for me. Like it didn't feel very comfortable. And also the, my eye tracking wasn't as good.

01:21:24   I think you're going to like this. I think you're going to like this. Um, I also want to mention,

01:21:28   uh, I've still been alternating between using the vision pro as a, as a VR headset with the,

01:21:34   with the light seal versus using it, uh, with an open system. Yeah. I've read about the open

01:21:41   system a few months ago. If you're interested, the company that made the air cover, um, they're

01:21:48   called infinity one three D they make a bunch of accessories for, for various, uh, VR headsets. Um,

01:21:55   the air cover lets you use the vision pro as, uh, almost an AR headset without the light seal.

01:22:03   It's very comfortable, quite cheap. They have a version two, uh, that is very similar to the,

01:22:09   to the original one. Maybe the, the printing material is a little bit nicer on the version

01:22:14   two, but this is the one that I've been using, uh, sort of switching back and forth between this one

01:22:18   and the light seal for when I really want to be immersed. There's something about this, like

01:22:23   whenever I see the pictures of this where I'm just like convinced that you're just like burning your

01:22:27   eyes. Like, I don't know why, like whenever I see pictures of it, I'm like, Oh God, it looks so bad.

01:22:32   And I gotta say it does look bad, but I gotta say that it, it does help a lot in terms of like

01:22:38   getting rid of the tunnel effect when you're looking into the vision pro right with the light

01:22:43   seal. Um, vision OS two is much better than vision OS one at not bothering you so much with alerts,

01:22:53   like, Oh, you should, you know, you're too close to this place. Like with vision OS two,

01:22:57   the system tells you once and then kind of forgets about it. Whereas in vision OS one,

01:23:03   it would be the sort of like, uh, Jason Snell alert that comes up every so often, you know,

01:23:10   it comes up and it bothers you and it annoys you and it gets in your way. Not so much anymore. Um,

01:23:15   lastly, I want to recommend the sub stack newsletter, uh, last week in Apple vision pro

01:23:22   it's the name. And it's just a very good newsletter that sort of collects a bunch of

01:23:26   vision OS things. It's, it's the next, it's the closest thing to a blog all about vision OS that

01:23:33   I've found. And they do a really good job sort of collecting all the things that developers come up

01:23:39   with interviews, um, new demos from YouTube. It's just a weekly collection of vision OS and vision

01:23:48   pro related things. And they do a really good job. And yeah, quite nice. Yeah. So that's, uh,

01:23:57   that's my three things. And yeah, Mike mentioned our, our, uh, little chats that we try to do.

01:24:01   We try to put on the calendar, right? Because that's, that's one of the challenges is people

01:24:05   don't have, um, they're not like, Hey, let's just check in with my friend who happens to be wearing

01:24:11   vision pro right now, which I kind of wish they would like offer some sort of solution for that,

01:24:16   where you could like see what ones of your friends like, like how actually on the, on the meta quest,

01:24:21   um, it works that way where you can, you know, it's like, like a game console. It's like your

01:24:27   friend is on right now. Um, so I wish they would do that, but I, the, the perspecial personas are

01:24:32   so good. And I try to explain it to people. And I think that they all think that I'm crazy,

01:24:37   but it's like when, when we were doing this one this week, it's like, we're just around like a

01:24:43   campfire or something. And it feels completely different than being on a video call with

01:24:47   somebody. It feels fun. It's not the same as being together in person, but it's much closer to that

01:24:54   than it is to be on a FaceTime call. It just, you're not seeing yourself and, and making sure

01:24:59   that you're positioned in the frame. Like you're just present in reality, basically, virtual

01:25:04   reality, and you see people's facial expressions and you hear them and the position of the audio

01:25:09   is perfect. It's so good. Again, nobody has got a Vision Pro, so you gotta be, you gotta have those

01:25:17   people and you gotta make the time, but it's so good. And then I'll throw it out again. I mentioned

01:25:21   Runestone earlier. The other thing I use the Vision Pro for is absolutely when I am on a

01:25:26   deadline and I am, I just cannot focus. And I need to write something. I will put the Vision Pro on,

01:25:35   go into an environment, bring up Runestone, play some music that will help me focus. And I have

01:25:42   written many articles in Vision Pro for that reason, that it gives me, you know, I've written

01:25:50   about it before. Sometimes I'll go outside in the summertime or I'll go work at the,

01:25:53   at the kitchen countertop, or I'll just try to like change where I am or back in the day,

01:25:59   go to a cafe just to put myself in a different mental space to write. And I found that Vision Pro

01:26:06   will let me do that. And then I can go to Joshua Tree is my mental space and, and right there. And

01:26:10   it really does work most of the time. It's a very good product that is very expensive and requires

01:26:18   the effort, but if you're okay with all of that, God damn it's good. You know, like it's real good.

01:26:26   And again, I know that provided they are willing to commit, it will all continue to get better.

01:26:36   I guess the next little while is they're willing to commit. I think that method is probably holding

01:26:41   their feet to the fire and we'll see how Apple responds if at all. But I think that if, if it

01:26:47   had been taken the backseat, I don't think they can, they can accept that to occur anymore.

01:26:51   Sure hope so. Thank you for listening to this episode of connected, but most of all,

01:26:56   thank you, Jason, for joining us. Oh, it was, I listen every week. So it was a pleasure to be on

01:27:02   and fill in for Steven this week. What was today's date, Jason? It is, uh, October the 9th, 2024.

01:27:09   Check it out. Accept no substitutes. That big thing that happened later in October, 2024.

01:27:15   We didn't know about it. Sorry. Didn't know about it. If you want to find Jason online,

01:27:20   you can go to six colors.com. He is also the host of upgrade here on relay. Let's say co-host. I

01:27:27   don't know why I just, why did I just demote myself like that? Jason is the one and only

01:27:31   person worth listening to on upgrade. You can check him there every Monday. It's just, you're

01:27:36   just being, you know, it's official in your role as Mike on connected to sort of accuse yourself.

01:27:43   You can also find Jason on the incomparable and other shows on relay too, including downstream.

01:27:48   I always go to call it download. You'd think I would have gotten that right by now,

01:27:52   but I was actually successful at that time. So I shouldn't have called attention to it.

01:27:55   You can find Jason online is at Jason. Now J S N E double L Federico is the editor in chief of max

01:28:02   stories. You can find Federico at max stories.net. And he is also the teacher at max stories.net on

01:28:08   mastodon of a teachy on threads. I am I Mike I M Y K E and you can find my work here on relay

01:28:15   and a cortex brand.com. Uh, I'd like to thank our sponsors of this week's episode. That is the

01:28:20   wonderful people over at net suite, E cam and cell trios. But most of all, thank you for listening

01:28:26   and we'll be back next week until then. Say goodbye, everybody. Later, dude.

01:28:33   And like the dude? Yeah, I love it.

01:28:36   (laughs)