00:00:02 ◼ ► when I know the one with the lung Guyland Jeep dealer or whatever. That's been pretty good at that. [TS]
00:00:08 ◼ ► You still do your fake like this is how we think people around town after hearing people on Long Island talk for an [TS]
00:00:17 ◼ ► and it didn't it didn't take hearing all the actual people around talk you're just going to go back to that because you [TS]
00:00:22 ◼ ► think that is somehow representative of something. No I think it makes you mad I think that's funny. [TS]
00:00:29 ◼ ► Yeah you were once upon a time was the capital Confederacy to a smaller than an Apple store I know Richmond does your [TS]
00:00:36 ◼ ► thing in Charlottesville which is an hour west. You're just trying to get me angry so you can go to bed. [TS]
00:00:50 ◼ ► and that all this crap again to try to extract some value from it so here you have double punishment. [TS]
00:01:02 ◼ ► Right so the first follow up is from me and it's from a well I don't know if that's al or a L [TS]
00:01:09 ◼ ► or what I meant to say Alabama. I you know I think that's right I think this person's name is Alabama. [TS]
00:01:16 ◼ ► or she made a point with regards to the Andrew people switching from Android trial as what you would said kind of off [TS]
00:01:25 ◼ ► the cuff an episode or two ago and so reading from his or her feedback in my immediate circle of friends [TS]
00:01:31 ◼ ► and colleagues fifteen people have switched from Iowa standard none have switched from Android to I O. S. [TS]
00:01:39 ◼ ► and this is what I thought was interesting the main reason after an I was update their one plus year old i Phone [TS]
00:01:51 ◼ ► but everything keeps working as scare quotes fast scare quote as it did when they got the phone [TS]
00:02:00 ◼ ► Heard this personally but I could see that being I don't know if I should use the word legitimate [TS]
00:02:05 ◼ ► but perhaps justifiable reason for not upgrading or not upgrading your i Phone or alternatively going to Android [TS]
00:02:12 ◼ ► and i was just curious if you have any thoughts on that. I mean it's kind of a weak argument. [TS]
00:02:23 ◼ ► but it was it was saying that not a lot of people ever move from Iowa West to Android [TS]
00:02:33 ◼ ► and I don't really have a lot of strong support for that except that just you know from what I've seen online I've seen [TS]
00:02:38 ◼ ► occasional studies and surveys and reports here and there that some people move to us after having an Android phone [TS]
00:02:54 ◼ ► After having an i Phone Those numbers might be out there but I've I've I've only ever seen the former [TS]
00:03:03 ◼ ► or report of real numbers with real people so we you know anybody can have any code say Oh well I switched [TS]
00:03:12 ◼ ► But I would love to know if anybody has actual numbers backing that up in either direction or both directions [TS]
00:03:18 ◼ ► I would love to see actual numbers for that because neither of us really do really have anything to support this. [TS]
00:03:24 ◼ ► Me or Al I like that anecdote though because it highlights a phenomenon that I have seen a lot in that you know [TS]
00:03:36 ◼ ► when you have a study of a large group of people you want to see you know larger trends over ever [TS]
00:03:40 ◼ ► but that's just like the big numbers are good for sort of you know seeing where the entry or the population's going [TS]
00:03:48 ◼ ► but in any small pocket of people in this phenomenon that this person is describing is something that I've seen a lot [TS]
00:03:55 ◼ ► of and like how how do people decide. I had to you know change platforms switch for a MAC to a P.C. [TS]
00:04:13 ◼ ► Most of the time what I see is what this person described is that social groups move kind of as a herd in that it will [TS]
00:04:20 ◼ ► become socially accepted within some small small or large group of people if just five percent friends [TS]
00:04:26 ◼ ► or an entire family or entire community already Framley want Yeah and it will and it will become like common wisdom. [TS]
00:04:34 ◼ ► Everybody knows that X. Is true of Y. and It starts becoming socially unacceptable to be still be using X. [TS]
00:04:44 ◼ ► As a problem why you should all changes it whatever it may be whether it's about cars dishwashers car seats. [TS]
00:04:57 ◼ ► and I've seen this as well in small groups of people everyone just knows like you know like the original is like with [TS]
00:05:04 ◼ ► the i Phone your phone is crappy you should get an i Phone because it's better in the web or whatever [TS]
00:05:09 ◼ ► and then not ever or it's the cool thing or they have apps and apps are cool and on the other side you know [TS]
00:05:14 ◼ ► and this group like oh you should get off Apple phone because Apple doesn't support their old products [TS]
00:05:23 ◼ ► and write it whatever it doesn't really matter whether the thing they're talking about is true or not [TS]
00:05:27 ◼ ► or whether it's true for a brief period of time or was true in the past is no longer true [TS]
00:05:31 ◼ ► or was never true it doesn't really matter all that matters is that like the social proof of of a group of friends [TS]
00:05:43 ◼ ► and you know the pocket phenomena has almost nothing to do with the larger trend because there could be pockets going [TS]
00:05:53 ◼ ► These pockets could be just Brownian motion just like random movement of these little pockets [TS]
00:05:56 ◼ ► but I think it's interesting that it's not it's not. You know for motion and did sessions are made an individual basis. [TS]
00:06:10 ◼ ► and stuff like that because these little pockets to move in one direction or the other [TS]
00:06:13 ◼ ► and that I think is fascinating about which direction they're moving at fascinating a little bit depressing. [TS]
00:06:18 ◼ ► But I've long since learned that it's you know there's no use trying to dissuade people of whatever notion that they've [TS]
00:06:26 ◼ ► decided about whatever it is they're talking about whether it's vacuum cleaners or cars or certainly parenting [TS]
00:06:33 ◼ ► and they tend to go in cycles so whenever I hear someone say something like I'm always going to get Android phones [TS]
00:06:44 ◼ ► It's difficult to discuss that topic in a constructive way with them about the utility of flash on the web [TS]
00:06:55 ◼ ► or whatever once they've decided that they're not going to change their mind until the new thing is you know Android [TS]
00:07:02 ◼ ► phones are unreliable I'm going to get Apple because my last two hundred phones progress something equally unfounded [TS]
00:07:16 ◼ ► and he also which because they were mad because their one year old i Phone got a software update from Apple that made [TS]
00:07:23 ◼ ► it slower. And this is actually losing conundrum like you know what should Apple do here now. [TS]
00:07:30 ◼ ► I've never heard anybody say that about an Android phone that that it got a software update period. [TS]
00:07:37 ◼ ► But also but also that that a software update for the data maybe it's because they get updates I don't know [TS]
00:07:43 ◼ ► but whatever the reason I've never heard people say that I think a lot of this has to do with this like cultural [TS]
00:07:52 ◼ ► and anti Apple people have have had about Apple for a while which is their products are overpriced. Right. [TS]
00:08:00 ◼ ► You know the i Phone is often sold at retail at the same price as similar interest on whatever you know you can make [TS]
00:08:10 ◼ ► and it's a similar price you know you can you can make that argument all day it doesn't matter as John you said you [TS]
00:08:14 ◼ ► know it's hard to ever convince these people otherwise once they have these these like long running beliefs [TS]
00:08:22 ◼ ► and I've heard people say the whole time a commonly held thing here is Apple's update made my old phone slower to force [TS]
00:08:31 ◼ ► Now again I've never I've never heard anybody say Samsung updated my phone to maybe buy a new one [TS]
00:08:36 ◼ ► and may you know intentionally mean slower so I'd buy a new sentence I've never heard a single person say that. [TS]
00:08:43 ◼ ► but that you know the motive is ascribed to Apple that if a new version of the software is slower [TS]
00:08:53 ◼ ► but for a reason that's not the fault of the operating system maybe I'd like running more apps and stuff [TS]
00:08:59 ◼ ► or killing the battery you know whatever the reason they ascribe the blame to all Apple is greedy because their [TS]
00:09:06 ◼ ► However what would happen if Apple's if Apple did not give software updates to one year old phones then you'd have [TS]
00:09:18 ◼ ► Apple is so greedy they won't let me have the new software they made my phone obsolete. [TS]
00:09:23 ◼ ► They will use the word obsolete even though it does not mean that I think it means that they will use the word anyway. [TS]
00:09:27 ◼ ► Apple made my phone obsolete to force me to buy a new one because they want more money [TS]
00:09:31 ◼ ► and they're so greedy like it would be sexy or human if they did it the other direction [TS]
00:09:36 ◼ ► and so this is one of the things like I don't think I think this is it's just like it's a cultural like rumor or [TS]
00:09:43 ◼ ► or meme or just norm that this certain pretty sizable group of people just thinks this about Apple [TS]
00:09:50 ◼ ► and will always ascribe that motive of their stuff is expensive therefore anything they do is to make me go spend more [TS]
00:10:00 ◼ ► But I think it's pretty casual I think it's that's more like a happy side effect of moving things forward [TS]
00:10:06 ◼ ► and making the stuff every year and you know moving the requirements for it every year [TS]
00:10:09 ◼ ► but you know what do you expect them to do with your eighteen month old i Phone four. [TS]
00:10:13 ◼ ► Like what do you expect them to your way if they support this old hardware forever. [TS]
00:10:19 ◼ ► It will get slower over time as the elect gets more complicated and more advanced. [TS]
00:10:26 ◼ ► It's the social aspect of those important because what I think what happens in these little pockets that move around is [TS]
00:10:31 ◼ ► that one or two people with stature in the social group who will get unreasonably angry about something [TS]
00:10:38 ◼ ► and then the other people will feel that they will be looked upon as foolish if they continue to have dealings with the [TS]
00:10:45 ◼ ► company that's been denounced by the person with lard with a higher social standing [TS]
00:10:49 ◼ ► and they would be chided about it said like oh you're still doing that stuff don't like it become socially unacceptable [TS]
00:10:56 ◼ ► even if that individual if left to their own devices doesn't have a problem their device didn't get slower [TS]
00:11:08 ◼ ► and you see this the opposite thing to mark I recently posted a link on on your website about the guy's experience at [TS]
00:11:20 ◼ ► or at least in some social circles there is a stigma about Android phones about how they're crappy [TS]
00:11:24 ◼ ► and there's nothing good on them and if you were seen with an Android phone whether you like the Android phone [TS]
00:11:29 ◼ ► or not if you're in a social group where that is looked down upon you will get the crap about having an Android phone. [TS]
00:11:40 ◼ ► but I know it is definitely a thing because I've seen this opposite thing as well and it has. [TS]
00:11:44 ◼ ► If you're in that social group it doesn't matter if you are perfectly happy with your Android phone at a certain point [TS]
00:11:50 ◼ ► you you begin to think you begin to feel foolish for having an Android phone because all these other people who you [TS]
00:11:55 ◼ ► respect say that you should have one and they're crappy. Or you get teased about it. [TS]
00:12:00 ◼ ► Never and so groups will move you know groups of teenagers families groups of co-workers [TS]
00:12:06 ◼ ► and again these individual bubbles mean nothing about the larger trend of their They're just you know lumps in the real [TS]
00:12:13 ◼ ► but I think it's fascinating how how these little groups are moving sometimes I think the group can spread quite widely [TS]
00:12:27 ◼ ► Is evil because they sell children to slavery or whatever that bubble has grown cover everybody [TS]
00:12:31 ◼ ► and be like well I'm not going to you know forget it we're not buying it from them [TS]
00:12:35 ◼ ► or the company goes out of business like the bubbles can end up growing and connect with each other [TS]
00:12:45 ◼ ► or two people with high social standing have a bad experience with whatever and that spreads to like one [TS]
00:12:52 ◼ ► or two degrees of connections from the person you know the only exception is cases and this is [TS]
00:13:09 ◼ ► and you'll be out of airlines because they're all terrible it's like I'm never dealing with Comcast again. [TS]
00:13:14 ◼ ► OK Well so you have probably one two possibly zero other cable companies are going to eventually you will hate them all [TS]
00:13:21 ◼ ► and then what will you do then you have to pick the least bad one which is what we're all doing anyway so that [TS]
00:13:25 ◼ ► when I think people have learned to ignore because it used to be like oh I'll never fly Delta are phony doesn't fly [TS]
00:13:29 ◼ ► Delta Delta is terrible sorry dolphin was taking a name out of the hat. The Delta still in business. [TS]
00:13:37 ◼ ► but at this point everyone sort of knows Look they're all terrible if someone in your family or work group [TS]
00:13:43 ◼ ► or whatever is super mad at some airline it is not a reason for you to not fly that airline. [TS]
00:13:49 ◼ ► If anyone gives you crap about flying an airline because they tell you about the horrible experience they had just said [TS]
00:13:53 ◼ ► look every airline has those stories and they're all terrible. Right but with the phone things I thought of. [TS]
00:14:00 ◼ ► This is going in cycles and with Apple stuff as well I have relatives who run Macs for years [TS]
00:14:04 ◼ ► and then a bubble forms about like my mac broke and I didn't feel like I was getting the support I need [TS]
00:14:20 ◼ ► and I'm going to get an Android phone on general principles because I'm mad at Apple about the whatever things like [TS]
00:14:28 ◼ ► and it could be back around the other side again I'm never getting the Android phone again these things are terrible I [TS]
00:14:32 ◼ ► don't like them for whatever reason they decide on the getting you know Microsoft phones or Windows phones [TS]
00:14:38 ◼ ► or whatever and very few of these decisions are anything to do with logic and they just end up being noise [TS]
00:14:47 ◼ ► and think of what is making this bubble move from one can for the other for any reason. [TS]
00:14:51 ◼ ► So you're saying that you never got made fun of for your flip phone say in the lobby of the park fifty five [TS]
00:15:04 ◼ ► and that's like gentle teasing I don't feel like I'm excluded from the group because I have one it's like I can hang [TS]
00:15:09 ◼ ► out with you guys and I'm an i Phone like no one really cares. Well I don't think we made fun of you. [TS]
00:15:16 ◼ ► and got four hundred people think that's a whole other category of things like You're not even participating you don't [TS]
00:15:21 ◼ ► even have a smartphone you still have a dumb phone it's like I would if I show up running a penny farthing bicycle [TS]
00:15:28 ◼ ► but you know well it's funny because it's not you know I'm not going to laugh at anyone using football [TS]
00:15:32 ◼ ► and I will laugh at you using a flip phone because it's funny that you of all people don't have a smartphone. [TS]
00:15:40 ◼ ► but anyway people who are excited about it can be excited about what the point is it's not like I felt as if I wasn't [TS]
00:15:50 ◼ ► Thing where you're hanging out at everything you call the Android phone you somehow feel like you can't participate in [TS]
00:16:01 ◼ ► and that I mean I've I've never personally experienced that phenomenon maybe I don't care enough about what phone I [TS]
00:16:06 ◼ ► have maybe other people don't care enough about one of the fun of it I have a badge [TS]
00:16:14 ◼ ► but I've also very rarely ever seen somebody take out an Android phone period at every really see [TS]
00:16:19 ◼ ► and I think in the groups that we hang out in if one of the people we were hanging out of some road [TS]
00:16:23 ◼ ► and it's on I think our reaction would be curiosity we would all want to know. Show me something cool in that phone. [TS]
00:16:30 ◼ ► but like show me the thing that phone can do that the i Phone can do again not as a challenge [TS]
00:16:39 ◼ ► and be in the circles we travel in of anyone we know pulled out something we assume because they're someone we respect [TS]
00:16:45 ◼ ► and are friends with or whatever and knows tech stuff that there must be a reason they're using [TS]
00:16:53 ◼ ► Yeah it's like a some of what you know should to a party on an elephant. Like OK well we all drove here. [TS]
00:16:58 ◼ ► You took the elephant. That's one I haven't seen an elephant being ridden in a while especially to parties like this. [TS]
00:17:06 ◼ ► and can you show me you know I have a ride maybe like what's going on can I see the trunk. [TS]
00:17:12 ◼ ► So the joke is too bad to pass up a tangible example of this is I went to dinner with just a millions [TS]
00:17:19 ◼ ► and couple other people when I was a C. and He's rocking earth he was at the time rocking a five C. [TS]
00:17:26 ◼ ► Which That's exactly what happened it led to a very brief discussion of a five C. One out of five S. [TS]
00:17:31 ◼ ► What the hell's wrong with you why don't you rock in a five S. and What makes the five C. [TS]
00:17:39 ◼ ► but more about geez tell me why you prefer this because you're someone whose opinion I trust in and I respect [TS]
00:17:46 ◼ ► and you take in what could be called a contrarian opinion or a contrarian position. [TS]
00:17:53 ◼ ► Tell me why or even it doesn't even need to be contrary and just unusual. Like you're the only person I've seen. [TS]
00:18:02 ◼ ► You know what you know out of curiosity why I me answer is because it's super comfortable and smooth on the back [TS]
00:18:07 ◼ ► and everything is just a bit more active than that actually I think that was pretty much his answer [TS]
00:18:12 ◼ ► and it comes in cars that you want to talk about something off and then we'll continue to follow it. [TS]
00:18:18 ◼ ► We are sponsored this week by a new sponsor. It's Harry's go to Harry's dot com and use the promote code A.T.P. [TS]
00:18:29 ◼ ► and they're already disrupting the shaving industry they are for a better shaving experience at better value than the [TS]
00:18:41 ◼ ► and if it's Joe if you'll let us read our so it's founded by two guys one of them Jeff also co-founded Warby Parker [TS]
00:18:53 ◼ ► Both of them are disrupting huge stagnant industries by offering great design meticulous craftsmanship [TS]
00:18:58 ◼ ► and great highly personal customer service at an amazing value and the other founder of Harry's name Andy Newman [TS]
00:19:07 ◼ ► but the other founder Andy went to a drugstore one day to restock on some shaving supplies he had to ask for help [TS]
00:19:20 ◼ ► So anyway he was eventually permitted to buy one of the four packs of blades and some shaving cream for bleed [TS]
00:19:29 ◼ ► and wasting all this time he had to pay over twenty five dollars for just four blades and some shaving cream. [TS]
00:19:35 ◼ ► So after that he knew there had to be a better way. Harry's makes amazing German engineered razor blades. [TS]
00:19:41 ◼ ► They care actually so much about the quality to shave that they just purchased a ninety three year old German factory [TS]
00:19:47 ◼ ► They are focused on providing men and women a great shaving experience for a fraction of the price of the competitors. [TS]
00:20:03 ◼ ► and I did all the stuff you know years ago with like the straight rear not the straight razor [TS]
00:20:09 ◼ ► and everything I've actually went back to like I currently use the Gillette Fusion [TS]
00:20:14 ◼ ► and I gotta say there the quality of their shave matches the Gillette Fusion quality [TS]
00:20:21 ◼ ► and I didn't think it was I've never tried a lot of other ones I've never found anything else that matched it. [TS]
00:20:28 ◼ ► and the handles actually really it's a nice way to handle it so you know it's I think there's there's some kind of [TS]
00:20:34 ◼ ► metal in the middle somewhere it's a nice way to handle and certainly looks a lot nicer feel a lot nicer in the hand [TS]
00:20:40 ◼ ► and is more substantial than the Gillette one so anyway that's my experience with it so you know that in the script [TS]
00:20:47 ◼ ► convenience and ease of ordering online you get high quality bleeds a great handle and shaving cream [TS]
00:20:53 ◼ ► and excellent customer service at half the price of competitors they have their blade packages it's like less than two [TS]
00:21:01 ◼ ► and just for for of that I compare an Amazon before the show the price I paid I paid for fusion blades is like three [TS]
00:21:12 ◼ ► and everything so they're under two dollars a blade so they are really about half the price of fuel. [TS]
00:21:23 ◼ ► Anyway get started with a set that includes the handle three blades and shaving cream for just fifteen bucks [TS]
00:21:30 ◼ ► and that's including shipping to your door. They even offer a custom engraving option on the handle if you want. [TS]
00:21:50 ◼ ► and then we also have some follow up about i Phone if you want to cover that real quick actually. [TS]
00:22:00 ◼ ► Back in the day was that you'd have the first edit of Iraq photo would be kind of lots of separate on Iran [TS]
00:22:06 ◼ ► and then it would bake that into the j peg of the future and it would be with little Rob badge in the corner [TS]
00:22:12 ◼ ► Only and if you want to go back and do like a real Doesn't of the ROI You have to reprocess and reset everything. [TS]
00:22:17 ◼ ► Apparently in newer versions of our photo that is no longer the case which is awesome. [TS]
00:22:21 ◼ ► So now a new versions have had multiple people tell me that he will tell me that in current versions of i Photo You [TS]
00:22:30 ◼ ► always get the rioting if you're working on a raw file it doesn't do the thing where the editing after the first one [TS]
00:22:45 ◼ ► and how things are is beeping because the devices don't know enough to know whether something is normal of normal this [TS]
00:23:03 ◼ ► but it makes sense is already time for this because it's definitely a thing that's a nice term to open. [TS]
00:23:11 ◼ ► Yes on those watches that are buzzing on your wrists every time you get a notification although I don't know how people [TS]
00:23:16 ◼ ► deal with that with their phones like I have sometimes I briefly use someone else's phone [TS]
00:23:20 ◼ ► and the thing is always deep in in buzzing and things are going off like I disabled like every notification. [TS]
00:23:29 ◼ ► but I keep them so low that like I can sleep with my phone on next to my bed with the volume on every night [TS]
00:23:35 ◼ ► and I expect to hear nothing on unless something is really important and happening [TS]
00:23:41 ◼ ► and you know I think people are criticizing these Android Wear watches for buzzing constantly notifications constantly [TS]
00:23:48 ◼ ► but that's not really the watches problem that's your problem is the user for having all the equations configured [TS]
00:23:54 ◼ ► and you know maybe you could say that the platform should add some kind of granularity settings like priorities [TS]
00:24:00 ◼ ► If they do or not I'm assuming they don't or at least the watches don't integrate with anything like that yet [TS]
00:24:04 ◼ ► but that's not a great solution that's kind of a that's like a programmer actually [TS]
00:24:10 ◼ ► The good solution is to exercise a little bit more self control over the notifications that you choose to receive [TS]
00:24:16 ◼ ► and if you don't want to have your responding on time maybe it isn't important enough to have an occasion for it. [TS]
00:24:21 ◼ ► So that's really I don't that's nothing like people arguing they're criticizing these watches for that that's not [TS]
00:24:28 ◼ ► really that's your fault not the watches for the thing there are those who ever like I was his [TS]
00:24:35 ◼ ► and of a don't read every single tweet in the feed right would just find a different way do you swear. [TS]
00:24:40 ◼ ► But then those same people who don't read their entire feed have like notifications turned on for their admonitions [TS]
00:24:48 ◼ ► You're not interested enough that you're going to read every single tweet of all the people you follow [TS]
00:24:53 ◼ ► but you are interested enough when any random person at mention to you that your phone is going to buzz like vibrate [TS]
00:25:00 ◼ ► Like I have no notifications for Twitter I have no notifications for email the only thing that could make my i Pod make [TS]
00:25:08 ◼ ► any kind of noise I think is my message and I almost never use that. Some like at sea. [TS]
00:25:13 ◼ ► How does that not make sense because I don't necessarily care about the crap that that everyone else is shouting into [TS]
00:25:20 ◼ ► But hey if you're talking to me I want to know so you don't list of people you decide to follow you don't care enough [TS]
00:25:26 ◼ ► to read everything they say. But anybody in the entire world that mentions viewing in these know better right now. [TS]
00:25:32 ◼ ► Any jerk from anywhere has more control over your attention than the people you have chosen to follow. [TS]
00:25:39 ◼ ► but yes I mean I don't think that's a that's a surprising conclusion for any normal human to reach. [TS]
00:25:47 ◼ ► and that's that's what we're programmed to be so it's all about us it's all about me me me [TS]
00:25:52 ◼ ► and it's not surprising to me that people would skip what everyone else is saying unless it pertains to me. Maybe if. [TS]
00:26:02 ◼ ► but most of the people that I know do get a lot of that mentions and I bet at least half of them are bad thoughts. [TS]
00:26:08 ◼ ► It's like you're writing a Facebook experiment on yourself where you're making yourself feel bad by making your phone [TS]
00:26:12 ◼ ► ring with a fifty percent chance that it could be someone saying something is going to feel bad [TS]
00:26:16 ◼ ► but you need to up now it's time for my front vibrate I got a poll that let me see what random jerk one two three had [TS]
00:26:22 ◼ ► Fifty fifty shot it's going to make me feel bad which is not exactly right which is exactly why I recently came to the [TS]
00:26:28 ◼ ► conclusion that having notifications for all that mentions is insane and I'm a completionist like you for the record [TS]
00:26:35 ◼ ► but anyway I instead have notifications only for people that I mention me that I also follow. [TS]
00:26:41 ◼ ► So the so the assumption here is that if somebody that I follow is mentioning me the signal to noise ratio is quite a [TS]
00:26:49 ◼ ► I still think it's not a reason to be notified right now about it you can have a separate view of your Twitter feed [TS]
00:26:55 ◼ ► that shows you had mentioned I feel you fall like I can understand viewing your feed filtering your feed that way to [TS]
00:27:05 ◼ ► Someone I mention me on Twitter right if I was in the middle of reading Twitter then fine [TS]
00:27:08 ◼ ► but like just going to have a low tolerance for anything making my phone vibrate like it's like a family man member [TS]
00:27:16 ◼ ► Now this is basically the equivalent of a phone call I'm the modern day equivalent of a phone call. [TS]
00:27:20 ◼ ► They were like real real time information and I need to know now where even if it's someone I follow [TS]
00:27:28 ◼ ► Well you're much you have much more self-control than I do now you know and I need to be more like you [TS]
00:27:33 ◼ ► and I'm not saying that to patronise you I I feel like I want to know if somebody is talking to me because I feel like [TS]
00:27:39 ◼ ► Twitter's just a half step less important than a text message which goes back to my appearance on R.L. [TS]
00:27:45 ◼ ► but I I should turn off all at mention notifications I don't know I just I want to know I want to know if something's [TS]
00:27:53 ◼ ► when you have a chance to look at Twitter then you'll see what they had to say about you [TS]
00:28:00 ◼ ► And it gets back to just I have so few notifications turned on at all period like there is very little that happens on [TS]
00:28:13 ◼ ► and not interrupt service routine anyway to be clear I don't have sounds on so it shows up on my home screen [TS]
00:28:30 ◼ ► and the way it works that I send a content available push which is silent which doesn't alert the user the app wakes up [TS]
00:28:36 ◼ ► and if there's something new that the user should be notified about it shows a little vacation [TS]
00:29:01 ◼ ► Yeah briefly and that is my cue to know that some notification has happened on my system [TS]
00:29:05 ◼ ► but I don't know what notification it was because no banner goes down because I don't know of a good turnout button of [TS]
00:29:09 ◼ ► the something has happened and so frequently I will pause the audio go back and see that I was a mess [TS]
00:29:14 ◼ ► or something is that because my settings are screwed up that it didn't make any noise the audio dock so clearly [TS]
00:29:19 ◼ ► overcast knew something was happening but no other noise came through my headphones. [TS]
00:29:30 ◼ ► when they're being dumped like I can't really do anything in response to that so my supposed to be here. [TS]
00:29:34 ◼ ► Like in theory am I supposed to be hearing something. Probably but fortunately that's not my blog. [TS]
00:29:39 ◼ ► Well anyway the docking audio I first I thought it was like a pod cast production problem like boyo you know in our [TS]
00:29:45 ◼ ► podcast or someone else like I will buy the audio document now I learned something else going on my phone anyway. [TS]
00:30:00 ◼ ► Again when the dot com L Y N D A dot com helps you learn and keep up to date with software pick up brand new skills [TS]
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00:30:30 ◼ ► and you know the production value on this is a great way better than what you get like on You Tube [TS]
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00:31:31 ◼ ► Printing course so you can do all the stuff I've used on the dot com myself to learn how to better edit pod cast [TS]
00:31:43 ◼ ► and material like they had stuff they have like really special I stuff on logic that you can go into like I want to [TS]
00:31:48 ◼ ► learn how to use the compressor and logic and they have like two courses just on the compressor and logic [TS]
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00:32:14 ◼ ► Thanks a lot to Linda for sponsoring and we want to do this by medical stuff and follow this ridge it's brief. [TS]
00:32:20 ◼ ► There's been a gravel road and before and he's correcting himself so I think that in that spirit. [TS]
00:32:31 ◼ ► So there are a few watches out there that can determine your heart rate optically using infrared light shine through [TS]
00:32:36 ◼ ► your skin and by the way that I've seen a lot of people tweeted me about various wrist watches [TS]
00:32:39 ◼ ► and things that use something similar to this some of you suggest this method works fairly well. [TS]
00:32:47 ◼ ► Long term continuous heart rate motoring becomes feasible looking which can give you all kinds of information including [TS]
00:32:53 ◼ ► It also makes the process of getting continuous heart rate during exercise much more convenient. [TS]
00:33:03 ◼ ► You can use this information to diagnose and treat any conditions with it. With F.D.A. [TS]
00:33:07 ◼ ► Approval and studies still show that for most people this kind of data just becomes boring noise [TS]
00:33:11 ◼ ► and might motivate some people to exercise in the short run but long term it just doesn't happen. [TS]
00:33:14 ◼ ► This is a big point of a spuriously I couldn't mention like the idea that that bit in those other kind of tracker [TS]
00:33:26 ◼ ► but that's true of all guide next size regimes everyone eventually backslides because that's the way people are so I [TS]
00:33:35 ◼ ► Easy to use home blood pressure monitors have been around for ages and they're not exactly flying off the shelves. [TS]
00:33:40 ◼ ► The only thing I add to this other than allowing him to do his cell follow up is that he was wrong about not having a [TS]
00:33:50 ◼ ► Well actually I don't know read the second that a follow up which is from a different person is also fairly short [TS]
00:34:00 ◼ ► Or the person who gave you back was a doctor not a biomedical engineer a doctor so this is Josh Brock addressing the [TS]
00:34:07 ◼ ► Dr it was so pessimistic about the potential medical use of help book style devices wasn't wrong [TS]
00:34:19 ◼ ► Positions frequently know very little about individuals healthy vital signs or long term health. [TS]
00:34:23 ◼ ► Most most healthy people have the hard data monitored a few times a year at most people serious health problems are [TS]
00:34:28 ◼ ► typically only seen by a physician intermittently and only fully monitor while actually in the hospital. [TS]
00:34:33 ◼ ► So part of being able to see a long history of data with long term trends could open up new opportunities for diagnosis [TS]
00:34:40 ◼ ► So as we talked about a little bit in the last thing that while the information may not be particularly interesting to [TS]
00:34:46 ◼ ► you or useful to you and may not vary that much it does if you have long term information and you [TS]
00:34:55 ◼ ► or they just get dumped on dumped on them off of your phone or our wrist thing whatever. [TS]
00:35:00 ◼ ► It's kind of you know a better equivalent of like the log books the doctors have people keep for if they have chronic [TS]
00:35:05 ◼ ► health conditions keeping a log of how they felt what they did in response to cations they took the doctors will look [TS]
00:35:11 ◼ ► at that because they just get to see you for be for your time and what they want to know is essentially your history [TS]
00:35:16 ◼ ► and you just verbally telling them what happened is probably not that reliable you keeping a log book probably more [TS]
00:35:23 ◼ ► but having advice minor things for you is probably I mean aside from bed reading stuff like that the devices memory is [TS]
00:35:30 ◼ ► and if it's something you wear all the time I'm sure a doctor would love that in addition to hearing what you had to [TS]
00:35:37 ◼ ► The point I wanted to get to about these things about flying off the shelves that we keep talking about Apple [TS]
00:35:42 ◼ ► and wearables in terms of all the sensors that are going to have them whether it's going to have distribute screen [TS]
00:35:46 ◼ ► or not or whether the screen is going to be touch screen or not or you know what kind of integration with the phone. [TS]
00:36:07 ◼ ► And the rumor mill is using it as a form of identity that we talk about that like months and months and months ago. [TS]
00:36:13 ◼ ► Oh I don't remember probably having having this thing on you as a way of identifying yourself. [TS]
00:36:19 ◼ ► Sort of like a location based unlocking thing that the Apple patent was going around the news this week like Basically [TS]
00:36:25 ◼ ► if you pick up your phone you don't have to use Touch ID to unlock it you know I didn't do a code because you wear your [TS]
00:36:33 ◼ ► and unlock the screen because you're wearing the wrist thing that identifies you as sort of a Touch ID without touching [TS]
00:36:39 ◼ ► type of identity thing because I think now that I think this is you know a slam dunk [TS]
00:36:46 ◼ ► but so much of the wearable stuff has been focused on are I think not on timekeeping I don't know how to be able to [TS]
00:36:53 ◼ ► But there's something called a watch and what it's going to do and measure your vitals and record them [TS]
00:36:59 ◼ ► and they just seems weird to me that is such an incredible focus I mean I may be not that weird because Apple does have [TS]
00:37:07 ◼ ► and I was talking about using your wrist thing as a way to turn on lights as you wander through your house [TS]
00:37:15 ◼ ► Stone that out there so we can get in every possibility be horrible release of something that's wearable never use I [TS]
00:37:20 ◼ ► see we talked about that on some show in the past so this is me this is like yet another thing that is not a very [TS]
00:37:30 ◼ ► It's yet another thing where OK Well first of all there are some security issues with that [TS]
00:37:40 ◼ ► and I don't know it's just it solves problems that most people I don't think really have in ways that are substantial [TS]
00:37:47 ◼ ► enough where the gain to be big enough that it be worth having another thing to maintain by in charge. [TS]
00:37:56 ◼ ► but likely what do you think about that patent though for the location based thing basically not. [TS]
00:38:00 ◼ ► I'm to enter your unlock code or yesterday when you're in your house with your phone [TS]
00:38:05 ◼ ► Oh hell yeah I'm already using that with my mac with control plane control P. L. A N. E. [TS]
00:38:13 ◼ ► but it's I think the like a slogan they use is context aware computing which I may have talked about in the past on the [TS]
00:38:21 ◼ ► but suffice to say based on like the network address I have based on what device what extra monitor I'm connected to [TS]
00:38:31 ◼ ► This thing will basically perform perform a series of macros to turn on or off my screensaver password [TS]
00:38:39 ◼ ► or to set a default printer or things like that and it's wonderful and I love it because [TS]
00:38:44 ◼ ► when I come home after work it will automatically figure out oh he's at home now well let me turn off the M where [TS]
00:38:50 ◼ ► fusion let me turn off outlook let me turn off the link which is probably crashed anyway and so on [TS]
00:38:59 ◼ ► And Mark are you talking about that being a particularly compelling benefit it in and of itself. [TS]
00:39:03 ◼ ► Perhaps not but just think of how life changing it was when you all got proximity to your fancy German cars right [TS]
00:39:09 ◼ ► and how you don't want to go back to having to fish out of instead you know like it's not that big a deal [TS]
00:39:19 ◼ ► and if you are in you know it's kind of like touch I do like I'm I'm a pretty big convert to swear that I don't ever [TS]
00:39:26 ◼ ► when I don't I don't even know her her you know security code thing I just have one and I just have my one thousand [TS]
00:39:36 ◼ ► and it's much better than me having to ask her where the code isn't and never remembering it the next time [TS]
00:39:48 ◼ ► but presumably has other reasons that you're going to wear whatever this wearable thing is if this is there on top of [TS]
00:39:55 ◼ ► I would definitely use it I'm sick of typing in my password unlock my screen at work and think it's free. [TS]
00:40:00 ◼ ► He goes I mean you have to have a screen like this you know corporate policies or whatever. [TS]
00:40:03 ◼ ► Everytime I get up I lock the screen beautifully and I have to like I want to come back no matter how long I'm gone. [TS]
00:40:09 ◼ ► I would love to have a thing on my wrist I would wear it work just for this one feature you know [TS]
00:40:22 ◼ ► and all that good stuff that is just another possible thing because I definitely track my vitals so that it's also not [TS]
00:40:32 ◼ ► or if you just be another thing that Apple introduces that I don't buy all of the list. [TS]
00:40:39 ◼ ► Our final sponsor this week is back Lee is once again back to unlimited untrodden uncomplicated online backup that's [TS]
00:40:47 ◼ ► available anywhere you can try for free with no credit card required. That plays mac native It was founded by X. [TS]
00:40:55 ◼ ► Apple engineers and it's really you know I use it for a long time in fact to kind of save my butt. [TS]
00:41:07 ◼ ► and I want to listen to a certain album over airplay to show her that airplay exists on an Apple T.V. [TS]
00:41:13 ◼ ► and I didn't have an album in my laptop and i Tunes Match as usual was failing for me [TS]
00:41:20 ◼ ► and just not even showing that it even existed so I couldn't sell it or threatens match so I went to back ways [TS]
00:41:26 ◼ ► and I pulled it off my computer there I did a web restore of just that directory and downloaded it right there [TS]
00:41:44 ◼ ► You know if you can upload what you need to back up within two months I would say do it. It's that good. [TS]
00:42:00 ◼ ► Speed whatever my internet connection will allow him whatever they whatever I set my parlance settings to in their app [TS]
00:42:05 ◼ ► it will appear at the speed I can say the same thing about either of the services I tried them before [TS]
00:42:09 ◼ ► and a lot of times it would throttle me and it would slow me down to like one megabit up and were taken months [TS]
00:42:15 ◼ ► and yeah bad experiences they're back with I've never had problems that it's always been rock solid. [TS]
00:42:20 ◼ ► I've done I've never going to fully store fortune and they were had too but I've done many partial restores [TS]
00:42:25 ◼ ► and it's always been great always reliable and really I can't recommend it enough. [TS]
00:42:31 ◼ ► Once again five dollars a month there's no I don't know gimmicks There's nothing complicated about it. [TS]
00:42:36 ◼ ► Just five bucks on the fact you can even pay less if you if you buy a whole year from what I do go to a back Blaze dot [TS]
00:42:43 ◼ ► com slash A.T.P. To learn more. Again I can't recommend this enough back Blaze dot com slash A.T.P. [TS]
00:42:50 ◼ ► For unlimited throttle uncomplicated online backup just five bucks a month thanks a lot to back please for sponsoring [TS]
00:42:55 ◼ ► once again have you ever gone through all three sponsors during follow up because we still have a little bit more. [TS]
00:43:08 ◼ ► and listened to the hypercritical on the first episode on game controllers I believe there were two and a half [TS]
00:43:19 ◼ ► when we pulled into her driveway we were just finishing follow up like seventy minutes in that's magnificent. [TS]
00:43:40 ◼ ► but anyway that was the story that was going around this past week was that Samsung is stopping production of its [TS]
00:43:49 ◼ ► and after Panasonic stopped like well they were the best ones that you can still buy Samsung So those are the second [TS]
00:43:54 ◼ ► best buy that instead I think the wire cutter updated their T.V. or View things that they had previously recommend. [TS]
00:44:01 ◼ ► and mentally had to say well you can't get those anymore so darn exploit the Samsung plasmas now they're kept updated [TS]
00:44:13 ◼ ► but the other days of plasma are going is a bunch of stories going around the web about mourning the end of class A lot [TS]
00:44:20 ◼ ► when Panasonic stopped for all the people who care about picture quality saying basically these T.V.'s as it is [TS]
00:44:26 ◼ ► continuing to have better picture quality than any T.V.'s that have been introduced after them [TS]
00:44:35 ◼ ► and again Plasmas do have their downsides we talk about them on passion they're not perfect [TS]
00:44:38 ◼ ► but if you care about picture quality you many people are willing to put up with their downsides in exchange for having [TS]
00:44:45 ◼ ► It doesn't surprise me for the reasons I think we talked about a passion as nobody was putting in the money to to try [TS]
00:44:52 ◼ ► to make a four K. Plasma and for the future as far as I told him any factors are concerned anyway. [TS]
00:44:57 ◼ ► It may not even be technically possible to make a reasonable plasma for Kate because that size [TS]
00:45:03 ◼ ► and a little whatever you call the little pits are things that make the picture images are so tiny at four K. [TS]
00:45:09 ◼ ► That we don't really have a manufacturing process. I mean they could develop that but we already have four K. [TS]
00:45:15 ◼ ► In L.C.D.'s and even a lead which is supposed to save us from the scourge of L.C.D. [TS]
00:45:21 ◼ ► That's kind of been back burner as well so it seems like we're just going to be L.C.D. [TS]
00:45:31 ◼ ► For the foreseeable future which is kind of a shame but I'm glad I brought my Panasonic when I did [TS]
00:45:42 ◼ ► Now it's like I mean there's no there's no content available for it that I care about [TS]
00:45:47 ◼ ► and really like there is something to be said about screen size and viewing distance in like seven twenty ten A.D.. [TS]
00:46:01 ◼ ► I don't know I mean if the content was good enough maybe I could tell the difference [TS]
00:46:08 ◼ ► and I figure by the time things that I care about are in four K. It will be time for me to get a new T.V. [TS]
00:46:13 ◼ ► In several years but I don't know how long that's going to take I mean that four K. Is a tougher sell than the H.D. [TS]
00:46:23 ◼ ► So it's up to content creators and television manufacturers to convince us that we need to go from an A.T.P. To four K. [TS]
00:46:35 ◼ ► and I think that was like as soon as someone see that high definition television if they have good vision [TS]
00:46:40 ◼ ► or they're into sports or something else where you care about spoiled small details that's pretty easy sell but for K. [TS]
00:46:52 ◼ ► I haven't been to see anything in the fanciest new for Kati's I haven't seen a lead for K.D. [TS]
00:47:00 ◼ ► but I think I figure I have many years of service left in this plasma I want to do agree in the reason I ask is my [TS]
00:47:07 ◼ ► parents have just recently moved down to pretty close to where Aaron and I are and so couple weeks ago my dad [TS]
00:47:14 ◼ ► and I went to a Crutchfield store which those of you who are into car audio in the ninety's probably know what [TS]
00:47:20 ◼ ► Crutchfield is and their home office is in Charlotte so what I bring up brought up periodically on the show [TS]
00:47:25 ◼ ► when we went to the store and looked at a few for Katie these and we were looking for mom [TS]
00:47:30 ◼ ► and dad's house which the viewing distance and seating distance when what have you is like fifteen feet [TS]
00:47:38 ◼ ► and I looked at these forty displays a lot of which were curved by the way which I don't really understand the whole [TS]
00:48:00 ◼ ► Fifteen feet I I don't get it and I may be in five or ten years when content is available I will get it. [TS]
00:48:07 ◼ ► But today I agree with you I don't understand what do you make the screen the size of your wall [TS]
00:48:22 ◼ ► but for television set size screens where it's like a thing that sitting on you know some kind of pedestal [TS]
00:48:32 ◼ ► I don't like it I think a lot of it has to do with the content what kind of things are you trying to show [TS]
00:48:42 ◼ ► You can't make out that kind of detail on a screen that's only like you know fifty sixty seventy inches [TS]
00:48:50 ◼ ► but In the movie theater when the screen is gigantic then read the resolution you know can be useful. [TS]
00:49:00 ◼ ► and yeah I mean you can maybe make out a difference and to be fair my eyes are not the best but certainly at the ten [TS]
00:49:08 ◼ ► or fifteen feet that moment that's houses viewing distances that I do not see the need even in like a seventy five inch [TS]
00:49:18 ◼ ► and The other thing is and you just mentioned this you know we talked to the sales people both at Crutchfield [TS]
00:49:24 ◼ ► and it passed by we were like So what content is for Katie's news because this is not this is well out of my wheel [TS]
00:49:29 ◼ ► house and I don't keep up with the stuff. And and so they're like well some stuff on Netflix and that's about it. [TS]
00:49:37 ◼ ► Now don't you get any even like what device can output four K. Right. Exactly and they look at the T.V. [TS]
00:49:43 ◼ ► They have a built in. Yeah I mean like my for example my audio video receiver has four K. [TS]
00:49:48 ◼ ► Passed through like a lot of devices a four K. Capable despite So in theory if if I was getting that flex that four K. [TS]
00:49:54 ◼ ► On a device to go out but four K. You know it the pieces are there that it's possible to do. [TS]
00:50:00 ◼ ► That's why Netflix is running these kind of experiments. Topically named pennants Ghana Jerram has a point where four K. [TS]
00:50:07 ◼ ► Isn't just about resolution but also you know we talk about a different color depth and and refresh rates [TS]
00:50:21 ◼ ► but as I say image quality nerd I would probably maybe that's why I would notice more. Yeah. [TS]
00:50:33 ◼ ► The resolution difference will be that big but the color gamut different could be significant. [TS]
00:50:38 ◼ ► Assuming we get some kind of television technology that has reasonable black levels. [TS]
00:50:43 ◼ ► So yeah I don't think it's in the immediate future because I thought entirely safe buying a plain old normal high [TS]
00:50:49 ◼ ► definition television last year whenever about the thing. Well all right we have any topics today. [TS]
00:50:56 ◼ ► Any other if they don't we don't is this this you know this is a people too needs to know we saw a You Tube video from [TS]
00:51:06 ◼ ► somebody who I am not familiar with who is who seems to have an i Phone six sapphire displaying what we think about [TS]
00:51:19 ◼ ► Like you know regardless of whether you know there's a bunch of things we don't know the big two are we don't know this [TS]
00:51:25 ◼ ► is actually an i Phone part or a part for something else or a fake or something else [TS]
00:51:30 ◼ ► and they also don't know whether it's actually sapphire that was going to be my think of the two big ones that we don't [TS]
00:51:36 ◼ ► buy big plus why put sapphire in quotes because I have no idea if that's a fire or not. [TS]
00:51:42 ◼ ► Maybe Gorilla Glass of that exact same thickness behaves in the exact same way I don't know I've never taken a piece of [TS]
00:51:50 ◼ ► So I have no idea if this is impressive at all or of us exactly what all existing phones are like now or you know [TS]
00:51:56 ◼ ► and I don't know how they would tell you I don't blame the person for not doing due diligence. [TS]
00:52:08 ◼ ► and whether I was actually sapphire does seem to have impressive visual characteristics [TS]
00:52:17 ◼ ► I don't know enough about either of these things to say whether that's likely to be a fancy Gorilla Glass product [TS]
00:52:25 ◼ ► but whatever it is it's a laminate obviously I mean I give it if it was Sapphire what they mean is that sapphire [TS]
00:52:30 ◼ ► laminated again something else that's flexible lemony it like it's obviously Modern some some kind of laminate because [TS]
00:52:39 ◼ ► but anything with Sapphire I think would have to be some kind of laminate the single screen [TS]
00:52:43 ◼ ► but I think the most interesting about thing about it even if you assume is entirely fake is that it shows I mean they [TS]
00:52:50 ◼ ► but it shows a four point seven inch thing presumably next to a regular i Phone give you kind of a size comparison of [TS]
00:53:17 ◼ ► but there's tons of them all of this is just the one I happened to see that bubbled up in my feed. [TS]
00:53:23 ◼ ► and you know all sorts of leaks in the guy also had a mock up of what he thought the back to look like based on all of [TS]
00:53:33 ◼ ► and as is the case with those in the past i Phones all these leaks I mean as the parts start to come out I would think [TS]
00:53:42 ◼ ► the idea that it's going to be kind of rounded on the back kind of like the i Pad mini is [TS]
00:53:49 ◼ ► and this thing if it's four point seven inches you know reasonable odds that it could be a part of some kind. [TS]
00:53:56 ◼ ► We're starting to get close to the season where we start to see things that are real. So. [TS]
00:54:02 ◼ ► I just thought it was interesting that it's not just here's a picture of the part take a look at it like the torture [TS]
00:54:08 ◼ ► test that phenomenon. I would like to see someone do that if in that context comes out. [TS]
00:54:12 ◼ ► Take apart actual i Phone Sex and do the same experiments do the same experiments of the five S. [TS]
00:54:18 ◼ ► Maybe I think that people can tackle it because because I really don't know the properties of the existing parts for i [TS]
00:54:24 ◼ ► Phones You know I think it's very likely this probably is a real i Phone part this is you know the timing is right it [TS]
00:54:32 ◼ ► matches all the things you've heard from you know general rumor voting you know it's matching all the stuff it is very [TS]
00:54:39 ◼ ► likely to be a real i Phone part the big question mark is whether to actually sapphire [TS]
00:54:46 ◼ ► or that you know the closest similar part you know the cover glass of an i Phone five S. [TS]
00:54:51 ◼ ► and Did the same things how would it react to what would it withstand would it be similar or not. [TS]
00:54:59 ◼ ► but I think the real the real problem that needs to be solved in i Phone cover glass if it's possible to easily solve [TS]
00:55:06 ◼ ► it is not bending it's shatter resistance like what happens if you drop it on a corner you know like does the phone [TS]
00:55:18 ◼ ► You know that's that's the problem people usually have if they can if they can improve that. That's big news. [TS]
00:55:26 ◼ ► and I don't I don't know if this you know I don't know I'm talking about manufacturing stuff so who knows. [TS]
00:55:30 ◼ ► But if they're going to use Sapphire for the for the screen glass of all the new i Phones We know that the two new [TS]
00:55:38 ◼ ► sizes and backing up a second there is on on the talk show a couple weeks ago Gruber had pocket fossils [TS]
00:55:46 ◼ ► and they were both kind of agreeing that they didn't actually want a four point seven inch phone to be the new smallest [TS]
00:55:52 ◼ ► size that they both are perfectly fine with the current five size and don't want to get any bigger [TS]
00:56:00 ◼ ► We believe that line of thinking is you know OK well what you know is there a new four inch phone [TS]
00:56:16 ◼ ► I think the answer is four point seven will be the new small size period and maybe there might be like a six S. Six D. [TS]
00:56:25 ◼ ► but that's going to be phased out in the next few model lines as as the big size you know goes down in the one I think [TS]
00:56:31 ◼ ► four point seven is the new size and we're going to have a Hempel people saying no I want the i Phone to stay small [TS]
00:56:37 ◼ ► and it's the going to be the exact same thing that happened when they went from three [TS]
00:56:40 ◼ ► and a half inch to four inch with the five they're going to have people to say no I don't want the phone to be any [TS]
00:56:46 ◼ ► bigger than this and a new come out it won't be that much bigger and it won't be a big deal [TS]
00:56:51 ◼ ► and will probably even be thinner and lighter and so they were able to deal with it [TS]
00:56:55 ◼ ► and everyone will forget about their complaint within six months and it'll just be the new site anyway. [TS]
00:57:01 ◼ ► Beginning of this massive paragraph if they're going to use Sapphire for the screens of these new phones that's a lot [TS]
00:57:10 ◼ ► of sapphire. It's really hard to to say to properly communicate how much they have to make of this stuff. [TS]
00:57:23 ◼ ► Anything that goes into the i Phone has to be available in quantity has to have very high manufacturing yields very [TS]
00:57:34 ◼ ► And I don't know if I know they have that big sapphire thing in Arizona or wherever [TS]
00:57:38 ◼ ► but it would surprise me if they could make enough sapphire all the sudden to be able to be the glass on every i Phone. [TS]
00:57:48 ◼ ► and it could be some deposition process again I don't know anything about the manufacturing [TS]
00:57:51 ◼ ► but like it's I think it's within the realm of the reason that they could that because you're only putting this out [TS]
00:57:59 ◼ ► there. Scratch resistant Sapphire's not giving you anything in terms of Bender shatter resistance I would imagine. [TS]
00:58:05 ◼ ► But anyway I don't think you have to make the whole thing out of I think just need to be the surface coating like it's [TS]
00:58:09 ◼ ► it's hot hardness of this thing and then you back it by other materials whether they be you know Gorilla Glass [TS]
00:58:17 ◼ ► or something like that so I don't know if they keep saying it's part of everybody saying it's a fire. [TS]
00:58:29 ◼ ► I'm sure we'll know as soon as Apple interested because if it's out there I'm sure they will emphasize that. [TS]
00:58:35 ◼ ► I just I was stunned by bend resistance on or off that's right word I'm looking for [TS]
00:58:41 ◼ ► but the way in which this is handled bending which may or may not have anything to do with Sapphire [TS]
00:58:47 ◼ ► but my goodness this thing was then a lot and didn't crack and certainly scratch resistance was incredible [TS]
00:58:55 ◼ ► but the dude the video noted that he didn't really have an appropriate way to test dropping it on a corner which is [TS]
00:59:04 ◼ ► what you guys brought up a minute ago because he didn't have the rest of an i Phone to melt this thing against But I [TS]
00:59:11 ◼ ► agree that that's the real test because pretty much anyone I know with an issue with their i Phone display [TS]
00:59:16 ◼ ► or Android display for that matter is because they've dropped it in some way and it shattered. [TS]
00:59:24 ◼ ► but I've seen it like it's hard to notice them because they're small What you notice is the person using a phone with a [TS]
00:59:30 ◼ ► crack in it and no one is ever going to bend their screen like bend it that much the rest of the phone is broken now. [TS]
00:59:35 ◼ ► Doesn't the screen can bend that much the rest of the printed circuit board can't bend that much [TS]
00:59:40 ◼ ► and so if you ever bend your phone that much it's that but if you drop it from the concrete and it lands on a corner [TS]
00:59:45 ◼ ► or smack face down and it shatters then you have the choice of you know getting the screen replaced [TS]
00:59:52 ◼ ► and swiping their thumbs across fractured pieces of glass just like you know you can cut themselves [TS]
01:00:00 ◼ ► Look at the Apple store and get one of those horrible stick on screen protectors and just hope that covers it up [TS]
01:00:14 ◼ ► and professors in that I don't want to bigger i Phone but I think you're right Marco that the four point seven [TS]
01:00:19 ◼ ► or whatever the the the new smaller of the new ones I think will be just smallest high end i Phone [TS]
01:00:31 ◼ ► But goodness this five or five five or whatever it was I do not want that in my life. [TS]
01:00:39 ◼ ► That just seems like a darn tablet. I I would I'm going to have a very hard time choosing between the two. [TS]
01:00:45 ◼ ► If the screen size is the only substantial difference you know if there is something else you know there's rumors that [TS]
01:00:49 ◼ ► the camera might be different if the camera is substantially better on one or the other. [TS]
01:00:56 ◼ ► I can't imagine you just marketing wise it would be very strange if the biggest one wasn't the best one. [TS]
01:01:03 ◼ ► And so chances are the biggest i Phone whether it will be what it's called the i Phone area i Phone six plus whatever [TS]
01:01:12 ◼ ► the five and a half inch i Phone if it's real it's very likely to have the best of everything that plans to offer [TS]
01:01:24 ◼ ► and I'll take the bullet for all of us who I know John you're not going to buy anything. [TS]
01:01:27 ◼ ► And Casey you're going to stick with a small one or you going to wait two years and I can make fun of you. Exactly. [TS]
01:01:36 ◼ ► We have parts Leaks for the five five it's rumored five point five inch you know that's a good question. [TS]
01:01:42 ◼ ► Still I see some partly it's for that I continue to think that it is like Katie said diversification find a new four [TS]
01:01:49 ◼ ► point seven size while keeping around the old five S. In a different case or whatever or even in the same case. [TS]
01:01:55 ◼ ► That's reasonable diversification I'm not sure they need a five point five. Maybe they're going to have one. [TS]
01:02:01 ◼ ► But I would like to see partly extract more or less I want to see what it looks like you know proportion wise [TS]
01:02:08 ◼ ► and line up all three of them and show next to a hand and see what they would be like. [TS]
01:02:15 ◼ ► I don't feel like I have that much access pocket space in order to stuff a five and a half inch phone. [TS]
01:02:26 ◼ ► That's kind of an issue and I don't I don't have a purse I don't have a man purse. [TS]
01:02:39 ◼ ► and a half inch phone in my pocket I just don't know whatever will say remind me of this when I buy one in a year [TS]
01:02:51 ◼ ► Thanks Bloodworth response or this week. Harry's when the dot com and back please and we will see you next week. [TS]
01:03:02 ◼ ► Now it was accidental accidental death was accidental and she is now sitting on the screen sister that's KING LIVE. [TS]
01:04:08 ◼ ► I keep the show bought open in Chrome because Google Chrome is my Google. What did you call quarantine. [TS]
01:04:19 ◼ ► Suggested a question mark in a box in a question mark in a box which is because I'm stupid chrome still doesn't support [TS]
01:04:26 ◼ ► emoji. Do you think that is so evil of Google it is the real reason you don't use Chrome. Open always wins. [TS]
01:04:35 ◼ ► So I mean working on a very basic web interface for overcast and wiping the new in America because it had to be done. [TS]
01:04:48 ◼ ► That's OK so anyway some people whine to me about it so I made a very basic web player [TS]
01:04:56 ◼ ► and I turned on content security policy in very strict mode so the disables any of the things that begin with with [TS]
01:05:03 ◼ ► unsafe but the hardest thing about that is that you can't use inline style or script tags. [TS]
01:05:10 ◼ ► Why script times were easy to pull out in one style tabs are not that easy to pull out if you've already written a [TS]
01:05:21 ◼ ► So if you don't know it's still pretty rarely use I think that's pretty new and pretty hard to use [TS]
01:05:27 ◼ ► but there are these couple of headers you set as a web programmer you had a couple of headers or one header [TS]
01:05:32 ◼ ► but three times to put up a stupid vendor prefixes because web programming is awesome [TS]
01:05:36 ◼ ► and the header basically says only permit javascript from the sources only permit styled stuff a C E O C as a styles [TS]
01:05:49 ◼ ► and the spec even kind of inherently yells at you if you enable Kundry policy at all. [TS]
01:06:00 ◼ ► Anything and if you want the ability to use like an inline style attribute on something [TS]
01:06:13 ◼ ► and like it's it's a it's a pretty well in the center if they're well designed standard I think because it's designed [TS]
01:06:24 ◼ ► So anyway so I've now made my entire interface with it as if it's a very small interface to very small so far [TS]
01:06:31 ◼ ► but I now have my thing where it's it only allows things from from the from its own host and the host of the C.D.N. [TS]
01:06:45 ◼ ► and I'm wondering Casey why don't you play with this also why don't you use this on shoeboxes it would it would help [TS]
01:06:52 ◼ ► dramatically reduce the number of people who would ever be exposed to excess on your site. [TS]
01:06:58 ◼ ► If you were to miss a vulnerability I probably should but I don't need to because the Shabat still up what now. [TS]
01:07:10 ◼ ► and I probably should to be honest this was not something I was familiar with so I'll have to look into it. [TS]
01:07:17 ◼ ► Yeah actually that's you have to do that a fair a question I thought but now it's a cool sanity. [TS]
01:07:32 ◼ ► when by the by browsers most of them would also block bookmarklet execution because that was a script that didn't come [TS]
01:07:39 ◼ ► from blah blah blah and the standards of a plea says bookmarklet should not be interfered with [TS]
01:07:44 ◼ ► but the branches on this that the first time and so it broke both markets for a little while [TS]
01:07:53 ◼ ► Firefox was the last one to fix I don't know if they have yet but who cares it's Firefox. [TS]
01:07:58 ◼ ► Do you remember back in the day when. It was lean and mean. I know we've been over this at some point. [TS]
01:08:06 ◼ ► and got my name like in the in the big ad the big full page ad they were running in some movies new times I don't know. [TS]
01:08:13 ◼ ► Yeah I was like a backer of Firefox and I wrote Firefox extensions at my first job in two thousand [TS]
01:08:23 ◼ ► I believe when I started it was still called Phoenix and whatever point seven was. [TS]
01:08:33 ◼ ► and Firefox really didn't want became what it was trying to solve because remember Netscape was just this bloated [TS]
01:08:41 ◼ ► disgusting mess and so far foxes all lean and mean it was small downloading it was fast as hell [TS]
01:08:51 ◼ ► and it's the disgusting bloated mess that Netscape once was over standards compliant. [TS]
01:08:59 ◼ ► and they did do that because all the browsers that supplanted it you know conform to standards with the exception of I [TS]
01:09:10 ◼ ► and moved on because you know it's got the five I thought of the oldest codebase Well I don't know. [TS]
01:09:15 ◼ ► Caged in old muzzle Anyway it's got it's only got the creepiest code base elements of had much more recent attention to [TS]
01:09:22 ◼ ► to get cleaned up on some of those guys trying to write a new rendering engine to rust. [TS]
01:09:30 ◼ ► So maybe they will rise again but they did you know the big they were the flagship for standards [TS]
01:09:40 ◼ ► and I mostly dead with the exception of the ones that are still supported by the versions of I.E. [TS]
01:09:46 ◼ ► So it kind of succeeded in its mission so I don't think it's like it died by getting fat [TS]
01:09:51 ◼ ► and I'm going to fail those measures it's exceeded it's just that now it's a little long in the tooth. [TS]
01:10:03 ◼ ► and it just gradually shift it off onto for a while using Safari step tools on the Web good ones are really good now I [TS]
01:10:12 ◼ ► but I was kind of gotten to use to Chrome tools interface kind of like where things are until they change I guess [TS]
01:10:22 ◼ ► Yeah I have I cannot remember the last time I launch Firefox I use it to post to Twitter [TS]
01:10:31 ◼ ► I leave Firefox signed in to that account on Twitter and that's it you were quarantined for everything. [TS]
01:10:39 ◼ ► Well chrome I used Chrome for some other Twitter logon I forget which one so I want to keep them separate. [TS]
01:10:46 ◼ ► I really didn't want her to get on my desktop as I'm saying but you don't have to be put on your desktop or anything. [TS]
01:10:51 ◼ ► No I deleted it in a fit of productivity boosting because I called Rescue time that that tracks how long you spend [TS]
01:11:00 ◼ ► and send you a report every week saying like you spent sixteen hours in Xcode four hours in logic probably And [TS]
01:11:06 ◼ ► and it kept telling me every week that I was apparently spending roughly four hours a week using Twitter [TS]
01:11:17 ◼ ► and so I realize you know what I should really not be saying that much time with it [TS]
01:11:23 ◼ ► and so to force myself not spend much time with it I deleted the complete app because you know it's one thing you can [TS]
01:11:29 ◼ ► just read them or not but with a Twitter app it's like log in to each of the accounts separately [TS]
01:11:34 ◼ ► So I knew that I knew that it would it would be a significant barrier barrier put it back as if you think putting it [TS]
01:11:42 ◼ ► back earlier today because in my effort not to have it on my desktop what I haven't said to right now I have my laptop [TS]
01:11:49 ◼ ► which I still have it installed during during our show I keep tweet open so I can see replies coming in from people [TS]
01:12:01 ◼ ► and at this as the second screen just over Twitter during the day if I post a tweet I still can post tweets from [TS]
01:12:09 ◼ ► but I can't read the responses I get that many times I have a conversation with somebody over Twitter DNS [TS]
01:12:22 ◼ ► and so I frequently have to like have a Twitter website open in a tab so I can use the D.M. [TS]
01:12:30 ◼ ► or like you know I have a laptop on the side which is annoying in that it's open anyway [TS]
01:12:33 ◼ ► and it is just a different puter and that the copy links back and forth between the two it's it's annoying [TS]
01:12:37 ◼ ► and so I have to organize a question on Twitter and I'll be reading the responses on my phone on my desk bent over [TS]
01:12:51 ◼ ► So my rationale is like I should probably add a back because I'm using it anyway just in ways that Rescue Time doesn't [TS]
01:13:01 ◼ ► and it would actually be faster if I had the real app of my desktop again because all these things I would have to go [TS]
01:13:21 ◼ ► but the discussion about workflows some Someone put in the chat room a link to the article showing the rendering web [TS]
01:13:28 ◼ ► rendering engine time line thing among gecko cage T M L and Web Kit Gecko is slightly older and caged to male [TS]
01:13:36 ◼ ► and also older than Triton which I think is what I use is now the reason why I think most people abandon Firefox over [TS]
01:14:00 ◼ ► Made it in that a lot of people use it for a while a lot of people still use it because certain extensions are are only [TS]
01:14:10 ◼ ► But what made this extensions possible was that the whole Firefox interface is built on. [TS]
01:14:16 ◼ ► I assume it still does please tell me if this is out of date information but it was built on this like a big X.M.L. [TS]
01:14:27 ◼ ► and that's one of the reasons why it never looks quite native never looks quite right on the platform [TS]
01:14:32 ◼ ► and why it's very slow because it's it's basically a web page and there's it's more complicated than that [TS]
01:14:39 ◼ ► but that's that's kind of the gist of it is I get specified in this very heavy customizable language so that it can be [TS]
01:14:52 ◼ ► The browser was like a giant slow interpreter to run on a scrap including its own interface [TS]
01:15:05 ◼ ► Looked pretty bad it didn't have very good design either but so it felt big and slow. [TS]
01:15:11 ◼ ► It was big and slow and it looked big and slow and in the area where now everything is to be efficient and fast [TS]
01:15:20 ◼ ► and Firefox is as big bloated slow thing in the corner. Yeah it hasn't been a while so far as I'm concerned. [TS]
01:15:30 ◼ ► I could but you're your show but my Twitter productivity or Firefox the most current topic in the world. [TS]
01:15:39 ◼ ► So what's more important in these things is what I just put in the chat room which is somebody dying node a new M three. [TS]
01:15:46 ◼ ► Can you translate to English for those of us who don't who are not experts in this field. [TS]
01:15:51 ◼ ► Does this refer to a dinosaur in any way. No So somebody put a new M three on a dynamometer which measures. [TS]
01:16:00 ◼ ► How much power the car produces and they compared it to the prior generation M three which is from my generation [TS]
01:16:11 ◼ ► It goes from no torque to use atop your ism you darn near all of its torques in a thousand rpm. [TS]
01:16:19 ◼ ► It's ridiculous in the worst Jonty Do you really slightly appreciate this magic of turbos. [TS]
01:16:28 ◼ ► Yep so it is the magic of turbos however might my car actually doesn't have a curve that different from this [TS]
01:16:37 ◼ ► and I can tell you it's mostly useless because if you actually give it full power at low reds you just lose grip in the [TS]
01:16:44 ◼ ► tire spent like you can't actually use all of your torque off the line which is where I think it matters most. [TS]
01:17:00 ◼ ► but a terrible I wish they would make some better ones. Much of launch control nothing. [TS]
01:17:06 ◼ ► Zero isn't the point of watching for the spin the wheels even will know the computer controls making sure that you get [TS]
01:17:25 ◼ ► but not going over it in a way that you can kind of like any like brakes in a way that you couldn't do yourself of your [TS]
01:17:33 ◼ ► and driver they have the Porsche nine eighteen going to sixty in two point two seconds us. That's launch control. [TS]
01:17:45 ◼ ► Cars can get a much better and they're able to get this much power out of a six under again. [TS]
01:17:49 ◼ ► So the cars are getting smaller lighter or at least you know making the same way to get a more powerful close enough [TS]
01:18:00 ◼ ► Lower weight and needed any better traction and I think they are pretty much at the limit. On the B.M.W. [TS]
01:18:06 ◼ ► Side I think it pretty much at the limits of how much torque you can apply the two wheels [TS]
01:18:10 ◼ ► and have it be reasonably useful. I think they need to move to another drive system in the M. [TS]
01:18:14 ◼ ► Cars that's like the biggest. There's too much power there and this is what the current generation. [TS]
01:18:19 ◼ ► What do you do with the next generation of these things where presumably the power is going to go even further up. [TS]
01:18:25 ◼ ► And the way it's going to go down how you can apply the power of the road. Yeah I'm not so sure you're right. [TS]
01:18:31 ◼ ► The war war you about this forever more. But to come back to what John was saying so I'm attempting and failing. [TS]
01:18:40 ◼ ► This past I think was this past winter in my car doing a four wheel burnout in snow [TS]
01:18:46 ◼ ► and I did go I took the video actually Aaron took a video using one of our i Phones in high frame rate mode [TS]
01:18:54 ◼ ► and if you look at the front tire you can see it slowing down speeding up slowing down speeding up slowly [TS]
01:19:00 ◼ ► and speeding up in order because the trash controls trying to keep me moving forward. [TS]
01:19:06 ◼ ► And so it's a very fascinating video seeing it in slow mo because I can assure you that [TS]
01:19:15 ◼ ► and as a quick aside a friend of mine who has a ship's rear drive three thirty five said to me that he went through the [TS]
01:19:25 ◼ ► rear brakes extremely quickly because the trash control was just melting all the rear brakes trying to keep him moving [TS]
01:19:33 ◼ ► forward and I just thought I was hysterical. I think Launch Control is the same things as traction in Colorado. [TS]
01:19:40 ◼ ► I mean some incorrectly are wrong but that it's not using the brakes as much as traction control on a slippery surface. [TS]
01:19:48 ◼ ► I think it's more about clutch application and how many revs you have when you pretty much dump the clutch. [TS]
01:20:00 ◼ ► They get everything moving forward a lot of them car actually has a limited slip which I guess helps. [TS]