Search Captions & Ask AI

Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?

March 27, 2026 / 01:36:44

This episode of the Waveform Podcast covers various tech topics including updates on Apple Maps ads, the US government's router ban, and new features in the Flighty app. Hosts Marquez, Andrew, and David discuss the implications of the US government banning consumer routers made outside the country, highlighting the challenges this poses given that most routers are manufactured abroad.

The hosts also share their thoughts on the recent announcement that Apple will allow businesses to buy ads in Apple Maps, comparing it to Google's longstanding practice. They express concerns about the potential impact on user experience.

Additionally, the episode features a discussion about the Flighty app's new airport intelligence feature, which provides users with real-time information about airport conditions. Marquez emphasizes the app's utility for frequent flyers.

Lastly, the podcast touches on the recent discontinuation of OpenAI's Sora app, reflecting on the challenges of AI-generated content and the ethical implications of using public figures' likenesses in AI models.

TL;DR

Hosts discuss Apple Maps ads, US router ban, and Flighty app updates.

Episode

1:36:44
00:00:00
When I was a kid in either fourth or
00:00:01
fifth grade, we had to make, and this is
00:00:03
a horrible assignment to give a child,
00:00:05
>> a paperier-mâché.
00:00:06
>> Oh god.
00:00:07
>> Terrible already.
00:00:09
>> Two scale solar system.
00:00:11
>> Wait, so you had like
00:00:12
>> which as you know is absurd one scale.
00:00:16
>> So kids and I like a marble in a
00:00:18
football field.
00:00:18
>> Yes. Yeah. So I my son my son was like
00:00:22
this big and Pluto was still like 20 ft
00:00:24
away and I had everything connected with
00:00:26
like dowels and strings and like I did
00:00:29
bring that into school.
00:00:30
>> I don't remember. I got to ask my
00:00:31
parents about this cuz I remember this
00:00:32
project.
00:00:32
>> What you should have done is brought in
00:00:34
the sun and be like the rest is at home
00:00:37
>> where it belongs.
00:00:42
>> Yo, what is up people of the internet?
00:00:43
Welcome back to another episode of the
00:00:45
Waveform Podcast. We're your hosts. I'm
00:00:47
Marquez.
00:00:47
>> I'm Andrew. And I'm David. This week it
00:00:49
is still TACH, believe it or not. Are we
00:00:52
doing it? Is still tech March and thus
00:00:56
we have lots of things to talk about. We
00:00:58
have uh dubbed updates getting
00:00:59
announced. We have IGDMs. We have US
00:01:02
governments banning routers, lots of
00:01:04
acronyms. Uh also some new flighty
00:01:06
updates, one of my favorite apps of all
00:01:08
time. Uh ads and Apple Maps, no more
00:01:12
Sora, and a million other little things.
00:01:14
So let's just jump. So many things this
00:01:15
week. It's crazy.
00:01:16
>> It's a lot of small things. Yeah. So, a
00:01:18
lot of four bullet points.
00:01:20
>> Yeah.
00:01:20
>> The whole outline pretty much.
00:01:22
>> But we can we can at least vamp, you
00:01:24
know, that's what we're good at.
00:01:26
>> Bullshitting.
00:01:26
>> We yap. We're yappers. Adam's ready to
00:01:29
yap. And did we even did they even test
00:01:30
it?
00:01:31
>> Oh, nice. Good segue. You caught me off
00:01:33
guard.
00:01:33
>> Yeah. Did they even test this? You might
00:01:35
have caught it on the studio channel if
00:01:37
you follow them. They did a short about
00:01:39
it yesterday. Eric and Rich. But I was
00:01:42
annoyed because me and Rich were
00:01:44
transferring files yesterday and I gave
00:01:45
him a hard drive and then as he's going
00:01:48
to give it back to me, he rightclicks it
00:01:50
and he looks for unmount but it's right
00:01:53
next to erase like format. Who decided
00:01:59
that
00:01:59
>> Yeah,
00:02:01
and erase should be right next to each
00:02:03
other.
00:02:03
>> Say even worse, they both start with a
00:02:04
capital E, so it's it's just right
00:02:06
there.
00:02:06
>> Like if you're not paying attention
00:02:08
>> Yeah.
00:02:08
>> And I think I've done that actually.
00:02:10
But erase does give you an additional
00:02:12
prompt that says, "Are you sure?" Right?
00:02:13
>> No. Yeah. And then I panic and I'm like,
00:02:14
"No, no, no, no, no." But I've
00:02:16
definitely hit erase accidentally
00:02:17
before.
00:02:17
>> Doesn't eject give you a No, it doesn't.
00:02:19
>> No, no, no. But you wouldn't be
00:02:20
surprised if it got a prompt. You just
00:02:21
hit yes. And you're like, "Wait, did
00:02:22
that say
00:02:24
that?"
00:02:25
>> Your your reactions to the enter button
00:02:28
are much quicker than reading
00:02:29
comprehension.
00:02:30
>> It's true.
00:02:30
>> Yeah.
00:02:31
>> And it's the same on So, it happened on
00:02:33
his Mac and then it was the same thing
00:02:35
on my Samsung phone. It's also like if
00:02:37
you go into the files app and you hit
00:02:39
the three dots to eject the hard drive
00:02:40
or whatever, it's right next to erase.
00:02:42
So this is like a standard.
00:02:43
>> Wait, when you connect a drive to your
00:02:45
Samsung phone,
00:02:46
>> that's hilarious that more than one
00:02:48
company did this.
00:02:49
>> Like who decided this?
00:02:50
>> Is it alphabetical? Hold on. This is
00:02:51
crazy. Eject.
00:02:53
>> I guess I don't have a drive attached.
00:02:54
Wow.
00:02:55
>> Maybe because they're alphabetical, but
00:02:57
nothing else. Wait,
00:02:59
>> I doubt it.
00:03:00
>> No, it's not cuz right above it is like
00:03:01
>> it's probably just because it's an
00:03:02
action for the text. Yeah, if I right
00:03:04
click anything, it's not in alphabetical
00:03:05
order. So,
00:03:06
>> cuz generally that drop down is like
00:03:08
folder colors and a bunch of other
00:03:10
stuff. So, then those two are just like
00:03:11
actions that are
00:03:13
>> Yeah.
00:03:14
>> similar, but not ones you want to be
00:03:16
similar.
00:03:16
>> It's it's like engineer brain versus
00:03:18
designer brain, you know? Like engineer
00:03:20
brain would be like, yeah, like those
00:03:21
are two things you do to the drive. I'm
00:03:23
going to order them in terms of
00:03:24
severity. Whereas a designer would be
00:03:26
like at no point does anyone ever
00:03:29
choosing between those two options. like
00:03:31
they should be far away.
00:03:33
>> Yeah, erase should be at the bottom.
00:03:34
>> If we want a good example of a designer
00:03:37
brain that may not have noticed
00:03:38
something that feels too obvious, we
00:03:40
just released these studio stickers
00:03:43
>> which if you are an audio listener
00:03:45
essentially what our uh design team has
00:03:48
thought up of which I think is really
00:03:50
interesting is the eyropper tool from
00:03:52
like Photoshop or any design program
00:03:54
except that we have cut it out. So there
00:03:58
is a it's not clear. It's just a
00:04:00
straight cutout in the eyedropper and in
00:04:02
the circle that it's selecting. So no
00:04:03
matter what you put it on, it looks like
00:04:04
you're selecting the color of
00:04:06
>> A lot of people got very confused at
00:04:07
this. Somebody posted on our subreddit
00:04:09
um our unofficial subreddit. They're
00:04:11
like, I'm confused. How did they get the
00:04:13
colors to match exactly
00:04:15
>> what the thing they put it on and it's
00:04:16
because there's a cutout and it's clear
00:04:18
and you can see through it.
00:04:19
>> That's what I was saying. Like our
00:04:19
designers, somebody said in Instagram,
00:04:22
is there a red one?
00:04:23
>> It's like yes, there is any color you
00:04:25
could ever think of. whatever it is
00:04:28
underneath it.
00:04:30
>> None of us ever thought that would
00:04:31
happen, but there are multiple comments
00:04:32
on Twitter and Reddit and Instagram. So,
00:04:34
yes, whatever color you would like.
00:04:36
These are new stickers available
00:04:38
>> except except teal. It doesn't work on
00:04:39
teal.
00:04:40
>> It doesn't. Well, it shouldn't. Sorry,
00:04:42
Dave.
00:04:43
>> I will say that it works much better on
00:04:45
like brighter, more vibrant colors. I
00:04:48
put it on my iPhone um blue, whatever
00:04:51
the blue color is called this year
00:04:52
>> and it's like it's it's not as poppy.
00:04:55
You know, when you put on your water
00:04:56
bottle, you're like, "Whoa." It like
00:04:57
looks like a red sticker, like a bright
00:04:59
red sticker. It's pretty cool.
00:05:01
>> But on my dark blue iPhone, it's not as
00:05:03
vibrant. So, I would put on your more
00:05:05
vibrant.
00:05:06
>> You're using an old version also that
00:05:07
has a clear outline, which creates less
00:05:09
contrast on the
00:05:10
>> over
00:05:12
Oh, you're right. I'm using We have an
00:05:13
old all white outline now. So no matter
00:05:16
what your color is, you should get a big
00:05:18
contrast boost because it's a great
00:05:20
point.
00:05:20
>> That's a great point. That's a great
00:05:21
point. It's a classic of like we've been
00:05:23
in the weeds working on this for so long
00:05:25
that when it comes out, we assume
00:05:26
everyone knows all of the things, but
00:05:28
now you know all the things.
00:05:29
>> Luckily, this is just a sticker and you
00:05:31
can figure it out by yourself.
00:05:32
>> You get the sticker, you're like, "Oh,
00:05:33
this is nice. This is good."
00:05:34
>> Yeah. And if you want new things to put
00:05:37
the stickers on, there's new software
00:05:39
coming out in June from Apple because
00:05:41
WWDC just got announced. You can put
00:05:44
your stickers on your software
00:05:47
>> in the metaverse
00:05:48
>> as long as it's not teal.
00:05:50
>> As long as it's not teal.
00:05:51
>> I'm kidding. It's a sticker. It does
00:05:52
work on teal.
00:05:53
>> Yeah. So, here's one of our two bullet
00:05:55
point uh things. Actually, there's only
00:05:56
one bullet point, but WWDC starts on
00:05:59
Monday, June 8th. It is once again on a
00:06:01
Monday for some reason. I don't know why
00:06:02
they keep doing this. Usually events are
00:06:04
on Tuesdays so that people can travel
00:06:06
and not have to travel over the weekend.
00:06:07
Um but it is on a Monday. So, you know,
00:06:10
we're going to be seeing what's going on
00:06:12
there. There's going to be some new
00:06:13
Apple Intelligence stuff.
00:06:16
>> 27
00:06:16
>> hopefully iOS 27. Which brings us to
00:06:20
Apple is reportedly testing a standalone
00:06:23
Siri app. And uh we know that Siri is
00:06:26
going to be powered by Gemini. And so
00:06:30
this feels like it will possibly just
00:06:32
kind of be a Gemini rapper, you know,
00:06:34
because Gemini has a dedicated app and
00:06:36
that's how people interact with it. But
00:06:37
you can also interact with it through
00:06:39
the phone through asking, you know, hey
00:06:41
G, what's up with this? You can do
00:06:43
things via Gemini through a Gemini
00:06:45
rapper. It was just Meek Mill.
00:06:47
>> Oh, wow. Meek is
00:06:49
>> That was a crazy cut. Not even deep
00:06:51
because it was new, but if you saw it,
00:06:54
>> who is Meek Mill?
00:06:55
>> I'm just on
00:06:56
>> No, that was a Twitter reference.
00:06:57
>> Yeah, it was a recent Twitter reference
00:06:59
like been tweeting about AI all week.
00:07:02
Sorry. I totally
00:07:02
>> He's a rapper also if you didn't know
00:07:04
that. Hence,
00:07:05
>> I thought you meant he was actually his
00:07:07
his birth sign.
00:07:08
>> That's what I thought, too. Yeah.
00:07:10
>> Now, Mico's been tweeting about Claude
00:07:11
all week. That's really funny.
00:07:12
>> Got it.
00:07:12
>> That is funny. Okay.
00:07:14
>> Wait, I need to know now. What's his
00:07:16
sign? Hold on. He's a Taurus. He's a
00:07:19
>> Taurus Bros. Nice.
00:07:20
>> Anyway, anyway, um yeah, so it seems
00:07:23
like we're going to get the Siri 2.0
00:07:25
potentially in the iOS 27 release. Uh
00:07:28
despite previously being stated that it
00:07:30
will come out in iOS 26.4 4 26.5 German
00:07:33
is reporting that there will be a
00:07:35
separate app that looks like iMessage
00:07:37
when you message it.
00:07:38
>> I thought that was really interesting.
00:07:39
Yeah,
00:07:40
>> cuz a lot of this was maybe this is just
00:07:41
because of u what was the new one open
00:07:43
claw how people were like interacting it
00:07:45
with through messages. That was an
00:07:46
interesting like paradigm of just I want
00:07:48
to chat with my chatbot. Everyone knows
00:07:50
iMessage. So an app that's Siri but it
00:07:53
looks like iMessage is interesting. It's
00:07:55
a concept that Apple can do. I think
00:07:56
it's good and weird because like it's
00:07:59
obviously familiar to iPhone users
00:08:01
because it looks like iMessage,
00:08:03
>> but then also like the fact that there's
00:08:04
two apps that look exactly the same, but
00:08:06
one is the AI one. I guess you'll never
00:08:08
get them confused, but it feels like
00:08:10
maybe it could just be in the messages
00:08:12
app.
00:08:13
>> Like why not just a a top chat like a
00:08:15
pin chat that's now
00:08:17
>> inside the messages,
00:08:18
>> which is what WhatsApp did for a very
00:08:19
long time.
00:08:20
>> And I think didn't Google messages do
00:08:21
that with Gemini or you can chat to
00:08:23
Gemini.
00:08:23
>> You can chat to Gemini. can pin it if
00:08:25
you want to the top and there's a chat
00:08:26
in there.
00:08:27
>> So, I can see that.
00:08:28
>> I think that makes a lot of sense. Um,
00:08:30
it's also being reported that they're
00:08:31
testing a lot of new different Siri
00:08:33
designs, which is kind of sad cuz I like
00:08:35
the current kind of rainbow wavy one
00:08:37
that they got going on. But apparently
00:08:39
it may come out of the dynamic island.
00:08:42
Um, and it will probably be replacing
00:08:44
Spotlight so that Siri can access
00:08:46
different types of data because
00:08:48
Spotlight is fairly limited on what the
00:08:49
phone can access. And now that Siri is
00:08:52
going to have this new LLM built in,
00:08:53
it'll be able to understand more context
00:08:55
and kind of reach for different types of
00:08:56
things. Um, and apps will also be
00:08:59
getting an ask with Siri option so you
00:09:01
can get more context about the things
00:09:02
that you're currently looking at on your
00:09:03
screen. So, it really kind of just feels
00:09:04
like Apple is following what Google is
00:09:06
doing with Gemini where Gemini is
00:09:08
embedded inside of Android and it's just
00:09:11
kind of part of the OS. I think Apple is
00:09:14
moving in that direction.
00:09:15
>> Clippy.
00:09:16
>> Clippy.
00:09:16
>> Microsoft had it right years ago.
00:09:19
>> Ahead of it time. Yeah. Google, we
00:09:20
always say Google Glass ahead of its
00:09:22
time, Clippy ahead ahead of its time.
00:09:24
>> They kill Clippy so hard. We're saying
00:09:26
Microsoft's ahead of its time, and this
00:09:27
Siri isn't even out yet, and we're still
00:09:29
giving it more credit.
00:09:30
>> Yeah, that ahead of time.
00:09:31
>> Bring back Clippy. That's all you needed
00:09:32
to do.
00:09:32
>> Some people were saying there were
00:09:34
rumors that we were going to get a beta
00:09:35
drop that included Siri like this week.
00:09:38
I would personally prefer if they just
00:09:40
waited till June and it was one big like
00:09:42
release announcement because it would be
00:09:44
more exciting. I think the thing I heard
00:09:45
was like updated Gemini queries inside
00:09:48
of like Apple intelligence, but that the
00:09:51
new Siri would be in iOS 27 cuz like
00:09:54
they have to drop it at dubdub. Apple
00:09:56
needs an event for everything except for
00:09:58
AirPods Max 2 and then
00:10:00
>> they that's where they're going to drop
00:10:02
it even though it probably should have
00:10:03
been dropped at last dubdub even though
00:10:04
it probably should have been dropped at
00:10:06
the
00:10:06
>> 24.
00:10:07
>> Well, it was dropped at that one and
00:10:08
then not actually dropped event
00:10:10
announced and then not dropped at the
00:10:12
iPhone.
00:10:12
>> They did drop it. you know,
00:10:13
>> they dropped the out of they dropped the
00:10:16
ball.
00:10:17
>> Yeah. So, I mean, iOS 27 is going to
00:10:18
come out officially with the iPhone 27.
00:10:21
So, that would be like a Septemberish
00:10:22
type of time frame. So, if they announce
00:10:24
what they're going to do with it in
00:10:26
summer,
00:10:27
>> iPhone 18.
00:10:28
>> Yeah, sorry. iPhone 18, iOS 27. Yeah.
00:10:31
2027 September.
00:10:33
>> Correct. Yeah,
00:10:34
>> that could possibly be the big drop of
00:10:37
like all the new features. The new Siri,
00:10:39
everything comes out at once and the new
00:10:41
phone happens to have a couple other
00:10:42
We've seen rumors of like new features
00:10:43
of the iPhone,
00:10:44
>> but we should get some developers stuff
00:10:45
in like July, right? When 27 beta comes
00:10:48
out early.
00:10:49
>> Well, the beta comes out on the day of
00:10:51
Dubdub. Like it drops that day.
00:10:53
>> Oh yeah. Yeah.
00:10:54
>> Developer beta. Yeah,
00:10:55
>> developer beta. But like people usually
00:10:57
aren't allowed to make videos and stuff
00:10:58
until
00:10:59
>> Fun fact, you're not technically Okay.
00:11:02
How how how in the weed should I get
00:11:05
this?
00:11:06
>> Let's get weedy right now.
00:11:07
>> Well, okay. You are not allowed when you
00:11:09
sign the developer agreement to make
00:11:11
videos about the developer beta.
00:11:14
>> Most people don't read that and don't
00:11:16
care.
00:11:17
>> Yeah.
00:11:18
>> But we are in a unique position where we
00:11:20
have some working relationship with
00:11:21
Apple and so we try to follow the actual
00:11:24
rules. And so when the developer beta
00:11:26
comes out and everyone makes videos
00:11:28
about the developer beta that they're
00:11:30
technically not allowed to, but they do
00:11:31
it anyway. Yeah.
00:11:32
>> I wait because I agreed to the developer
00:11:35
agreement and then a month later when
00:11:37
the public beta comes out, I make a
00:11:38
video on that using my experience from
00:11:40
the developer beta.
00:11:41
>> Right.
00:11:41
>> On the public beta.
00:11:43
>> The benefit of Waveform is we can just
00:11:44
report on everybody else's videos and
00:11:46
talk about it however we want before
00:11:48
that.
00:11:48
>> Look at this.
00:11:49
>> Exactly. That's that. Um should we do
00:11:51
the other Apple thing and just get it
00:11:53
out of the way or what do you think? ads
00:11:54
in Apple Maps.
00:11:55
>> Yeah. Okay. Uh Apple's going to allow
00:11:58
businesses to buy ads in Apple Maps. And
00:12:01
I can already hear people being like,
00:12:02
"Wow, Apple Maps is sucky now." Which I
00:12:05
I still don't like it to be clear. I
00:12:07
still like Google Maps a lot more.
00:12:08
Google Maps, you probably don't know
00:12:10
this, but has had ads for an extremely
00:12:12
long period of time.
00:12:13
>> A Google product
00:12:14
>> with with ads.
00:12:16
>> It's their main their main money maker.
00:12:18
That's crazy. Yeah. No, I mean if you go
00:12:21
on Google Maps right now, you'll just
00:12:22
see Dunkin Donuts around you without
00:12:24
trying to search for it.
00:12:25
>> It's so weird. Oh, is that in Maybe
00:12:27
that's in ways. I think ways when you're
00:12:29
just like driving and it's just like,
00:12:32
>> "Hey, there's a Wendy's right there."
00:12:34
Okay, cool. I don't care.
00:12:37
>> Yeah,
00:12:37
>> it's like your friend pointing out the
00:12:38
window like, "Hey."
00:12:40
>> Yeah,
00:12:40
>> there's a Wendy's right there.
00:12:41
>> So, it's going to allow people, well,
00:12:43
people that want to sell ads to have
00:12:45
suggested places at the top of search
00:12:47
results. Um, and this is going to be
00:12:49
based on places that are trending and
00:12:51
based on your recent searches and it
00:12:53
will not be associated with your Apple
00:12:55
account because all of the data is
00:12:56
stored on device. So, they're still
00:12:58
trying to be hardcore about security
00:12:59
about that. And they also say that the
00:13:01
places that you go to are not shared
00:13:03
with advertisers.
00:13:04
Now, that's also what uh Chad GPT said
00:13:07
when they said that they were going to
00:13:08
do ads, but um we'll have to see if
00:13:11
that's true.
00:13:12
>> What's funny about that is maps is like
00:13:13
a very personal app. It's like where
00:13:14
you're going and your location all the
00:13:16
time. Yeah.
00:13:17
>> And I do feel like, and this is maybe
00:13:18
this is a hot take, but everyone loves,
00:13:21
you know, to talk about I would rather
00:13:22
have privacy than have
00:13:25
your maps app, wouldn't you rather have
00:13:28
personalized ads than like I never drink
00:13:31
coffee. Why am I still getting Starbucks
00:13:34
ads everywhere I go? I would rather have
00:13:36
the personalized ad for the thing that I
00:13:38
would actually maybe go to than
00:13:40
constantly get things that are not
00:13:41
associated with me at all. Yeah, I feel
00:13:43
like that I would actually appreciate
00:13:44
that because I might actually go to the
00:13:45
Jollibee and I would never go to the
00:13:47
Starbucks that I might get an ad for
00:13:48
from Apple.
00:13:49
>> You go to Starbucks a lot for a non-
00:13:50
coffee drinker.
00:13:52
>> Yeah. Oh, okay. Maybe that's a bad
00:13:54
example,
00:13:54
>> but I just want to say I've never seen
00:13:56
someone go to Starbucks as often and
00:13:58
never order coffee.
00:13:59
>> I think people I just You're big on the
00:14:01
pumpkin bread.
00:14:02
>> The bread is
00:14:04
>> Can I warm it up for you? Yeah.
00:14:06
>> Yes, you can.
00:14:07
>> I think best item at Starbucks is the uh
00:14:09
the thing that has the spinach and the
00:14:11
feta wrap. the spinach fed app.
00:14:12
>> It's a solid breakfast. Yeah, they got a
00:14:14
couple breakfast sandwiches. Anyway, my
00:14:16
point is Google's going to give me ads
00:14:19
>> based on the way too much that it knows
00:14:22
about me and Apple's going to give me
00:14:23
ads based on the knowing nothing about
00:14:25
me. And I suspect I'll be more annoyed
00:14:28
by the ones that are for the thing that
00:14:29
I've never considered going to. That's
00:14:31
kind of the the big question that's been
00:14:33
asked for the last few years cuz when
00:14:34
Apple dropped the ask app not to track
00:14:37
feature and then Meta was like wouldn't
00:14:40
you rather that you had more integrated
00:14:42
and it's like it's kind of I don't know
00:14:43
I I know a lot of people who buy a lot
00:14:45
of things from Instagram ads
00:14:47
>> so I've never bought anything from an
00:14:49
Instagram ad because I will not let them
00:14:50
win but I know that it can be quite
00:14:54
effective for a lot of people. It
00:14:56
reminds me of that story of the the
00:14:57
woman who didn't know she was pregnant,
00:14:59
but Amazon did
00:15:00
>> because it was surv.
00:15:02
>> Yeah, Target. And then they start
00:15:03
recommending things for they targeted
00:15:05
her, I guess.
00:15:06
>> It was also a minor. So,
00:15:07
>> I'll be interested in how this pops up.
00:15:09
Is it popping up while you're searching
00:15:11
for places? Is that taking over the top
00:15:13
of it? Is it just suggestions when you
00:15:15
first open Apple Maps? Is like you think
00:15:17
about places like Yelp that were a place
00:15:20
thing and Yelp is just uh destroyed ever
00:15:23
since they did all the like you can pay
00:15:26
to get
00:15:27
>> like placed up higher and better reviews
00:15:29
or whatever.
00:15:30
>> No one cares about Yelp anymore.
00:15:32
>> Yelp has also famously like kind of
00:15:34
exploited PE like businesses and called
00:15:36
them and be like, "We're going to take
00:15:38
you off of our recommendations if you
00:15:40
don't pay us." That's Yeah, like there
00:15:41
are stories about this.
00:15:43
>> It's crazy. So, yeah, we'll we'll see. I
00:15:45
mean, it's I don't even know how many
00:15:46
people actually use Apple Maps anymore,
00:15:48
but
00:15:49
>> Yeah.
00:15:49
>> Or not anymore, but ever did.
00:15:51
>> As long as it's clearly marked as an ad
00:15:52
so I can very quickly skip it, then I'm
00:15:54
happy. Yeah. So,
00:15:56
>> that's the hard part though is like what
00:15:58
if the ad does look really scrumptious
00:16:01
>> then that's a successful
00:16:03
>> I know but how many like like what you
00:16:05
said if you see it say ad I'm usually
00:16:07
like hardwired to skip but then there's
00:16:09
the times where it's like
00:16:10
>> that does sound really good but is this
00:16:12
actually good or is this just an ad
00:16:15
second layer of research of like let me
00:16:17
click it let me look at the reviews
00:16:19
>> I'm hungry I'm just trying to eat
00:16:20
>> I know it's usually I'm trying to
00:16:21
research
00:16:22
>> that's why I don't like that's why
00:16:23
nobody wants ads and maps Like you just
00:16:25
want to find the thing, go to the thing,
00:16:26
but the ad's going to pop up and be
00:16:27
like, "Hey, what about you want to go to
00:16:28
this other place?" Like, "No, I I
00:16:30
actually opened this app just to go
00:16:31
somewhere else. Thank you very much."
00:16:33
>> It is frustrating. Even Google Maps will
00:16:34
be like, "Best food near me." And it'll
00:16:36
give me like a 4.5 because that that
00:16:39
restaurant like paid for it or whatever.
00:16:40
It's like suggested sponsored result and
00:16:43
it's like gh Yeah. Apple is in this
00:16:44
weird place where it's like slowly
00:16:46
trying to transition towards other
00:16:48
revenue sources because they're scared
00:16:50
of the iPhone making less money over
00:16:51
time and
00:16:52
>> all these things happening and uh you
00:16:55
know they can't retain as many people as
00:16:57
they want on their other services. So
00:16:58
that
00:16:58
>> this will come up again later in this
00:17:00
podcast.
00:17:00
>> Oh it will yeah it will it will for
00:17:03
shadowing.
00:17:03
>> We'll see how that happens.
00:17:05
>> Marquez, what are you more excited about
00:17:07
the a Samsung A series or flighty?
00:17:11
>> Is that is that a question?
00:17:13
Real question lips when we were flighty
00:17:16
>> before we started before we started
00:17:18
recording I was like I think flighty is
00:17:20
like top five app of all time
00:17:21
>> insane take
00:17:23
>> and it's not like a multi it's not
00:17:24
multiplatform it's not like a very broad
00:17:27
thing that everyone can use not
00:17:28
everybody flies enough to give any hoots
00:17:30
about flighty but if you do fly a loty
00:17:34
is goated and everybody who flies a lot
00:17:36
knows that so it's weirdly and it's
00:17:37
tucked away in the corner of like hey do
00:17:39
you fly a lot no question about it this
00:17:41
app is unbelievably useful That will be
00:17:43
a flighty ad by Monday.
00:17:44
>> Sorry, it's just facts. Anyway, they uh
00:17:47
No, they just announced another thing.
00:17:49
So, kind of like I'm I'm describing it
00:17:51
as like ways for airports. They're
00:17:53
calling it airport intelligence. And
00:17:55
essentially what it does is it allows
00:17:57
you a broader view of like what's going
00:18:00
on with airports in general. So,
00:18:01
Flighty, for those who don't know, is
00:18:02
like a flight tracker app. You put in
00:18:04
your flight information. It tells you
00:18:05
everything you need to know about your
00:18:06
flight as you're about to fly, while
00:18:08
you're flying. As soon as you land, it
00:18:10
tells you where your baggage is going to
00:18:11
be. If it's delayed, it tells you why
00:18:13
it's delayed before the airline usually
00:18:14
does all this stuff. It's super useful.
00:18:16
So, airport intelligence is like, let's
00:18:20
say hypothetically there's some
00:18:22
something going on with airports in your
00:18:24
area.
00:18:24
>> Allegedly.
00:18:25
>> Yeah, allegedly. This could happen.
00:18:27
Maybe
00:18:27
>> the timing for this release is
00:18:30
>> perfect.
00:18:30
>> It's really good timing. Yeah.
00:18:32
>> Uh, so something weird's going on at an
00:18:33
airport in your area and it's affecting
00:18:35
like kind of all flights and you're
00:18:37
flying tomorrow and you just kind of
00:18:38
want to get an idea of like maybe I
00:18:40
should go to security check-in like 2 or
00:18:42
3 hours early for example. Just a
00:18:45
hypothetical. You would be able to look
00:18:46
at the airports in your area and look at
00:18:49
their status in this which is sort of
00:18:51
aggregating a bunch of data I assume
00:18:53
from flighty users and from you know the
00:18:54
FAA and everything contributing to one
00:18:56
spot kind of like ways and you can get
00:18:59
an idea of if the airport in question is
00:19:01
affected or not and make your decision
00:19:02
accordingly. So again as someone who
00:19:05
flies a lot another useful feature I
00:19:07
will be happily using this. It is kind
00:19:08
of slow right now I assume because it
00:19:10
just launched but it is full of
00:19:13
information about every airport. I'm
00:19:14
It's crazy that they launched this
00:19:16
before the FAA did, but
00:19:18
>> I think that's the least surprising
00:19:20
thing.
00:19:20
>> I mean, yeah, true. Yeah. There was an
00:19:23
interview with the United CEO like a
00:19:25
year ago and they're like they asked
00:19:26
him, "What is one thing that you wish
00:19:28
that you did to like update your tech
00:19:30
stack earlier?" And he said, "I wish we
00:19:31
bought Flighty."
00:19:32
>> Wow.
00:19:33
>> Like he specifically said that. He was
00:19:34
like, "They're doing insanely good
00:19:35
things." And I have made I think they've
00:19:37
made them offers and they said no.
00:19:39
>> Yeah. Every time I fly, I get the my
00:19:41
iPhone has the live activity for the
00:19:43
United app and for flighty and I
00:19:45
immediately dismiss the United one
00:19:47
because I just use the flighty one.
00:19:48
>> You should just not allow it to send you
00:19:50
notifications.
00:19:51
>> Yeah. Well, I also click on it for my
00:19:52
boarding pass. That's the one thing I
00:19:53
have the United app for though is the
00:19:55
boarding pass. Everything else I I just
00:19:56
get from flighty.
00:19:57
>> Wait, did they even test this United
00:19:59
boarding pass? If you have multiple
00:20:00
people on the reservation and you are
00:20:03
not the first one, if you have like your
00:20:04
boarding pass up and ready and then lock
00:20:06
your phone waiting in line and then come
00:20:08
up, it resets back to the first one.
00:20:11
I've scanned adamant before on business
00:20:13
trips and then we have to figure out
00:20:15
which one I did wrong.
00:20:16
>> Yeah.
00:20:17
>> Terrible. United.
00:20:18
>> Yeah.
00:20:19
>> Should be able to pin your boarding
00:20:20
pass.
00:20:21
>> Yeah. You should be able to have your
00:20:22
boarding pass in flighty.
00:20:24
>> You should be able to what?
00:20:25
>> Be able to have your boarding pass in
00:20:26
flighty.
00:20:26
>> Oh
00:20:28
yeah. Why? Why? Why can't we do that?
00:20:30
There's probably a reason why we can't
00:20:31
do that.
00:20:31
>> Because they want you to use their app.
00:20:33
>> Yeah, probably.
00:20:33
>> That's probably why.
00:20:34
>> Anyway, so that's that. The other thing
00:20:36
that you mentioned, Andrew, is Samsung
00:20:37
dropping the new A series of phones. Uh
00:20:39
I only put this in here cuz I thought it
00:20:41
was just a note and interesting that
00:20:42
they all have the same battery size.
00:20:44
>> These aren't notes. So, yeah. So, it's
00:20:46
the Samsung A57 and A37. The A37 will be
00:20:49
449. The A57 will be 5.49. So, these are
00:20:53
like your mid-range fighters. is we've
00:20:54
seen a lot of phones coming out at these
00:20:55
price points and they look just like the
00:20:58
rest of the Samsung S series phones like
00:21:01
S26s. They look like they have triple
00:21:02
cameras, but one of them is a macro
00:21:04
camera. You know, they make the
00:21:05
appropriate cuts to reach these price
00:21:07
points. But the one thing they did is
00:21:08
they both have 5,000 mAh batteries,
00:21:11
which is the same size as the S26 Ultra.
00:21:14
So, the $1,200 phone has a 5,000 mAh
00:21:17
battery and the $450 phone also has a
00:21:21
5,000 mAh battery. It's one of those
00:21:22
things where you're like really pumped
00:21:24
for the cheap phone and really bummed
00:21:26
for the expensive phone.
00:21:27
>> Pretty much.
00:21:27
>> It's like hard to complain about this
00:21:28
because I'm so happy that the mid-range
00:21:30
phones are getting that.
00:21:32
>> Yeah.
00:21:32
>> But you got to take that as a kick in
00:21:34
the teeth if you bought the 26 Ultra.
00:21:36
>> Yeah. You can't That's It's I I said in
00:21:38
my review so I don't have to harp on it
00:21:40
again, but that is maybe the least Ultra
00:21:42
Ultra phone right now. Yeah.
00:21:43
>> This is the S26 Ultra.
00:21:44
>> Back to the S20 days. S20 Ultra.
00:21:47
>> Great phone. I I told I I told it like
00:21:49
it is in the review, but yeah, as far as
00:21:51
the word ultra concerned,
00:21:52
>> Adam, did you purchase another phone?
00:21:55
>> The S26 Ultra.
00:21:57
>> He had it last. What color was it? It
00:21:58
was a different color that I seen.
00:21:59
>> It's black.
00:22:00
>> Yeah, the black.
00:22:00
>> Yeah, the black one.
00:22:01
>> Yeah, I had the like purple.
00:22:02
>> How long do you plan to stay on that?
00:22:04
>> Till the iPhone allegedly folds.
00:22:07
>> We'll see.
00:22:08
>> Interesting. That's that I don't think
00:22:09
that's going to happen. I think you're
00:22:10
going to change earlier.
00:22:12
>> Definitely.
00:22:12
>> Possibly.
00:22:13
>> I thought you were going to say till my
00:22:14
next shipment comes in of whatever I
00:22:16
ordered yesterday. Yeah. Well, you could
00:22:18
buy that or you could buy a MacBook Neo.
00:22:22
So, choose wisely
00:22:24
>> for 1,200 bucks.
00:22:25
>> No, the the the cheap one.
00:22:28
>> Oh. Oh, yeah. The cheap Yeah, that's
00:22:30
crazy. Yeah, you can buy that or a Neo.
00:22:32
That's wild.
00:22:32
>> Speaking of the MacBook Neo, you want to
00:22:34
talk about this Windows 11 problem?
00:22:36
>> Yeah, we can do this before it breaks.
00:22:37
So, uh recent video on the channel will
00:22:39
be live by the time you see this, which
00:22:41
is just talking about the Windows laptop
00:22:44
problem. This was inspired by the two
00:22:47
Mac laptops that I've tested most
00:22:49
recently, the MacBook Neo, their 599,499
00:22:53
mid-range fighter, and the M5 Max
00:22:56
MacBook Pro, which I've also tested. I
00:22:59
was running all my benchmarks on it. It
00:23:00
had like 18,000 megaby per second SSD
00:23:04
read and write speeds, which is crazy.
00:23:06
It has benchmarked multi-core, higher
00:23:08
than any other Mac ever, including the
00:23:10
Mac Pro and M3 Ultra. It has GPU scores
00:23:13
matching M3 Ultra, which is insane. This
00:23:15
is a Max chip in a laptop. So, I'm
00:23:18
actually thinking like this is now a
00:23:20
laptop that could actually replace my
00:23:23
Mac Pro and be my desktop. I might be
00:23:25
that guy at some point.
00:23:27
>> But having all these thoughts also made
00:23:29
me think, well, what's going on in
00:23:31
Windows land? Like, what is actually the
00:23:32
equivalent of, you know, the highest end
00:23:35
laptop you could get? And could it be
00:23:36
the desktop that I choose to use? How
00:23:38
good are those laptops? And so that had
00:23:40
me digging into like, okay, what's going
00:23:42
on with XPS? What's going on with Razer
00:23:45
Blades? What's going on also with the
00:23:46
Neo competitors? I bought a $550 Acer
00:23:48
laptop. We tested that. And essentially
00:23:51
conclusion I came to was Apple's Apple
00:23:53
Silicon Advantage and their vertical
00:23:55
integration.
00:23:55
>> Yeah.
00:23:56
>> Is a huge advantage at the high end for
00:23:58
efficiency and performance. And it turns
00:24:00
out to also be a huge advantage at the
00:24:02
low end for cost.
00:24:04
>> Yeah. And the cherry on top is that
00:24:06
Apple doesn't actually really need to
00:24:08
make a ton of money on Neo's on the
00:24:11
hardware margin services
00:24:12
>> because it is it's basically as I said
00:24:14
in the video like a Trojan horse for new
00:24:17
Apple customers which then will spend
00:24:20
way more on software on services on
00:24:24
Apple Care on Apple TV on Apple Creative
00:24:26
Studio all these other things. So they
00:24:28
don't have to make the $100 on the
00:24:30
hardware margin, but they will make a
00:24:32
ton of money over time on just getting a
00:24:34
new person to be a Mac user.
00:24:35
>> This is the entire Chromebook play. It
00:24:37
was get people on Google services when
00:24:39
they're 5 years old so that they will
00:24:41
use services for the rest of their life.
00:24:43
>> Yeah.
00:24:43
>> Yeah.
00:24:44
>> So it was interesting to sort of see
00:24:46
that in real time and just like put the
00:24:48
machines next to each other and be like,
00:24:49
"Oh yeah, they they can make just a
00:24:51
straight up better laptop for the same
00:24:53
price and that's going to get people to
00:24:55
become first time Mac people." I mean, a
00:24:57
Windows computer has parts from a ton of
00:24:59
different companies, and every single
00:25:01
one of those companies has to make
00:25:02
margin.
00:25:03
>> That's literally the main problem.
00:25:06
>> Disadvantage off the riff, like having
00:25:08
to do that. And
00:25:09
>> that bites, it's the same. It's like
00:25:12
similar with Android phones, it's
00:25:13
similar with uh tablets. It's just like
00:25:16
when Apple has the full integration
00:25:17
through, they there's a benefit there.
00:25:19
Even just like making software on
00:25:21
mobile, right? Like we see all the time,
00:25:22
if you're making iOS software,
00:25:25
>> you don't have to do it that hard. But
00:25:27
if you're making Android software, it
00:25:29
has to fit
00:25:30
>> a thousand
00:25:31
>> like thousands of thousands of tens of
00:25:33
thousands of different like form factors
00:25:35
and phones and resolutions and aspects.
00:25:37
>> That's why Google has been so hardcore
00:25:39
about just trying to make Android so
00:25:40
flexible with screen sizes and stuff.
00:25:42
>> And that's part of the advantage, right?
00:25:44
Is there is a choice. Like in Android
00:25:46
land, if I really, really, really care
00:25:48
about having 8K video, well, there is no
00:25:50
iPhone that can do that. So, if I just
00:25:52
want to choose a phone that can shoot 8K
00:25:54
video, you can find that in Android
00:25:55
land. You can find all sorts of other
00:25:57
different things you might care about
00:25:58
like a folding screen or whatever in
00:26:00
Android land. Yeah.
00:26:01
>> But the couple of phones that Apple
00:26:03
makes are like locked in, super tightly
00:26:05
integrated, and you might not be super
00:26:07
used to the way they do things, but they
00:26:09
do it the same way every single time.
00:26:11
So, you you kind of just get used to
00:26:12
that when you're in that ecosystem.
00:26:14
>> Yeah. And yeah, that's kind of the same
00:26:15
thing with Windows. Now, in this sort of
00:26:18
latest generation, this is the nuance of
00:26:19
it is yes, you depend on all these
00:26:22
different companies who make the parts
00:26:24
to your computer to all make their
00:26:26
margin, but also make a good piece.
00:26:29
You have to have to make a great Windows
00:26:31
laptop, several different companies all
00:26:33
executing and firing all cylinders at
00:26:34
the same time for your one computer to
00:26:36
be good. So if you're Dell and you make
00:26:38
the XPS like I showed, you're also
00:26:41
depending on Intel to be making a good
00:26:43
chip at that time, which they are. And
00:26:46
you know, you're Dell, you have to make
00:26:47
a good computer with a good screen and a
00:26:49
good keyboard and all that stuff, which
00:26:50
they are. And you need Windows to be
00:26:53
good.
00:26:56
>> I'm fine with Windows. I like Windows.
00:26:58
>> Yeah. So, Windows 11 is in kind of a
00:26:59
weird place because not everybody's
00:27:01
loving Windows 11. I do not I haven't
00:27:04
used Windows since Windows 10 and I was
00:27:06
jumping into Windows 11 again and I set
00:27:08
up this XPS. It took me 45 minutes to
00:27:09
set it up.
00:27:10
>> The setup is sufferable.
00:27:12
>> There were mandatory downloading updates
00:27:14
and stuff. Once I got through the
00:27:15
updates, it was like sign into this,
00:27:16
sign into that, download Microsoft 365,
00:27:18
do you want to use Copilot? Do you want
00:27:20
recall on? Do you want all these other
00:27:21
things? And I was like, no, no, no, no,
00:27:23
no. All this stuff it was asking me. And
00:27:25
then I finally got in to my clean
00:27:26
install of Windows and then I got a
00:27:27
popup for McAfee to be installed.
00:27:29
>> And this is this is the other thing. The
00:27:31
only other way that these manufacturers
00:27:33
that make the laptops can make the
00:27:35
laptops cheap enough to even be
00:27:36
competitive at all is that they have to
00:27:38
put a bunch of bloatware on it. They
00:27:39
have to get more.
00:27:40
>> Yeah. I mean, we see this on Android
00:27:42
phones, too. Like the Android phones
00:27:43
that come with Facebook installed and
00:27:44
come with Instagram installed. They
00:27:46
don't do that out of the kindness of
00:27:47
their heart. They do that because Meta
00:27:49
pays them to do that.
00:27:50
>> So, yeah, it's just it's not a good
00:27:52
situation for anybody else. And
00:27:54
Microsoft really they tried to do the
00:27:56
vertical integration with the Surface
00:27:58
but I just they're such a B2B company
00:28:01
that it's such an afterthought for them.
00:28:02
We saw this with the Pixel for a very
00:28:04
long time. The the Nexus program the
00:28:06
Pixel Tensor
00:28:07
>> Google didn't really care about the
00:28:09
Pixel and they still don't really care.
00:28:11
They're trying to care more and the
00:28:12
Pixels are really good now. They're
00:28:14
really really good now but it still
00:28:16
doesn't have quite the level of vertical
00:28:19
integration that they would like. And
00:28:20
even if they achieved it, they're in
00:28:22
this weird spot where they make Android
00:28:24
for everyone else. Yeah.
00:28:26
>> So they're competing against all of
00:28:28
that.
00:28:28
>> Yeah.
00:28:29
>> While also providing them with the OS.
00:28:30
So this happens in in Google land
00:28:34
because they make the Pixel and Tensor
00:28:35
and they're all vertically integrated
00:28:36
and they'll give the Pixel exclusive
00:28:38
Android features and now they're
00:28:39
competing against every other Android
00:28:40
phone. Same thing happened with Windows
00:28:43
and Microsoft and Surface and making
00:28:45
this beautifully ideally very vertically
00:28:47
integrated thing. Now you're competing
00:28:49
against all your other OEMs trying to
00:28:51
make good Windows machines. And maybe
00:28:52
that's like a lead by example type
00:28:54
thing,
00:28:55
>> but it just it never went well.
00:28:56
>> Yeah.
00:28:57
>> And the funny thing about the the the
00:28:58
Google Android features thing is that
00:29:00
they also want to make Android a popular
00:29:02
OS to compete with iOS. And so they have
00:29:05
to eventually give a lot of these
00:29:07
features to the the broader Android
00:29:08
ecosystem. And that's why Google does
00:29:10
this awkward thing where they have Pixel
00:29:12
exclusive features for like 2 months and
00:29:14
then it goes to every other Android
00:29:15
phone because they need other people to
00:29:17
want to use Android in general. It's
00:29:19
also why they had that weird bromance
00:29:20
with Samsung for such a long time.
00:29:22
>> Yeah.
00:29:23
>> You look like you really want to say
00:29:24
something.
00:29:24
>> I I've just been fighting a Windows PC
00:29:26
all week and and like to be honest I I
00:29:30
it's all tinfoil hat stuff like because
00:29:32
it's a Windows PC that on paper has a
00:29:36
really good graphics card and a really
00:29:37
good pro or you know good enough
00:29:38
graphics card and a good enough
00:29:39
processor but like and we didn't build
00:29:42
this PC and it it sort of is the things
00:29:44
that you know you I think you've been
00:29:46
talking about Marquez like like it's for
00:29:48
a video we're working on that involves
00:29:50
this like peripheral device that
00:29:52
connects via USB 3.0 know and it keeps
00:29:55
crashing all the time and I couldn't
00:29:56
figure out why it kept crashing. And my
00:29:58
working theory right now and I haven't
00:30:00
like tested this so again it's tinfoil
00:30:01
hat is that the USB 3.0 ports on this
00:30:05
computer are just not USB 3.0 ports.
00:30:08
That that's my best guess cuz when you
00:30:10
and the USB 3.2 ports are USB 3.0 part
00:30:13
ports and it's like there's no way the
00:30:16
company who built this PC,
00:30:18
you know, they didn't build the the
00:30:20
ports. They definitely got the the USB
00:30:22
IO box like from
00:30:23
>> the motherboard.
00:30:24
>> Yeah. From someone else. But it's like
00:30:26
that is sort of what you're talking
00:30:27
about. It's like you need all or like
00:30:29
for some reason not a single Bluetooth
00:30:32
keyboard will connect to this PC. Not
00:30:34
one. There's there's one Logitech
00:30:36
keyboard in the whole office that will
00:30:37
connect for 30 seconds and then
00:30:39
immediately disconnect. And the rest of
00:30:41
And it's not like I haven't tried all
00:30:43
100 Bluetooth keyboards that are in the
00:30:46
office.
00:30:46
>> Where could those be?
00:30:47
>> Where could those have come from? So I
00:30:49
just this is all ringing very true.
00:30:51
>> It also is shaped like a shoe.
00:30:52
>> Well, I was trying not to I don't know
00:30:54
if that any of these are the problems I
00:30:56
don't want out.
00:30:57
>> There's a chance like that computer
00:30:59
doesn't get used very often. There might
00:31:01
be some driver updates that are in there
00:31:02
that we haven't like dug that deep into
00:31:04
where like it was dormant for a while.
00:31:06
So totally
00:31:08
>> some are probably that, but some are
00:31:09
also like it should be easy to figure
00:31:10
out what those problems are.
00:31:11
>> Yeah. I don't want to I don't want to
00:31:12
accuse anyone of counterfeit USB ports,
00:31:15
but I genuinely cannot I'm at the point
00:31:18
now where I'm like, why why does the USB
00:31:21
3.0 cable not get USB 3.0 speeds until
00:31:24
it's in the 3.2 port? Why does the 3.0
00:31:28
port not give 3.0 speeds?
00:31:30
>> Yeah. Yeah.
00:31:31
>> What?
00:31:32
>> Yeah.
00:31:33
>> Sorry, I was looking into the eyes of
00:31:34
your hat for a second.
00:31:36
>> Yeah, I should probably address this.
00:31:37
This is Franklin, the mascot of the
00:31:39
Philadelphia 76ers. Thank you to fan
00:31:41
Michael for the sick hat. I'm going to
00:31:43
be wearing this the whole
00:31:44
>> Why do they have a cat as the mascot?
00:31:45
>> It's a dog. His name is Franklin.
00:31:47
>> That is a cat a thousand%.
00:31:49
>> Is Franklin a turtle?
00:31:50
>> Has whiskers.
00:31:50
>> Franklin is Benjamin Franklin, the
00:31:53
founding father. That's half of the
00:31:55
things in Philadelphia.
00:31:56
>> A dog.
00:31:57
>> Benjamin Franklin was in fact
00:31:59
>> What number president was he?
00:32:00
>> He was president number six. And he when
00:32:02
he signed the Declaration of
00:32:03
Independence, it was a paw print.
00:32:06
>> He got that dog in him.
00:32:07
>> Cat print. Um um
00:32:09
>> to bring it back, I think the the best
00:32:12
way
00:32:15
>> I didn't notice that.
00:32:16
>> I feel like the best way if you really
00:32:19
want an example of the difference
00:32:20
between like the vertical integration in
00:32:22
Apple and the vertical integration in
00:32:24
Android Windows. go on our Apple and go
00:32:27
on our Android and watch everyone in
00:32:29
Apple is just generally mad at the same
00:32:31
thing where everyone in Android is mad
00:32:33
at each other because even though
00:32:34
they're all using Android, they're all
00:32:36
fans of different companies of phones
00:32:39
and they all hate each other. It is just
00:32:42
the wildest infighting ever. And like
00:32:45
>> now imagine all of those different
00:32:47
people need to work together and build
00:32:48
something and it's just
00:32:49
>> and and to be fair like
00:32:51
>> I'm a full Android and Windows user at
00:32:53
home by the way. I only use Apple stuff
00:32:55
that work.
00:32:55
>> I like Android better than iOS by far.
00:32:58
And there's a great piece by David
00:33:00
Pierce. He uh he tried to use Android
00:33:02
for like the last four months and he
00:33:04
used a bunch of different phones and he
00:33:06
really liked the Fairphone 6, but it
00:33:07
doesn't work on Verizon, so he couldn't
00:33:09
do it. But um he went back to iOS
00:33:12
because his conclusion was effectively
00:33:14
phones are app machines and iOS has
00:33:17
better apps and he relies on too many
00:33:20
iOS apps to go back to Android which
00:33:22
sucks because Android is a way better
00:33:23
OS.
00:33:24
>> Well, I I want to play devil's advocate
00:33:25
cuz as someone who's like fully Apple,
00:33:27
you know, ecosystemed up. There are a
00:33:30
lot of these like vertically integrated
00:33:31
things in the Apple world that are like
00:33:34
not supported to the degree they should
00:33:37
be. Like Free Form has like six updates
00:33:40
that they just need to add. Like there's
00:33:44
just no excuse why Free Form doesn't
00:33:46
have these things, but I just don't
00:33:47
think they care enough about Free Form
00:33:49
to
00:33:50
>> to do it. And there's a bunch or like
00:33:52
why does the Apple Mail app still kind
00:33:55
of blow you?
00:33:57
>> So, you know what I mean? It's
00:33:59
>> when you're just the default and you get
00:34:00
to be the default thing for
00:34:02
>> what 80% market share of the US. Like,
00:34:05
why change?
00:34:06
>> Why update it? Yeah. Yeah. But like why
00:34:07
is it so hard to rotate something on the
00:34:10
desktop version of free form and why is
00:34:13
it so hard to select multiple objects on
00:34:14
the mobile version of free form?
00:34:16
>> I would like to see the user base for
00:34:17
free form.
00:34:18
>> It's me.
00:34:19
>> Yeah. I just
00:34:22
your average Apple user. There's
00:34:24
definitely some people who hate Apple
00:34:27
screenshotting you in that hat right
00:34:29
now. like average.
00:34:32
There's also it's kind of like either
00:34:34
that or the massive graveyard of stuff
00:34:37
that Google tries and then just kills a
00:34:39
year later.
00:34:40
>> So, it's like would I rather have the
00:34:42
kind of weak updates, but at least it
00:34:44
works the same way every time on one
00:34:46
side of the fence or like
00:34:48
>> Google launching an app and me going, I
00:34:50
don't think I want to switch to this
00:34:51
because I don't trust them to even keep
00:34:53
this alive for a year.
00:34:54
>> RIP inbox, bro. So true. So it yeah
00:34:57
>> there's choice on one side but there's
00:34:58
the upside and downside of that choice.
00:35:00
>> Also there's at least six free form
00:35:02
users because there are several things
00:35:03
that I force my friends to do on free
00:35:06
form with
00:35:06
>> me vacations. Free form is excellent for
00:35:09
that.
00:35:10
>> This whole conversation is also negating
00:35:12
people who have like very specific needs
00:35:14
that software-wise or like needs to be
00:35:17
on a Windows machine, needs to be on
00:35:18
Android, needs to be on iOS like we're
00:35:20
talking outside of that because clearly
00:35:22
then you only have one option. Almost
00:35:24
every business distributes Windows
00:35:25
computers.
00:35:26
>> I think that's a big part of the
00:35:27
equation for like why they are where
00:35:29
they are. Especially because like you
00:35:30
talk about like David having like he
00:35:32
come from an iPhone so he's already
00:35:34
plugged in and use a lot of iPhone only
00:35:36
apps. There's a lot of people who play a
00:35:38
certain game that you can't play on Mac
00:35:39
or there are people who use certain
00:35:40
softwares for their business that are
00:35:42
just only Windows XP. Like that that's a
00:35:45
real thing where okay now Windows XP has
00:35:47
a massive market share because that's
00:35:48
still stable and that's the thing that
00:35:49
we use and that's where our apps are.
00:35:51
So, like if your dependencies or you're
00:35:53
plugged into one specific thing, like
00:35:55
I'm a Mac user. I you not because I
00:35:58
switched to Final Cut Pro.
00:35:59
>> Yeah.
00:35:59
>> That is why I started using a Mac.
00:36:01
>> Yeah.
00:36:02
>> And now here we are a decade later and
00:36:04
I'm I'm in the ecosystem and they got
00:36:06
me.
00:36:06
>> That's that's the point of Neo. That's
00:36:08
the point of like all these other, you
00:36:09
know, feelers is to just get a device in
00:36:12
front of you that gives you options and
00:36:15
hopefully you like one of those things
00:36:16
and then you are sucked into that
00:36:17
ecosystem.
00:36:18
>> Yeah. And I I was the lead reviewer at
00:36:19
Android Authority for 5 years. I didn't
00:36:21
use an iPhone until the iPhone 13 when I
00:36:24
reviewed it. And I didn't switch to an
00:36:25
iPhone till the iPhone 15 because I had
00:36:27
USBC. I would have never touched an
00:36:29
Apple device and all of my dependencies
00:36:32
were in Android. Like I I could use my
00:36:34
world. People were Nobody texted cuz
00:36:36
when I lived in the Bay Area, everyone
00:36:38
used Facebook Messenger. But then I
00:36:40
moved here and now I swear I am in so
00:36:43
many iMessage group chats that every
00:36:44
time I test an Android phone, they bully
00:36:46
the out. Now look at you. What have they
00:36:48
done to our lad?
00:36:49
>> I know. And I know that you say that's
00:36:51
not a real problem,
00:36:52
>> but bullying is real. Okay. I don't like
00:36:55
crying. Do you like crying?
00:36:57
>> It sucks.
00:36:58
>> You should uh we should get on Group Me.
00:37:00
>> Oh my god.
00:37:01
>> Fun fact.
00:37:02
>> Oh my god.
00:37:02
>> Worst app of all time.
00:37:04
>> F first messaging app of the MKBHD
00:37:06
business.
00:37:07
>> When Brandon and Vince started the
00:37:09
group.
00:37:10
>> Well, because Marquez and I were in a
00:37:11
group me for our both of our ultimate
00:37:13
team. Every frisbee team I've played for
00:37:14
for 15 years until like last year it was
00:37:17
a group me that was the most like
00:37:20
feature not an app app of all time.
00:37:23
>> It's genuinely I was talking about
00:37:24
flighty being one of the five best group
00:37:26
me is one of the five worst apps
00:37:29
>> of all time.
00:37:29
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
00:37:31
>> I want to make one final note rel
00:37:33
related to this and then we can take it
00:37:34
to break on the Windows uh 11 thing.
00:37:37
Dave 2D put out a really good video um
00:37:40
recently about this. And the kind of the
00:37:42
gist of this was that a number of years
00:37:44
ago, like five or six years ago, he had
00:37:47
all of the Windows manufacturers uh send
00:37:50
him laptops that were in the same price
00:37:52
range as the Apple M1 Air, I believe,
00:37:55
>> so he could compare them. And all these
00:37:57
manufacturers like, "Sure, like, here's
00:37:59
our laptop that's that price." And then
00:38:01
he asked all the same manufacturers this
00:38:03
year to send him laptops that were in
00:38:05
the same price range. And they were all
00:38:06
like, "No."
00:38:09
>> And I feel like that kind of distills
00:38:12
the entire thing. That's all you really
00:38:14
need to know. They're all afraid.
00:38:16
>> They knew the video he was going to
00:38:17
make.
00:38:17
>> It was going to make it look negative.
00:38:18
Yeah. It was going to make it look
00:38:19
terrible. They didn't really know at the
00:38:20
time how insane M1 was, but they still
00:38:23
feel five to six years behind at this
00:38:25
point. So, it's it's crazy. Yeah. So, go
00:38:28
watch the video if you haven't already.
00:38:30
I want to say something nice about
00:38:31
Windows because everyone always tells me
00:38:33
I'm too mean to my Windows Green bubble
00:38:36
people. I know those are two separate
00:38:37
things.
00:38:37
>> Windows Green Bubble
00:38:38
>> to me, you're the same. But
00:38:40
>> yeah, that's fair.
00:38:41
>> Something nice about Windows.
00:38:43
>> I like that they support old graphics
00:38:46
engines. I like that I can still get a
00:38:49
DirectX driver that runs on a modern
00:38:52
>> Windows motherboard. I think that's
00:38:54
cool. Apple does not do that. pre
00:38:57
pre-metal stuff very hard to run on Mac
00:38:59
OS.
00:39:00
>> DirectX stuff very easy to run on a
00:39:02
Windows computer.
00:39:03
>> Pre- metal we use like rocks and fire.
00:39:05
So
00:39:05
>> yes, I that was the name of the old
00:39:08
Apple graphics engine actually. Rocks
00:39:09
and fire.
00:39:10
>> Hell yeah.
00:39:11
>> Yeah. Steve Jobs was super against it.
00:39:13
>> Yeah. And then when uh and then when
00:39:15
Johnny IV came in and he said aluminium
00:39:17
and they knew it had to be metal. That's
00:39:19
a great place to jump to trivia.
00:39:23
What was the old graphics driver of
00:39:25
Apple
00:39:26
>> rocks and fire?
00:39:27
>> Today we're doing a number question and
00:39:29
it's Delta, not Prices, right? Rules.
00:39:31
>> Is it United?
00:39:33
>> No, it's Delta.
00:39:34
>> We'll talk about United later.
00:39:36
>> Yeah, we will. Will we?
00:39:37
>> Yes.
00:39:37
>> Oh.
00:39:38
>> Uh, I thought
00:39:38
>> I think we lost our chance to talk about
00:39:40
United.
00:39:40
>> Oh,
00:39:41
>> yeah. Also,
00:39:42
>> we don't have to talk about it.
00:39:43
>> That's really cool. But they're like the
00:39:44
seventh airline to do that. So, I was
00:39:46
sort of like, why are we freaking out
00:39:47
about this?
00:39:48
>> Skyap. It's called mingling beds
00:39:51
>> in in regular class.
00:39:52
>> Yeah.
00:39:52
>> Oh yeah.
00:39:53
>> I thought that was like a super super
00:39:54
premium crazy fe.
00:39:56
>> No. No. Most other airlines just call it
00:39:57
I the first one that did it.
00:39:59
>> I don't know what you're talking about.
00:40:00
>> The Okay. United was like United was
00:40:03
like guys you could get a whole row.
00:40:05
>> Yeah.
00:40:06
>> And then we'll like we'll like you can
00:40:08
turn it into a bed
00:40:08
>> and relax row. Relax row.
00:40:10
>> Relax row. Other airlines called Sky
00:40:12
Couch. I think Jet Jet Blue does this
00:40:15
too. A bunch of the European airlines do
00:40:16
it. This is not like a new
00:40:18
groundbreaking thing. This is like a
00:40:20
United catching up sort of thing.
00:40:21
>> They pretended it was.
00:40:22
>> Anyway, well, of course, it's a business
00:40:24
thing. But anyway, today's trivia
00:40:26
question is,
00:40:27
>> yeah,
00:40:28
>> Delta, how many Wikipedia pages have the
00:40:32
title Apple TV?
00:40:36
>> H
00:40:38
>> I'm assuming it counts if it's like
00:40:39
Apple TV parenthesis something.
00:40:42
>> And and and I'm only accepting Apple
00:40:44
space TV, by the way. Those that exact
00:40:47
set of was that nine characters in a
00:40:49
space.
00:40:50
>> What about like would Apple TV Plus
00:40:52
count?
00:40:53
>> Seven characters in a space
00:40:54
>> or does it just have to be Apple TV?
00:40:56
>> A ple e space TV and then something in
00:41:00
parenthesis?
00:41:01
>> H.
00:41:01
>> Oh,
00:41:02
>> how many Wikipedia pages have that exact
00:41:04
title?
00:41:05
>> Damn. Delta.
00:41:06
>> Pretty good question.
00:41:07
>> Can we do a quick shout out?
00:41:08
>> Yeah,
00:41:08
>> sure.
00:41:09
>> Someone on our subreddit watched
00:41:10
Waveform at a planetarium at their
00:41:13
university. It was so cool. I kind of
00:41:15
want to know what that sounded like. It
00:41:17
was probably
00:41:18
>> like a bee's ass,
00:41:19
>> dude. I bet. No, I sounded amazing. I
00:41:21
was
00:41:22
>> probably the opposite.
00:41:22
>> When I worked at Liberty Science Center,
00:41:23
the planetarium was sick. And it was
00:41:26
also it sounded really good. I don't
00:41:28
remember why I remember it sounded
00:41:29
really good. But the videos that they
00:41:31
played cuz everything's it's like you're
00:41:32
looking up, everything's around your
00:41:34
speakers everywhere.
00:41:35
>> Your visual field is making that sound
00:41:37
better.
00:41:38
>> Yeah. At least my memory of it was that
00:41:39
it sounded.
00:41:40
>> I really hope they played the episode
00:41:42
where Andrew says he can't name all the
00:41:44
planets.
00:41:46
>> I just I wish he stretched it. I wish
00:41:48
there was a stretch to fit somehow
00:41:50
because seeing one of our giant faces
00:41:53
circular like over top.
00:41:55
>> That is what it felt like to watch
00:41:56
Project Hail Mary in the front row in 70
00:41:58
mm.
00:41:58
>> Oh man, I've seen the the clips of like
00:42:00
Oenheimer from the front row and just
00:42:02
like crimson shin.
00:42:04
>> I watched Oppenheimer from the front row
00:42:05
and I watched Project Hell Mary from the
00:42:07
front row.
00:42:07
>> Amaze. Amazing. Amazing. Amaze.
00:42:09
>> Shout out to that person on our
00:42:10
subreddit.
00:42:11
>> Yeah.
00:42:11
>> Uh photos.
00:42:12
>> We will think about the trivia question
00:42:14
answers at the end like usual. We'll be
00:42:15
right back.
00:42:16
>> Yeah. I don't I don't think I can name
00:42:17
all the planets.
00:42:18
>> Still can't.
00:42:28
>> Support for the show comes from Monarch.
00:42:30
Hard to believe it's already spring.
00:42:32
That's mostly a good thing. The
00:42:33
sunshine, the great defrosting, the
00:42:35
spring cleaning. There's just one
00:42:36
drawback. tax season, but breathe. It's
00:42:39
going to be okay, especially if you use
00:42:41
Monarch. Simplify your finances with
00:42:43
Monarch. Monarch's the all-in-one
00:42:44
personal finance tool designed to make
00:42:46
your life easier. It brings your entire
00:42:47
financial life, budgeting, accounts, and
00:42:49
investments, net worth, and future
00:42:51
planning all together in one dashboard
00:42:53
on your phone or laptop. Feel aware and
00:42:56
in control of your finances this tax
00:42:57
season and get 50% off your Monarch
00:42:59
subscription with code wave. And with
00:43:02
our AI assistant, you'll get access to a
00:43:03
24/7 financial coach that can actually
00:43:06
help you answer questions about personal
00:43:07
spending trends or debt repayment, or in
00:43:09
this case, where you might want to put
00:43:10
your tax return. Achieve your financial
00:43:12
goals for good with Monarch, the
00:43:14
all-in-one tool that makes money
00:43:15
management simple. Use code wave at
00:43:17
monarch.com for half off your first
00:43:19
year. That's 50% off at monarch.com.
00:43:23
Codewave. All right, welcome back. Uh
00:43:25
there is some news of a product that was
00:43:28
killed, but not by Google.
00:43:30
>> Big day. It was uh killed by OpenAI.
00:43:32
It's called Sora.
00:43:33
>> Thank God.
00:43:34
>> Ring a bell. Anyone Anyone remember Sora
00:43:36
from a couple months ago? I actually
00:43:37
remember making a video when Sora first
00:43:39
came out.
00:43:39
>> We've made two, I think.
00:43:40
>> Yeah. Two now at this point of uh their
00:43:42
video generation models. Generate
00:43:46
models. Generate video slop. Yeah. But
00:43:48
it would get higher and higher quality
00:43:49
over time. And I remember the first
00:43:51
videos from Sora, you know, they were,
00:43:53
you know, Will Smith eating spaghetti
00:43:55
but like higher fidelity than before.
00:43:56
And it got better and better and it
00:43:58
costs more and more and more and then
00:44:01
OpenAI was like this costs too much.
00:44:04
>> Yeah.
00:44:04
>> And I'm glad they made that realization
00:44:06
because I mean there's other video
00:44:08
generation models out there but Sora was
00:44:10
like the big one that everybody knows
00:44:12
about from OpenAI and they made the
00:44:14
decision to kill the Sora app and I
00:44:15
assume the entire AI slop generator from
00:44:18
top to bottom
00:44:19
>> is now gone. They'll probably turn those
00:44:21
GPUs towards something else that we're
00:44:23
very excited about maybe. Uh but yeah,
00:44:27
>> no more Sora. Yeah. Big day to dance on
00:44:29
a grave.
00:44:30
>> I'm dancing boy.
00:44:31
>> Yeah.
00:44:32
>> What's the meme of like
00:44:33
>> is he giving the peace sign or the pray
00:44:35
sign? Like
00:44:36
>> where he's like in front of the grave.
00:44:37
Yeah.
00:44:38
>> Yeah. Sora was bad. The funny thing
00:44:40
about this uh that we reported on when
00:44:43
it happened was that Disney had made a
00:44:44
$1 billion investment deal with OpenAI
00:44:48
about Sora.
00:44:49
>> Yeah.
00:44:49
>> And Disney said, "We are going to invest
00:44:51
a billion dollars in OpenAI over X
00:44:53
period of time." And Sora is going to be
00:44:56
in the Disney Plus app with AI generated
00:44:59
versions of our characters that you can
00:45:01
just sort of scroll through on the
00:45:03
Disney Plus app as a sort of like little
00:45:04
Disney Tik Tok feature. This never
00:45:06
launched and uh reportedly the Sora
00:45:10
engineers didn't even really know that
00:45:12
Sora was getting killed. They even put
00:45:14
out a guidelines as to like their safety
00:45:17
standards about Sora the day before they
00:45:19
announced that they were killing it,
00:45:20
which is very funny. And now that $1
00:45:23
billion deal is not happening. So, uh,
00:45:26
OpenAI can't find money. And now they
00:45:28
really can't find money. I guess a
00:45:30
billion dollar is like pocket change for
00:45:31
them.
00:45:31
>> I mean, I guess how much money were they
00:45:33
burning in the process of
00:45:34
>> billions? Yeah, probably more than that.
00:45:36
Um, and also one thing you should know
00:45:38
is that pretty much every Open AI deal
00:45:40
is not real money. It's like the idea of
00:45:43
money. Nothing ever really happens.
00:45:45
Everyone's like, Nvidia is like, we're
00:45:46
investing 1 trillion in open AI. And
00:45:49
they're like, what does that mean? And
00:45:50
then they just sort of do jazz hands and
00:45:52
walk away.
00:45:52
>> You could have been out, bro.
00:45:54
>> You know, none of the these circular
00:45:56
deals have are inflating the stock
00:45:57
market and that's why you're seeing a
00:45:58
lot of red.
00:45:59
>> A lot of them are like promises to
00:46:01
invest over time or something.
00:46:02
>> That's what the Disney one was. It was
00:46:04
$1 billion investments over a period of
00:46:06
time and it didn't even start.
00:46:08
>> Yeah. No money had changed hands.
00:46:10
>> No money had changed hands. Huge win.
00:46:12
So, it's not happening. Yeah.
00:46:13
>> Um,
00:46:13
>> David, I'm going to give you $1 billion
00:46:16
over the next three years.
00:46:18
>> I hope my stock goes up. Psych.
00:46:22
>> Uh yeah. So the another funny thing
00:46:24
about this is that Meta had purched
00:46:27
um a guy to lead the super intelligence
00:46:29
lab and the first product that they
00:46:31
launched was an AI slop generator video
00:46:34
generator that was supposed to compete
00:46:35
with Sora. It was um it was horrible and
00:46:38
I think they shut it down too
00:46:40
>> hopefully. But this is good for
00:46:42
everybody. Like we don't need more AI
00:46:44
slop. If you're ever on Twitter, there's
00:46:46
a lot of fruits cheating on each other
00:46:48
on there. I don't know if you've seen
00:46:50
this.
00:46:50
>> Fruits?
00:46:51
>> Yeah, fruits.
00:46:52
>> What?
00:46:53
>> Yeah, there's some weird stuff.
00:46:54
>> Wait, you guys haven't seen this?
00:46:56
>> I'm jealous that you guys not
00:46:57
>> I see mostly cuz you can do like the
00:46:59
remixes with YouTube videos.
00:47:01
>> Every once in a while, I'll go to one of
00:47:03
our old videos to reference something
00:47:04
and I'll just be like blah blah blah
00:47:06
remix with this video and it's a short
00:47:08
of like a pregnant cat.
00:47:09
>> Yeah, that's Yeah, they're always
00:47:11
pregnant. There's always like a pregnant
00:47:12
cat and a dad cat and they're like
00:47:14
having a baby and it has like your voice
00:47:16
over the background.
00:47:17
>> Well, the background music is always
00:47:18
meow meow meow meow meow.
00:47:21
>> It's really bad. It's like
00:47:25
>> I think it redefineses
00:47:26
>> hallucination are you having?
00:47:28
>> It redefineses the the word slop. Like
00:47:30
really it does.
00:47:31
>> It's also this stuff makes a ton of
00:47:34
misinformation out there for sure.
00:47:35
>> Not just straight slop literal harmful
00:47:38
videos.
00:47:39
>> Yeah. So, I'm glad it's gone.
00:47:41
>> I'm glad I missed that.
00:47:42
>> Dance on the grave. Um, speaking of
00:47:44
Instagram meta doing slop things, do you
00:47:48
want to break this down?
00:47:49
>> Yeah, I'll try and break this down
00:47:50
really quick. Um, IGDMs are no longer
00:47:52
going to be end to end encrypted by May
00:47:54
8th. This is kind of a uh I mean I think
00:47:57
everyone knows what end to end
00:47:58
encryption is. You and your the
00:48:01
recipient are the only ones who are able
00:48:02
to see the message due to a code uh
00:48:06
>> encryption.
00:48:07
>> Encryption. Yeah. Yeah, it has to public
00:48:10
and private keys.
00:48:11
>> Um, so like this feels like a really big
00:48:13
deal headline wise. Uh,
00:48:16
>> but like there's a couple weird things
00:48:18
about this that make me confused. So I'm
00:48:20
going to read out a couple of the
00:48:22
reasons why I think or they've said
00:48:23
they're ending this encryption and
00:48:25
everyone can be the judge on why they
00:48:26
think they really are ending it. Um, so
00:48:29
>> they've been the way they announced this
00:48:31
first of all meta is not like a full
00:48:34
post. They updated a 2022 news post
00:48:37
about encryption to say that encryption
00:48:39
is ending on May 8th. Um, so like two
00:48:42
months away.
00:48:43
>> Um, and a couple reasons. One, a meta
00:48:46
spokesperson said that which I didn't
00:48:48
know about. The encryption is optin on
00:48:50
Instagram, which I never knew about. I'm
00:48:53
sure most people don't know about. And
00:48:55
they said very, very few people on
00:48:57
Instagram use encryption anyway in the
00:48:59
end because it's optin. Exactly. poor uh
00:49:04
communication.
00:49:05
>> Not even just communication, just poor
00:49:07
design. I mean,
00:49:08
>> Metap doesn't want it to be encrypted
00:49:10
because they want all of that. So, like
00:49:12
>> Well, yeah,
00:49:13
>> there's a lot of drama going on right
00:49:14
now with like the EU and the UK. Yeah.
00:49:17
Okay.
00:49:18
>> So, like the next point is uh FBI,
00:49:21
Interpol, UK safety organizations are
00:49:24
all urging Meta to break encryption
00:49:27
because of child safety. because of how
00:49:29
much meta in general and Instagram
00:49:32
specifically is essentially harming
00:49:34
children in so many different ways. One
00:49:36
of them being through DMs and with
00:49:38
encryption, if the correct people have
00:49:40
the encryption on, it makes it really
00:49:41
harder to find chat logs or stuff like
00:49:43
that. So, they've they're urging Meta to
00:49:45
end encryption. Another thing is Meta is
00:49:48
just not getting rid of encryption
00:49:50
WhatsApp. They're telling people to just
00:49:51
move to WhatsApp if you want encryption.
00:49:53
>> Just use WhatsApp, bro.
00:49:55
>> Just they literally pulled the just use
00:49:57
WhatsApp. I hate this.
00:49:58
>> Um, and then the last reason, which I
00:50:00
think most of us can agree on is
00:50:03
>> Meta's favorite,
00:50:05
>> but maybe the one they don't want to
00:50:06
admit,
00:50:07
>> is yes,
00:50:08
>> without encrypted DMs, they have the
00:50:11
ability to use those DMs to target with
00:50:13
advertisements and train data, train AI
00:50:16
data on your messages. Um, which
00:50:19
>> the the reason this is all kind of weird
00:50:21
is it seems like most people aren't
00:50:23
using it, so they're probably doing all
00:50:24
of this anyways. But like the actual end
00:50:26
to this is probably just saving them
00:50:27
money because they don't have to run
00:50:28
compute to
00:50:30
>> saving them face with like all the all
00:50:32
the public stuff with the
00:50:33
>> It's really nice that they're having
00:50:35
other people like government agencies
00:50:36
tell them to remove it so they can just
00:50:38
be like, "Well, that's the reason we're
00:50:40
removing it. Thanks for the training
00:50:42
data. Thanks for the advertising." Yeah.
00:50:44
>> Uh,
00:50:45
>> yeah, that's kind of I'll let everybody
00:50:47
be the judge of what how they want to
00:50:49
see the story with encryption, but I
00:50:51
think the thing to know here is if you
00:50:53
really care about privacy encryption,
00:50:54
don't touch a Meta product.
00:50:56
>> Yeah, that's like the easiest thing
00:50:58
here.
00:50:59
>> The number one advertising company in
00:51:00
the world. Yeah, I think Meta realizes
00:51:02
that like a lot of the DMs on Instagram,
00:51:05
they mostly care about you sharing reels
00:51:07
and sharing posts and pushing you to
00:51:08
other parts of Instagram to spend more
00:51:10
time on and get gather more data to
00:51:13
spend more money. So, they don't really
00:51:14
care about this. WhatsApp is still
00:51:15
encrypted if you want to use that, but I
00:51:17
personally would just stay away from
00:51:19
meta products if I really cared about my
00:51:21
privacy.
00:51:21
>> Yeah. I mean, speaking of which, they
00:51:22
just announced yesterday as well that
00:51:24
they're going to integrate um sort of
00:51:26
like buy now buttons into reals. Tik Tok
00:51:30
shop has this
00:51:32
>> where you can be watching a reel or
00:51:34
something and then it will show a little
00:51:35
like you can buy this now and it out
00:51:37
links to a store.
00:51:38
>> Uh Instagram's going to add that. So,
00:51:40
>> I think YouTube Shorts has this already
00:51:41
probably the like little product
00:51:43
shelves,
00:51:43
>> dude. On Amazon, what is it? Prime TV.
00:51:48
Prime. What do they call it? Prime
00:51:49
Video. Yeah. you'll be watching like
00:51:52
you'll be watching like Fallout or
00:51:53
something, right? And then it cuts to an
00:51:55
ad and in the ad there will be a
00:51:57
purchase on Amazon button that you can
00:52:00
just do straight. It's like holy moly,
00:52:03
we are Cuz I Yeah, I only wanted to
00:52:05
watch Fallout and I haven't used Amazon
00:52:07
Prime TV in like a really long time and
00:52:10
I was like, "Wow, we're in the we're in
00:52:11
the dystopia where you can literally the
00:52:13
product is in your face and there's just
00:52:14
a one-click buy now and ship to me
00:52:16
immediately button." Mhm.
00:52:17
>> I mean, with
00:52:18
>> it is so crazy
00:52:19
>> the like UI on all these short form
00:52:20
contents. How far are we away from it
00:52:22
just feeling like the old annotation
00:52:24
like scamming where just there's like 20
00:52:26
different boxes up on your screen cuz we
00:52:28
have all these different sets of
00:52:29
guidelines for different short form
00:52:31
because depending on where you put
00:52:33
>> text or something in a video, it's going
00:52:34
to get covered by a username, an icon,
00:52:37
the description, and like now we're
00:52:38
adding shops and stuff. This is already
00:52:40
a really small form factor of what we're
00:52:42
watching. There's not a lot of real
00:52:43
estate there. So adding all of that on
00:52:45
is
00:52:46
>> Yeah, it's crazy. We're just not even
00:52:47
going to watch videos anymore.
00:52:48
>> It's okay. They're pushing you to use
00:52:49
Instagram on the iPad because all they
00:52:51
want you to do on that is watch reals
00:52:53
anyway and then you won't miss click
00:52:55
because it's a bigger screen.
00:52:56
>> Wow.
00:52:56
>> True.
00:52:57
>> Got him.
00:52:57
>> Big brain.
00:52:58
>> Got him. Um, kind of related, the US
00:53:02
government has officially banned
00:53:04
consumer routers made outside of the
00:53:06
United States, which by the way,
00:53:08
>> pretty much all of them.
00:53:09
>> Yeah, essentially all the only one I can
00:53:11
really think of that's not is Starlink
00:53:13
because that's made in Texas.
00:53:15
>> Is that a router? Yes, I guess.
00:53:18
>> But like it's not what you would think
00:53:19
of in the general sense of like a router
00:53:21
when you already have an ISP and you're
00:53:23
using it as a router in your house.
00:53:24
>> Um, so like similar to banning drones
00:53:27
made in foreign countries, the FCC is
00:53:28
adding consumer grade routers made
00:53:31
outside of the US to a covered list. And
00:53:33
if you're not sure what that is, the
00:53:34
covered list is a list that the FCC and
00:53:36
Homeland Security Bureau use to add
00:53:38
devices that quote pose an unacceptable
00:53:40
risk to the national security of the
00:53:42
United States or the security and safety
00:53:44
of US persons. Um, like you just
00:53:47
mentioned, we're all pretty familiar
00:53:49
with where technology is manufactured.
00:53:52
It's not in the US and like
00:53:55
>> it's not here.
00:53:55
>> Seriously, it's got to be 90 plus% of
00:53:57
routers, dude. I mean, are made outside
00:53:59
of the US.
00:54:00
>> I'm just looking up all I'm going one by
00:54:01
one to look through all the router
00:54:02
companies that
00:54:03
>> they're all like Taiwanese. Yeah,
00:54:05
they're all not made here.
00:54:06
>> But even some of them might be stationed
00:54:08
or like headquartered in the US. They're
00:54:10
still not manufactured in the US. Um, so
00:54:13
like first of all, if you already own a
00:54:15
router that's doesn't meet this
00:54:17
criteria, it's going to work fine. Um,
00:54:19
but the new ones then coming into the
00:54:21
company into the United States will be
00:54:23
put on a list where the radios won't be
00:54:24
authorized.
00:54:26
>> Uh,
00:54:26
>> it's just insane. Like it's so
00:54:28
isolationist to say anyone not made in
00:54:31
the United States.
00:54:31
>> I think that's wild. like it is it would
00:54:33
be more understandable if it was like
00:54:35
from specific countries that the
00:54:37
government deems to be adversaries or
00:54:39
whatever but the fact that it is not in
00:54:41
the United it's like I cannot name a
00:54:44
single router company that is based in
00:54:46
the United States they probably exist
00:54:48
but they are not mass market
00:54:50
>> I think TPLink is now headquartered in
00:54:52
California
00:54:54
>> they're probably made in Taiwan yeah
00:54:56
>> yeah or Vietnam
00:54:57
>> I forget exactly where a lot of ones I
00:54:58
was finding were made in Vietnam but
00:55:00
still that is just straight up foreign
00:55:01
country that is not the US.
00:55:03
>> What does this do for like IP or um
00:55:06
>> ISPs? That's exactly what I was
00:55:07
thinking. Like what Xfinity My guess
00:55:09
right now is Xfinity uh Verizon probably
00:55:13
have just a boatload of routers in a
00:55:15
warehouse somewhere that they are the
00:55:16
ones sending to you, but like that needs
00:55:18
to update. Well, I also know that
00:55:19
there's sort of a workar around you can
00:55:20
do where like all of the parts are
00:55:22
basically made outside of the US and
00:55:24
then like there was a thing that some
00:55:26
Yeah, there's some the thing that some
00:55:28
companies were doing for a while where
00:55:29
it was like all the parts but one were
00:55:32
already assembled and then they would
00:55:33
ship all the parts and that one part to
00:55:35
United States and they would put it in
00:55:36
the thing and they'd be like made in the
00:55:38
United States.
00:55:39
>> Well, there's like guidelines for made
00:55:41
in the USA or assembled in the USA. Like
00:55:43
there's things that they need to like
00:55:45
more than 60% or
00:55:46
>> Oh, yeah. Like the Trump phone, right?
00:55:47
like the Trump.
00:55:50
No, not even on.
00:55:51
>> Also, with the Ver not Verizon, Xfinity
00:55:53
routers and stuff, does that count?
00:55:55
Because this says consumer.
00:55:57
>> Yeah. How much consumer? So, consumer
00:55:59
they define as uh for residential use
00:56:01
and installed by the customer.
00:56:02
>> Installed by the C. Okay.
00:56:04
>> Any router you can have just shipped to
00:56:06
you and I was going to ask.
00:56:08
>> I mean, maybe that's it's it's a weird
00:56:09
thing where the way they're uh
00:56:10
>> the company's the one buying them in
00:56:12
bulk. So, I don't know if this will like
00:56:13
apply to them, you know? Uh, the fact
00:56:15
that they say consumer grade, I think
00:56:16
it's less of consumer bought and
00:56:18
consumer grade. Again, it's like it's
00:56:20
kind of weird. What they're doing is
00:56:21
either companies can apply for like an
00:56:24
extension to be allowed into the United
00:56:27
States if they're proving that they're
00:56:30
working on creating a manufacturing
00:56:32
aspect in the United States to pass
00:56:34
that.
00:56:35
>> Stupid. We've tried this so many times.
00:56:37
Doesn't work. or like similar to what
00:56:40
DJI does, the company's just not going
00:56:42
to release it in the US for x amount of
00:56:45
time until this either stops or just not
00:56:47
care.
00:56:47
>> Have we seen companies like or like buy
00:56:49
a building like an old manufacturing
00:56:51
plant in the US and then just slap a
00:56:53
label on we're going to for sure make
00:56:55
stuff here. Okay, you're good.
00:56:57
>> They do a big groundbreaking thing in
00:56:59
Arizona and they're like look at all
00:57:00
these jobs and then just leave them
00:57:02
empty. The United States is claiming the
00:57:03
routers were directly implicated in the
00:57:05
Volt Flax and Salt Typhoon cyber attacks
00:57:07
which were a set of cyber attacks a
00:57:09
while ago.
00:57:10
>> Yeah, but I'm confused cuz the Salt
00:57:12
Typhoon ones was about Cisco routers.
00:57:15
>> Okay, so this is the funny thing United
00:57:16
States.
00:57:17
>> Well, just like what like
00:57:19
>> they were Cisco and Nekar routers that
00:57:20
were designed by US companies, but the
00:57:22
reason they were vulnerable is because
00:57:24
the companies stopped providing updates
00:57:26
for them. So they were unupdated
00:57:28
security risk routers which has nothing
00:57:30
to do with who made them. It has to do
00:57:32
with who's continuing the software upd.
00:57:34
So this is like saying
00:57:35
>> who's doing the
00:57:36
>> hey hackers targeted vulnerable things
00:57:38
because they're vulnerable and probably
00:57:40
shouldn't be used or should have been
00:57:41
updated anymore. It has nothing to do
00:57:43
with the fact I I get that there is like
00:57:46
>> foreign countries that maybe were
00:57:47
worried about and stuff like this, but
00:57:49
this feels like a blanket ban that is
00:57:51
not actually helping anything. Uh
00:57:53
>> heavy-handed government intervention in
00:57:55
tech. No.
00:57:57
No,
00:57:58
>> it's Yeah. So, the residential thing I'm
00:58:00
really confused about because I'm also
00:58:01
confused there is if the main thing
00:58:03
we're trying to protect is like
00:58:04
government agencies and government
00:58:06
information stuff like me maybe
00:58:09
government shouldn't be using
00:58:10
residential. That's what the ban should
00:58:12
be. Government should stop using
00:58:14
residential grade routers
00:58:17
and like buildings or the ones made in
00:58:19
these certain companies. But like why do
00:58:21
I need
00:58:22
>> Yeah. or
00:58:23
>> why does that make a difference if I'm
00:58:25
using
00:58:25
>> or have one US company like make a
00:58:27
government grade one or like ad like
00:58:29
change one of the routers to be
00:58:31
government grade ad features.
00:58:33
>> I think in theory the reason it matters
00:58:35
if you have one Andrew is that you are
00:58:37
sort of inherently plugged into your
00:58:39
telecom company's network and like that
00:58:41
is who all of these attacks were against
00:58:43
were like we're getting into telecom
00:58:45
companies networks. I I don't know quite
00:58:47
enough about this whole thing. There's
00:58:49
there's obviously so much more going on
00:58:51
than what we're saying here, but it
00:58:52
still feels like this wild blanket band
00:58:54
that doesn't really
00:58:55
>> No, I agree. And also, watch
00:58:58
>> this is, you know, me predicting the
00:58:59
future, but watch Oracle launch a new
00:59:02
line of US-based routers.
00:59:04
>> Wait. Oh my god, I didn't even think
00:59:06
about that.
00:59:07
>> Yeah. No, no, no. I haven't, this is not
00:59:08
a thing that's happened. I'm just
00:59:09
>> I know, but it will. You know it will.
00:59:12
And they will be called Freedom Router.
00:59:14
>> Yeah.
00:59:15
So the the cyber attacks were also on
00:59:18
like energy transportation and water
00:59:20
infrastructure stuff as well. So it's
00:59:21
not just straight up communicate or just
00:59:23
communications although those were in
00:59:25
there. I also I guess saying the router
00:59:28
was directly implicated. I was like well
00:59:29
yeah it was online it has to go through
00:59:31
a router but it's because those routers
00:59:33
were missing their security updates and
00:59:35
had vulnerabilities which is like
00:59:37
>> yes if things on the internet have
00:59:39
vulnerabilities people are going to
00:59:40
attack them. They shouldn't, but
00:59:42
>> I really don't know enough about this,
00:59:44
but it's always been my understanding
00:59:45
that like, you know, a a big part of
00:59:46
what routers are doing are like
00:59:48
assembling these packets that are going
00:59:49
out over, you know, and so if they're
00:59:51
putting like a router with malware on it
00:59:54
can put
00:59:55
>> stuff in a packet that can make it
00:59:56
pretty deep inside
00:59:58
>> uh a network.
00:59:59
>> Yeah.
01:00:00
>> That is like the most like middle
01:00:01
schooler friendly way I can describe
01:00:04
network communication.
01:00:04
>> That's why Cisco was supposed to prevent
01:00:06
this. That's their whole thing. Yeah.
01:00:08
>> They do B2B. It wasn't him.
01:00:12
>> Is that Is that Cisco?
01:00:13
>> No.
01:00:13
>> What is that? A rapper, too?
01:00:15
>> Damn it.
01:00:16
>> Shaggy.
01:00:16
>> Shaggy. Yeah.
01:00:17
>> That's not the first time you've made
01:00:19
that mistake.
01:00:20
>> Wait, this confuses me because I feel
01:00:22
like if
01:00:25
>> if a company in the US made routers and
01:00:28
those routers were not updated and
01:00:30
weren't patched over time, they would
01:00:32
also be susceptible to these attacks.
01:00:34
Yes.
01:00:34
>> Correct. So, what does this do?
01:00:36
>> I don't know. It's just they're going
01:00:38
after the wrong pro. I don't know. I I
01:00:39
imagine
01:00:40
>> that is a very popular attack by
01:00:41
>> I imagine it is it is all a bunch of
01:00:43
like to just try to they're so
01:00:46
obsessed with stimulating American
01:00:47
manufacturing, but they don't understand
01:00:49
like the amount of work that it requires
01:00:51
to actually build a entire business in
01:00:54
the US making various things like
01:00:57
routers. Like I how often do people buy
01:01:00
routers? You know,
01:01:01
>> once every 5 to 10 years.
01:01:03
>> Most people never buy a router.
01:01:05
>> Yeah. They rent it from their telecom.
01:01:07
>> Mhm. I just I don't know, man.
01:01:08
>> Counter point, David. If you had 1
01:01:10
million Optimus robots, you could make
01:01:11
them for free whenever you wanted.
01:01:14
>> Think about that.
01:01:15
>> Think about that. How much would an
01:01:16
Optimus robot cost me?
01:01:17
>> It costs Well, $0 Optimus robots.
01:01:21
>> How much would it cost me though?
01:01:22
>> I don't think you're allowed to have
01:01:23
one.
01:01:25
>> Then how am I going to get my router?
01:01:27
>> Send the robo taxi for it.
01:01:28
>> I'll just use Starlink.
01:01:29
>> Yeah.
01:01:30
>> So, um, we want to talk about this
01:01:32
because it was kind of hot news in the
01:01:34
journalism world this week. Effectively
01:01:37
you guys probably know Grammarly and
01:01:38
there was also an app called Superhum
01:01:40
and then Grammarly bought Superhum and
01:01:42
now Grammarly is superhuman and
01:01:44
Grammarly is a product of Superhum.
01:01:47
That's your that's your breakdown.
01:01:48
>> Not confusing at all.
01:01:49
>> Not confusing at all. Multiple months
01:01:51
ago, but only discovered fairly
01:01:52
recently. uh people discovered this
01:01:54
feature within Grammarly that
01:01:56
effectively
01:01:58
gives you advice based on various
01:02:00
different writers that are well known in
01:02:03
the writing world or like the tech
01:02:05
writing world or things like that. So if
01:02:07
you were writing an article or you were
01:02:08
writing I don't know anything you're
01:02:10
writing you could say like hey what
01:02:12
would Nei Patel think about this writing
01:02:15
that I'm doing?
01:02:16
>> So funny.
01:02:17
>> Yes.
01:02:18
>> Are you serious?
01:02:19
>> I'm serious. I don't know if it was
01:02:20
necessarily you asked Nei Patel, but it
01:02:22
was like if
01:02:23
>> you asked a question about writing an
01:02:25
article and it would say like, oh, it
01:02:27
was called expert review and something
01:02:28
would come up as an expert is here to
01:02:30
give you an example and that example
01:02:31
would pop up as like
01:02:33
>> I can't believe I'm saying this out loud
01:02:35
but it said Nei Patel and with a
01:02:37
verified check mark like Twitter which
01:02:39
is sitting there for no reason and then
01:02:42
it would say like
01:02:42
>> not verified. They would give some piece
01:02:44
of advice and then to their credit it
01:02:46
would say like this is inspired by
01:02:49
Vergecast hosts and Verge editor-inchief
01:02:52
Nei Patel because of blah blah blah have
01:02:54
a source button and then
01:02:56
>> first of all no one's going to click
01:02:58
that source button
01:02:59
>> that doesn't count. Uh, so yeah, that's
01:03:02
what a a verified check mark Nei Patel
01:03:04
would pop up and say, "Yeah,
01:03:06
>> hey, not just him, a bunch of other
01:03:07
jokes."
01:03:08
>> And it would also do line edits, too.
01:03:09
Like if you had it would like make
01:03:11
suggestions based on your writing. And
01:03:13
um they they were like, "Oh yeah, we
01:03:16
pulled specific like pieces of work from
01:03:18
various different journalists and then
01:03:19
we put it in this AI model and now it
01:03:22
can make suggestions." And it's like
01:03:23
that's just not how this works at all.
01:03:25
Like it's insane. And uh this feature
01:03:27
has been deployed for multiple months,
01:03:29
but people only found it recently. So,
01:03:31
>> well, no, no, it was deployed. It took a
01:03:33
while for people to gone. It's gone now.
01:03:34
They took it away a lot.
01:03:35
>> Yeah, it was found recently by like the
01:03:38
it blew up
01:03:39
>> I think a few month I think last year
01:03:41
>> Grammarly had added this feature late
01:03:43
last year. Um, not a lot of people were
01:03:45
using it. No one really noticed it. And
01:03:47
then recently it kind of popped up in
01:03:48
the media because people started
01:03:50
noticing it and all these people started
01:03:51
writing about it because the people that
01:03:53
were writing about it were the people it
01:03:54
was impersonating effectively. Every
01:03:56
article was like this is impersonating
01:03:59
authors including me. It was kind of
01:04:01
crazy. Um so funny enough has this
01:04:05
podcast called Decoder. He had already
01:04:07
scheduled to have the superhuman/grarly
01:04:10
CEO on like the following week. Um, and
01:04:14
to that guy's credit, he actually did go
01:04:16
on Decoder to talk to Nei about it, and
01:04:18
the interview was very tense
01:04:20
>> from the get- go.
01:04:21
>> From the get-go.
01:04:22
>> From the start. Yeah.
01:04:23
>> Um, and so it became this whole kind of
01:04:26
argument about what is attribution
01:04:28
versus what is just stealing and using
01:04:31
someone's likeness. Uh, and the CEO
01:04:34
really just defends the idea that it's
01:04:35
attribution. He talks about, oh, there's
01:04:37
a link that you can go to and it clearly
01:04:39
says that, oh, this is inspired by this
01:04:42
person, but like it had the check mark.
01:04:44
>> The check mark is
01:04:45
>> the check mark. The check mark is
01:04:47
>> you can't defend it when you do because
01:04:49
the check everyone knows what the check
01:04:50
mark means in every other context. It
01:04:52
means this is verified from this person,
01:04:54
right?
01:04:54
>> If it's on social media, the check mark
01:04:56
means this is definitely the person you
01:04:57
think it is.
01:04:58
>> Theoretically, why do they put a check
01:05:00
mark here? They put a check mark here to
01:05:02
convince you that this is legit and this
01:05:04
is definitely like they're not trying to
01:05:06
necessarily convince you that this is
01:05:09
actually the human editing your work,
01:05:12
>> but they get about as close to that as
01:05:13
possible and it's definitely
01:05:15
impersonation.
01:05:16
>> You can't convince me otherwise that
01:05:17
it's not attempting to trick a person
01:05:20
into thinking this for real. I don't
01:05:21
care what he said in that interview. I
01:05:23
know it says at the like under that
01:05:25
inspired by, but to put the check mark
01:05:27
in is just straight up lying.
01:05:29
>> Yeah. Yeah. There was a class there is a
01:05:31
class action action lawsuit going on
01:05:34
which is I think why the CEO couldn't
01:05:36
really say a lot because then it could
01:05:38
be used against him in court and it's
01:05:40
insane to me that he would even do the
01:05:42
interview when he knows Neili is very
01:05:43
combative about these kind of things.
01:05:45
>> Yeah.
01:05:46
>> Well then if he doesn't go on the
01:05:47
interview then the article is about how
01:05:48
he pulled out of the interview.
01:05:49
>> Yeah. It looks even worse.
01:05:50
>> So it's either do you get that or I
01:05:52
don't think that looks worse.
01:05:53
>> He made himself look worse in that
01:05:55
interview for sure.
01:05:56
>> Yeah. He made himself look better. We
01:05:58
definitely recommend that you go listen
01:05:59
to this or watch it. Um, it's both on
01:06:01
their podcast feed.
01:06:02
>> Watch it.
01:06:03
>> Watch it. Yeah.
01:06:03
>> Seeing facial expressions and it is well
01:06:05
worth it. Also, the CEO's whatever
01:06:08
laptop he's using should be blown up
01:06:10
because the wobble of the screen as he's
01:06:14
talking, you're just watching him the
01:06:15
whole time. Andrew,
01:06:17
>> if you watch
01:06:19
screen, it looks like he's in the middle
01:06:20
of an earthquake. It's It's wild.
01:06:23
>> Yeah. This though, this really reminds
01:06:25
me of when we had these conversations
01:06:27
about these AI image generators and
01:06:28
video generators where if you would just
01:06:30
put in like tech reviewer like Marquez
01:06:32
would just show up, you know, it reminds
01:06:34
me of the whole like who's in this
01:06:36
training data? How are they stealing it?
01:06:38
>> Didn't they do that recently?
01:06:39
>> It was a long time ago. Sora
01:06:42
>> Well, there was Sora, but there was also
01:06:44
like Gemini. There was uh Yeah.
01:06:46
>> Yeah. There was early ChatGBT stuff.
01:06:48
>> There was something a few weeks ago
01:06:49
where I literally put in like a tech
01:06:51
reviewer and it just popped out.
01:06:52
Marquez. Yeah, when we were out South by
01:06:54
Southwest, I said I said add a tech
01:06:56
reviewer to this photo and it just added
01:06:58
Marquez and it said but it did say I've
01:07:00
added MKBHD.
01:07:02
>> Oh my god.
01:07:03
>> Which that's a whole that's the same
01:07:05
thing. It's like likeness versus
01:07:07
>> the weird thing about this is Nei was
01:07:10
looking at so the reason that the
01:07:11
interview is so good is because like
01:07:13
there's personal stakes here. Like it's
01:07:15
literally
01:07:16
>> impersonating Nei. So he's the one
01:07:18
interviewing which makes it much more
01:07:19
intense. But like
01:07:21
>> what the suggestion it wrote says it's
01:07:23
from like using his body of work at the
01:07:25
Verge and Verge cast. He's like I would
01:07:27
never say anything like this. I've never
01:07:29
said anything ever like this. So it just
01:07:32
feels like straight up lying.
01:07:34
>> To the credit of the CEO, he said like
01:07:36
this didn't work out really well. How
01:07:38
are we supposed to get into the mind of
01:07:40
an editor by only using their the final
01:07:43
published works?
01:07:44
>> Great question. I know. Exactly. You
01:07:47
cannot. And that's what they killed it,
01:07:48
which I'm glad they got rid of it. But
01:07:50
just that's just impersonation and lying
01:07:54
at that point. Who's to say that
01:07:56
couldn't have just been like an AI
01:07:58
software where Marquez Marquez Brownley
01:08:01
pops up verified check mark and says a
01:08:03
piece of advice that Marquez doesn't
01:08:05
believe in at all. Windows is the best
01:08:07
the best editing for 8K videos. Like I
01:08:10
love my Windows laptop. And then all it
01:08:12
has to say is inspired by Marquez
01:08:14
Brownley's body of work for he's an
01:08:16
eight 20 million tech reviewer blah blah
01:08:18
blah source.
01:08:20
>> It's all it's
01:08:23
trust me bro.
01:08:24
>> It's very trust me bro. and also using
01:08:26
the likeness of someone else to prove
01:08:28
credibility. And yeah,
01:08:29
>> I don't see how Yeah, I don't see how
01:08:30
you ship this feature and not think it's
01:08:32
going to blow up in your face because in
01:08:33
the best case version of this feature,
01:08:35
it's like, wow, we're going to have
01:08:36
testimonials of people going like, I
01:08:38
love this product because it lets me get
01:08:41
my work checked by these professionals.
01:08:44
And the professionals going,
01:08:45
>> no,
01:08:46
>> obviously I would not. That's like not
01:08:48
what I would have done. He said the
01:08:50
reason this the small team he kept
01:08:52
saying small team because he kept saying
01:08:53
he wants not throw that many people
01:08:54
under the bus which he should be under
01:08:56
the bus because he ultimately approves
01:08:58
it as CEO. But like if you are he keeps
01:09:02
saying you as the person like you might
01:09:04
want like Grammarly is supposed to be
01:09:07
your uh your language arts teacher
01:09:09
sitting right there and helping you make
01:09:10
decisions. So he's like this is a
01:09:12
version where some experts you really
01:09:13
respect might be right there helping you
01:09:15
make corrections into something.
01:09:17
>> I was like but I wouldn't make those. I
01:09:18
wouldn't make those and I'm not there.
01:09:19
It's like, yeah, the reason we like all
01:09:21
these people is the like personal
01:09:22
connection we have to them personally. I
01:09:24
don't want an
01:09:25
>> AI just pretending they're them. It's
01:09:28
this is bas you're getting catfish.
01:09:30
>> Yeah, for sure. Yeah.
01:09:31
>> I mean, Neil even said his line edits
01:09:33
are usually just like feels messy and
01:09:35
that's the whole thing. You know,
01:09:37
>> anyone who's ever had an editor knows
01:09:38
that it's not very coherent thought.
01:09:40
>> No, back. It's just a lot of back and
01:09:42
forth. I can't wait until Final Cut adds
01:09:45
a Marquez editor and then like I make a
01:09:47
J cut and it's like great job Marquez
01:09:48
would have done this too.
01:09:50
>> Yeah, just that that feels bad.
01:09:52
>> It could happen.
01:09:53
>> I think Grammarly took the wrong route
01:09:55
with this product. I think instead of
01:09:56
like people like obviously Nei great
01:09:59
writer, people love his writing, but I
01:10:01
think they should have gone with people
01:10:02
who are known for being unbelievably
01:10:05
opinionated writers and just force like
01:10:07
I want to be writing an email to like
01:10:09
Marquez about our health insurance plan
01:10:11
or something like that. And then
01:10:13
Grammarly's like and then a little AI
01:10:15
Slavage Ziz, the Slovenian philosopher
01:10:17
pops up and is like, "But what does this
01:10:18
email have to do with the struggle of
01:10:20
the self?"
01:10:21
>> And I'm like,
01:10:22
>> I'd like that.
01:10:22
>> Yes, distract me. Susan Santag comes up
01:10:24
and he's like, "Where are the mentions
01:10:25
of gender?" You know, he Hector Beerios
01:10:28
pops up and is like, "Ellis, you
01:10:29
mentioned nothing about Beethoven's
01:10:31
terrible use of the French horn."
01:10:33
>> Yeah, that's that's fair. I think Clippy
01:10:35
could have done any of that. Clippy
01:10:37
could have done that.
01:10:38
>> Clippy could have done all of that.
01:10:39
>> That's what you stop Yeah. Stop
01:10:40
replicating actual people and giving
01:10:43
them that attribution is such a bull
01:10:45
argument.
01:10:46
>> Yeah. Free advice to any CEO. If you run
01:10:48
a company that does any sort of AI
01:10:50
product and your goal is to have it
01:10:52
replace people in any way,
01:10:54
>> think a little harder about how you
01:10:56
think that's going to go.
01:10:57
>> Yeah.
01:10:58
>> Just a little harder. Just hire funny
01:11:00
guys.
01:11:01
>> Take some accountability. All of them
01:11:03
just seem to be like, "Oh, well, if the
01:11:05
models were using like pull up the work
01:11:08
of blah blah blah and they're going to
01:11:09
use that, then that's what the models
01:11:11
are going to do." Shut the up,
01:11:13
dude. Are you serious?
01:11:15
>> Yeah. I mean, every pretty much every AI
01:11:17
CEO makes the argument that this is not
01:11:20
this is just an average of like a bunch
01:11:22
of stuff. So, it's not copying
01:11:24
everything. It's just making new content
01:11:26
based on like a every every AI CEO is
01:11:28
like, well, you could have read all of
01:11:30
Neili's writing and then edited like
01:11:32
him. And it's like, no, you can't.
01:11:34
That's not how this works. That's not
01:11:35
how any of
01:11:36
>> learning. And also like it sounds like
01:11:38
it's so funny that the one art example
01:11:40
they're arguing over the whole time is a
01:11:42
bad like just straight up didn't work in
01:11:44
the voice at all
01:11:45
>> which makes it look even worse.
01:11:46
>> I think the flaw with that logic would
01:11:48
be thinking that all of Nei's thoughts
01:11:50
and and experience that he's ever had
01:11:52
exists in a training data set.
01:11:54
>> Yeah.
01:11:54
>> Which as a human with their own thoughts
01:11:57
and experiences that they have not
01:11:59
submitted to a training data set. No. I
01:12:02
mean ultimately that's what people in
01:12:04
Silicon Valley generally think like they
01:12:06
think that you can model everything.
01:12:08
They think that with enough information,
01:12:10
with enough data, with enough training,
01:12:12
you can simulate everything, you know,
01:12:14
and so they're like maybe you can, but
01:12:17
we're not even close to that yet.
01:12:18
>> Yeah. That's that's probably why this
01:12:20
interview is so good because it's one of
01:12:21
the people who you think you're you have
01:12:23
enough data from, and it's like, no, you
01:12:25
just don't have enough data, and
01:12:27
frankly, I don't want you to have enough
01:12:29
data to simulate who I am,
01:12:30
>> right? Yeah, cuz you're not paying
01:12:31
>> because the data that Nei's brain was
01:12:33
trained on are things like his
01:12:35
childhood. Like things that you can't
01:12:37
like
01:12:39
>> you can't do that, bro. It doesn't work.
01:12:41
>> Yeah, exactly. So, until you put it in a
01:12:43
vat.
01:12:44
>> No,
01:12:45
>> go listen to the interview. It's
01:12:47
fantastic.
01:12:47
>> Watch the interview.
01:12:48
>> Watch
01:12:50
sickness. Yeah.
01:12:51
>> Part of the Vox Media podcast network.
01:12:53
>> VMP, maybe. Okay. Well, I think we're
01:12:57
take it to one more ad break. Um, but
01:12:59
>> and then I'm going to yap about a mouse
01:13:01
again afterwards.
01:13:01
>> That's right. We love mice.
01:13:03
>> Yes,
01:13:04
>> we love mice. We love Ellis yapping
01:13:06
about speakers.
01:13:07
>> To the one person that has read Hector
01:13:10
Barios's treatise on orchestration other
01:13:13
than me.
01:13:14
>> I hope you enjoyed my little reference.
01:13:16
>> He's famous. I'm sure a lot of people
01:13:17
did.
01:13:18
>> I don't know who that is.
01:13:18
>> Alice, I agree with everything you say
01:13:20
and love everything you say about audio
01:13:21
and I've never interrupted you once
01:13:23
about It's this part of it's it's this
01:13:26
composer who wrote a book about how to
01:13:27
write for all the instruments a long
01:13:29
time ago and he was really angry and
01:13:31
there's this whole passage in the French
01:13:33
horn section where instead of talking
01:13:34
about how to write for French horn he
01:13:36
just goes into this giant beef with
01:13:38
Beethoven and he's like that guy
01:13:39
Beethoven sucked at French horn. He was
01:13:41
a coward on the French horn. It's very
01:13:43
fun to read.
01:13:44
>> Oh wait.
01:13:45
>> Oh sorry I did not. That was a
01:13:47
soundboard. That was not me.
01:13:48
>> Sorry Ellis. I forgot you were talking.
01:13:50
What? What were we talking?
01:13:53
>> No, that's interesting.
01:13:54
>> I did that to Andrew in the in the
01:13:56
weekly meeting yesterday where he said
01:13:58
something and then immediately I was
01:13:59
like, "But what about this thing that
01:14:01
Andrew just said?" And then I had to DM
01:14:02
him and say, "I'm sorry. Did you say
01:14:04
something?"
01:14:08
>> Karma. That was karma. That's karma.
01:14:10
>> Karmic retribution. Okay, next question.
01:14:12
Well, next question. Question number
01:14:13
two.
01:14:13
>> Yeah.
01:14:14
>> Mhm.
01:14:14
>> What year?
01:14:16
>> And we're doing this without going over.
01:14:18
>> Oh,
01:14:19
>> yeah. What year did Apple release Apple
01:14:22
Maps?
01:14:23
>> Oh.
01:14:24
>> Oh.
01:14:25
>> Oh.
01:14:26
>> Have access to the dock.
01:14:28
>> Wait, don't look. Don't look. I want you
01:14:29
to guess, too.
01:14:30
>> Was that that was the year that people
01:14:31
were driving into the the lakes, right?
01:14:34
>> I know the
01:14:35
>> I remember how poorly the launch went.
01:14:38
>> I got to remember the year. Okay.
01:14:40
>> There's a joke in a WWDC announcement.
01:14:42
>> Yeah,
01:14:42
>> it was a dubdub announcement.
01:14:44
>> I'm pretty sure
01:14:44
>> in Silicon Valley the show, they're
01:14:46
doing like a control group and they're
01:14:47
like, "Oh, this is bad." bad and he
01:14:48
goes, "How bad?" Apple Maps bad.
01:14:53
>> Sick. That is the bar.
01:14:54
>> One more mouse thing to talk about.
01:14:57
>> I'll make it quick.
01:14:58
>> I won't.
01:14:58
>> We'll be right back.
01:15:08
>> Support for the show comes from Zapier.
01:15:10
So, when it comes to incorporating AI
01:15:12
into your workflows, there's a lot to
01:15:14
consider and lots of trend chasing. But
01:15:16
actually making it happen starts with
01:15:17
the right tools like Zapier. Zapier is
01:15:20
how you break the hype cycle and put AI
01:15:21
to work across your company for real. It
01:15:24
can help you actually deliver on your AI
01:15:25
strategy, not just talking about doing
01:15:27
it. Their AI orchestration platform
01:15:29
allows you to bring the power of AI to
01:15:31
any workflow so you can do more of what
01:15:33
matters. You can connect top AI models
01:15:35
like CHBT and Claude to whatever tools
01:15:37
your team already uses so you can
01:15:39
incorporate AI exactly where you need
01:15:41
it. That could be workflows, an
01:15:43
autonomous agent, a customer chatbot, or
01:15:45
whatever else. You can orchestrate it
01:15:46
all with Zapier, letting you do more
01:15:48
with the rest of your time. And it's for
01:15:50
everyone, tech expert or not. According
01:15:52
to data from Zapier, teams have already
01:15:53
automated over 300 million AI tasks
01:15:56
using the platform. So join the millions
01:15:58
of businesses transforming how they work
01:15:59
with Zapier and AI. Get started for free
01:16:02
by visiting zapier.com/wave.
01:16:04
That's zap i.com/wave.
01:16:09
All right, welcome back to Andrew's
01:16:10
Mouse Corner again. I kind of wanted
01:16:13
both of these the same week, but then I
01:16:15
kind of thought this one was never
01:16:16
coming in and then it came in after we
01:16:17
did the Pwnage Sim 3 last week.
01:16:19
>> You got to order one for next week now
01:16:21
so you keep it going.
01:16:21
>> That will never happen. Um, this
01:16:23
>> you just order a Cyborg Rat 7.
01:16:25
>> There's If you order the Cyborg Rat 7,
01:16:27
I'll do a review on the podcast next
01:16:29
week.
01:16:29
>> Okay,
01:16:30
>> I will smash that thing by the end. Um,
01:16:33
this is the Logitech Pro X2 Super
01:16:36
Strike. Not a great name, but
01:16:39
>> words.
01:16:39
>> The uh this is kind of like the most
01:16:41
hype mouse in the the scene right now
01:16:44
for a couple of reasons. One, Logitech G
01:16:46
Pro has been kind of like the de facto
01:16:49
tried and trueue gaming mouse for years
01:16:51
at this point. I think there you could
01:16:53
look at like Valerant or Counterstrike
01:16:56
stats of how many people use a specific
01:16:58
mouse and I think the Gro is top of the
01:17:00
list every single time. Um, but so this
01:17:03
is the exact same form factor, but
01:17:05
Logitech finally decided to do something
01:17:07
kind of cool because they've been kind
01:17:08
of boring for a while. Um, this mouse
01:17:11
>> on its uh the exterior is just
01:17:14
everything you'd kind of expect expect.
01:17:16
It's not too uh flashy. It's it's
01:17:18
nothing like really bad. It's nothing
01:17:20
really good. It's just a good form
01:17:22
factor, two buttons, symmetrical. It's
01:17:24
it's everything you would want. Um, but
01:17:27
this one is doing something a little
01:17:28
different. This actually has no
01:17:30
switches. Not mechanical or options.
01:17:33
There are no switches. This is
01:17:35
>> fully haptic.
01:17:36
>> What?
01:17:37
>> Similar to like
01:17:38
>> Hall effect.
01:17:38
>> No, it's not Hall effect. It's haptic.
01:17:40
Those are optical switches.
01:17:42
>> Um,
01:17:42
>> it's like your MacBook trackpad how it
01:17:45
is essentially a fake click.
01:17:47
>> Um, and the reason I want to bring it on
01:17:49
to this is because I can get reactions
01:17:50
from all of you because the easiest way
01:17:52
to test what this feels like is I will
01:17:54
hand this to you.
01:17:55
>> Okay. Uh,
01:17:56
>> and I want you to click the buttons. You
01:17:58
can even do them in the microphone.
01:18:00
Click the buttons right now. What do
01:18:01
they feel like?
01:18:02
>> Mush.
01:18:03
>> Like broken, right?
01:18:04
>> They do move.
01:18:05
>> They do move,
01:18:06
>> but uh it feels like I'm not actuating.
01:18:09
>> Sure. Now the switch on the bottom. Flip
01:18:11
that on. And now start clicking.
01:18:17
>> The sound is not fantastic, but
01:18:18
>> the sound's not great, but there is a
01:18:22
>> Yeah,
01:18:22
>> there's a pretty convincing Yeah. Click.
01:18:24
>> I'll let David try this. Now, this is
01:18:26
off. Would you say that you just want to
01:18:27
click? You just You just want to click.
01:18:30
>> Subscribe.
01:18:31
>> Subscribe. Yeah, that feels mushy.
01:18:33
>> It feels broken, right?
01:18:34
>> Yeah, it feels broken. Does the honor
01:18:36
>> now? Flip it on. Yeah.
01:18:40
>> Yeah.
01:18:40
>> This is amazing audio.
01:18:42
>> It's great for audio listeners. I mean,
01:18:44
we're getting
01:18:44
>> Oh, yeah. Okay. So, it goes from feeling
01:18:46
like broken to like there's something
01:18:48
there. There's still a lot of actuation.
01:18:50
>> I agree with you. I'm not like full
01:18:52
Well, so that's one thing
01:18:53
>> that's higher than I would like. That's
01:18:54
something that now we can do with this
01:18:56
mouse is we can change a couple
01:18:58
different things. We can change
01:18:59
actuation force. We can change uh
01:19:02
essentially like the clickiness of it.
01:19:04
And you can change what it's calling
01:19:07
rapid trigger, which is essentially was
01:19:09
really popular on keyboards a couple
01:19:10
years ago. Stuff like snap tap where not
01:19:13
only uh
01:19:16
>> it got worked in in certain things like
01:19:18
it it could do things that programs
01:19:20
would make it think was possibly
01:19:22
cheating because essentially what it's
01:19:23
doing is if you have an actuation
01:19:25
uh length going down until the buttons
01:19:28
actuated. Essentially what you could do
01:19:29
is the lift off to reset that could be
01:19:33
very very small.
01:19:34
>> You can you can make it really small. So
01:19:36
a way this can be really beneficial is
01:19:38
if you're in a game where let's say you
01:19:41
have a gun that's semi-automatic.
01:19:43
>> So each click is one shot. If you can if
01:19:47
that gun is really strong but the the
01:19:48
like weakness of it is a semi-automatic
01:19:50
but now you can make your actuation
01:19:52
really small and your reset activation
01:19:54
really short as well. You can just and
01:19:56
it feels like an automatic gun. That
01:19:57
would hurt my finger.
01:19:58
>> That's pretty sick that you can get
01:19:59
that.
01:20:00
>> And so right now I have the right the
01:20:03
left click as a five in your haptics
01:20:07
>> out of five.
01:20:08
>> Five out of five. And the right is on
01:20:10
one. So if you click these now,
01:20:13
>> it's not a big difference, but you there
01:20:15
are five levels of activation in per
01:20:17
button. Buttons can be different as
01:20:19
well.
01:20:20
>> Um
01:20:21
>> it's just this is kind of a cool thing
01:20:23
in the mouse world. I guess this is
01:20:26
brand new. This is within a month.
01:20:28
>> Okay.
01:20:28
>> Um I don't know if you want to try left
01:20:30
versus right. Like I said, this isn't
01:20:33
like the craziest thing, but like
01:20:35
>> the ability to have this in a mouse is
01:20:38
such a smaller version of where you can
01:20:40
put this in versus a keyboard where you
01:20:42
have full PCBs and individual switches
01:20:44
and everything.
01:20:45
>> Um so I thought this was kind of cool. I
01:20:47
don't have much to say about it. Uh
01:20:50
>> how much is it?
01:20:51
>> Uh $180. There is one other cool thing
01:20:54
which is super niche which is a lot of
01:20:57
people when they're doing something
01:20:58
called bunny hopping in in first-person
01:20:59
shooters is they actually change their
01:21:01
jump button from the space bar to the
01:21:03
wheel so that you can just bunny hopping
01:21:05
is when you jump and you hit the jump
01:21:07
like the second you hit the ground which
01:21:09
carries momentum in a lot of games which
01:21:11
lets you move faster. So when people do
01:21:12
it on the wheel, it makes it so you're
01:21:15
always hitting the jump as you land
01:21:17
because you're not just pressing space
01:21:18
one time. You're scrolling through it,
01:21:20
which is like 10 jumps at a time, right?
01:21:22
>> You can just scroll.
01:21:23
>> You can just scroll to be your jump. So
01:21:24
that's how people will make sure that
01:21:25
their jump is always landing at the
01:21:27
perfect point. This has a bunny hop
01:21:29
mode. So like it makes it really bad
01:21:32
sensitive.
01:21:33
>> What?
01:21:33
>> I know I wasn't bad at FPS. I just don't
01:21:35
have
01:21:35
>> Yeah, you just weren't bunny hopping
01:21:37
correctly. equipment. Uh, it has a thing
01:21:39
so you can't accidentally scroll the
01:21:40
scroll wheel when you're clicking
01:21:41
buttons, which can happen sometimes
01:21:43
because if you jump when you're trying
01:21:44
to fire, you completely screw up recoil
01:21:46
and everything. Um, but yeah, there's
01:21:48
not much to this. I will say since this
01:21:51
is a totally new technology in a thing
01:21:53
that you press thousands of times in a
01:21:56
life cycle very quickly. I would
01:21:58
probably wait till like
01:21:59
>> is it that people are using this for a
01:22:01
while?
01:22:01
>> We have haptic touch like trackpads like
01:22:03
you mentioned. So, there's a motor in
01:22:04
there and then there's the sort of
01:22:06
attachment to the moving piece.
01:22:09
Theoretically, that's similar tech to
01:22:11
the trackpad. Like, that should last a
01:22:13
long time.
01:22:14
>> Think about how often you click on your
01:22:15
trackpad versus how often you might
01:22:17
click in like one game of Counter.
01:22:19
>> Dude, that's fair. Yeah.
01:22:21
The
01:22:21
>> amount of Dota. Dota is literally all
01:22:23
movement is based on clicking. It's
01:22:25
probably
01:22:26
>> You're right.
01:22:27
>> 500 to a,000 clicks like a game.
01:22:29
>> Probably more. It might be more where
01:22:31
like you do that on this trackpad like
01:22:33
>> Dota is like an hour long an hour long
01:22:35
game and to move you have to be like
01:22:39
>> interesting.
01:22:40
>> My computer is going crazy with this
01:22:42
right now. But uh yeah,
01:22:43
>> I want to do a land actually play Dota
01:22:46
and Valerant and all that stuff. Such
01:22:49
dog at Valerant now. But
01:22:50
>> I don't know how anyone gets into Dota.
01:22:52
It's like the most complicated.
01:22:54
>> I don't know. I say these games I know
01:22:56
nothing about them. I'll play with you
01:22:58
one day. We'll play. Let's play.
01:23:00
>> Let's play Valerant. Let's play a Let's
01:23:02
Play. Let's play. Let's play studio
01:23:04
stream.
01:23:06
>> Um, yeah. I'm Guardian 5, which is the
01:23:08
second lowest tier,
01:23:10
>> and I have 4,800 hours in it.
01:23:13
>> Well, Marquez just bought his rat mouse,
01:23:15
so
01:23:16
>> you bought the mouse?
01:23:17
>> No, I should. I really want to, though.
01:23:19
>> If I had the RA, I'd be better at Dota,
01:23:21
though.
01:23:22
>> I bet you that mouse How much does that
01:23:23
mouse weigh? This is 60 g.
01:23:26
>> It can weigh as much as you want.
01:23:27
>> Yeah, it's customizable. It's I remember
01:23:29
the days of adding weights where now
01:23:31
everyone is like, I need to shave grams
01:23:34
off of my mouse. If this thing is over
01:23:36
35 gram, I ain't touching it.
01:23:38
>> It could weigh up to 157.
01:23:41
>> That's like
01:23:42
>> having a mouse with progressive overload
01:23:43
is crazy.
01:23:44
>> It's like it's weight training.
01:23:46
>> It's modular, baby.
01:23:47
>> So, um the AI overview, which is almost
01:23:49
definitely wrong, but it says that one
01:23:52
game of Dota can be between 5,000 to
01:23:54
10,000 clicks.
01:23:56
>> That seems insane. Yeah,
01:23:58
>> that's why to be fair, this is something
01:24:00
where like gaming really loves to do the
01:24:02
and we've seen this with frame rates and
01:24:04
graphics cards and everything is like
01:24:06
you need this to be better, but it's
01:24:07
like the point top five% might find like
01:24:11
a huge difference in this. I do think
01:24:12
this will be more interesting than like
01:24:15
snap tap cuz counter strafing is
01:24:17
something that is really hard to do. But
01:24:18
in games where just like a
01:24:19
semi-automatic rifle might need to fire
01:24:21
faster, you can do that so easily on a
01:24:24
mouse like this. Uh, I need to go home
01:24:27
and actually try it. But now I have two
01:24:28
mice to try and No time to try them.
01:24:31
>> Three.
01:24:31
>> So, I'm just going to start playing
01:24:32
games at work.
01:24:33
>> Yeah, it's James Bond. No time to try.
01:24:36
>> Um, can I also make a quick
01:24:38
announcement?
01:24:38
>> Sure.
01:24:40
>> Street Manifesto.
01:24:41
>> Oh my god.
01:24:42
>> This band.
01:24:42
>> All right. Trivia.
01:24:44
>> I've been waiting. Their album still
01:24:46
didn't come out. Okay,
01:24:47
>> that's the announcement.
01:24:48
>> Mhm.
01:24:49
>> There's Okay. They announced the show in
01:24:52
June.
01:24:53
>> That's the announcement. But in
01:24:54
December, they said that there wouldn't
01:24:56
be another show until the album comes
01:24:58
out, which was last June was when the
01:25:00
album was supposed to come out. So, so
01:25:03
is the Tesla roster going to come out?
01:25:05
>> Siri 2.0 or Street Manifesto first?
01:25:11
>> That's a good question. Probably at the
01:25:12
same time. Someone was joking on the
01:25:14
Streetlight subreddit that the reason it
01:25:15
hasn't come out was because uh their
01:25:17
music is gonna be in GTA 6's uh like the
01:25:21
radio station. So, they're just delaying
01:25:24
it alongside GTA. Anyway, I just had to
01:25:26
tell you guys that
01:25:28
>> for my like two fans out there that care
01:25:29
about this.
01:25:30
>> I know there's at least two though
01:25:32
because Ellis told me that at South by
01:25:33
Southwest somebody said that her husband
01:25:36
cared about Street Light.
01:25:37
>> She know she was like she was like, "My
01:25:38
husband's a huge fan of the podcast.
01:25:40
Like, I'm so sorry. Like I've never seen
01:25:42
an episode. I don't really know anything
01:25:43
about it, but I do know that
01:25:47
someone on the podcast is like a fan of
01:25:49
this really small band I'm really really
01:25:51
into. And I was like, "It's Streetlight
01:25:52
Manifesto and David, isn't it?" She was
01:25:54
like, "Yeah."
01:25:55
>> So, thank you. Now we can do trivia.
01:25:59
>> Can I tell you guys a funny AI overview
01:26:01
thing that happened to me a little bit
01:26:02
ago?
01:26:02
>> Yeah.
01:26:03
>> Um, I was trying to Google the English
01:26:06
translation. I was trying to see if
01:26:07
there was an English translation of this
01:26:09
book that's like a collection of
01:26:10
folklore that I really wanted to read.
01:26:12
And so I searched English and then the
01:26:15
name of the book
01:26:16
>> and um it's like a collection of these
01:26:18
stories and
01:26:20
>> AI overview mixed up the ISBN which is
01:26:24
like the sort of the book registration
01:26:25
number with the number of stories in it.
01:26:27
So it said the Mabanagion is a
01:26:29
collection of 111125239255811137281023
01:26:38
3818912
01:26:40
321154
01:26:42
medieval Welsh pros tales. I don't know
01:26:45
what that number is. Uh but I guarantee
01:26:48
you there is not that much of anything
01:26:50
in anywhere.
01:26:50
>> That's almost as long as the
01:26:51
simmerelion.
01:26:52
>> No, there's way more.
01:26:53
>> I had a huge fight with uh
01:26:56
>> AI overview. Well, it was like Google
01:26:58
Lens search and then the AI like trying
01:27:00
to I was trying to find a keycap that
01:27:02
was on the uh mech keyboard subreddit
01:27:06
and I said, "What is this?" And it like
01:27:09
kept bringing me it's saying, "Oh, it's
01:27:10
this and this model from this artist and
01:27:13
it's on this website." I'm like, "I
01:27:14
can't find it on the website. Are you
01:27:15
sure?" "Oh, just kidding. It was
01:27:16
actually this one." For so long and then
01:27:18
I kept going like absolutely right.
01:27:19
>> It just kept saying, "It's definitely
01:27:20
from this." I said, "What p? Show me
01:27:22
link. Just send me a link. Only give me
01:27:25
the link. Don't say anything else." and
01:27:26
just never got it. And then I just
01:27:27
replied on the subreddit and in like
01:27:29
five minutes he answered what it was
01:27:30
from and I was like,
01:27:32
>> I hate AI.
01:27:34
Talking to humans is better than talking
01:27:36
to a
01:27:37
>> Did it just send you this picture over
01:27:39
and over again?
01:27:40
>> A key. A key on a baseball cap.
01:27:43
>> Keycap.
01:27:44
>> That's a fire hat. Holy.
01:27:46
>> Well, you should buy that.
01:27:47
>> I should definitely buy this.
01:27:49
>> How many Wikipedia pages are there
01:27:51
called
01:27:51
>> I hate photos so much
01:27:53
>> TV?
01:27:54
>> And I'm looking for Delta. You can go
01:27:55
over
01:27:56
>> Delta
01:27:59
Airlines.
01:28:01
>> Do you know why it's called Delta
01:28:02
Airlines?
01:28:03
>> Because
01:28:04
>> Because it changes what place you're in.
01:28:06
>> Yeah, that's
01:28:07
>> I made that up. That's not true.
01:28:09
>> True.
01:28:09
>> No, it almost is definitely because of
01:28:12
>> prices, right? Airlines.
01:28:13
>> Delta.
01:28:13
>> I was going to say Delta wings, but
01:28:15
jetliners don't use Delta wings. So,
01:28:16
>> Delta Christ.
01:28:17
>> I don't
01:28:18
>> I think it's actually just changing
01:28:19
where you are. Let's just change my
01:28:20
mind.
01:28:20
>> He was actually uh on the Deltitarian
01:28:23
diet and just came back from it.
01:28:25
>> He was eating only triangles. Allegedly,
01:28:27
it is named after the Mississippi Delta.
01:28:29
Guys, how many Wikipedia pages whoever
01:28:32
you get closest to
01:28:34
>> mouth of the river?
01:28:35
>> I said six.
01:28:37
>> Six is incorrect.
01:28:38
>> Okay. I said seven.
01:28:39
>> That is also incorrect.
01:28:40
>> I said seven.
01:28:41
>> That is third incorrect. But Marquez was
01:28:44
closest. There are three.
01:28:46
>> Oh,
01:28:46
>> there is kind of a trick question. There
01:28:48
is the page for the Apple TV hardware
01:28:50
device,
01:28:51
>> the Apple TV streaming service,
01:28:54
>> and the Apple TV app, which you can get
01:28:56
on other
01:28:57
>> devices. These are dedicated pages. I
01:28:58
>> thought there be more than one for the
01:29:00
hardware devices.
01:29:01
>> There are three things 2024,
01:29:03
>> but there's not separate pages. There's
01:29:04
just one page that details all of them.
01:29:06
>> No, these are three separate Wikipedia
01:29:07
pages.
01:29:08
>> Well, I know those are I'm talking about
01:29:09
the hardware.
01:29:10
>> Ah, yes. No, three point though.
01:29:13
>> Apple TV, Wikipedia.
01:29:14
>> Okay, needs the point, so I'll give it
01:29:15
to him. Not a single TV made by Apple.
01:29:19
>> I'm now going to hand it off to Adam for
01:29:22
a quick update on that score.
01:29:23
>> Anna de Montana.
01:29:25
>> Marquez with 19.
01:29:26
>> We got a point.
01:29:27
>> Andrew with 19. David way in the lead.
01:29:30
23.
01:29:31
>> Jesus.
01:29:32
>> Yeah. Next question. What
01:29:35
>> really got out of hand.
01:29:36
>> Did Apple release Apple Maps?
01:29:38
>> What year?
01:29:40
>> Yeah. Closest without going over.
01:29:41
>> Too high.
01:29:42
>> Yep.
01:29:42
>> Jesus Christ.
01:29:43
>> Yeah.
01:29:45
I think is this. But let me think. So
01:29:49
dubdub. Let's see. I don't know.
01:29:52
Probably was farther.
01:29:54
Without going too high.
01:29:57
>> Indeed. Without going too high.
01:29:59
>> Dang.
01:30:02
I'll try it.
01:30:04
>> And flip them and read. What do you guys
01:30:06
got?
01:30:06
>> Oh, Jesus. Oh, wow. We all
01:30:09
>> I'm just going to say all of you are
01:30:10
wrong, but tell me what your answers
01:30:12
are.
01:30:12
>> Uh, I wrote 2017. Nope.
01:30:16
>> I wrote 2014.
01:30:17
>> Nope.
01:30:18
>> 2010.
01:30:19
>> Nope. But Andrew gets the point
01:30:20
>> cuz I didn't go over, baby. Let's go.
01:30:22
>> It was 2012.
01:30:24
>> Oh,
01:30:25
>> that's my first point.
01:30:26
>> 2012.
01:30:27
>> Maybe in 2026.
01:30:29
>> No,
01:30:30
>> I went on a blazing lead to start and I
01:30:34
have not had anything.
01:30:36
>> Guns blaz.
01:30:37
>> It's essentially the New Jersey Devils.
01:30:39
>> We're going to have to
01:30:40
>> blow it out of the water and then just
01:30:42
>> Oklahoma City Thunder.
01:30:43
Yeah,
01:30:44
>> Sacramento City Kings.
01:30:48
>> That's cuz I grew up there.
01:30:49
>> That's a good
01:30:49
>> I went to a lot of games. Kobe. No, Kobe
01:30:52
wasn't.
01:30:53
>> Sorry, he was on the
01:30:54
>> Oh, that's Bam.
01:30:56
>> Bam.
01:30:57
>> No, it was um No, the old guys.
01:30:59
>> Yeah, you got this.
01:31:00
>> When the Kings were good.
01:31:01
>> Uhhuh.
01:31:01
>> Uh, hit it.
01:31:02
>> Paige. No, Mikey was not
01:31:04
>> Bibby. Are you a Bibby fan?
01:31:05
>> Bibby. I have a I had a bobblehead of
01:31:07
Bibby. Of
01:31:09
>> the bobblehead of
01:31:11
>> Bibby bobblehead. Uh, Kevin Durant.
01:31:13
>> No. No.
01:31:14
>> Deja Styovich. Does that
01:31:17
Doug Christie
01:31:18
>> Doug Christie okay Christie Mike Bby
01:31:22
>> Brad
01:31:22
>> Lander Brad
01:31:26
>> Brad Miller? I don't know. My grandpa
01:31:29
was really into Kings basketball so we
01:31:31
went to a lot of games actually.
01:31:32
>> Wow.
01:31:33
>> I was waiting for you to explain the
01:31:34
film in basketball terms and you never
01:31:36
did.
01:31:37
>> Oh yeah.
01:31:37
>> Oh the film. Oh yeah. Somebody posted
01:31:39
this. So, well, okay,
01:31:42
real quick. I got to give you guys Okay,
01:31:45
I got to tell you about this and I'll
01:31:47
explain.
01:31:49
I'm sorry.
01:31:50
>> It's not about Streetlight, though. It's
01:31:51
about film.
01:31:52
>> Okay, so Kodak, you know Kodak?
01:31:56
>> Yeah, I saw that.
01:31:57
>> I know Kodak.
01:31:57
>> They went out they went out a bit they
01:31:59
went they went bankrupt a long time ago.
01:32:01
>> I believe you.
01:32:02
>> Yeah, they went bankrupt. Kodak was
01:32:03
basically was basically like was like
01:32:06
IBM. They were like one of the biggest
01:32:09
companies in the world for quite a long
01:32:10
time. Then they went bankrupt because
01:32:12
they were stupid.
01:32:13
>> And then
01:32:13
>> because nobody shoots film anymore.
01:32:15
>> That's not true.
01:32:16
>> I do. Uh anyway, they had to split into
01:32:20
two separate companies as part of the
01:32:22
bankruptcy and they became Kodak and
01:32:25
Kodakis. Kodak Eastman and Kodakis.
01:32:28
Okay.
01:32:30
The way that the deal worked was that
01:32:31
Kodak Eastman would produce the film and
01:32:33
they would sell the film to Kodakaris
01:32:36
which would then sell sell the film to
01:32:38
consumers. They'd package itself to
01:32:40
consumers. Really strange bankruptcy.
01:32:41
>> I I don't get that.
01:32:42
>> Yeah, I don't really get
01:32:43
>> Hey, we don't have any money, so let's
01:32:44
just be the same company but two
01:32:46
companies and the same thing more
01:32:48
complicated.
01:32:48
>> There's details and there's business
01:32:50
stuff.
01:32:50
>> Tax reasons, tax reason. I don't know.
01:32:52
Anyway, uh fairly recently Kodak
01:32:55
Eastman, and I'm not sure why this
01:32:56
started happening, became able to sell
01:32:59
film itself again. So now Kodaka still
01:33:03
exists who they are still selling film
01:33:05
to, but they are now they have new
01:33:07
packaging and new names for like a lot
01:33:09
of the film that they're selling.
01:33:12
>> So there's like Ultramax and like
01:33:14
there's Portra and all this stuff. Uh,
01:33:16
Portra is the Kodak Eastman like name
01:33:20
for the film, but name for the film, but
01:33:22
the Kodak Eastman version is now called
01:33:24
like Kodak color or something like that.
01:33:27
>> Okay.
01:33:27
>> So, anyway, over the last like six
01:33:29
months, they've been re-releasing all
01:33:32
these films, but with like different
01:33:33
packaging and different names, generally
01:33:36
cheaper because they don't have to do
01:33:37
like they don't have to sell it. Eastman
01:33:40
doesn't have to. No, doesn't have to
01:33:41
make a margin.
01:33:43
Anyway, on Instagram, they they posted,
01:33:46
"We just released this new film." And
01:33:48
someone said, "Can you explain this to
01:33:49
me in basketball terms?"
01:33:51
>> Okay,
01:33:52
>> shut up,
01:33:53
>> David. So,
01:33:55
I think my basketball thing would be
01:33:57
like if Mike Bby
01:34:00
>> and Kobe
01:34:03
>> Bryant,
01:34:03
>> should I not? Is that bad to say?
01:34:06
>> No, it's a basketball player.
01:34:07
>> Kobe Bryant. My baby and Kobe Bryant
01:34:10
were like best friend were like the same
01:34:11
person and then they split into two
01:34:13
people. This is a bad analogy. I can't
01:34:14
make the B basketball analogy. I don't
01:34:17
know enough about basketball to make the
01:34:18
basketball.
01:34:18
>> I think that's a hard thing to do. I can
01:34:19
do a tech analogy.
01:34:20
>> People can't split in half.
01:34:23
>> If you can make a tech analogy, I will
01:34:25
try to make it a basketball. Okay. Okay.
01:34:27
Good. This is like telephone.
01:34:28
>> I like this
01:34:29
>> film company split in two.
01:34:31
>> Basketball it.
01:34:32
>> But no. Okay.
01:34:34
>> What's a let me let me do a tech
01:34:35
analogy.
01:34:35
>> Yeah. Okay. Imagine if Android had to
01:34:40
spin off from Google, right? And which
01:34:43
we've or Chrome, let's say Chrome,
01:34:45
>> okay?
01:34:46
>> And Google still made Chrome, but they
01:34:50
couldn't distribute it. And Chrome, the
01:34:53
company was the one that like actually
01:34:56
packaged it and distributed it to
01:34:57
people. And then later on, uh, for some
01:35:01
reason, Google was once again able to
01:35:03
make Chrome. And because Chromium is
01:35:05
open sourced, because they still have
01:35:06
the like they still have the rights to
01:35:08
do it, they released it under Google
01:35:10
Chrome as opposed to just Chrome,
01:35:13
>> you know. I got I got a version.
01:35:15
>> Okay. Basketball.
01:35:16
>> It would be like if Kevin Durant played
01:35:18
for a Seattle team called the
01:35:20
SuperSonics
01:35:21
>> and then at some point they went away
01:35:24
and they split. Kevin Durant went to
01:35:25
another team and the SuperSonics went
01:35:26
away and became Oklahoma City Thunder.
01:35:30
And then later, okay,
01:35:32
>> the NBA was like, "We should make an
01:35:33
expansion team in Seattle."
01:35:36
>> And Kevin Durant went back to the
01:35:39
Seattle team.
01:35:41
>> Oh, I like it. Okay, we should clip that
01:35:44
and uh comment on that guy's comment.
01:35:46
>> Let's see if that works. That might not
01:35:47
be.
01:35:48
>> That was like a game of telephone.
01:35:48
>> It might happen. It might not. All that
01:35:51
we've learned a lot on the pod.
01:35:52
>> Some trivia explanations.
01:35:54
>> Yeah. Hopefully some of that is
01:35:55
accurate. Hey, thanks for watching.
01:35:58
>> See you in April. Wait, really? It's
01:36:00
been a really long March. I know. It's
01:36:02
been April 1st. Wait, is it going to be
01:36:05
April 1st when we record? Next time we
01:36:06
record it will be April officially.
01:36:08
April.
01:36:08
>> So, thanks for tuning in. Thanks for
01:36:10
subscribing. Thanks for hyping. I think
01:36:12
we finally killed that feature.
01:36:14
>> Either way, catch you guys next week.
01:36:16
Peace.
01:36:16
>> Wait for produced by Adamina and Ellis
01:36:18
Ren. We're part of Fox Media Podcast
01:36:19
Network and Tri Music was created by
01:36:20
Vainil.
01:36:21
>> Bingo. That was a quick one.
01:36:31
In hindsight, if I was a teacher and I
01:36:32
gave this assignment, this would
01:36:34
probably be like a lesson in like just
01:36:36
how big the solar system is. But I was a
01:36:39
very literal. I was like, I have to make
01:36:42
everything the right

Episode Highlights

  • Siri 2.0 on the Horizon
    Apple is reportedly testing a standalone Siri app powered by Gemini, potentially changing how users interact with Siri.
    “It seems like we’re going to get the Siri 2.0 potentially in the iOS 27 release.”
    @ 07m 25s
    March 27, 2026
  • Apple Maps to Feature Ads
    Apple is set to allow businesses to buy ads in Apple Maps, raising questions about user privacy and personalization.
    “I can already hear people being like, 'Wow, Apple Maps is sucky now.'”
    @ 11m 58s
    March 27, 2026
  • Flighty App Launch
    Flighty introduces 'airport intelligence' to enhance travel experience for frequent flyers.
    “It's crazy that they launched this before the FAA did.”
    @ 19m 14s
    March 27, 2026
  • Windows 11 Setup Woes
    Setting up Windows 11 can be a frustrating experience filled with unnecessary prompts.
    “The setup is sufferable.”
    @ 27m 12s
    March 27, 2026
  • The Battle of Ecosystems
    Exploring the differences between Apple and Android users.
    “I feel like the best way to understand the difference between Apple and Android...”
    @ 32m 12s
    March 27, 2026
  • Sora's Demise
    OpenAI's video generation model Sora has been officially killed.
    “Sora was bad. Big day to dance on a grave.”
    @ 44m 29s
    March 27, 2026
  • Meta Ends Instagram Encryption
    Meta announced that Instagram DMs will no longer be end-to-end encrypted by May 8th. This change raises concerns about user privacy and data security.
    “If you really care about privacy encryption, don't touch a Meta product.”
    @ 50m 54s
    March 27, 2026
  • Tense Interview with CEO
    The CEO of Grammarly faced tough questions about their new feature in a heated interview.
    “From the get-go.”
    @ 01h 04m 20s
    March 27, 2026
  • Grammarly's Controversial Feature
    Grammarly's new feature impersonates writers, causing a stir in the journalism community.
    “This is impersonating Nei.”
    @ 01h 07m 16s
    March 27, 2026
  • Logitech Pro X2 Super Strike
    The Logitech Pro X2 Super Strike is the most hyped gaming mouse right now, featuring a unique haptic feedback system without traditional switches.
    “This actually has no switches. Not mechanical or options. There are no switches. This is fully haptic.”
    @ 01h 17m 30s
    March 27, 2026
  • Street Manifesto Update
    An update on the long-awaited album from the band Street Manifesto, which still hasn't been released.
    “Their album still didn’t come out.”
    @ 01h 24m 46s
    March 27, 2026
  • Kodak's Bankruptcy Twist
    Kodak split into two companies after bankruptcy, complicating their film distribution.
    “Really strange bankruptcy.”
    @ 01h 32m 40s
    March 27, 2026

Episode Quotes

  • Bring back Clippy. That’s all you needed to do.
    Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?
  • That's literally the main problem.
    Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?
  • Sora was bad. Big day to dance on a grave.
    Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?
  • We're in the dystopia where you can literally buy now with one click.
    Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?
  • You can’t do that, bro. It doesn’t work.
    Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?
  • That's not true. I do.
    Is Flighty a Top 5 App of All Time?

Key Moments

  • Siri 2.007:25
  • Ecosystem Wars32:12
  • Sora's End44:29
  • Meta's AI Slop46:31
  • Instagram Encryption47:52
  • Router Discussion1:01:00
  • Gaming Mouse Features1:20:07
  • Street Manifesto News1:24:46

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

Related Episodes

Our Favorite Apps of All Time!
April 03, 2026
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:46:49
Our Favorite Apps of All Time!
Fitbit Air and Ferrari's Luce Fiasco
May 29, 2026
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:43:06
Fitbit Air and Ferrari's Luce Fiasco
The iPhone 17 Event!
September 12, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:33:33
The iPhone 17 Event!
The WWDC 25 Episode!
June 13, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:34:49
The WWDC 25 Episode!
Gadgets We're Loving Right Now!
August 08, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:21:57
Gadgets We're Loving Right Now!
The Next iPhone Will Be…Orange?
August 01, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:13:22
The Next iPhone Will Be…Orange?
Who Cares About Thin Phones?
May 16, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:24:03
Who Cares About Thin Phones?
You're Using Tabs Wrong
April 10, 2026
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:55:09
You're Using Tabs Wrong
Apple Splitting up iPhone 18 Releases?
May 09, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:11:06
Apple Splitting up iPhone 18 Releases?
How Much Will the iPhone Fold Cost?
January 30, 2026
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:55:18
How Much Will the iPhone Fold Cost?
Can the iPhone 17 Pro Beat a Leica?
October 03, 2025
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:23:59
Can the iPhone 17 Pro Beat a Leica?
Is Apple Breaking the Law?
March 29, 2024
Captions not detected. You can watch the video, but not search it. If you think this is an error, contact support.
01:51:51
Is Apple Breaking the Law?