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539: 98 Yards with My Boys

 

00:00:00   [Music]

00:00:08   From Relay, this is Upgrade, episode 539 for November 25th, 2024.

00:00:15   This episode is brought to you by Squarespace, FitPod, and Data Citizens Dialogues.

00:00:20   My name is Mike Hurley, and I'm joined by Jason Snow. Hi, Jason Snow.

00:00:24   Hi, Mike Hurley, how are you?

00:00:26   Oh, I'm fine and dandy, my friend. Fine and dandy, indeed.

00:00:29   It's Thanksgiving week, it's Thanksgiving week!

00:00:32   It sure is, I was just about to say I'm very thankful for you, very thankful for our listeners.

00:00:36   Thank you, yes, same.

00:00:39   But I have a Snow Talk question for you.

00:00:40   It comes from Yoni, who wants to know, "Jason, how did you celebrate Cal's win over Stanford,

00:00:46   and at what point in the game were you no longer nervous and knew they were gonna win?"

00:00:50   Huh. I'll take the last part first.

00:00:56   At the very end of the game, after Cal went 98 yards to score the go-ahead touchdown,

00:01:05   very dramatic, Stanford got the ball, as one does, and they got them out four tries and

00:01:14   out right away, and only then did I know that they were going to win.

00:01:20   And even then, they had to get a first down, but anyway, at that point, I felt pretty confident.

00:01:24   But before that, Cal fans have learned, Yoni, you may not know this, Cal fans have learned

00:01:33   that whatever is the worst possible thing to happen will happen.

00:01:36   So you've got to just keep it, like people are like, "Oh, you must have been devastated

00:01:40   by the four devastating losses that come from behind losses and all that this year."

00:01:48   I'm like, "Folks, that's what being a Cal fan is."

00:01:53   I'm not only not surprised by it, I kind of expect it.

00:01:57   It is that kind of a fandom, that kind of a relationship.

00:02:00   They let you down a lot.

00:02:01   We are long-suffering.

00:02:02   So anyway, it was a...

00:02:04   But here's the thing, another little trivia about the rivalry between Cal and Stanford

00:02:09   is it matters, like the coach of the Cal football team was saying that every win only counts

00:02:16   for one, but yet emotionally, it's just not true.

00:02:20   It means more, it just means more, as some college football people say, that it matters.

00:02:25   And the stadium was completely full.

00:02:28   This is a five and five team and a three and seven team or something, three and six team

00:02:33   playing each other, not great teams.

00:02:35   And the stadium was completely full and everybody lost their minds after it was over.

00:02:40   And it is an amazing moment.

00:02:44   It matters more than anything else.

00:02:46   There was one of Cal's most successful coaches of all time, having Cal's best season in 20

00:02:53   years lost the big game at the end of the season.

00:02:55   And the reaction to it was so negative that he basically quit and went somewhere else

00:03:00   because he didn't want to take it anymore, even though he had had an incredibly successful

00:03:04   year.

00:03:05   So it matters a lot.

00:03:06   How do we celebrate?

00:03:07   I mean, we just, you know, we stood there and did the cheers and we're really excited

00:03:12   and we didn't go down on the field because it was going to take forever to even get down

00:03:16   on the field.

00:03:17   The field was completely full.

00:03:18   Everybody went on the field after the game.

00:03:20   And I assume that's like mayhem.

00:03:21   It is.

00:03:22   Yeah, that's true.

00:03:24   It's amazing.

00:03:25   There is a clip.

00:03:27   People can find it.

00:03:28   The quarterback of Cal, a kid named Fernando Mendoza, was interviewed after the game.

00:03:35   And it is a wonderful interview.

00:03:38   This is why I text you, right?

00:03:40   I text you and was like, "Bears, tada," or whatever.

00:03:44   And it was because I had seen someone share this clip and was like, "Oh, he's so excited

00:03:50   right now."

00:03:51   And I realized they must have won.

00:03:53   And he's crying.

00:03:55   And he says, you know, "This is why we do it.

00:03:58   I went 98 yards with my boys," which is going to be a Cal thing for all eternity now.

00:04:03   "98 yards with my boys."

00:04:04   I think that's just going to be a thing thing.

00:04:06   Like I can just imagine Cal saying that to each other.

00:04:09   That's so great.

00:04:10   And he says, "Go Bears Forever," he says at one point, "This is why we did all this work."

00:04:13   But the other thing you can notice in that clip is people just keep running up to him

00:04:17   and taking pictures with him and patting him on the back and stuff because the students

00:04:21   and everybody else are just running onto the field.

00:04:24   And he's just shaking people's hands while he's talking.

00:04:26   It's really good.

00:04:27   This is a very heartwarming clip.

00:04:29   By the end of the interview, literally, they're completely surrounded by people.

00:04:31   They start and it's not quite that, but by the end, he's completely surrounded because

00:04:35   the whole field is surrounded.

00:04:36   And there's the axe, which is like the trophy that goes back and forth.

00:04:40   And that was paraded around.

00:04:43   Like there's a whole group of people that keeps their hands on it at all times and that

00:04:47   got paraded around.

00:04:48   It's just madness.

00:04:49   It's, again, it's a purity of joy that is rare.

00:04:55   And that interview is an all-time classic because he's just so overwhelmed with the

00:04:59   emotion.

00:05:00   So this is college football, right?

00:05:01   Like they're not professionals.

00:05:02   Yeah, this is what it's supposed to be.

00:05:04   I mean, they get money now a little bit.

00:05:07   Yeah, I know.

00:05:08   And there's all the name names like this stuff.

00:05:09   But they're not in the NFL, right?

00:05:12   Absolutely.

00:05:13   And this is, I think, the passion of college football in a nutshell is that interview encapsulates

00:05:19   it.

00:05:20   This is a game with two teams that are, you know, one team is going to not be over 500

00:05:24   and the other team is going to play in a very minor bowl game and that's it.

00:05:29   But it doesn't matter because it's rivalry and it's history and it's the fans and the

00:05:32   alumni and the players and it just, that's one of the magical things about college football.

00:05:37   You don't have to care about it at all.

00:05:40   I mean, I don't really because I don't understand it.

00:05:42   No, of course not.

00:05:43   But I recommend watching that interview because it's just nice to see someone care so much

00:05:47   about something.

00:05:48   Yeah, I mean, that's really it.

00:05:50   There's no cynicism in it at all.

00:05:52   And this is in an era that coach talked about it after the game.

00:05:53   There was a great postgame press conference that I actually watched later on YouTube where

00:05:57   he said, you know, we got people who, today in college football there's free transfers.

00:06:01   So basically people just show up and they haven't been there for, you know, before and

00:06:04   they've never had it.

00:06:06   And some of those players played in this game and were like, whoa.

00:06:09   I had heard about it, but I didn't understand.

00:06:12   And you get there and everybody's intense and the stadium is full and loud and it's

00:06:17   very exciting.

00:06:18   So yeah, it was the pure emotion of it.

00:06:22   I do think that that's going to be an all time classic that 98 yards with my boys.

00:06:29   So anyway, we had a great time.

00:06:30   There is no better drug than coming home after your team won a nail biting rivalry football

00:06:39   game.

00:06:40   I have walked out of that stadium with a gut, this year with a gut punch of like, oh my

00:06:44   God, I can't believe we lost that game with a high, but this was in the category of the,

00:06:49   I can't believe we won that game, but it's just such a great feeling.

00:06:52   I want to go 98 yards with my boys, Jason, you know, we can go 98 yards together.

00:06:57   Let's set it up.

00:06:58   In the meantime, we go 98 yards with the boys.

00:07:01   With the boys.

00:07:03   If you would like to send in a question to help us open a future episode of Upgrade,

00:07:07   please go to upgradefeedback.com and thank you to friend of the show, Joni, for doing

00:07:11   that.

00:07:12   That was a great one.

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00:08:36   Thank you very much.

00:08:37   Some follow up.

00:08:40   I got the Belkin accessories.

00:08:41   Oh yeah.

00:08:42   For the Vision Pro accessories.

00:08:43   They both ended up arriving.

00:08:44   I bought the bag after your review last week and like, you know, just hearing you talk

00:08:49   so kindly about it.

00:08:51   But the strap was back ordered, but then it just arrived.

00:08:53   I don't know why.

00:08:54   Like it was meant to arrive like at the end of the month and it just like showed up.

00:08:57   It's like, great.

00:08:58   Thanks Apple.

00:08:59   Appreciate it.

00:09:00   Um, you weren't wrong.

00:09:01   Like they're both perfect.

00:09:04   Like why, why?

00:09:05   I mean, that was my, my reaction was very much like, Oh, right.

00:09:09   This is what they should have shipped.

00:09:11   Got it.

00:09:12   Yep.

00:09:13   Yeah.

00:09:14   I was surprised at how much I liked the bag because I was really skeptical about, Oh yeah,

00:09:16   great.

00:09:17   Another Vision Pro bag.

00:09:18   And it's like, it's good.

00:09:19   It's really well designed.

00:09:20   It's this bag is small enough that it fits in my tote pack.

00:09:24   Like the bag that I use every day.

00:09:25   I thought that was impossible, but I can get it in my daily bag now if I want to, which

00:09:30   is so much smaller than the Apple bag.

00:09:32   Yeah.

00:09:33   I would not have expected that at all.

00:09:34   And it's also just so well thought out of all the pockets.

00:09:38   There is an unbelievable amount of pockets on this bag.

00:09:41   It's like there's more pockets than I thought would be possible to put on this bag.

00:09:45   It is great.

00:09:46   They did a great job of that.

00:09:47   The strap is the exact amount of infinitely adjustable that I wanted where it's essentially

00:09:53   an Apple watch band, like one of the sport loop or whatever they're called, the Velcro

00:09:58   ones.

00:09:59   Yeah.

00:10:00   The little Velcros.

00:10:01   Yeah.

00:10:02   It's just one of those.

00:10:03   Choose it where you want.

00:10:04   And it's soft.

00:10:05   I think it's soft enough that it's not, it doesn't feel harsh, like digging into your

00:10:07   head, but it does provide enough suspension to keep.

00:10:10   Uh, and you know, I like the solo top, but like the knit band is not made for that.

00:10:14   And, and this is the right, this is the right thing.

00:10:17   It is.

00:10:18   It's, it's right.

00:10:19   The whoever built that up for the WWDC demos that we had last year, they knew what they

00:10:25   were doing and then they didn't ship it.

00:10:26   It's weird, but, uh, but good, good, uh, accessories for sure.

00:10:30   Yep.

00:10:31   Uh, we have a bunch of, uh, follow up related to the HomePod home with a screen device.

00:10:38   So I haven't come up with a name, but maybe we'll get one by the end of this.

00:10:41   We'll find out a lot of people are calling it like HomePad and I've seen some other things,

00:10:46   but I don't like any of them.

00:10:47   Uh, on your website of which you read the proprietary six colors, you linked to Jennifer

00:10:52   Patterson-Toohey's piece at the Verge about why Apple should get into the smart home,

00:10:57   which is a very good article.

00:10:58   I read a quote from it, but people should go check it out in full because it's really

00:11:01   good.

00:11:02   Uh, Patterson-Toohey knows what they're talking about.

00:11:04   When it comes to smart home, they do all of the stuff for the Verge.

00:11:08   Oh yeah.

00:11:09   Yeah.

00:11:10   This article is the one of those articles where I read it and I was like, okay, that

00:11:13   article I don't have to write because she literally covered everything that I would

00:11:18   have covered.

00:11:19   Yeah, it's really good.

00:11:20   So this is just a quote from it, which I think gives a flavor.

00:11:23   Apple needs to bring its signature simplicity to this space.

00:11:26   It needs to make it all just work.

00:11:28   To be successful, Apple needs to offer an intuitive user interface that effectively

00:11:31   combines voice and touch in a way no other smart display has to date, which I agree with.

00:11:37   Like they have the ability to do this.

00:11:38   And like another quote that you put on six colors was it's about damn time that Apple

00:11:42   took the smart home seriously.

00:11:44   Having let Apple home and home kit largely languish in its decades since its launch.

00:11:49   I mean, I agree so much with that.

00:11:52   And I know you noticed, I, so we talked last week briefly about that.

00:11:56   I did the annuals, right?

00:11:57   The annual Apple charts.

00:11:59   And I think that the one that was the most interesting to me of all of them and I reproduced

00:12:03   it.

00:12:04   In fact, I made a new version of it with just wearables, home and accessories because it's

00:12:07   this line that starts going up and then it just sort of like is now plateauing and going

00:12:11   back down.

00:12:13   And I think that's really telling that like Apple built a lot of growth on the AirPods

00:12:16   and the Apple watch and it stalled out.

00:12:20   And like we can debate value of growth.

00:12:24   You know, investors want growth.

00:12:26   Does Apple need it to grow like that and all that?

00:12:27   But I would say Apple wants it to grow.

00:12:29   Apple wants everything to grow and home is, I, it would be very hard to find somebody

00:12:37   to argue that Apple has nailed it perfectly with the home, right?

00:12:39   Like it feels like they've let a lot of opportunities go by and they've done tentative things.

00:12:43   How many years did they lose by miscalibrating the original HomePod?

00:12:46   And I'm not sure they've ever really gotten it back, but at least they've got it in a

00:12:50   more viable place now than it was originally.

00:12:53   And so if, you know, I don't do this a lot, but I'll just say like, if I were an Apple

00:12:57   executive right now, this would be one of my things that I would say, like, we have

00:13:01   to do a better job.

00:13:02   And it feels like maybe that's what's happened is that somebody has been told we actually

00:13:06   need to make an effort in the home because I would argue that what they've been doing

00:13:10   is avoiding most of the home stuff.

00:13:14   And their only place where they've been playing at all is in the speakers, which, you know,

00:13:19   I don't know, 10 years ago, I think it was pretty clear that this was an opportunity

00:13:22   for them and they missed the boat.

00:13:25   But it's broken enough and early enough that there are more opportunities for them.

00:13:29   It kind of feels like one of these things where it's like, oh, if we build it, they

00:13:32   will come kind of thing.

00:13:33   But that while that has happened, they have, it's not been good enough.

00:13:37   And I think this is one of those situations where, you know, I love things to be open.

00:13:43   We're going to talk about that later on in the show today quite a bit.

00:13:45   But like, I do feel like there is, they should have the open framework that they have.

00:13:50   But if Apple was able to create an Apple like experience for these devices talking together,

00:13:55   it would be superior than what we currently have because they don't have to design for

00:13:59   edge cases.

00:14:00   They don't have to make a set of APIs, like they are able to maybe make their own.

00:14:04   And then I would expect as these things usually happen, if they do build their own stuff,

00:14:08   they could actually take some of those learnings and put them back into HomeKit.

00:14:11   Like they're actually dogfooding it in a way, which is a phrase that I don't like, but I

00:14:15   said it anyway.

00:14:16   Or matter, right?

00:14:17   I feel like that's the trick here is that the emergence of matter, which is still kind

00:14:23   of like, you know, it exists, but it lets Apple build something on a framework that

00:14:29   will integrate with other stuff.

00:14:31   And they can just say, yeah, sure, we're integrated.

00:14:34   And it makes, I can make the argument that if Apple executes this right, that what currently,

00:14:42   it seems like they kind of have wasted five years or whatever, which I think they have,

00:14:47   but like you could maybe, if they succeed, you could maybe make the argument that maybe

00:14:51   it just, the whole smart home market wasn't good enough.

00:14:57   And if I were at Apple, again, I would probably make the argument that this is one of those

00:15:03   categories that is sort of like classic Apple entering a category late, but waiting to a

00:15:09   moment where there's actually an opportunity to drive more sales of this.

00:15:13   'Cause that's gotta be their goal, right?

00:15:15   Is that the biggest opportunity in the smart home market is not selling to people who have

00:15:20   smart home devices.

00:15:21   It's to everybody else who has not bothered.

00:15:24   And a lot of nerds are like, oh, I've been doing this for 10 years or whatever.

00:15:29   But it's like, yeah, but most people like, no, like super repelled from a lot of this

00:15:34   stuff.

00:15:35   And so there's an opportunity there for Apple.

00:15:36   I'm not sure that they will succeed.

00:15:40   I'm skeptical.

00:15:41   I need to see it because they've been so lackluster in this category before, but I do think that

00:15:45   there are opportunities for them to succeed, especially if they pick their spots and make

00:15:49   really good products that will allow them to succeed, even if they're not the market

00:15:55   leader to succeed with a product that will sell into their ecosystem and be seen as one

00:16:01   of the better products in the category.

00:16:03   I think that's the challenge is they need to, they're gonna have high price tags 'cause

00:16:07   it's Apple.

00:16:08   So they also need to provide that.

00:16:09   But when there was rumors about the camera, cameras mostly aren't very good.

00:16:13   So there is an opportunity there.

00:16:15   Even this late in the game, I think there's an opportunity for Apple here.

00:16:18   - Yeah, as well.

00:16:21   And it will open different opportunities.

00:16:22   I can't imagine that Apple would create a home security system with monitoring.

00:16:28   But the more that Apple push into this field, then if it's all home kit, like the system

00:16:33   that I have made by a company called Abode, which I like a lot, I can add that into the

00:16:38   system and it would integrate with Apple's cameras and all that kind of stuff.

00:16:41   So you can bolt on these extra parts if you want a bit extra.

00:16:46   If you imagine that screen, that new screen accessory thing, one of the things it has

00:16:50   to presumably do or they're thinking of doing is security.

00:16:55   And the thing is with Matter and HomeKit, Apple doesn't need to make window sensors.

00:17:02   They don't.

00:17:03   They can make some cameras, maybe a doorbell, I don't know, up to them what they wanna do

00:17:11   there.

00:17:12   But there's lots of other products in that category.

00:17:13   And maybe what they say is, "Look, what we're gonna do is we're gonna make this screen be

00:17:16   the best place for you to do your home security settings and monitoring and notification at

00:17:22   the heart of the ecosystem and have all those pieces out there."

00:17:25   They could get there.

00:17:26   I mean, there's lots of opportunity here.

00:17:28   I feel like when I hear people talking about entrenched smart home companies, I'm like,

00:17:34   "Hmm, I don't think that trench is very deep."

00:17:37   I feel like there's a lot of space here, a lot of room to grow and redefine what these

00:17:43   categories are and popularize it.

00:17:45   Like, I mean, Amazon has been trying and Google has been trying to popularize this for ages.

00:17:49   It's still not that great.

00:17:52   There's opportunity here.

00:17:53   So we also got some listeners who wrote in with some thoughts and questions about this

00:17:58   kind of space for Apple.

00:17:59   Brian says, "Do you think the iPhone mirroring feature that was debuted at Mac OS this year

00:18:04   could be a software tell that similar features are under development or consideration for

00:18:08   the rumored home part of a screen product?

00:18:10   This could bring all the iOS apps while avoiding some of the platform adoption issues that

00:18:14   have plagued platforms less popular than the iPhone."

00:18:17   So we spoke about intents, we spoke about widgets, but just straight mirroring could

00:18:21   be another one.

00:18:22   Like, maybe it's not what's on the Mac, but maybe it's like, would you like to mirror

00:18:27   YouTube?

00:18:28   It feels to me like, this feels too far to me.

00:18:32   I think we talked about it last time.

00:18:34   The idea of, David Smith's idea that the iPhone mirroring on the Mac has suggest some things

00:18:41   about what they might have, how they might approach some of a device like this, I think

00:18:45   is right.

00:18:46   I think that he's clocked it, which is if you can show all your notifications from your

00:18:52   phone on your Mac, you would presumably automatically be able to do that with this device.

00:18:59   If you can display a widget that's running on your phone on your Mac, you absolutely

00:19:04   should be able to do that with this device.

00:19:05   And that solves part of that problem of like, how do you put widgets from Widget Smith on

00:19:10   it if Widget Smith doesn't run because there's no app store?

00:19:13   And the answer is, it runs from your iPhone.

00:19:15   So I don't know, based on the shape of this thing and the size of the screen, I'm a little

00:19:22   dubious about that, but who knows?

00:19:25   I mean, AirPlay is a good example though, where you could have it, I don't know.

00:19:31   A lot of this stuff it's going to be able to do itself, right?

00:19:34   YouTube playback and things like that.

00:19:35   So I think you could say that this goes too far, but I do like the idea that Apple's been

00:19:41   building technologies in plain sight that allow it to project things from your iPhone

00:19:45   onto other screens.

00:19:47   That I like because I think that that is a very clever way, right?

00:19:52   Because here's the problem.

00:19:54   We talk a lot about multiple devices and you get different notifications in different places.

00:19:59   And if you have two different Macs, not everything syncs and all of that.

00:20:02   Throwing this extra device into the mix when your life is on your iPhone is a problem because

00:20:09   your life's not on this thing.

00:20:12   So the more projection you can do from your iPhone and the more you can tie it into your

00:20:15   iPhone or iPhones, because remember Apple already in the HomePod has voice recognition

00:20:19   where they can actually detect who's speaking.

00:20:21   So if you have the idea that it knows who's speaking and it knows who's iPhone is who's.

00:20:27   Like show me my email.

00:20:29   That's great.

00:20:30   Yeah.

00:20:31   Right.

00:20:32   Because again, it's like, it's not necessarily about like iPhone mirroring isn't just mirroring

00:20:36   the iPhone.

00:20:37   We're assuming it's the same technology that they use to do the widget mirroring, right?

00:20:41   Or the notification mirroring.

00:20:43   Like it's all, I would assume much of the same kind of like making this secure connection.

00:20:49   And maybe there is a thing that we haven't seen yet that would make the same kind of

00:20:56   links together.

00:20:57   I don't know.

00:20:59   Yeah.

00:21:00   Brian, a different Brian.

00:21:02   We have a lot of Brian's who care about this.

00:21:03   A second Brian says, do you think that the HomePod with a screen could act as a bridge

00:21:09   to bring Apple intelligence to other devices like the HomePod mini that would probably

00:21:13   not get a powerful enough chip for a long time?

00:21:16   I wrote a whole Mac world column about this because this is the challenge is that you've

00:21:20   got a lot of devices that are not likely to get Apple intelligence.

00:21:24   Apple watch is one of them.

00:21:27   HomePod mini is a good example.

00:21:28   I don't think they would upgrade the HomePod mini to process on device Apple intelligence

00:21:33   maybe, but boy, I just, so I think that there is a lot of this, which is how do you get

00:21:39   Apple intelligence in other places?

00:21:41   So HomePod with a screen that acts as a home hub and also can run Apple intelligence routines

00:21:45   itself, would that be a great way to control HomePods and give them some intelligence without

00:21:52   them actually being intelligent?

00:21:54   Of course.

00:21:55   I mean, the iPhone is too, right?

00:21:56   It would be kind of nice if you didn't need to use the HomePod with the screen, you could

00:21:59   just also use your iPhone.

00:22:01   I think they need to come up with a way in probably presumably the next product cycle,

00:22:05   although maybe it's tied to this product, if this comes out sooner, to have that sort

00:22:09   of thing where like if I issue a command and one of the devices in my little personal cloud

00:22:14   in my house has Apple intelligence on it, maybe it should field it.

00:22:20   Maybe it should take that in and then choose the right thing to do.

00:22:24   And they're probably not there yet, but absolutely, this is a way to make those unintelligent

00:22:30   devices theoretically more intelligent.

00:22:33   And Kelvin came up with my favorite name so far.

00:22:37   You hold it for a second.

00:22:39   So Kelvin says, what about HomePod Touch because it continues the iPod naming scheme.

00:22:45   We have iPod, HomePod, iPod mini, HomePod mini, iPod touch, HomePod touch.

00:22:52   You can touch the HomePod already?

00:22:54   But it doesn't do anything.

00:22:55   I mean, you could touch an iPod before.

00:22:58   You did touch them, but they weren't called that.

00:23:00   A little sidebar.

00:23:01   I know I wrote about this years ago when they came out, but I just moved a pair of second

00:23:05   gen full-size HomePods into my living room and to replace, okay, so my last of my first

00:23:13   gen HomePods died in the classic way that they die, which is they just stop and that's

00:23:19   it.

00:23:20   I have two original gen HomePods that I'm still using.

00:23:22   I feel like I'm a unicorn here because I was listening to Mac Power users and they were

00:23:26   talking about that too.

00:23:27   I was using them as well in my living room and then one died and a friend said, oh, I

00:23:33   have one that we're not using.

00:23:34   I'll send it to you and she did and I used that for a while and that one still works,

00:23:39   but the other one that was my other one that I had had from the beginning, it died.

00:23:48   We had a good run, but it's over now.

00:23:50   So I moved, I also have a pair of second gen HomePods.

00:23:53   So I moved those into the living room and plugged them in and set them up.

00:23:58   I know I wrote about this when I reviewed them, but it's been ages and I haven't put

00:24:01   them in this context.

00:24:03   Those devices in the living room, I do adjust the volume by pressing the plus minus on them

00:24:10   and they don't light up anymore.

00:24:11   The second gen doesn't light up the plus minus buttons, so you can't see them to change the

00:24:16   volume.

00:24:17   I'm tapping all over and it's pausing it and playing it again and what are they, what are

00:24:23   you doing?

00:24:24   What are you doing?

00:24:25   Anyway, you could call it HomePod Touch.

00:24:26   I think that's a very clever name.

00:24:28   I don't know if they'll go that route or not, but I like it.

00:24:31   I like it as an idea so far.

00:24:34   That's my favorite of the potential name options.

00:24:37   Where at first I was like, would they?

00:24:38   And then I was like, oh, it does follow the iPod.

00:24:41   So we'll see.

00:24:42   I look forward to HomePod Shuffle.

00:24:44   I don't know what that's going to do though.

00:24:45   I'm not sure.

00:24:46   Kelvin, you are now an honorary HomeBrien.

00:24:48   Congratulations.

00:24:49   HomePod Nano.

00:24:51   Like it's just like, I don't know what that is.

00:24:54   We'll find out.

00:24:55   HomePod Brian.

00:24:56   In upgrade plus last week, we both spoke about blue sky, like in kind of our feelings about

00:25:01   blue sky.

00:25:02   So I wanted to mention here in case any upgradings want to follow us on blue sky, we're both

00:25:05   on blue sky.

00:25:06   You're a Snell.Zone.

00:25:08   I'm Mike.Social.

00:25:10   I'll put links in the show notes in case you want to find us there.

00:25:14   Do you like that I extended the Snell Zone branding even further?

00:25:17   I'm so happy.

00:25:18   I've got the domain, man.

00:25:20   I didn't want to be Snellworld.com, right?

00:25:23   There was a time where me and Steven decided that your nickname was going to be Snell Zone.

00:25:28   And I remember you didn't like it.

00:25:31   I don't know.

00:25:32   You know, I prefer the Snell Zone is a, I am not the Snell Zone.

00:25:35   The Snell Zone is a place.

00:25:36   The Snell Zone is a place, not a people, you know?

00:25:39   That's right.

00:25:40   It's a place when you're with me, you're in the Snell Zone.

00:25:42   And so when people come to blue sky and they go to your profile, they're in the Snell Zone.

00:25:48   They are.

00:25:49   And when they receive the emanations from my social media presence on blue sky, they

00:25:54   are receiving them straight from the Snell Zone.

00:25:56   That's absolutely true.

00:25:57   I love it.

00:25:58   Oh yeah.

00:25:59   You can follow us there.

00:26:00   Also, my family, did you know that my family chat with my wife and my kids is named Snell

00:26:03   Zone?

00:26:04   Yeah, I did not know that.

00:26:05   I love that.

00:26:06   Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

00:26:07   That makes me very excited.

00:26:08   That makes me very excited.

00:26:09   But yeah, I will say, look, maybe it's just like the new social media shine.

00:26:17   Kind of liking blue sky.

00:26:18   I kind of like it.

00:26:21   We'll see how long that lasts, but right now I do like it.

00:26:24   I have some notes.

00:26:25   I feel like they need a proper replies view.

00:26:28   I don't need to see people following me.

00:26:33   There is a settings icon on their notifications view.

00:26:37   And what it does is suppress all replies to you from people who aren't following you.

00:26:41   So I guess it's like a celebrity view or something, or people you're not following.

00:26:46   It's exactly the wrong setting.

00:26:48   So they have some work to do on that score.

00:26:52   And it's in the inflationary period of any social media.

00:26:54   It gets kind of old.

00:26:55   And we talked about it last week that as it settles down, we'll see how it goes.

00:26:59   But also, in general, I don't think I need more social media in my life.

00:27:05   But one of the approaches is use the different ones for different purposes.

00:27:09   And one thing that is slowly happening is, I said for a long time, the only thing I'm

00:27:14   using on Twitter anymore is my sports list.

00:27:17   Because the sports writers didn't move anywhere else.

00:27:21   They're still breaking news.

00:27:22   And that's still true.

00:27:23   The Calgarethom is there.

00:27:25   All those people are still on X.

00:27:26   Okay.

00:27:27   But in the last two weeks, a substantial number of the people on my sports list have moved

00:27:34   to Blue Sky.

00:27:35   So that I now have a Blue Sky sports list.

00:27:38   And that's exciting.

00:27:40   I also wrote about a thing called Cill, which is a social media app like Nuzzle, where you

00:27:45   can attach it to Blue Sky and Mastodon, and it will roll up all the links in your social

00:27:50   media.

00:27:51   It's early.

00:27:52   It's like public beta.

00:27:53   They need to add some stuff, including support for lists.

00:27:56   But somebody is remaking Nuzzle for these other social media outlets, too.

00:28:00   So that's cool.

00:28:01   Blue Sky even has an element of that, right?

00:28:03   But I know it's about posts, but it's like things that are popular with your friends.

00:28:06   With your friends, yeah.

00:28:07   I have not dug into a lot of the features that Blue Sky has.

00:28:12   But similar to you, there's just a lot of content creators in different fields, especially

00:28:18   in gaming.

00:28:19   They didn't move to Threads or Mastodon.

00:28:20   They tried Threads and didn't like it, but they seem to have moved to Blue Sky.

00:28:24   So I'm getting a lot of the stuff that is just the things that I enjoy on that service.

00:28:30   I feel like at the moment, I kind of have these three different services, and I'm kind

00:28:34   of trying to use them more differently, and we'll see how that goes.

00:28:38   And let's be honest, three of them are not going to win, right?

00:28:40   There's not going to be three.

00:28:42   There's maybe going to be two.

00:28:43   I don't know what two of that's going to be.

00:28:46   My first week with Blue Sky has been positive.

00:28:48   Sure.

00:28:49   Yeah, I would say so.

00:28:51   Yeah, we'll see how it shakes out.

00:28:58   It really depends on where it goes.

00:28:59   But I do hope that this sports writer exodus or cross post or whatever continues, because

00:29:08   I would love to be able to just visit my Blue Sky sports list and get enough.

00:29:15   We've already talked about college football, but I'll just throw in here.

00:29:18   There's a guy who does the Baseball Hall of Fame vote tracker, Ryan Thibodeau.

00:29:23   And so we're in the period where the baseball writers are turning in their ballots for who's

00:29:26   going to make the Hall of Fame.

00:29:28   And he used to track that all on Twitter, and he left Twitter and is on Blue Sky now.

00:29:32   And so every time I go to the Blue Sky sports list, at the very least, I'm getting some

00:29:37   of my baseball writers and the Hall of Fame tracker and all that kind of stuff is there.

00:29:41   It's a good start, right?

00:29:42   It's not -- I have been waiting for a while now for there to be any reason for me to create

00:29:50   a sports list on Blue Sky, and there wasn't any.

00:29:52   And now it's starting to happen.

00:29:54   And so I'm happy about that.

00:29:55   That's a start.

00:29:56   I hope that becomes functional.

00:29:58   Yeah.

00:29:59   I also just wanted to mention, still just a couple of weeks left to get your nominations

00:30:05   in for the 11th annual Upgradies.

00:30:08   They're coming in December.

00:30:09   Voting is open.

00:30:10   Go to Upgradies.vote.

00:30:12   Thank you to the many of you that have.

00:30:13   If you want to get your voice heard for the 11th annual Upgradies, which is being recorded

00:30:19   on December 30th, you've got to get your nominations in by December 13th at Upgradies.vote, and

00:30:26   there'll be a link in the show notes too.

00:30:28   Yeah.

00:30:29   You'll help us out a lot.

00:30:30   It's not just to make your voice heard and what your preferences are.

00:30:33   It's also to give us suggestions for things that we should look at that we maybe haven't

00:30:39   considered because that is very helpful to us.

00:30:41   Cause we're just two little brains in the world.

00:30:45   We need the power of the Upgradians.

00:30:47   We're just a couple of boys going 98 yards.

00:30:49   98 yards, man.

00:30:51   That's it.

00:30:52   That's it.

00:30:53   Help us get across the goal line.

00:30:55   It's a long way down those 98 yards.

00:30:57   98 yards to the Upgradies.

00:30:59   Come be one of the boys with us.

00:31:02   Let's go.

00:31:05   This episode is brought to you by Squarespace, the all in one website platform for entrepreneurs

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00:32:02   really kind of help you fully understand what you want your site to look like, but then

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00:32:54   Right?

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00:33:22   It's time for the Rumour Roundup.

00:33:25   Yeehaw!

00:33:26   We've got a couple of stories today.

00:33:28   Mark Germin at Bloomberg is reporting on Apple's plans for a version of Siri that is more conversational

00:33:34   and powered by their own large language model.

00:33:37   This version of Siri would expect to be more human-like in conversation and be more capable

00:33:43   of handling complex queries more quickly.

00:33:47   So while this would be debuted as part of iOS 19 at WWDC most likely, but like how Apple

00:33:54   has been rolling out Apple Intelligence so far, this would be part of a point release

00:33:58   down the road.

00:34:00   Mark Germin believes that it would ship in 2026, probably in the spring.

00:34:05   So that's a long time from now.

00:34:09   18 months, folks.

00:34:10   From now.

00:34:11   18 months for maybe good Siri.

00:34:14   Yeah.

00:34:15   And separately, Mark Germin was talking on threads about how this is what we can expect

00:34:21   from Apple going forward is to be rolling out their features over a longer period of

00:34:25   time.

00:34:26   Which I think there is something good to that.

00:34:29   There is like merit to that.

00:34:31   But this to me is like, there's been so much to-ing and throwing.

00:34:36   Is Apple behind?

00:34:37   Is everybody else truly behind?

00:34:40   Did Apple get just the right features?

00:34:42   To me, this shows that they are behind.

00:34:47   An LLM powered Siri is what should have shipped now.

00:34:51   That should be shipping now.

00:34:52   Yeah.

00:34:53   I think that one of the advantages Apple has is that if it turns out that these gains in

00:35:00   AI models are becoming more limited, which is one story that's out there, that the AI

00:35:06   companies are struggling to make their models better now that they've hit a wall or maybe

00:35:11   at least it's harder.

00:35:13   Okay.

00:35:14   If that's true, then that's going to be great for Apple because Apple will be able to catch

00:35:18   up.

00:35:19   And also if there are places where everybody realizes, oh, you know, AI models aren't good

00:35:22   for this, Apple will be like, great, we're not just not going to even do that.

00:35:26   We never had to do that.

00:35:27   We never pretended to do that.

00:35:28   Great.

00:35:29   So that's fine.

00:35:30   But you're right in the sense that I think when everybody thought about Apple doing AI,

00:35:34   everybody not, I don't know about everybody.

00:35:36   Lots of us thought, oh, good, fix Siri.

00:35:38   This was the logical thing.

00:35:39   Like this was the obvious thing.

00:35:41   It's like we were talking about Siri as a chatbot from months before the WWDC this year.

00:35:47   Now it's possible that with App Intents and your personal data being queried, the semantic

00:35:59   index and all that, that Siri will get better this spring, but it won't be what we thought

00:36:09   Siri would be, which is more conversational.

00:36:14   And even if you use, I mean, I don't know, they may, they may make it so that like if

00:36:20   you query chat GPT automatically, it'll give you some things back that are better, but

00:36:25   like, what are, but, but I think you're right, which is this shows play a place where Apple

00:36:33   really does feel like it's way behind.

00:36:36   With the first thing that a lot of us think of as being the benefit of large language

00:36:40   models is you could make Siri more conversational and have knowledge of our history of our conversation

00:36:47   and be able to give it, give me answers in better ways.

00:36:50   And what we're sort of getting is things that aren't that things that feel like they come

00:36:57   from the earlier days of the AI craze.

00:37:01   And the thing that really seems the most obvious is not just shipping, you know, it's not just

00:37:06   going to be announced next June, but even then we're not going to actually see it until

00:37:12   more than a year from now.

00:37:14   That's that's tough.

00:37:15   That's rough.

00:37:16   So this LLM powered version of the Apple assistant should be able to build on the work that will

00:37:22   ship as part of iOS 18.

00:37:24   So the app Intents, but this should be able to do a better job with that.

00:37:28   Of course.

00:37:29   Great.

00:37:30   So the Apple will continue to have their partnership with open AI and probably Google too, and

00:37:35   maybe others.

00:37:36   The expectation is over time that they will need to rely on them less and less with this

00:37:39   LLM version of Siri.

00:37:44   This is what this is what it should be, but it isn't.

00:37:46   And it's like, wow, that's going to be a long time.

00:37:49   You know?

00:37:50   Yeah.

00:37:51   Yeah.

00:37:52   That's I do.

00:37:53   I do wonder if their term solution is to pipe these things through to the other LLMs.

00:37:56   Right.

00:37:57   Also, it's really funny.

00:37:58   We're still talking about maybe Google.

00:37:59   Like I don't even know what's going on there, but it's really interesting that it may just

00:38:03   be that Apple is, is, has decided they want to ship their integration with one partner

00:38:08   and make sure that it actually works.

00:38:09   And then it actually kind of a classic move, right?

00:38:11   Which is we're going to build our initial launch of how this works and then we'll open

00:38:15   it up to third parties thinking of open AI as it's weird.

00:38:18   It is a third party, but it's like a first party implementation.

00:38:21   It's an Apple implementation of how you work with an external chat bot in iOS or in Mac

00:38:25   OS, right?

00:38:26   Or either way.

00:38:28   And so they, maybe their approach is really like, look, we're just going to launch this

00:38:32   with open AI so that it makes sense and it works and then we can use it with other providers

00:38:37   and we'll get them in here.

00:38:39   Maybe that's it.

00:38:40   Maybe there are negotiations going on.

00:38:41   I don't know, but I find it really funny that they're still talking about maybe Google and

00:38:44   there's just nothing that has come out about that or any other potential partner other

00:38:48   than Apple's intent to have more partners than just open AI.

00:38:52   But maybe you use that to prop it up a little bit and say, you know, allow Siri to relay

00:38:57   my request to open AI, you know, and you log in and you say, don't ask me.

00:39:01   And then maybe you could get something that is at least a little bit better than the existing

00:39:06   Siri experience.

00:39:07   But I don't know.

00:39:09   I mean, it's not going to be based on your personal contacts.

00:39:11   That's the whole point, right?

00:39:12   Is that you want an intelligent Siri who knows all your personal contacts.

00:39:15   And it sounds like it's going to be the kind of dumb Siri with a smart personal contacts

00:39:19   backing instead for the next year.

00:39:23   So, Magrumas is reporting on an analyst note from Jeff Poo who says that he expects the

00:39:31   iPhone 17 Air would be the thinnest iPhone Apple has ever made.

00:39:36   So this is the thin version of the iPhone 17.

00:39:40   The iPhone 6 currently holds this title coming in at 6.9 millimeters.

00:39:45   This phone is expected to be just over six millimeters.

00:39:48   So it will be the thinnest phone ever and the current thinnest iPhone that you can buy

00:39:54   right now is the iPhone 16, which is 7.8 millimeters.

00:39:58   I can't wait for Bendgate 2025.

00:40:00   It's going to be awesome.

00:40:01   Bendgate.

00:40:02   Oh boy.

00:40:03   Yeah, baby.

00:40:04   Bring it back.

00:40:05   It's fine.

00:40:06   I think.

00:40:07   So, Mark Gurman had some color about this this week talking about how he put it firmly

00:40:20   in the context of Apple trying to find another iPhone that isn't the iPhone base model.

00:40:28   And there's the mini and then there was the plus.

00:40:31   His narrative is fascinating because he suggests first off, he suggests that loud Mac podcasters

00:40:36   bullied Apple into releasing the iPhone mini.

00:40:40   This loud Mac podcaster, if you call me that, said that they shouldn't.

00:40:44   So yeah, I was like, big fun.

00:40:46   Let's go.

00:40:47   Big fun.

00:40:48   And I, look, do things we say sometimes have an impact on what Apple does?

00:40:53   I guess.

00:40:54   Sure.

00:40:55   But for the iPhone at this scale of like, I'm skeptical of that.

00:41:00   But what I also think is funny is that he's like, oh, the podcasters said they would get

00:41:04   the mini, but that didn't work.

00:41:05   And then he's just like, and also then they tried the plus and that also didn't work.

00:41:09   It's like, yeah.

00:41:10   I mean, this is not a story about podcasters hoodwinking Apple into making a smaller phone.

00:41:15   It's that Apple has some specific sales goals for what that alternate iPhone product should

00:41:20   be.

00:41:21   Like if we're going to go to the trouble of making it, it should sell at this level.

00:41:24   And clearly making it smaller or bigger didn't satisfy.

00:41:27   So what are they going to do now?

00:41:28   Thinner.

00:41:29   They're trying a different dimension and they're going to see how this one works and we'll

00:41:32   see.

00:41:33   I also saw some skepticism, I mean, Gurman said, I don't think it's going to make a difference.

00:41:37   I mean, he's entering pundit territory there, right?

00:41:40   Which is very different.

00:41:41   He has the best sources.

00:41:42   His punditry is, it's just punditry.

00:41:44   It's fine.

00:41:45   But he's like, I don't think anything's going to move the needle here until the folding

00:41:48   phone.

00:41:49   I think he's probably right on a large scale, but I think that thin, I think thinness has

00:41:55   a different kind of appeal than bigger or smaller.

00:41:58   And I love that they're trying this because what they're trying is to redefine what table

00:42:04   stakes are in an iPhone.

00:42:06   And it's going to be like, I saw somebody on some social media network who even knows

00:42:10   anymore, which one, who can tell who was like, I'm really skeptical about this stupid thin

00:42:14   iPhone because you're going to lose multiple zoom levels.

00:42:19   And it's only going to, the one that made me laugh is it's only going to have one speaker.

00:42:22   It's not going to have stereo speakers.

00:42:23   And I'm like, if there's something I don't care about on my iPhone, it's the stereo speaker.

00:42:28   But okay.

00:42:29   Okay.

00:42:30   But this is the point is I love the idea that Apple's going to throw out a bunch of stuff

00:42:35   in order to get, it's the ultimate Johnny Ive impulse, right?

00:42:37   In order to get this thing to be as thin as possible.

00:42:40   But what they're not going to do is make it the main iPhone, at least not yet.

00:42:44   They're going to make it this thin alternative.

00:42:47   I like that idea because I wonder if some people will look at it and be like, Ooh, I

00:42:53   like that one in a way that, uh, that without, uh, another object for size reference, you

00:43:00   couldn't do with the other phones, right?

00:43:02   They're literally, Oh, it's an iPhone.

00:43:04   How is it different?

00:43:05   Well, this one's slightly bigger or slightly smaller.

00:43:07   This one should be much more visibly different.

00:43:10   I think that's interesting.

00:43:11   It's worth a try.

00:43:12   Is it going to create a huge spike in iPhone sales?

00:43:15   I don't think so.

00:43:17   It will move.

00:43:18   It will move people around.

00:43:19   I don't think this, and I think a folding phone could like a folding iPhone.

00:43:22   A folding phone could bring new people in.

00:43:24   I agree.

00:43:25   I think, I think what it might do is solve Apple's problem of how you have another phone

00:43:32   in the line, right?

00:43:33   That the mini and the plus didn't solve.

00:43:35   I think maybe having a phone that is different and has different, different trade-offs probably

00:43:42   more expensive than you'd think and different trade-offs is going to maybe entice some people

00:43:47   and also move people around.

00:43:48   But I also agree.

00:43:49   I mean, I think that we said here a few months ago is if you're making a folding phone, everything

00:43:55   in the individual planes of that phone has to get way thinner.

00:43:59   Making a thinner iPhone is a good way point on the way to making a folding iPhone.

00:44:06   And preparing people for what the trade-offs might be of a folding iPhone that we may not

00:44:10   be able to get that 5X camera in there on a folding phone, get used to it.

00:44:16   So I think this product, it's not going to change the world.

00:44:20   It's not going to generate a giant spike in iPhone sales.

00:44:23   This is all true, but I'm pretty positive about it being, I like that they're trying

00:44:29   it and I think it's got a better chance of success than the mini or the plus do, but

00:44:32   we'll see.

00:44:33   Jason, we're going to do some upstream.

00:44:37   Oh, that's nice.

00:44:39   That's nice.

00:44:41   People should tune into a downstream by the way, a podcast I do with a rotating group

00:44:45   of interesting people about the present and future of television.

00:44:50   There will be a link in the show notes, but you can also find downstream wherever you

00:44:54   get your podcasts.

00:44:56   Downstream is like a fun thing where I've never been part of a show that has had a spin-off,

00:45:00   right?

00:45:01   Yeah.

00:45:02   It was manifested by the ghost of Federico Future too, but yeah, we spun it right off.

00:45:08   But I think that's very fun and it's a great show.

00:45:11   But anyway, what I want to talk about here is there's two pieces of Apple TV news.

00:45:16   The first is in speaking to Deadline, writer and director of Wolfs, that's the George Clooney

00:45:23   and Brad Pitt movie, John Watts has shared that he does not want to continue working

00:45:29   with Apple for a potential sequel.

00:45:32   Watts was very unhappy that Apple decided to change course on a theatrical release.

00:45:36   They're originally going to make a theatrical release and then...

00:45:39   First minute, with one week's warning, they told the creative people involved that they

00:45:45   weren't going to bother.

00:45:47   And this was very upsetting to all of the people involved.

00:45:51   Because movie people want their movies in movie theaters, they do.

00:45:55   That's just, you got to deal with that.

00:45:57   Just in case, like, you know, if you don't know who John Watts is, like, he made the

00:46:02   Spider-Man movies.

00:46:03   He's a big deal director.

00:46:08   And he was going to do the Fantastic Four movie but didn't.

00:46:11   And then one of the things he did was this instead.

00:46:13   I think maybe he should have made that decision.

00:46:15   I don't know.

00:46:16   But anyway, so when this was going to be announced that they were going to be canceling the theatrical

00:46:21   release, Watts asked Apple to not mention that there was a sequel in development, which

00:46:27   was something that apparently during the development of Wolfs, Apple liked it so much that they

00:46:31   said, "We want to do another one."

00:46:33   And Watts was like, "Okay."

00:46:34   And they started work on that too.

00:46:36   But then when they were going to change course in this, it's like, "Please don't say about

00:46:39   this," but Apple did.

00:46:42   And I actually heard some reporting or some thoughts on this, like from Matt Bellamy,

00:46:46   who's the host of The Town and Wright's Oak Park, where he was saying when he heard about

00:46:50   the sequel, he didn't think that sequel was ever going to happen because the movie didn't

00:46:56   seem like it was going to perform very well, especially if they took it out of theaters.

00:47:00   And he believed that this was Apple trying to kind of like make Watts feel better.

00:47:05   But now Watts has this alternate story, which I'm more inclined to believe because this

00:47:10   is coming from him.

00:47:11   It's just like speculation from Bellamy's part.

00:47:13   Exactly.

00:47:14   Exactly.

00:47:15   It feels to me like Apple wanted to...

00:47:17   Apple changed direction, and we're going to get to the other story about this too, because

00:47:21   this is all about Apple TV+, but it's really about the film division, which is really interesting

00:47:28   because the TV division I think is doing a great job and the film division is completely

00:47:31   confused and lost.

00:47:33   And in this scenario, what they're trying to do is save face.

00:47:36   So they're like, "Yeah, we're not going to do a theatrical release, but we love the movie

00:47:41   and we've already commissioned work on a sequel."

00:47:44   And they're trying to do that to save face.

00:47:46   And I do believe they're actually trying to save face for the creative partners of the

00:47:52   movie, including the actors and the writer and director, saying we're not...

00:47:57   Even if they have no intent of actually funding the sequel, I think they mentioned the sequel

00:48:03   because they wanted to soften the blow and make it seem like they were still very confident

00:48:07   in these actors and the director.

00:48:08   The reason we're doing this is not because the movie's bad, right?

00:48:12   That's the message they're trying to get across.

00:48:14   But they also want to make it that people don't feel like the movie's going to be a

00:48:16   stinker, right?

00:48:17   So it's also self-serving.

00:48:19   But what it does do, if Watts asks you not to mention it, you got to not mention it if

00:48:26   you want to have good relationships with people in Hollywood, because this is the result.

00:48:30   Or you have a conversation saying, "John, we'd really like to mention it because it's

00:48:34   like a boost to the release of this."

00:48:36   But obviously he's so mad at this point.

00:48:38   And as we talked about this in the Upstream segment before, and certainly on Downstream,

00:48:43   that a lot of people who make movies in Hollywood, they want theatrical releases.

00:48:47   And they don't love the idea that the money that they're getting to make their movie,

00:48:50   which is great, they love the money, that those companies aren't that into theatrical.

00:48:56   Now we could actually make an argument that a lot of this stuff probably should get a

00:49:00   theatrical release, because it's marketing for when it comes on streaming.

00:49:04   But opinions vary.

00:49:07   Netflix doesn't want to do it.

00:49:10   And also the argument is, by the way, I think a strong argument that Wolfs was not going

00:49:14   to do well, and that Apple probably made the right business decision to do this.

00:49:18   But the problem is they treated it like a product launch and not like a creative endeavor,

00:49:22   where the fact is there are people who are very creative stars and writers and stuff,

00:49:28   and they don't hurt their feelings, because you do need to work with them and all of their

00:49:34   colleagues.

00:49:35   And it's a different dynamic than it is in the tech industry.

00:49:38   Maybe it shouldn't be.

00:49:39   Either way, maybe it should be nicer to your tech workers too.

00:49:44   But I think that the way that Hollywood works is the way that a lot of things work, where

00:49:48   like it is about personalities and relationships.

00:49:52   Personalities and relationships.

00:49:53   The problem is, when you kind of go against somebody's wishes, you end up with a quote

00:50:00   like this.

00:50:01   "Apple didn't cancel the Wolfs sequel.

00:50:03   I did, because I no longer trusted them as a creative partner."

00:50:07   Now that's bad news for new directors that Apple want to get on board.

00:50:12   There will always be people who will take your money.

00:50:15   And I think that there will be people who will take your money.

00:50:17   Also this is, I saw somebody who said this is just devastating for Apple and their reputation

00:50:23   is ruined.

00:50:24   And I'm like, every studio does stuff like this.

00:50:27   And then they have to mend fences.

00:50:29   Every studio does stuff like this.

00:50:31   Because there's definitely a director that they're currently trying to sign on who just

00:50:35   saw this headline and now is a bit like, and that's not what you want.

00:50:40   It's not what you want.

00:50:42   It's yeah, so part of this is Apple seems to have really not handled, I mean, they didn't

00:50:49   handle this situation well from a personal management standpoint, which in Hollywood

00:50:52   is important.

00:50:53   And it does smack a little bit of higher ups in the corporate structure saying, just do

00:50:58   it.

00:51:00   But at the same time, if you're the people in charge of Apple's films and John Watts

00:51:05   says, "Don't mention the sequel."

00:51:09   And he's the one who's working on the sequel.

00:51:13   You gotta not mention the sequel.

00:51:15   I'm sorry.

00:51:16   Like you gotta not mention it.

00:51:17   That is like, you've already angered him.

00:51:20   You've already betrayed him essentially, by unilaterally pulling the theatrical release

00:51:25   right before it's coming out, which is something that probably everybody working on the project

00:51:28   hung their hats on.

00:51:29   They're like, yeah, well, we're gonna get a theatrical release.

00:51:31   It's fine.

00:51:32   And we can debate separately about whether theatrical makes sense or not for a movie

00:51:36   like this.

00:51:37   That's fine.

00:51:38   Like you said you would.

00:51:39   People want it to be in the cinema because it's like it makes them feel good.

00:51:42   Absolutely.

00:51:43   And it's not a TV movie.

00:51:44   It's just it's a movie.

00:51:45   And then it's also on streaming, but they get that movie experience and they feel better

00:51:48   about it.

00:51:49   So we can debate the logic of that, but it doesn't matter.

00:51:51   Feelings matter.

00:51:52   Relationships matter.

00:51:53   They had this situation.

00:51:55   They made this decision where it basically feels like a betrayal.

00:51:59   And then on top of that, when one of the people who feels betrayed says, "Don't mention this

00:52:04   thing in your press release," and you just go ahead and mention it anyway, it's a double

00:52:10   betrayal.

00:52:11   It's very bad.

00:52:13   Don't do this.

00:52:14   So, I mean, maybe there'll be an explanation at some point where they're like, "Oh, it

00:52:17   didn't really kind of come down that way."

00:52:19   But I think from John Watts's perspective, it certainly did.

00:52:23   And if Apple, like Apple blew this.

00:52:24   I don't know whether they blew it because they miscommunicated or because they misunderstood.

00:52:28   They might have an excuse, but they blew it.

00:52:30   And it makes it harder for them to work with creative people in the future.

00:52:35   And ultimately, basically it means that either they're going to have to have more ironclad

00:52:40   promises about theatrical or they're going to have to pay more money to outbid their

00:52:45   competitors who are maybe viewed as more trustworthy until they betray their people too.

00:52:50   Because again, studios betray people.

00:52:52   And the whole point of this is they're spending too much money, right?

00:52:55   So like that doesn't even work.

00:52:58   Which brings us to our other story that we want to talk about here, because what's going

00:53:03   on at Apple in the film division is they have decided, and there was prior reporting about

00:53:09   basically like Tim Cook and Eddie Q sending the message down saying, "How we're doing

00:53:16   films is broken and doesn't make any sense from a business perspective.

00:53:20   We're spending way too much money."

00:53:23   All of which I'd say is true.

00:53:24   All of which is true, right?

00:53:26   They got Academy Awards and all that.

00:53:30   That's great.

00:53:31   But their movie strategy has never really made sense.

00:53:36   Other than viewing it as they want to work with famous people and get award nominations.

00:53:42   But from a business perspective, I don't think it's ever really made sense.

00:53:45   I don't think spending all the money that they've done on Napoleon and stuff like that.

00:53:50   I just don't think that it's made a lot of sense.

00:53:53   And they have started to pivot.

00:53:56   The challenge is, I think that pivot is what caused them to treat wolves the way they did.

00:54:01   The challenge is that the pipeline is so long for movies that you can change your whole

00:54:06   strategy, but you still got movies.

00:54:07   They still got that F1 movie.

00:54:09   That one's different.

00:54:10   I do think that one's different.

00:54:14   It's something that they can handle in their new strategy.

00:54:17   But the point is, they've changed and it doesn't matter that you've got these things going

00:54:20   on.

00:54:21   So I think the idea in the future that they need to do fewer movies and lower budget movies

00:54:26   and occasional tentpoles like the F1 movie is probably a better approach for them.

00:54:32   And then this piece from Lucas Shaw at Bloomberg, excellent reporter, great newsletter about

00:54:39   the entertainment business, talking about how Apple is now looking at licensing those

00:54:47   original films to other streamers.

00:54:52   The idea there is that right now the lifespan of a movie like Napoleon is it's in theaters

00:54:59   and then it's on Apple TV or it's in theaters and then there's a pay window where you can

00:55:03   rent it or buy it on iTunes and Amazon or wherever, but then it lives as a streamer

00:55:07   on Apple TV+.

00:55:11   What this report suggests is that they're going to take those movies that they have

00:55:15   endless eternal streaming rights to and they're going to do what honestly every other company

00:55:22   is doing, which is saying, "Yeah, this movie is now worth more to us if it's also on Netflix

00:55:33   than if it just stays on Apple TV+."

00:55:35   Because there comes a time where everybody who's on your service has seen it who's going

00:55:38   to watch it.

00:55:40   And there's a whole audience at Netflix or wherever who has not seen it and it has value

00:55:46   over there.

00:55:47   And so you end up having this idea that, "Well, early days of the streaming wars was I'm going

00:55:54   to take my ball and go home.

00:55:55   It's just going to be me.

00:55:56   You have to come to my service to get it."

00:55:58   And then in this next era of the streaming wars, it's like, "Oh yeah, that doesn't actually

00:56:04   -- I need money.

00:56:07   Let's license this out after all because our exclusive --" and it's leading to a new concept,

00:56:13   which is that they -- it's actually an old concept, but they brought it back -- which

00:56:16   is they pay the money for it.

00:56:18   They get it.

00:56:19   They get it to premiere it.

00:56:20   It's on their service.

00:56:21   It's got their logos on it and all that.

00:56:23   And then after some window of time, it goes other places and makes more money because

00:56:29   that's how you make money on TV shows and movies is continuing to sell them later.

00:56:36   And there have been many successes where shows that have been on one streamer -- TV shows,

00:56:40   but movies are probably the case too -- and then they go on Netflix and it's like it's

00:56:45   a new show.

00:56:46   And there's like -- it becomes a hit.

00:56:48   And it's because there's lots of people who have Netflix and they don't have your service.

00:56:52   And it's new to them.

00:56:54   Yeah, it's worth noting that at the moment, this licensing is for locations where Apple

00:57:02   isn't with Apple TV Plus.

00:57:04   But the expectation is from LucasShore and basically everybody else, that would just

00:57:10   be the start of this.

00:57:11   Like, if they can make money doing this, they should do this.

00:57:13   And like there -- it makes sense, right?

00:57:15   Like let's imagine you've got a new season of For All Mankind coming.

00:57:19   You could put the first three seasons on Netflix and then maybe people will come to Apple TV

00:57:24   Plus to watch the most recent one, right?

00:57:26   This is what other people do.

00:57:28   There's a reason you do it because Netflix is television.

00:57:30   Why aren't you not going to put your television show on television?

00:57:33   Like sometimes you kind of got to just deal with it.

00:57:36   I want to correct you on something there though.

00:57:39   This report does not say that Apple is planning on doing that with its TV shows.

00:57:43   This is for movies.

00:57:44   Yeah, yeah, sorry.

00:57:45   But you got my point though.

00:57:47   In the long run, it'd be all of it, right?

00:57:49   In the long run -- or here's the other thing though.

00:57:52   In the long run, Apple could do that.

00:57:54   But Apple is, you know, its priorities are a little bit different.

00:57:58   It could take a season of For All Mankind or whatever.

00:58:01   Also those are -- at some point they have to pay -- it's like with Ted Lasso.

00:58:04   The stuff that they don't produce themselves, they do have a license for.

00:58:07   At some point -- that's why it goes on Blu-ray or DVD and stuff like that eventually is because

00:58:11   they don't have that.

00:58:12   At some point they have to say, "We don't want to keep paying to have C on Apple TV

00:58:16   Plus."

00:58:17   And then the studio that made C can go take it somewhere else.

00:58:21   Man, I forgot about C.

00:58:22   C. Jason Momoa.

00:58:23   Jason Momoa.

00:58:24   I watched the season of that.

00:58:25   It was okay.

00:58:26   I never went back to it though.

00:58:27   Didn't like it.

00:58:30   But they spent a fortune on it, right?

00:58:32   So they could do that.

00:58:36   But there definitely is a scenario where Apple looks at this stuff and says, "Let's just

00:58:42   put it on Netflix."

00:58:43   There's also a scenario where Apple says, "Our fast" -- so for people who don't listen

00:58:49   to downstream -- "free ad-supported television."

00:58:52   This is like Tubi and Pluto TV.

00:59:00   And Amazon had Freebie, but they're just converting it to -- there's a free tier of stuff at Prime

00:59:06   Video.

00:59:07   Apple could do that, right?

00:59:10   They've experimented with this a little bit, but it wouldn't be hard for Apple to just

00:59:13   say the entire first season of For All Mankind is free in the TV app, wherever you are.

00:59:20   They could do some of that, of granting of early seasons, and just say they're out there

00:59:24   for free, but you've got to watch them on Apple.

00:59:26   They could do that.

00:59:28   They could even do that with ads if they really wanted to, which might be an alternative to

00:59:33   building a paid ad tier, is to put a bunch of stuff up on a free tier with ads.

00:59:37   They could do that too.

00:59:38   We'll see what they do with that.

00:59:40   But the movies is the start of this, which is -- and again, I think this is just part

00:59:44   of a grander plan, which is, "Our movie strategy is totally broken.

00:59:48   Let's recast it."

00:59:49   And all of these things are feeding into that, which is -- and I agree.

00:59:53   I think the individual moves they made with Wolf's -- bad moves.

00:59:58   Bad moves from a relationship perspective could have been handled better.

01:00:02   Not saying that they weren't right business-wise could have been handled better, but I think

01:00:06   that they are coming from a place which is, they flailed and were like, "Quick, movies!

01:00:12   Ah!" and made some bad decisions.

01:00:15   And now that's the part of the business that the higher-ups are like, "This is not working.

01:00:19   We need to get better at this."

01:00:21   And we'll see.

01:00:22   I mean, we'll see.

01:00:24   We'll see if Apple really -- movies on streaming are a problem, right?

01:00:31   Movies on streaming are -- I don't think people have cracked it, like they have TV.

01:00:35   I think that there are successes and also lots and lots of failures.

01:00:40   And I think there's even an argument to be made that streaming is fundamentally better

01:00:44   at TV, and that making movie-quality TV is what the movies are, and that people like

01:00:52   novels better than short stories, and TV is novels, and people like those better than

01:00:57   short stories, so maybe more TV and fewer movies is really the future, and that's just

01:01:01   how it is.

01:01:03   That's an argument.

01:01:05   But whatever movies are, and whatever blockbusters are, and whatever small films are, and also

01:01:10   niche like your hallmarks of the world and horror movies and thrillers and stuff like

01:01:16   that, I feel like nobody's really cracked it with streaming.

01:01:21   So we'll see what they do.

01:01:23   But Apple's taken another crack at it, and we'll see.

01:01:25   We'll see if it works or not.

01:01:27   Certainly, I think their goal is for it to cost less than whatever they're doing now.

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01:03:33   So you wrote an article at Macworld as part of your column that you do for them every

01:03:37   week?

01:03:38   Every other week.

01:03:39   Every other week.

01:03:40   That's tough.

01:03:41   You wrote this column about essentially the App Store era must end is the line here, which

01:03:51   I love.

01:03:52   There I said it.

01:03:53   And you are in this article kind of outlying the fact that the way that the iPhone App

01:04:01   Store works and is controlled isn't and shouldn't have to be the only model.

01:04:05   We can also have the Mac model, right?

01:04:08   Like that's kind of what you're laying out.

01:04:10   Yep, that's it.

01:04:12   Why did you want to write this now?

01:04:16   It's funny because I had this.

01:04:18   So I have a reminders list of story ideas.

01:04:20   And it's funny because sometimes there are lots and sometimes there are none.

01:04:24   And when I'm reviewing, when I'm doing the OS updates and all of those things in the

01:04:29   fall, that list gets long of ideas I have.

01:04:32   Like literally this was me pressing the action button on my iPhone and saying the Mac is

01:04:39   the model into it at one point.

01:04:41   And then it sat there for weeks because I was busy with so many other things.

01:04:45   Also in that list, there's like, oh, here's a little blog post I could do.

01:04:48   And then some of them are like, that is a Mac world pundit column.

01:04:52   So some of those end up on six colors, but I always want to have those in reserve.

01:04:56   So I knew I had this one coming up and I was like, okay, now's the time to do this thing.

01:05:00   And what's funny about it is the thought I had, I was listening probably to some podcasts

01:05:07   like connected or ATP or something like that, where people were talking about the EU and

01:05:13   Apple's various things that they were doing and, or, you know, app getting rejected for

01:05:18   this, and they're going to try to do this and all of that.

01:05:21   And I just had a moment, I don't even remember what the conversation was, but I had a moment

01:05:25   where I just got kind of mad and I thought, what are we doing here?

01:05:31   Why is it that any of us accept that we spend a thousand dollars on a device that is basically

01:05:38   a computer that runs software?

01:05:40   That's what it is.

01:05:41   Let's not pretend that it's something else.

01:05:43   It's a computer that runs software, third party software written by other people, just

01:05:46   like a person on computer was in 1980.

01:05:49   It's literally somebody else wrote you a program and now you can run it.

01:05:53   It's not any different functionally.

01:05:54   We know people who write these programs, they write them, we run them on our devices.

01:05:59   And how have we gotten to a point where so many people just accept that if the maker

01:06:04   of the device doesn't want you to use that thing anymore, or doesn't want it to have

01:06:08   a particular feature or anything like that, there's no recourse and you just can't use

01:06:11   it.

01:06:13   And I just had that little flare of anger of sort of like, why are we, why do we talk

01:06:19   about this so much?

01:06:20   Why do we go through all of these intricate details of, well, it violated this rule and

01:06:27   but it's just, and then the press got hold of it.

01:06:29   And then they said it was okay because they didn't want the bad publicity, but it shows

01:06:34   you how much power that Apple has over its platform.

01:06:39   So that's where it started is just me feeling like, wait a second.

01:06:44   Look, I was a kid when the first person on computers came out.

01:06:47   And so I do remember that moment that most people younger than me don't have, which is

01:06:53   like the moment when computers became a thing.

01:06:56   I was young, but there was a moment where in my, I don't know, fourth grade classroom,

01:07:01   there was a computer and it was like, whoa.

01:07:04   Right.

01:07:05   I mean, my life was changed in that moment, but until the app store, like we all knew

01:07:10   how computers worked, which is you could put, you could get programs and run them for good

01:07:14   and for worse.

01:07:15   Yeah.

01:07:16   And Apple, one of the things I mentioned in the article is Apple was trying to solve some

01:07:23   very particular problems.

01:07:24   First off the iPhone happened so quickly that like they were still putting it together,

01:07:28   even after they announced it, they were still putting it together.

01:07:30   I, I, you know, when I use the original iPhone in the demo room on the day that they announced

01:07:34   it at Mac world expert the next day, I guess I had one in my hand and I tapped on the notes

01:07:38   app and it was a screenshot of the notes app.

01:07:40   It was like, Oh yeah, yeah, it's not done.

01:07:42   It's not even closed.

01:07:43   It was going to ship six months later.

01:07:45   Right.

01:07:46   And so at the time we all asked like, what about third party apps?

01:07:49   And they're like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.

01:07:51   That was the sweet solution, which is you use Safari.

01:07:53   But the real answer was like, they didn't even know how they were building their apps

01:07:56   yet.

01:07:57   They were still figuring it all out.

01:07:58   The last thing they could do is that made that available to third parties.

01:08:00   They did the app store the next year.

01:08:02   The app store for people who don't know or remember this, the app store is a hack.

01:08:06   It is based on iTunes.

01:08:08   Um, they, they literally, if you ever wondered, I mean, it's actually a decision that completely

01:08:12   distorted how the app market worked because it's a system designed to sell 99 cents singles.

01:08:21   And for expediency sake, they cloned that and turned it into the app store.

01:08:27   Um, it's why iTunes connect or app store connect was so bad for so long because they don't

01:08:35   really care about the uploads from record labels or developers.

01:08:39   Why the store looked and looks like it does to this day.

01:08:43   There are still elements of that.

01:08:45   Why was driven by sales charts for so long?

01:08:47   Yeah.

01:08:48   Like why would you even have charts?

01:08:50   Yeah, but hit singles is the answer.

01:08:53   So, so all, so a lot of Apple's early decisions were about expediency.

01:08:59   So fair enough.

01:09:00   But what happened is over time, Apple realized, I mean, even though the financial decisions

01:09:04   to say, look, we've, we've wired it so that you can just buy these apps right using your

01:09:09   credit card that we've got again, iTunes, it's the whole idea.

01:09:12   And they're like, well, okay, so there need to be an app purchases and subscriptions.

01:09:15   It all kind of evolved from there, but it was all coming out of that original idea of

01:09:17   like, we just want to make it easy.

01:09:20   But there was also this aspect, which is, which was, I think coming from a place of,

01:09:24   we barely started with this thing.

01:09:26   We don't even know what it's going to be.

01:09:27   We're going to make a vending machine for apps and that's what we're going to do.

01:09:31   But over time, Apple saw their control of the platform as a benefit and a, and their,

01:09:40   their control over the financial transactions in the platform as a benefit.

01:09:44   And that has led to a decade or more of rent seeking and rejections and deciding, you know,

01:09:51   creating arbitrary rules and say, we just don't want this kind of app in our platform.

01:09:56   And there being no recourse.

01:09:57   And one of the reasons that this makes me angry is, and we'll get to the Mac in a second,

01:10:03   but like on the Mac, if you have an idea for an app that will run on the Mac, you just

01:10:08   can make it.

01:10:10   And you might want to put it in the Mac app store.

01:10:12   But if Apple looks at it and goes like, yeah, actually you're doing this thing that we have

01:10:16   decided the Mac app store apps can't do.

01:10:19   So you can't be in the Mac app store.

01:10:21   You go, okay.

01:10:22   And you put it somewhere else.

01:10:24   You sell it yourself.

01:10:25   You do whatever.

01:10:26   It's not a problem.

01:10:27   It's like, it's literally not a problem.

01:10:30   On iOS, there's no step two.

01:10:32   Or like Apple changes a rule, right?

01:10:34   Which is the thing that they have done over the time of the Mac app store.

01:10:37   They have.

01:10:38   Or in some cases it turns out they changed a rule and then they changed it back so that

01:10:41   apps have to exit the app store.

01:10:43   That's happened recently, which is really interesting.

01:10:45   They're like, they greased the skids to get somebody in the app store.

01:10:48   And then later they were like, no, that time is over.

01:10:51   And you're like, okay, bye.

01:10:54   But on iOS, you can't do it.

01:10:55   On iOS, just think about this for a second.

01:10:59   On iOS, if you have an idea for an app, that's a great idea.

01:11:03   You can't just make it.

01:11:04   You have to stop and say, will this get approved?

01:11:11   And there's no pre-approval.

01:11:13   You have to decide if you're going to spend money or time in large amounts to make an

01:11:20   app that if Apple decides it doesn't want in the store, can't be distributed to anyone

01:11:29   forever.

01:11:31   And it's not like you can turn around and run it on Windows or run it on Android.

01:11:35   Like you built an iOS app.

01:11:37   It's gone.

01:11:39   As a result, it's not just the rejections.

01:11:41   The rejections that we hear about are from people who thought it was fine and they were

01:11:45   doing the right thing and they were following the rules.

01:11:48   Those are the rejections we hear about.

01:11:50   What we don't hear about are the thousands of app ideas that died because somebody said,

01:11:56   hmm, I don't trust that Apple will allow this.

01:11:59   So we'll just not bother.

01:12:01   And that makes the whole thing poor.

01:12:03   And all of this is solved if there's another option beyond the app store.

01:12:08   It's not killing the app store.

01:12:10   It's another option beyond the app store.

01:12:13   So the Mac is the answer.

01:12:16   And that's why I wrote the Mac is the model.

01:12:18   That's why I shouted it into my phone when I had this thought.

01:12:21   Mac is the model is because here's the thing.

01:12:23   A lot of the stuff we criticize Apple about, there are people who are like Apple's biggest

01:12:27   fans and think Apple is the greatest.

01:12:31   And yet there's this weird effect where if there's something Apple isn't doing, immediately

01:12:34   Apple becomes completely incapable of solving the problem, right?

01:12:37   They're the greatest company ever at everything they do, but the things they don't do it's

01:12:40   because they're completely just incapable of solving that problem.

01:12:44   It's a weird kind of fandom that I see from some people.

01:12:49   And with this one, though, Apple's already solved this problem.

01:12:55   Apple solved this problem in, I think it's like 2017, thereabouts, 2018.

01:13:02   Apple introduced notarization.

01:13:06   Apple wanted to bring app store level security to the Mac, which is an open platform.

01:13:10   So they can't close it off.

01:13:11   They could, but I don't think it would work.

01:13:15   I think people would revolt if they did that.

01:13:17   And there was an executive who stood on stage at WWDC in San Jose and said, we will never

01:13:21   prevent you from running software you want to run on your Mac.

01:13:24   So what they did was they built the notarization system, which is a whole thing, right?

01:13:28   It's a system where you are already a registered developer or you register as a developer and

01:13:32   you get your developer keychain and then you can sign your app and you send it into this

01:13:38   automated system and Apple scans it for malware and Apple signs it, which has the effect of

01:13:42   meaning that it can't be tampered with after the fact or the signature doesn't match and

01:13:46   it breaks.

01:13:47   So it adds a whole layer of security.

01:13:49   And then there's a setting on the Mac that says, do I want to run apps from just the

01:13:53   app store or by default, app store and authorized developers or authenticated developers, trusted

01:14:00   developers, something like that.

01:14:02   Well, I mean, first off there, you've got it.

01:14:06   You've got a solution that's outside the app store approved by Apple where Apple is checking

01:14:10   for the worst stuff, but it gives more flexibility beyond the app store policies.

01:14:16   It's right there.

01:14:17   And then on top of that, there is still the, if you say, yeah, but Apple still has to be

01:14:23   a part of the process, you can still run software that is notarized.

01:14:27   It's harder than it used to be for some good reasons, because if you view it as these are

01:14:33   the steps that a malware person, a phone scammer is going to talk your parent, you know, your

01:14:38   elderly parent or grandparent into doing in a scam call, you want as many barriers up

01:14:44   as possible.

01:14:45   But in the end, if I want to run make MKV on my Mac and it's not signed, it's not notarized,

01:14:52   I can do it.

01:14:53   It's just a bunch of steps.

01:14:56   Okay.

01:14:57   So that's where we are with the Mac.

01:15:00   There's the multiple circles of trust.

01:15:02   The inner circle is the app store.

01:15:04   The next circle out is notarization.

01:15:06   And then the furthest one out is good luck.

01:15:09   You know, God be with you.

01:15:11   Just under notarization thing, never not funny and awkward that it's Gatekeeper on the Mac

01:15:15   is the name of the system that can determine whether an app can run.

01:15:20   It's like part of it, but it's like always funny to me that it's called Gatekeeper.

01:15:23   And Gatekeeper originated earlier because Gatekeeper is the thing that was there from

01:15:28   an earlier point where the first launch, it tells you, you downloaded this thing from

01:15:32   this website at this time.

01:15:34   Do you want to launch this first time out of the box?

01:15:36   That's Gatekeeper.

01:15:37   But now it's also doing the no, it's not notarized, you can't run this at all kind of thing.

01:15:42   That's all in there.

01:15:43   And also is the kill switch, right?

01:15:45   Like there is the kill switch exists where like if Apple can kind of kill off an app.

01:15:50   Because the kill switch is after first launch, they can just kill it.

01:15:53   And there's X protect and all, there's a bunch of different stuff in there.

01:15:55   But it's the reason why if you can get through the security prompts and launch an app that's

01:16:00   not signed for the first time, it'll run every time after that because Gatekeeper is a first

01:16:04   launch kind of thing, but they have other things that they can do to scan stuff.

01:16:09   So this is my point is Apple, Apple's most recent model of app security is a multi-layered

01:16:19   approach that begins with a curated app store and then expands.

01:16:23   Yep.

01:16:24   So the app store model is not Apple's most recent take.

01:16:28   Apple's most recent take is the Mac, the Mac.

01:16:32   And that's why the Mac is the model.

01:16:33   The Mac is Apple's approach to how you have an open software platform that still has a

01:16:39   level of curation from the platform owner and levels of security that are available.

01:16:45   They built it because they had to figure out, well, they didn't have to, but they wanted

01:16:48   very badly to have some way to make the Mac have some of the positive effects of security

01:16:55   and control that the app store on iOS had.

01:16:58   And yet they knew that they couldn't stick everybody in the Mac app store for lots of

01:17:01   reasons.

01:17:02   So they built this other really clever thing.

01:17:04   What's interesting is as the DMA has come down on them in the EU, Apple has stolen pieces

01:17:12   of the Mac model as needed to backfill.

01:17:16   So there is a notarization system in the EU alternative app stores thing.

01:17:22   Now they had that one moment where they tried to deny somebody notarization because they

01:17:25   didn't like the policies, which I believe the EC immediately said, "No, that is not

01:17:30   allowed.

01:17:31   You cannot do that.

01:17:32   You can only use this for security reasons."

01:17:34   I find that deeply troubling because up till then notarization has had a complete clean

01:17:39   -- I mean, when they introduced it for the Mac, we're all like, "Is this de facto authorization

01:17:43   of apps on macOS?"

01:17:44   And it's turned out it isn't.

01:17:46   But they have at least once in the EU for iOS at least briefly tried to use notarization

01:17:52   as a way to reject things outside the app store.

01:17:55   But if we leave that aside, there is a model here that allows people freedom.

01:18:02   It allows developers something that is a fallback that gets them on the platform even if it's

01:18:08   outside of Apple's good graces.

01:18:10   And ultimately, if there's a user who really, really wants it, it lets them execute arbitrary

01:18:14   code that comes from wherever if they step through all the hoops.

01:18:19   And to me, this is a solved problem.

01:18:25   And when I look to the future, I feel like this is the future, that every device should

01:18:30   be like this, including the iPhone and the iPad.

01:18:34   Because if you just want to use apps from the app store, go ahead and use them.

01:18:37   But we are all poorer when app developers are unable to write software that they want

01:18:46   to write because it might not be approved.

01:18:50   And separately, when they don't have the option of linking out to their website, because the

01:18:55   web is a thing, and yet Apple is so terrified of linking to the web because they're afraid

01:19:02   that services will not give Apple a cut of that revenue.

01:19:08   And I think this is all part of the same thing, whereas Apple could compete.

01:19:13   And I think Apple should compete.

01:19:16   When I've talked about this, I've had a bunch of people ask, "Well, why wouldn't Apple want

01:19:20   to compete?"

01:19:21   And the answer is something that we said, I think it was a title even, which is if you're

01:19:25   the umpire and you own the field and the stadium and everything, right?

01:19:28   Why compete if you don't have to?

01:19:32   Like bottom line is it's better to have no competition.

01:19:35   It's, yeah, you don't have to work hard and all the money just keeps pouring in.

01:19:40   But Apple should have to compete and still has a great advantaged position because they're

01:19:46   the platform owner and they're Apple and they're trusted by the users.

01:19:51   And there's lots of reasons to think that Apple would do just fine in this model, but

01:19:55   the Mac is where they actually, it actually already works.

01:20:01   And I've heard people say, "Well, yeah, but the Mac App Store is so bad.

01:20:04   Would you want the iOS App Store to be like that?"

01:20:06   And my thought to that is Mac App Store is so bad because Apple doesn't put a lot of

01:20:11   effort into the Mac App Store.

01:20:14   And I think Apple would put effort into the iOS App Store and want to keep as many of

01:20:19   the apps in there as possible.

01:20:20   And so would developers.

01:20:22   There are a lot of developers that would not want to leave the iOS App Store.

01:20:26   Absolutely.

01:20:27   They just wouldn't.

01:20:28   If you had a free app, why would you be anywhere else?

01:20:32   No, and that's the model.

01:20:33   Again, the model is the best place to be is in the inner circle where everything works.

01:20:38   And even if your administrator locks down your phone and says like they do with Macs

01:20:43   and say only App Store apps, it's fine.

01:20:47   You can live that way and that's where you want to be.

01:20:50   But if you're that developer with that great idea or a business model that's very different,

01:20:56   to have the ability to say, "Okay, it turns out it didn't work with Apple, so we're just

01:21:01   going to release this on our own."

01:21:02   It doesn't necessarily have to be like, "You might want to be in the App Store, but it

01:21:07   doesn't work out."

01:21:08   Okay, right?

01:21:10   Plan B. It's fine.

01:21:12   It's fine.

01:21:13   But there has to be a plan B. And I would actually argue that in the EU, my problem

01:21:17   with the way the EU stuff is implemented right now is that it's through these app market

01:21:21   places where you're just replacing one curator with another.

01:21:25   And I hate that.

01:21:27   In the end, if I'm a developer of software and I want it to be available, I don't want

01:21:33   to have to work with a marketplace.

01:21:35   I want to make it available however I choose.

01:21:37   They're a piece of the puzzle, not the solution.

01:21:41   You can have other app marketplaces that exist on the Mac like SetApp, right?

01:21:44   It offers a completely different business model.

01:21:47   Or maybe you want that model or maybe you don't.

01:21:49   Or maybe you just want to offer your app on your website.

01:21:56   And that's the end of it.

01:21:57   And you should be able to.

01:21:59   So I mean, in the end, this is the thing that made me kind of like angry and then also made

01:22:02   me laugh is that Apple solved this.

01:22:07   Why have they not put that on iOS?

01:22:09   And the answer is people will be like, "Oh, it's because it would be madness and there

01:22:11   would be security and blah, blah, blah."

01:22:13   No, no.

01:22:15   The reason it's not on iOS is that nobody's forcing them, except in the EU, nobody's forcing

01:22:20   them to do any of this.

01:22:22   Why compete if you don't have to?

01:22:24   Why not just have complete control over your platform?

01:22:28   Because Apple built a system that does this, that lets them have their app store and a

01:22:33   notarization step and then an open step beyond that that's hard to get to.

01:22:37   They built the system for the Mac.

01:22:40   And I would say, I think it works pretty well.

01:22:43   So the only reason they're not doing it is because they don't have to.

01:22:47   And why would they bother?

01:22:49   Because they have complete control and huge financial leverage.

01:22:53   And so it makes them a lot of money and it allows them to completely dictate what goes

01:22:56   on their platform and treat, and this is an important point, and treat all third party

01:23:01   app developers as if they were Apple employees.

01:23:04   Because if you're an app developer, even our indie friends, okay, apologies for going on

01:23:12   a rant here, but our indie app developer friends aren't indie.

01:23:15   They aren't, they work for Apple.

01:23:16   They work for Apple because if Apple tells them to jump, they have to say how high.

01:23:21   They have to, or they can't be on the platform.

01:23:25   So essentially, Apple, they have to follow Apple's rules.

01:23:29   They get paid by Apple, right?

01:23:31   Because Apple takes the money.

01:23:32   They get paid by Apple, their customers aren't their customers.

01:23:35   The only thing is that they don't get to charge Apple an hourly rate.

01:23:38   Instead, Apple just takes their 15 or 30%.

01:23:41   But they're essentially working for Apple.

01:23:44   And that's how Apple wants it.

01:23:46   But that's not how it should be.

01:23:48   Bottom line is that's not how it should be.

01:23:51   And I've already seen some people push back on this line of thinking and say, "Well, just

01:23:56   go get Android."

01:23:57   And they're like, "First off, Google is not a saint here.

01:24:00   But yes, you could do that.

01:24:02   You could go to Android and there are some other options out there."

01:24:06   Okay, but that doesn't really solve this point, which is the iPhone is an influential and

01:24:14   important platform.

01:24:16   And Apple has just decided to keep it locked down in a way that I think is wrong.

01:24:21   Like bottom line, it's bad for everybody, except for some revenue and control at Apple.

01:24:28   And I think it needs to end.

01:24:29   I don't want the future to look like the iPhone.

01:24:32   That's the bottom line.

01:24:34   My entire thought process about this is where do I want computers, and the iPhone is a computer

01:24:38   and the iPad is a computer, where do I want them to go in the 21st century?

01:24:42   And where I don't want them to go is where the maker of the computer has complete control

01:24:47   over what you do with it.

01:24:49   I don't want that to be the future.

01:24:51   I want it to be balanced.

01:24:52   I don't want it to be like, man, desktop Linux, woo!

01:24:55   I don't want that.

01:24:56   I want it to be balanced.

01:24:57   I want it to be safe.

01:24:58   I want it to be secure.

01:24:59   I want it to be good.

01:25:01   But none of that requires the level of power and control that Apple exerts over iOS.

01:25:08   None of it is required.

01:25:09   It's just we look at it and we think it's required because that's the way it's always

01:25:13   been.

01:25:14   That's not the case.

01:25:15   And the Mac shows us why it's not.

01:25:19   This episode is brought to you by Data Citizen's Dialogue.

01:25:24   As listener of Upgrade, you know that data is shaping our world today.

01:25:28   If you're ready for a deeper dive into the latest hot topics in data, you need to listen

01:25:33   to the Data Citizen's Dialogues podcast, brought to you by Collibra, the leader in

01:25:38   data intelligence.

01:25:39   In every episode of Data Citizen's Dialogues, industry leaders unpack data's impact on

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01:25:54   You'll hear first hand insights about the data conversations affecting all kinds of industries.

01:25:59   You can expect guests sharing unique stories from some of the world's largest companies

01:26:03   like Adobe, Fidelity Investments, Deloitte, Hewlett Packard, McDonald's, and even the

01:26:08   US Coast Guard.

01:26:09   I listened to an episode yesterday about how using data effectively and efficiently is

01:26:15   improving healthcare at Memorial Care.

01:26:18   I really enjoyed how the episode featured the people that are actually implementing

01:26:21   the technologies they talk about because then they can bring practical examples of the work

01:26:25   that they've done and the challenges that they've faced, as well as keeping the focus,

01:26:29   I like to say about them specifically, keeping the focus on making sure that privacy is the

01:26:33   highest level possible for their patients.

01:26:36   The Data Citizen's Dialogues podcast is bringing the data conversation to you.

01:26:40   So go check it out now.

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01:26:47   Our thanks to Data Citizen's Dialogues for their support of this show and all of Relay.

01:26:53   Let's finish out with some Ask Upgrade questions.

01:26:56   There was a little delay on the laser there today.

01:27:02   I had to unmute myself because I was sparing you from my keyboard clicks, but I got there.

01:27:06   I'm sure you needed a break because I wanted to say that I really enjoyed the segment on

01:27:12   the App Store thing and I appreciate you taking us on a little seminar there, I think I'll

01:27:16   call it.

01:27:17   I was just waiting for you to jump in and I left some pauses, but I don't know how you're

01:27:21   feeling about that.

01:27:22   How are you feeling about that before we get to Ask Upgrade?

01:27:25   That segment?

01:27:26   Okay, well now we're on a slight dive in.

01:27:27   I think you're completely right in what you're saying.

01:27:30   I think that we have, we've touched upon this stuff before in many ways over the Lawyer Up

01:27:37   segment and I am in complete agreement with you.

01:27:41   I am not one of the, I'm not of the say, John Gruber school of thought that the iPhone is

01:27:48   a console and Macs are computers, right?

01:27:52   Like iPhones and iPads are computers and I, as you say in one point that like you have

01:27:58   a, you know, you buy like a $1,000 computer and you're told what you can put on it.

01:28:03   No, it's a computer.

01:28:05   This is more capable than most computers out there, my iPhone or my iPad, but they're hamstrung

01:28:10   by the fact that people can't develop whatever software they want and we can't put whatever

01:28:15   software we want on them.

01:28:16   Like I completely agree with you.

01:28:18   I actually don't have any time for the console argument anyway.

01:28:20   No, I never did, but I believe that if you buy a Nintendo Switch or a PlayStation or

01:28:26   an Xbox and this is, I was a child of the Atari 2600 when Activision came out with their

01:28:32   cartridges for it and Atari sued and said, "You can't make software for a platform."

01:28:35   And they lost.

01:28:38   I don't like those gatekeepers either and I saw somebody who said, "Yeah, but you can't

01:28:41   do that because they sell their consoles at a loss and then make it up."

01:28:44   And I was like, "Their business model is not my problem."

01:28:47   Like if you're somebody who doesn't get authorization from Sony or Microsoft or Nintendo and writes

01:28:54   software for their platforms, if they allow third-party developers, I would say if they

01:29:00   write it all themselves, it's one thing, but like if they allow third-party developers,

01:29:04   I actually don't think that they should be able to stop it either.

01:29:08   I am a radical about computer software.

01:29:11   Like there should be a way to put software on those devices too.

01:29:16   But certainly the iPhone is not some kind of a cockamamie app console.

01:29:21   That's ludicrous.

01:29:22   Just ludicrous argument.

01:29:23   No, I understand what you're saying.

01:29:24   I don't disagree with it.

01:29:25   I do think that it's just different.

01:29:27   I just think video game consoles and smartphones, they are fundamentally different things.

01:29:34   Completely different.

01:29:35   Completely different.

01:29:36   And so like I don't think that, I mean, I just don't think that you can apply the rules

01:29:42   of PlayStation to Microsoft in gaming to Apple or Microsoft in computers.

01:29:48   I just don't think that they overlap because then it's like, "Well, what if I start talking

01:29:52   about like a kitchen supply company?

01:29:55   Can I overlay their business model over Apple's?"

01:29:57   It doesn't work like that.

01:30:00   Just because they're both technological things.

01:30:02   The iPhone is a computer.

01:30:04   It is a computer.

01:30:05   It is not a games console.

01:30:06   It is.

01:30:07   Computers can play games.

01:30:08   Right?

01:30:09   Yeah.

01:30:10   That should, but anyway, so like, yes, I completely agree with you.

01:30:12   I talked about this on the Six Colors podcast last week, but I'll just mention really quickly

01:30:16   here.

01:30:17   Like if people want an example, cause it's like, "Oh yeah, but what about the game emulators?

01:30:19   Is this all about game emulators?"

01:30:20   Well, I'll tell you what, you can run Mac OS on the iPad today if Apple didn't control

01:30:24   it.

01:30:25   You could.

01:30:26   Someone would have done it.

01:30:27   Because Apple doesn't allow emulators on iPad OS.

01:30:30   And if you, like computer emulators.

01:30:33   And the moment that, if that was, if Parallels or VMware could just sell it themselves, sell

01:30:38   a version of their emulator themselves for iPad OS, and you could install it.

01:30:42   Well, you get Linux up and running.

01:30:44   You'd probably get Windows for ARM up and running.

01:30:47   And at that point, like you might as well have Mac OS up and running on there.

01:30:51   And wouldn't that be great?

01:30:53   And that would put, wouldn't that put pressure on Apple to maybe make a Mac mode in iPad

01:30:56   OS a thing themselves?

01:30:58   Or would they be like, "No, actually this relieves the pressure cause you can just run

01:31:01   an emulated version of Mac OS."

01:31:02   But like the hardware is the same.

01:31:04   The hardware is literally the same at this point.

01:31:06   The only reason that you can't do that is because of policy.

01:31:09   Because Apple has decided they don't want to let you.

01:31:12   And I hate it.

01:31:13   I hate that.

01:31:14   Yep.

01:31:15   All right, give another go at those lasers.

01:31:17   There we go.

01:31:19   Some Ask upgrade questions.

01:31:21   Jonathan asks, "Does Jason know why John Cusack follows him on Blue Sky?

01:31:26   I was scrolling Cusack's follow list and did a double take."

01:31:29   Did you know this was the case?

01:31:31   I didn't even know that this was the case.

01:31:34   It's a mystery.

01:31:35   My guess is that he clicked the wrong thing.

01:31:37   No, he also follows Joanna Stern.

01:31:39   So like I went and looked.

01:31:40   So like he must like, he must like tech stuff.

01:31:43   I'm going to have to post something on Blue Sky about my love of Say Anything and Gross

01:31:48   Point Blank at some point.

01:31:51   You should just post, you should just post the mic at the movies, say anything and just

01:31:55   see if he has anything to say about that, you know?

01:31:58   Yeah.

01:31:59   See, ironically enough, if he has anything to say about Say Anything.

01:32:01   Sure.

01:32:02   I wouldn't object to it.

01:32:04   It's true.

01:32:05   It is.

01:32:06   It's him and he follows you.

01:32:08   So congratulations on that.

01:32:09   It's pretty sweet.

01:32:10   It's pretty cool.

01:32:11   Mr. Cusack, if you're out there, hello.

01:32:14   Yeah.

01:32:15   Love your stuff.

01:32:16   Love your work.

01:32:17   High Fidelity.

01:32:18   I didn't even mention High Fidelity.

01:32:19   It's one of my favorite movies too.

01:32:20   He's in a bunch of my favorite movies.

01:32:21   He really is.

01:32:22   He's an 80s icon.

01:32:24   And I mean that with, again, 80 out of 80 on the scale of 80s.

01:32:28   John Cusack's an 80 out of 80.

01:32:31   Evan asks, "How are you both feeling about MagSafe on Apple's notebooks now that it's

01:32:35   been around for a few years?

01:32:37   I find myself torn carrying only a MagSafe cable over a USB-C cable when I'm on the go.

01:32:42   While I prefer the magnetic connector, it's hard to pass up on USB-C since I can choose

01:32:47   to plug it in on either side.

01:32:49   I'm curious which option you guys are using when you're not at your desk."

01:32:52   When I read this question, I was like, "Oh, Evan, you have seen into my soul."

01:32:56   I think about this all the time.

01:32:59   I love MagSafe and I have a MagSafe cable in my charging bag, but I know I don't need

01:33:05   it because I could just use a USB-C cable instead.

01:33:09   It's definitely a thing where it's like, I love that we have MagSafe, but I don't need

01:33:14   it the same way that I used to, I feel like.

01:33:17   And that is a very funny thing.

01:33:19   I was like, "I'm so happy it's there, but it is also superfluous as much as I love it."

01:33:24   Well, back in the day, MagSafe was the only way to charge your computer and now you can

01:33:28   charge via USB-C, so it's a totally different scenario.

01:33:30   I totally get what Evan's saying.

01:33:32   My laptop use, at home, I have a Thunderbolt cable that has all of my stuff hanging off

01:33:39   of it in the back bedroom.

01:33:42   So I don't use MagSafe there because that's power and display and Ethernet and all of

01:33:49   it, just one plug, and it's great.

01:33:52   When I travel, it's interesting.

01:33:54   You're right, it is superfluous.

01:33:55   When I travel, what I've come to realize is that I will bring a MagSafe cable if I'm bringing

01:34:04   enough devices that I feel like I'm going to need to charge, that I will also charge

01:34:10   the Mac at the same time.

01:34:11   - The USB-C cable, right?

01:34:12   I'll have to use it.

01:34:13   - Exactly.

01:34:14   You kind of do the math and then I'll bring the MagSafe connector, but if I'm traveling

01:34:19   light and I only am going to bring a couple of USB-C cables, then I don't need to bother

01:34:24   with the MagSafe if I'm not, right?

01:34:26   Because I can use that and it's all very versatile and that's nice.

01:34:29   What's great about MagSafe is to put it someplace where you're unhooking and rehooking your

01:34:34   computer all the time.

01:34:35   So like Lauren right now is using my old M1 MacBook Air, no MagSafe.

01:34:40   And it's a whole thing where it's like, I mean, the advantage of it is we have a plug

01:34:44   there.

01:34:45   We can plug our iPads into it, we can plug her computer into it and it charges.

01:34:48   Great.

01:34:49   But we used to have her on a computer with MagSafe and what was great about it is she

01:34:54   had a little place she could put her computer and then put the MagSafe on and then you just

01:34:57   pop it off and go and that's nicer.

01:35:00   So MagSafe is not as essential as it used to be, but I'm very glad we have it.

01:35:04   And I'm also very glad because it means that you can, so here's a real world example.

01:35:09   One of the reasons I started traveling again with MagSafe to visit my mom is that I realized

01:35:14   I need all those ports on my MacBook Air.

01:35:18   I need all the ports.

01:35:19   I can't use a port for charging because I need the ports for peripherals when I'm doing

01:35:23   a podcast.

01:35:24   I need to have a camera on there, I need to have a microphone on there.

01:35:27   I could bring a hub, but like I don't need to bring a hub.

01:35:29   I just need to bring a MagSafe cable because then I can do power and have those ports open.

01:35:35   And so that's another reason to like MagSafe is that it keeps your USB ports open.

01:35:40   But the truth, Evan is absolutely right, MagSafe is never going to be as essential as it was

01:35:46   because it used to be the only way that you could charge your computer and now USB-C is

01:35:50   there too and it's great.

01:35:51   And I would never advocate for USB-C charging to go away because it's so great to have that

01:35:56   one Thunderbolt cable that attaches and powers my computer and also all of the stuff.

01:36:01   So yeah, that's where we are.

01:36:03   So I use MagSafe sometimes, but not as often as I expected because most of the contexts

01:36:10   that I'm using it, I've got a USB-C cable there and so I'll just use that.

01:36:15   And Jason asks, do you use iOS's send later feature in messages?

01:36:19   I have never used that outside of testing.

01:36:22   I don't use it either.

01:36:24   I did actually for the first time ever schedule an email to send last week.

01:36:30   I just had something that I knew would be good if it landed with somebody in the morning

01:36:34   and so I just, I had the thought and I was like, I don't want to send this late.

01:36:37   I'll send it and it will like 8.30 or whatever and it'll just go for me.

01:36:41   The reason I never use the send later for messages thing is one, I mean, I just message

01:36:47   people.

01:36:48   Like I just message them.

01:36:49   Like for one-on-one instant messaging, people in my life, they know my hours, like whatever.

01:36:56   But I always feel like it would feel weird if I shared a message to you and then you

01:37:02   sent me a message and then my one came in like and it was, you know, that's why I don't

01:37:08   like it.

01:37:09   It's like what happens if like, you know, I'm like, oh, hey Jason, lol or whatever.

01:37:17   I don't know why I sent you that, but like, you know, you messaged me like, oh Mike, something

01:37:20   terrible happened to me and you know, and then like next message is like, I'm like,

01:37:24   uh, lol.

01:37:26   Congratulations Cal won.

01:37:27   Yay.

01:37:28   And then the next morning, so did Cal win?

01:37:29   Yeah, exactly.

01:37:30   Or you know, like Jason, I only want to go 97 yards with my boys and you'd be like, no,

01:37:35   it's 98 yards with the boys.

01:37:36   One more yard.

01:37:37   We've got to get that extra yard in there or it doesn't work.

01:37:39   So yeah, I don't, I don't use this feature.

01:37:41   I yeah, I text you at times that, uh, that many people would be asleep.

01:37:47   Yeah.

01:37:48   Here's what I know.

01:37:49   I know.

01:37:50   First off, you got focus modes and whatever.

01:37:51   I'm not going to be ding dinging you in the middle of the night.

01:37:53   That's my responsibility, not yours.

01:37:55   Yeah.

01:37:56   And second, sometimes you're awake.

01:37:58   Yeah.

01:37:59   And you get a response back and I love that.

01:38:00   I send you a message.

01:38:02   This happens sometimes where I send you a message and I'm like, yeah, he'll get it in

01:38:05   the morning and then you respond and I'm like, oh, that's delightful.

01:38:07   It's 1230 or it's 1am or something like that.

01:38:10   You're still up and that's nice.

01:38:11   I mean, James Thompson, I do that and he responds and I know it's like 2am and I'm like, James,

01:38:17   go to bed.

01:38:18   We all have that conversation with James.

01:38:20   Oh, you actually just stumbled into a thing, which is one of my biggest pet peeves, which

01:38:24   is people telling me to go to bed.

01:38:28   I know when to go to bed.

01:38:29   You don't need to tell me when to go to bed.

01:38:31   People message me and it's like 12, midnight, 1am, 2am and I'm still awake and I'm sending

01:38:36   them and say, oh, I might go to bed.

01:38:37   No, I'm a grownup.

01:38:39   I'm nearly 40 years old.

01:38:42   It takes a village to take care of James and so sometimes when it's very, very, very late

01:38:46   and we're worried about him, we will tell him to go to bed, but mostly not.

01:38:50   But maybe James wants to be told.

01:38:52   I never want to be told to go to bed.

01:38:54   Okay, so noted.

01:38:56   I just enjoy it.

01:38:57   I just get a little, because you've got your focus modes in, so it'll say this is delivered

01:39:01   silently or whatever.

01:39:02   Yeah.

01:39:03   And I'll be like, that's fine.

01:39:04   Get it when you get it and then I'll get a response and I'll be like, oh, I might still

01:39:07   pay attention at 12.30.

01:39:08   Well, because my sleep focus just turns on at 12, but I'm not done.

01:39:13   I've got time to go yet.

01:39:15   I'm still rocking and rolling over here.

01:39:19   If you would like to send us, this is a pre pre pre-show joke, so I apologize.

01:39:26   I made it, you made it, but nobody can get it.

01:39:31   If you would like to send in your question for a future episode, go to upgradefeedback.com

01:39:35   and you can send us an upgrade question, a Snell Talk question or any feedback and follow

01:39:40   up.

01:39:41   If you want to find Jason's work, go to sixcolors.com.

01:39:43   You can hear him on the incomparable.com and here on Relay where you can also hear me too.

01:39:48   You can check out my work at cortexbrand.com.

01:39:50   You can follow us on Mastodon threads and blue sky.

01:39:53   Work it out yourself.

01:39:54   You can watch clips of the show on TikTok, Instagram and YouTube.

01:39:59   We're at upgrade relay.

01:40:00   Thank you to our members who support us of upgrade plus.

01:40:02   Don't forget, go to give relay.com and you can get 20% off an annual membership.

01:40:07   Thank you to our sponsors, data citizens dialogues, fit pod and square space.

01:40:13   Thank you for listening.

01:40:14   Jason will be back next week.

01:40:15   I'm on vacation.

01:40:16   I'll see you in two weeks.

01:40:17   Say goodbye, Jason Snow.

01:40:19   Please enjoy special guest Steven Hackett next week.

01:40:22   We'll see you then.

01:40:23   Happy Thanksgiving to all those who celebrate Gobble Gobble.

01:40:25   Goodbye, Mike.

01:40:26   [Music]

01:40:32   you