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542: Wellies on the Ground

 

00:00:00   [Music]

00:00:08   From Relay, this is Upgrade, episode 542 for December 16th, 2024. This episode is brought to you by

00:00:17   Squarespace and Fitbud. My name is Mike Hurley and I'm joined by Jason Snell. Hi Jason Snell!

00:00:22   Hi Mike Hurley, how are you doing? Oh I'm feeling great. I have a Snell Talk question for you to

00:00:26   start out this week's episode. It comes from Mark. Mark wants to know, Jason regular listeners are

00:00:33   well aware of your opinions about peanut butter, but what are your thoughts on peanut butter

00:00:37   confections such as Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, Peanut Brittle, Peanut Butter Ice Cream, etc?

00:00:43   Peanut butter flavor is good, stuff that tastes like real peanuts is better than stuff that

00:00:49   tastes like fake peanuts. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups are nice, peanut butter and chocolate are

00:00:55   two great tastes that taste great together. Peanut Brittle is great, I don't have it very often.

00:01:01   Notice my dad's favorite candy actually was peanut brittle. Peanut butter ice cream is good. I'll

00:01:07   tell you, there's a frozen yogurt place that we always went when we visited Lauren's Parents and

00:01:12   we actually went, they went, they kind of closed down the store by their house but they've opened

00:01:17   a new one now which we were all very excited about because my kids especially like this was

00:01:21   the special thing about visiting grandma and grandpa was going to Golden Spoon Yogurt.

00:01:25   And most frozen yogurt places, but certainly Golden Spoon, always had a peanut butter flavor.

00:01:30   And what's interesting is there are actually two kinds of peanut butter flavor. Like I said,

00:01:35   there's kind of the one that tastes more like roasted peanuts and then there's the one that

00:01:39   tastes like peanut butter flavor. And the peanut butter flavor is fine, but the roasted peanut,

00:01:46   the actual like real peanut butter sort of flavor is the best. And in fact, if I see peanut butter

00:01:54   on a frozen yogurt menu, I will order it always default. Number one, always what I will get. But

00:02:01   it's not my favorite ice cream flavor. I don't really buy it. It's kind of weird,

00:02:05   but the frozen yogurt, there's something about it. That's just like a special kind of thing for me,

00:02:09   the little soft frozen yogurt. Maybe frozen yogurt is closer or hang on a second,

00:02:16   frozen yogurt. Geez, I've got to try and keep somebody's, you know, we had a family thing at

00:02:20   the weekend and everyone was making fun of me. - Join us. - As they do. - We draw your American.

00:02:25   - You say you American. Anyway, frozen yogurt is closer in consistency to peanut butter than

00:02:32   ice cream is. And I imagine that might make it nicer. - It is. That's true. - Not that I would

00:02:37   know because I'm definitely allergic to peanuts, but in visuals, I can see that it would be,

00:02:42   you know? - Well, I mean, you know the difference between, well, that's true. You can see what

00:02:45   peanut butter is from a distance and probably have tried frozen yogurt before. - I sure have.

00:02:53   If you would like to send in a Snow Talk question to help us open a future episode of the show,

00:02:59   go to upgradefeedback.com and do that. Thank you to Mark for sending that one in. Let's do some

00:03:06   follow-up. This really isn't follow-up, but there isn't really a section to put it, to say I want to

00:03:11   say. - It is follow-up. - It's follow-up, I guess. - It's secret follow-up. - Yes, you know what?

00:03:17   Very secret follow-up to my last couple of years. I'm very happy to share that my wife and I are

00:03:22   expecting our first child in February. Very excited. Edina is doing great. We're having

00:03:28   a baby girl and we could not be happier about it. - I give you my public upgrade. Congratulations

00:03:35   for this. Obviously, I've known about this for a long time and given you many private

00:03:39   congratulations about it. You kept this on the down low for a long time, which is great. In fact,

00:03:47   funny story, we were over at your house, Lauren and I were over at your house right before the

00:03:52   Relay 10 show over the summer and you were showing us the house. There was one room where you're like,

00:03:57   and this is going to be a room that we use for things. As we left, I said to Lauren,

00:04:04   that was totally the baby's room and they're not telling us that they're having a baby yet,

00:04:07   but that's totally what's going on. Then a week after we got back, you're like,

00:04:10   "Yeah, we're having a baby. It's fucking sad." It's like, aha. - During Relay 10,

00:04:14   Edina was pregnant, but it was incredibly early. Still in the very much don't tell anyone phase.

00:04:20   - Right, but I cut your slip and I was like, "I know what's going on here, but we're not

00:04:24   going to say anything. I'm not going to ask. You're going to tell us when you're ready."

00:04:27   It's great. Also, I feel like the untold, this is true, but it goes beyond this.

00:04:36   Steven taking a month sabbatical, great idea. I'm glad he did it. I do believe was prompted by the

00:04:43   idea that his co-founder was going to be taking paternity leave, but everybody heard about them

00:04:48   in the opposite order. I find that hilarious. - Yes, and me and Steven were on backstage today,

00:04:53   which is a membership show. That's like a monthly membership show. We talk about this of like,

00:04:56   it wasn't like, "Oh, hey, if you're going to do this, then I'm going to take time." But it was

00:05:02   like for him of like, "Oh, you know what? I am able to do this." Because if Mike is able to take

00:05:08   a paternity leave for an extended period of time and that be okay, it means that if Steven wanted

00:05:14   to take leave for some reason, he could do. And so he decided to take his sabbatical, but then

00:05:19   it's ended up being in the inverse as you say. So yeah, I'm going to be away from my shows for

00:05:28   somewhere between six to eight weeks, probably eight weeks at some point in February.

00:05:35   - Great news for all those people who write in when we have a guest host saying the guest host

00:05:38   is great and forget about Mike. - Yeah, those people are going to have a great time. They're

00:05:42   going to be really excited. - Oh man, the listenership on upgrade is going to just shoot up for

00:05:47   six to eight weeks. - Yeah, and then it's going to rocket plummet down to earth in May sometime

00:05:53   when all those people's hearts are broken because I returned to the show. - You triumphantly returned

00:05:58   for the, yep, mm-hmm. - That's planned for sometime in February. - Anyway, I don't have any guest host

00:06:06   announcements to make yet, but I imagine I'm going to rotate through a bunch of people who have guest

00:06:10   hosted on this show before. And so you could pretty much guess who they are. Steven was a great

00:06:14   replacement for you a couple of weeks ago. We'll bring Steven into the mix. I think I've asked,

00:06:19   I guess I am naming names. I asked John Saracusa and he seems up for it. I asked Dan Morin and he

00:06:24   seems up for it. We'll mix through and then... - You need reliable podcasters, right? Like that's

00:06:29   what you need, you know? - Yes, that and also maybe I'll just finally pull the ripcord on the

00:06:34   all kindle episode with Scott McMullen. That'll drive listenership. - Jason, do that the week

00:06:40   before I come back. Everyone will be really happy that I've returned. - You got it. You got it.

00:06:45   Maybe if there's an episode with no ads in it, we'll just pop that one out right then. I don't

00:06:49   know. Anyway, congratulations. - I guess people are asking is that I am going to be away from all

00:06:53   of my shows and I'm only pre-recording Cortex. So we're pre-recording a couple of episodes of

00:06:58   Cortex because otherwise the show won't happen and so we're going to do that and then other than

00:07:02   that all of my co-hosts are being incredible and are going to provide me that time off. So

00:07:06   get ready for a lots of conversation about baby technology because that's going to happen. I will

00:07:12   say send in if you have recommendations for apps or if you have recommendations for baby tech or

00:07:18   just general baby recommendations, send them in. Go to upgradefeedback.com, send them in to me. I

00:07:23   will appreciate it and there will be a whole new realm of content for me to talk about. I will say

00:07:28   before people recommend, there is an app that I've had a bunch of recommendations for right now. I

00:07:34   think it's called Mango Baby and it is made by a solo iOS app developer who's made this app. So

00:07:44   I'm really excited to check that one out because that's exactly what I'm looking for because it's

00:07:48   like an app that follows all of the iOS conventions. You know like they're adding the

00:07:54   new stuff every year. I want to get the developer's name because I followed them on Blue Sky today.

00:07:59   - What does it do? - Well okay so this is made by Yile Yang and it is one of these. So maybe,

00:08:06   you know what Jason? This obviously wouldn't have been a thing for you. There is a new thing it

00:08:11   seems that people do where they're tracking things that babies do. You know like you know stuff that

00:08:17   babies do. You track that stuff. - Yeah, yeah. - And share it with partners and things like that.

00:08:23   - We had that too but it was like on a computer or written down. Back then it was like you could

00:08:29   log it on your computer but now you can have an app for it. Okay so it's like logging.

00:08:32   - Yeah baby logging, yeah. - Yeah okay. - But this even has like shortcuts, support,

00:08:37   and widgets and everything. That's exactly what I'm looking for. So I'm looking forward to checking

00:08:41   out on that. But I would take any and all recommendations that people have and I would

00:08:46   also like to thank everybody for being so wonderful and congratulating us over the last week. It's

00:08:51   been lovely. But now we do have some more follow up. iOS 18.2 featuring Apple intelligence features

00:08:58   is now available. You've written a couple of posts about this and I just wanted to know because you

00:09:02   know obviously I've heard about this in the show but I think I would expect that there are more

00:09:07   people in the Six Colors readership than necessarily Upgrade listenership who maybe tried this out for

00:09:13   the first time and I wondered if you've had any specific feedback. - You know I'm not hearing a

00:09:19   lot about it. I think a lot of people have been on the betas and so they've been trying it out.

00:09:23   Yeah so I have not, it's been relatively quiet. I think that there's a piece we're gonna talk about,

00:09:32   a thing that happened that we talked about later that's the most obvious thing that was ever going

00:09:35   to happen with this and we'll get to that. Definitely it's what you'd expect where some

00:09:42   people are like this isn't very good. They put in pictures of people they know and are horrified

00:09:49   at the results. - Yeah I've been seeing a lot of that. - I did discover after ignoring it the

00:09:54   entire beta that there is this view into creating a generic person. - This blew my mind. I saw this

00:10:02   in Six Colors. I had no idea this existed. - Yeah and it's, I didn't either and you know friend of

00:10:10   the show Griffin from Cult of Mac actually is the one who sent me a note saying oh it's actually

00:10:14   easy to create fake humans. I was like easy except that I didn't know it was there but it's called

00:10:20   appearance. It's in the upper left corner of that thing where it's trying to get you to pick a

00:10:23   person you know not searchable by name which is very frustrating. I mean I guess you can try to

00:10:30   do it typing it in the prompt but that doesn't always work. Anyway you can also choose upper

00:10:34   left corner appearance and then you choose a skin tone and it gives you three buckets that seem to be

00:10:39   more female, assorted and neutral gender and more male. But it's random for every generation of sort

00:10:49   of like what person gets generated so you can't like pick a model and say I want to use this model

00:10:54   in a different setting. You like a model you can't pick it. It's more like you will get this

00:10:58   assortment of generic humans and you can't, you're limited in what you can specify. It's kind of

00:11:07   weird but there is a way to do it. It doesn't work with Image 1 so me trying to draw Abe Lincoln

00:11:12   and get a generic Abe Lincoln-esque kind of figure does not work but it does work for

00:11:17   Image Playground and then for Genmoji you get to pick which of the emoji people if you want a

00:11:26   generic emoji person you can pick male, female or neutral. Yeah because I've made a bunch of those.

00:11:32   I actually made a really great Genmoji today of Adina pregnant which is great which is very funny

00:11:37   and we found it to be very cute. So like Genmoji again I will say is great. Genmoji is such a good

00:11:43   feature. Image Playgrounds not so much but we'll talk more about Apple Intelligence in a minute.

00:11:49   Last piece of follow-up today MacRumors is reporting via French publication

00:11:54   "I generation" that's how I imagine it said. By the way I'm currently listening to the French

00:11:58   Revolution series of The Rest is History. Jason I'm so happy and also sorry that you introduced

00:12:05   this podcast to me. You know when you're on vacation and you get behind on your podcasts

00:12:10   that happened to me and now I'm not catching up on any of them and they're all getting behind

00:12:15   because all I'm doing is just mainlining The Rest is History. The Rest is History. Well it happens

00:12:19   to all of us eventually. Yeah I also I would like to issue my formal apology to all of the podcasts

00:12:26   in the Upgraders category because I think you're going to struggle this year. Probably so. You're

00:12:32   going to struggle but we'll find out anyway. MacRumors is reporting via French publication

00:12:37   "I generation" that from December 28th Apple will no longer be selling any iPhone of a lightning

00:12:43   connector in the European Union. So this is information that has been passed to Apple retail

00:12:48   stores from Apple and it's gotten to "I generation". This is related to the USB-C regulation that

00:12:55   passed in 2022 which I believed was only for new models but it seems that for whatever reason

00:13:02   Apple is applying this. Now there is a reading of the rules which is like you can't

00:13:08   make new devices but you can sell old devices. Maybe they don't have enough. Maybe they just

00:13:13   can't in it but basically this means the iPhone 14, the iPhone 14 Plus, the iPhone SE and like

00:13:20   Apple Keyboard, a bunch of stuff won't get updated. This makes me think maybe this is why the AirPods

00:13:27   Max was updated with USB-C. This is why the keyboards and trackpads have been updated with

00:13:32   USB-C because they were kittenlies. It's interesting it it looks like maybe it's arguable but the reason

00:13:39   is when when units individual units are placed in the market they must comply which is yeah I wonder

00:13:46   if this reading changed or if this was always it and we just had best read it but either way the

00:13:50   idea here is basically like I think they could import a bunch into the market and dump them

00:13:56   but like once the deadline happens they can't anymore. They can sell what they've got but

00:14:01   that's it. So it sounds like they're just exercising this and this was the plan was to just

00:14:06   cut it off here and they do have a new iPhone SE coming in the spring and they did replace all of

00:14:11   the keyboards and trackpads and mice and so you know here and AirPods and all those things so here

00:14:19   we are. If you enjoy this show you would like Upgrade Plus because you get longer ad-free

00:14:26   versions of the show each and every week and you have just a couple more days to get 20% of a new

00:14:33   annual membership. Go to getupgradeplus.com and use the code 2024holiday on an annual membership

00:14:39   and you'll get 20% off. There will also be a link in the show notes so you can do this or you can go

00:14:44   to giverelay.com to learn more or gift a membership to somebody else. So with Upgrade Plus you get

00:14:50   those longer ad-free versions of the show every week. You get tons of bonus content. I referenced

00:14:55   earlier backstage. Backstage is a monthly show where me and Steven talk about what's going on

00:14:59   behind the scenes at Relay and also answer listener questions that we collect from our

00:15:03   Discord which you also get access to. There's tons of great stuff available for Relay members

00:15:09   that you can get as becoming a member of Upgrade Plus. You also help support the show which for

00:15:14   reasons mentioned earlier I would really love more members. That is my key thing because membership

00:15:21   is reliable income for us. Advertising goes up and down. It's uncertain but members, one of the

00:15:27   things that's incredible about Relay members is they become members and they stay members.

00:15:31   Our churn which is where people leave is incredibly low. In fact member for who we work with,

00:15:36   they're always really pleased and surprised about how low our membership churn is so I appreciate

00:15:41   that for our members. But what that means if you're listening to me is people who become

00:15:47   Relay members value that membership. It's a good deal for you. So go to getupgradeplus.com, use the

00:15:54   code 2024holiday and you will get 20% off an annual membership or you can sign up for a monthly

00:15:58   membership at full price or if you miss the deal then you will be able to pay and still get it. But

00:16:03   it will be worth it. In Upgrade Plus this week we will talk more about my upcoming child because I

00:16:09   think that'll be fun for us to talk about in a little bit more detail together today. So

00:16:13   getupgradeplus.com. So let's talk about Apple Intelligence and the British broadcasting company

00:16:21   the BBC. So the BBC have issued a complaint to Apple over an Apple Intelligence summary

00:16:26   that was shared on social media that shows the BBC news app saying that Luigi Mangione, the man who

00:16:34   shot and killed health insurance CEO Brian Thompson which I can't believe is the thing we're

00:16:38   talking about on this show now. It said the BBC news app preview said Luigi Mangione has shot

00:16:45   himself which did not happen. Now in the article that I've included which is the BBC's write-up

00:16:52   about this, the BBC does not share the actual headline of the article in their story that like

00:16:58   was was the article headline. I would like to know what that was and I couldn't find it because I was

00:17:03   just interested like what what did it say that the AI got mixed up with right? And it might not even

00:17:09   be the headline it might be the push notification text right? Yeah that's what it is but like I was

00:17:16   I was intrigued what it said just out of like curiosity but it didn't it didn't say that.

00:17:21   But nevertheless it did do that kind of truncated summary and this is an exact example of the kinds

00:17:29   of things that we knew we were going to see and it's I think probably pretty problematic for Apple

00:17:36   that it's like the BBC is this company you know it's like similarly if it was the New York Times

00:17:40   which I think the New York Times did have one in November but now it's shipping to everyone.

00:17:45   This is and so as well the BBC say that Apple declined to comment on this story and this is

00:17:51   the first in what will be I'm sure a long list of stories like this and I am really intrigued to see

00:17:57   if Apple says anything or does anything about this. Yeah it's interesting I thought was this not a

00:18:04   thing that we predicted and I actually looked at our draft of the ages which were about halfway

00:18:08   through and I predicted actually that Apple would apologize for something generated by AI which

00:18:13   hasn't happened yet but I mean give it time by the way if things hold now in the draft of the ages as

00:18:20   we're about halfway through it's looking bad for me but okay there's time there's time the upgrade

00:18:27   dot cards if you'd like to see the draft of the ages in case people are interested it's in there

00:18:32   but we're that's for 600 where we predict the future from 500 and we're only you know 42 in so

00:18:38   we've got time left shout out to James Thompson we're 42 in so yes what is Apple's policy about

00:18:45   commenting on AI generation from their software are they going to have a standard boilerplate

00:18:51   are they going to say nothing I mean this is the BBC like demanding you know they are complaining

00:18:57   anyway I don't know if they're demanding an apology but they're complaining and Apple is

00:19:01   declining comment so I wonder if they're if they have a strategy if silence is the strategy if

00:19:06   they're going to come up with boilerplate responses that are just like you know you know from time to

00:19:11   time Apple buys companies it'll be you know from time to time Apple's AI generation will be I don't

00:19:16   know something like that or and I do wonder about this or is there going to be a moment where some

00:19:24   executive reads this stuff and says why are we even summarizing that or if is there no way for

00:19:31   us to back off of summarizing something if we're lower if we lower our confidence in it or maybe

00:19:38   we shouldn't summarize those news headlines or I don't know what right like maybe they make a change

00:19:44   to kind of reduce their exposure even if it reduces the utility of this the problem is these

00:19:49   issues are cropping up in all of the summaries right because there's famously that summary

00:19:53   about the the woman who got her mom sent a text that was like oh I took that hike today almost

00:20:00   killed me and the summary was like mom attempted suicide or something like that and it's like

00:20:05   what so bad so I don't know like the problem is that there are fundamental problems with this

00:20:12   technology that it does hallucinate even if you tell it not to and I don't think the technology

00:20:20   exists wouldn't it be nice if it did to add like a scrutiny layer that looks at it and says are we

00:20:27   confident that this is something that would happen or are we you know are there subjects that we're

00:20:33   not gonna summarize and what are those words and then sometimes summary is just because that

00:20:39   happens now with some stuff where the I don't know if you noticed this but there was this one

00:20:43   conversation about how certain llms wouldn't say certain names I don't know if you saw that story

00:20:51   no we're like there are certain names that if if you either mention the name or if you tried to

00:20:57   lead it to say the name it would cause an error and they think this is because these are public

00:21:02   figures who either have complained or asked for their name to be stricken right you know right

00:21:08   to be forgotten or they've threatened lawsuits and it's this sort of like exposure of potentially

00:21:13   like a blacklist of items like it's like we're gonna ban all of the mentions of these people

00:21:21   and and that that would be a pad apple could go down but it's gonna let just lead to the us seeing

00:21:26   the the residue of any ban list that apple makes because they're gonna be like oh no wonder why

00:21:33   didn't this get summarized oh it's about somebody dying or whatever but it like I don't have a a

00:21:40   simple solution here because I don't think there is a simple solution it's like you it's the two

00:21:45   edge sword of using these models is they aren't people you know they are they are llms I wonder

00:21:54   in the long run if what apple might try to do is get more data which is just off the top of my head

00:22:01   like I wonder if they could expand the push notification protocol for example to add like

00:22:06   a rich layer of data that was beyond it so that it could actually like the BBC hands it a a more

00:22:12   complicated summary that it could use to process to make its own little headline I don't I don't

00:22:18   know I don't know what the right answer is here but I I've heard from like I still have my summaries

00:22:25   on partially because I write about this stuff but I totally sympathize with people who've just turned

00:22:29   them off because you basically can't trust them I mean I mostly use them as at a glance did something

00:22:36   happen yeah but it's true that then you need to read the individual things right you can't not

00:22:40   read the individual things so like I'm seeing a lot of people online especially like a blue sky

00:22:45   and stuff like in talking about the story and they say like nobody's asking for this feature this

00:22:50   summary feature and I would just be the person who defends it and say I am asking for it like

00:22:54   I like the notification summary features like I and I I feel like I am present in mind enough to

00:23:02   be able to pull these things apart right from each other but what I do do is turn it off for

00:23:08   certain applications if like for example podcast for overcast I turn it off overcast because it

00:23:15   doesn't make sense for me there but for like message conversations I find it to be very useful

00:23:20   to get six notifications summarized into one quick sentence of course I'm going to read them anyway

00:23:26   but that's the whole point even the notification of a message you see the notification in its full

00:23:31   text you still go to the message and read it again because that's just how we deal with notifications

00:23:35   you're just thinking about them differently I think that it's great that Apple offers the

00:23:39   ability for you to opt in and out or opt into everything and opt out certain applications you

00:23:45   find the ones that work for you but there's certain types of apps where they send notifications

00:23:52   frequently and all you really need is a quick glance at what these things are and I find it to

00:23:58   be personally I find it to be a very useful thing but I know why people don't like it but I think

00:24:04   you can kind of exert your own control over it a little bit and just have the types of apps that

00:24:10   you want rather than everything but I do think that there is a lot of utility in this feature

00:24:14   part of my frustration is that some of the stuff I hoped it would do it doesn't do

00:24:19   like it will coalesce yeah it'll coalesce headlines and stuff like that but the one that I really

00:24:26   hoped it would do and this is I wrote a piece about this at Macworld is I wanted to do a better

00:24:31   job processing message notifications because you know you get a chat in messages like a group

00:24:39   thread just pop off yep and that's where I want summaries right that's where I want my family

00:24:45   chat that's Lauren's whole family and there's 18 messages that's where I want a good summary

00:24:52   but it it doesn't do it like instead what I get is every individual message but then I look at

00:24:58   the notification and I get a summary and it's like I want this stuff to be more intelligent I want

00:25:03   this stuff especially for something like messages to be oh or any app that's spamming you like it

00:25:09   I feel like it does a good job with with my camera notifications right but I've not been able to

00:25:15   experience this with messages where what I really want is I want that it to be like oh it looks like

00:25:20   this thread is popping off I'm gonna not bug you about it and just put a thing give you a

00:25:27   notification that says this thread is popping off and it's about this and it's not subtle enough to

00:25:33   do that it's not smart enough to do that and so like I see a lot of utility in doing this

00:25:38   a lot of utility in silencing things and summarizing them but and maybe it's just my settings

00:25:43   but like the one place where I wanted to see it which was in that family chat where like there's

00:25:48   nothing and then suddenly there's 20 messages and in most places I've muted it because I just can't

00:25:55   but even then when I go to my lock screen I you know I get there were 17 messages and not a

00:26:01   summary I don't know what's going on there but yeah I agree with you I think that this is a

00:26:05   feature that has a lot of potential I just don't know how you handle the downside of this in a way

00:26:16   if you're Apple that do you just say nothing and say like from time to time the headlines in your

00:26:22   news headline summary are going to be wrong yeah I just I don't know like this is like a microcosm

00:26:27   of the problems that Apple intelligence has at large which is there is promise here but you may

00:26:34   turn people off of it because you didn't implement it fully enough with the first version and like

00:26:40   and I also think of like that's the danger Siri's not smart or in any possible way exactly they

00:26:44   tried to make you believe that it is but it isn't right and like so yeah I worry that that in doing

00:26:50   all of this and doing it the way that they have done it with the rollout that they have done

00:26:55   that they have ended up harming themselves for later on but maybe this is the only way you can

00:26:59   do something like this because you have to learn from it I don't know I will say before we move on

00:27:03   from this do yourself a favor and just turn off notifications for news apps like I just say this

00:27:08   to everyone in the world you do not need push notifications for your favorite news service in

00:27:13   my opinion like go to the news when you want it the news doesn't have to come to you yes yes

00:27:21   although again I would say there is a revamped notification system here that would allow you to

00:27:32   set your notification for your news to be whenever you glance there's a news summary but that it

00:27:38   doesn't certainly I think that pushing headlines to you is something you should the vacation center

00:27:42   is not a great place for news just in general no matter how you do it in my opinion I agree

00:27:48   other people obviously disagree and they want to get their their breaking news there I think

00:27:51   the problem also is that once a new news organization has you they're gonna they're

00:27:55   gonna push notification you here's the issue right there is no such thing as breaking news anymore

00:27:59   right every piece of new information is considered to be breaking news breaking news used to mean

00:28:06   something serious is going on but now everything is breaking because the term breaking has lost

00:28:12   like it's actually been defined it's like it's been reduced to its actual meaning which is here's

00:28:17   some new information but that is not what we thought it was yeah it's coming over the wire

00:28:21   right now yeah so absolutely no you you've got it and and also there's just a structural if you

00:28:27   can talk somebody like even if you are a very important news organization and you say look

00:28:33   we have lots of different notifications you can get from our app but one of them is high priority

00:28:38   it's only the most important things I'll guarantee it somebody's going to look at the metrics and say

00:28:45   too many people have signed up for this thing there's so many people there we really need to

00:28:51   promote this puzzle that we did today yes or we really need to promote the promote this recipe

00:28:56   that we did today and yeah somebody in their editorial group or their tech group can say no

00:29:00   we said that this would only be the most important stuff but I can I will guarantee you there will be

00:29:05   somebody who's got revenue attached to their their compensation who will override them and force

00:29:11   those things into the push notification so you can't win you can't win yep

00:29:16   on this show in the past we have tracked Tim Cook's movements across the world

00:29:24   yes so I want to talk about where's Tim because I think something's going on Jason

00:29:33   oh right now interesting intriguing I think something's happening so last week on the

00:29:39   where in the world is Tim San Diego there you go last Wednesday an article went up on the UK

00:29:48   Apple newsroom right I think it's just on the UK Apple newsroom Apple expands UK investment and

00:29:54   doubles local engineering teams this is all respect to the people that put this together

00:30:01   an absolute puff piece where all it's doing is talking about Apple's investments over time like

00:30:07   it's not announcing for what I could like like it's not like oh hey we're about to double it it's

00:30:11   like just just breaking news breaking news to your point about what things aren't breaking news

00:30:16   it begins Apple today announced today there's there's your news angle its investment in the

00:30:21   United Kingdom has grown to exceed 18 billion pounds over the past five years we announced

00:30:26   today that we did a thing before double during that time yes Apple today announced that it's

00:30:31   been a good five years yeah where I also think it's not that they have necessarily employed new

00:30:39   people because they they basically made Battersea the European headquarters so I actually think they

00:30:44   consolidated some roles into London that maybe weren't there before but so this went up and I

00:30:50   was like hang on a minute something's going on here because it was it just felt like a weird

00:30:55   thing I was I was expecting Apple trying to leverage something in the UK and then

00:31:03   Keir Starmer our Prime Minister posts a picture with Tim Cook sitting together they're talking

00:31:10   for some reason the Prime Minister is advertising Apple intelligence to people as he says good to

00:31:17   meet Tim Cook Apple's investment in the UK and the rollout of Apple intelligence is testament to our

00:31:21   world-leading tech sector which I think is hilarious because it's got literally nothing to do

00:31:25   with us but Keir Starmer is taking credit for Apple intelligence just be sure mention mention

00:31:31   Apple intelligence so that's happened right so and then so it is then I'm like so the sub Mike

00:31:36   Mike the subtext there is it's not launching in Europe right that is that is a labor Prime Minister

00:31:43   making hay with a Brexit thing right but it is true it's like look at us though we've got it

00:31:48   and does the EU have it yet no because we are a good point a lawless you know outside the realm

00:31:56   we're you know we're more like the US basically is what he's saying there but fair enough and so

00:32:00   when I saw this I'm like oh here we go something's happening because one of the pillars of the labor

00:32:06   government is they are trying to get business to invest back in the UK it's like part of trying to

00:32:10   drive our economy and I was talking to Stephen and Federico about this because I was like trying to

00:32:16   piece this together I felt like Charlie from always sunny right with the string of law and Federico

00:32:21   said something that I thought was really interesting and he's like I bet it's I bet there's

00:32:24   going to be an announcement of a data center in the UK and I think something like that might be

00:32:31   coming that some infrastructure product project is going to be announced here now wait a second

00:32:36   were you talking to Stephen and Federico on Wednesday when you were recording connected is

00:32:40   that when you were talking to them yes because the next day yes what happened the king the king

00:32:51   yeah I mean uh just starting a sentence that way the storm clouds of war yeah yeah yeah we love

00:33:01   the king we love we love a king here on the upgrade program we love to hear about a king

00:33:06   this is again in the context of Mike's yarn diagram we've reached the point where the king

00:33:13   appears the king of England appears in the united kingdom because it's united England Scotland

00:33:18   Northern Ireland you yada yada but you get me Charles the third appears with who with Tim Cook

00:33:26   with Tim Cook so this is so this is where it continues for me where this visit appears to

00:33:35   be like hey so like the royal family is like hey the king is at Battersea today and he is visiting

00:33:43   with some local businesses that have set up this market and he's also going to meet apple and apple

00:33:51   have put on the biggest show they got all the employees in the hallways he's meeting with people

00:33:58   they unveil this plaque that commemorates the king's visit Jason something's going on and I

00:34:05   don't know what it is but like something has happened or is happening I'm convinced of this

00:34:10   that like all of these things mean something I just don't know what they are because this was

00:34:16   an awful lot of stuff to occur right in a couple of day period because Tim makes visits here all

00:34:23   the time he's always doing things we've made fun of it in the past he doesn't typically meet with

00:34:28   the two most powerful people in this country within a 24-hour time frame and that is what's

00:34:34   happened so something's yeah I something is going on or it's the we need to maybe it's like the UK

00:34:40   we we want them to not have a not pass something that affects us yeah or we want it we're going

00:34:47   to give another investment in and make an announcement so it seemed right it's it's the

00:34:52   politics too it's like it makes it seem like a win that apple is a friend of the UK that it's not a

00:34:57   scary big tech company that Keir Starmer could be like yay investment and by the way apple

00:35:02   intelligence but I don't believe part of that game gets that photo right without like there's

00:35:08   something's going on and it might not be that they make some big announcement but like I see this and

00:35:13   I'm like something is happening between apple and the United Kingdom which I mean I don't mind I'm

00:35:19   happy about that like I want investment in my country we need it and so this is great then Tim

00:35:25   Quakes takes quite the detour and he's dying with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago the next day is

00:35:31   reported that he's going to Mar-a-Lago and I'll say I said this on the show before right like I

00:35:37   seen this we've had some people write into us and they're like what does this mean look look we've

00:35:42   been here before all right we have he has to do this and like I understand that you don't like it

00:35:49   but Americans he's going to be your president in like a month Tim has to have a relationship with

00:35:55   him like I love the idea personally of Tim Cook deciding to shun Donald Trump I think that's so

00:36:02   fun right that would be great but then what happens to all of Tim's employees the thousands

00:36:08   and thousands of people that he is responsible for the company gets harmed and then and then

00:36:13   Tim Cook is replaced by the board is what will happen right and that's the that's the truth is

00:36:16   I know people it's very easy for people to be like well if I were CEO of Apple I wouldn't meet with

00:36:22   Donald Trump it's like well okay you wouldn't be CEO of Apple for very long and that that's like

00:36:28   that's Tim Cook's other option here is just to quit I mean that's his other option but the next

00:36:33   CEO will need to do it too and as we know from what happened you know during the first Trump

00:36:41   administration is they're playing the game it's uncomfortable but it ends up being a way for Apple

00:36:48   to navigate treacherous waters and get you know and maybe get relief from tariffs or other sanctions

00:36:57   to be viewed as an ally in terms of being a conduit to China to being supportive of Taiwan

00:37:04   to maybe building up chip infrastructure in the U.S. right which is which because that that's part

00:37:09   of the story too is things like Trump administration pretty bellicose about China but like the chips

00:37:16   act and TSMC building a factory in Arizona and like to build chips for Apple this is all part

00:37:23   of this global kind of thing and if you can also give Trump a mess a win in saying look at Apple

00:37:31   doing things in America even though Apple's still also doing lots of things not in America

00:37:36   uh you you you go by and like that's that's like again he's a CEO of a giant company this is this

00:37:43   is a corollary and I know we've talked about this before but it's a corollary to that whole thing

00:37:47   about Apple is also not a charity Apple is a profit-making company publicly owned it is all

00:37:54   those things the job of the CEO this is the fiduciary responsibility the CEO is to do stuff

00:37:59   like this and I think Tim Cook has shown that he has actually proved to be a skilled diplomat who

00:38:05   gets what he needs and gives what he needs to to get it without completely selling out and that is

00:38:12   just the he is navigating some treacherous waters that is the the storm clouds are gathering Mike

00:38:17   is what I'm saying and Tim Cook is you know getting his his uh what what are they called

00:38:23   what are rain boots called in in Britain he's getting his wellies on yeah and uh he's got his

00:38:29   he's got his umbrella out he's got his Brawley out I mean look as well it seems like Trump is

00:38:35   calling all the CEOs because there's been like I think Zuckerberg was there Sundar was there

00:38:41   like he's calling them all in and they're meeting with him and talking about whatever it is they're

00:38:47   talking about right but this is the way it has to go like if this is the scenario there is no other

00:38:55   way to deal with it right you can't ignore him it's just you're you're the CEO of a company this

00:39:02   is what you have to do and again yes it's diplomacy and trying to you know trying to make a deal I

00:39:08   mean that's the funny thing about this is Trump you know Trump is a deal guy that's his whole thing

00:39:13   like talking to businessmen first off he loves it he loves talking to businessmen because he's

00:39:17   rubbing shoulders with legitimate businessmen and he he feels like that makes him look good it's

00:39:21   like this is what's great about America is we got all these CEOs and we got all these big companies

00:39:25   their skepticism about big tech that they've had is a threat but at the same time there as I I said

00:39:32   a few weeks ago also these are huge American companies and so there's that aspect of it which

00:39:39   is this is American power extended around the world and that is a thing that that I think as

00:39:45   a U.S. president you have to view positively so all of these CEOs just have to navigate all of this

00:39:51   and it's do you think I'll say this I am sure that there are some of these CEOs who don't mind it and

00:40:00   I'm sure there are some of these CEOs who don't like it and in fact I will say knowing what I know

00:40:06   about Tim Cook's background I don't think he likes it but I think he knows he has to do it and I think

00:40:12   he's good at it and I think that that's actually important is if you can be seen by the president

00:40:19   of the United States as to be in this case but thinking back to 2016 to 2020 as well as an ally

00:40:28   as somebody you can do business with as somebody who has connections in places like in China that

00:40:37   are useful right like that's a good place to be is to be in that position and not be adversarial

00:40:46   and you know just does does Trump know that Tim Cook disagrees with him about lots of stuff

00:40:51   of course he does but when it comes to money and business and maybe international stuff

00:40:57   if you can be seen as somebody who is you know not an adversary then you're gonna you're gonna

00:41:05   be better off and that's what that's the game Tim Cook has has played before and is playing again

00:41:10   now I don't know exactly what that means about the king and Keir Starmer that is still a mystery to

00:41:15   be unraveled by my curly official UK yarn correspondent but on the ground will um well he's

00:41:23   on the ground well he's on the ground and what is on the ground on this one but yeah I'm convinced

00:41:27   something's happening here I just don't know what it is yet but as soon as I find out I'll follow

00:41:32   up on the show okay by the way the tip the tip line is open ask upgradefeedback.com you can send

00:41:40   in your anonymous tips we did break some news retroactively last week so yes that was pretty

00:41:45   funny just as an aside we were a footnote in a daring fireball article that mentioned an anonymous

00:41:49   thing we got about which we had forgotten about from several years ago about how the m4 or m5

00:41:56   ultras weren't going to happen because they had already moved on and this happened two years ago

00:42:00   but John remembered and found our transcript from David Smith's pod search transcripts

00:42:05   and posted it and it was just a hilarious moment of upgrade just we're breaking news left and right

00:42:12   this uh this this month yep it's amazing we can't be stopped so now so send those anonymous uh tips

00:42:20   in the anonymous tip line is open if you so happen to hear the king and tim discusses something you

00:42:25   let me know you let me know oh oh man can you imagine it's like I am I am within the government

00:42:33   and I like the anonymous Westminster informant who's like here's what Keir Starmer is up to yep

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00:44:58   show and all of Relay. Room around up time Jason Stell. Yeehaw! Yeah! Yeah! Mark Gorman has showed

00:45:06   some- yeah! I watched a western movie yesterday and so I'm really feeling the the the roundup

00:45:16   part of it just because I was in that mood by the way as an aside one of the as it came up

00:45:22   the warning label on it was rated R Western Violence and Lauren and I because I my immediate

00:45:28   comment was oh my favorite kind of violence and Lauren and I discussed what other directional

00:45:33   violence we preferred she said she preferred southern violence like angry penguins and I

00:45:38   said my second favorite after western violence is north northwestern violence because that's

00:45:42   somebody trying to kill you with an airplane. Okay I like that I like that well yeehaw maybe it was

00:45:49   rated R for round up did you consider that? Oh for room around up rated R. Rated double R for room

00:45:56   around up. Yeehaw! Mark Gorman has shared some details on where Apple currently stands on foldable

00:46:02   devices so it appears that right now that the device that one of the devices that Apple is

00:46:08   working on would be an iPad that when it's unfolded would be about the size of two iPad pros

00:46:14   side by side. I'm assuming 11 inch iPad pros is what he's talking about. It looks like this project is targeted

00:46:21   for release in 2028. As you can imagine Apple's designers are working very hard to minimize screen

00:46:27   creases and apparently this is something they've had some breakthroughs in and Mark shares that

00:46:32   Mark shares that he is unsure which OS would run on this device so but this feels I'm not sure what

00:46:38   I think about this. Okay I want to read this paragraph okay because this is the paragraph so

00:46:44   Sunday morning comes and I made a mistake of launching social media before I launched my RSS

00:46:52   reader on Sunday morning and so I was spoiled about power on which is funny because I was like

00:46:57   oh boy what is Mark Gorman up to now but this is the as I read it this is the paragraph that blew

00:47:03   my mind. It's not yet clear what operating system the Apple computer will run. Okay that's right so

00:47:12   it's like an iPad but is it an iPad if he's not sure what operating system but my guess is that

00:47:19   it will be iPad OS or a variant of it. Well that's interesting right is there something that isn't

00:47:23   iPad OS but is like iPad OS that runs only on this device still a mystery. He continues I don't believe

00:47:29   it will be a true iPad Mac hybrid comma but the device will have elements of both what does that

00:47:38   mean does that mean it'll have like different ports and is it a Mac or does he truly as he says

00:47:44   it's not yet clear which is a very passive statement of I don't know right is what what he

00:47:51   really is saying there is I don't know but it will have elements of both what does that mean

00:47:57   he continues by the time 2028 rolls around iPad OS should be advanced enough to run Mac OS apps

00:48:04   to run Mac OS apps what what is that just an aside of like oh by 2028 iPad OS will just run Mac OS

00:48:13   apps or what does it mean I mean I could argue that it's advanced enough to run Mac OS apps now

00:48:17   it just doesn't but by 2028 will be even more I he continues but it also makes sense to support iPad

00:48:24   accessories like the Apple pencil which sure if you've got a giant screen like that you'd want to

00:48:27   use the Apple pencil on it I don't know what any of this means it sounds like what he's saying is

00:48:32   it could be an iPad it could be a Mac it could be some other variant of it I think it'll be an iPad

00:48:37   or some other variant of it I don't think it'll be a hybrid but by 2028 iPad OS should be able to run

00:48:43   Mac OS apps should I mean they should be able to run them now but they don't but by 2028 the

00:48:48   advancements will have happened so that they will be able to Mike I don't know what this product is

00:48:54   and the problem is I think Mark Gurman doesn't know either no sure because I think this is literally

00:48:59   not to jump ahead but I think this is literally the same device that was rumored to be a a laptop

00:49:06   foldable that we reported about where we felt baffled about how it could be a Mac given what

00:49:14   it was and I would say the same about this prediction the idea that there's a giant

00:49:19   iPad like thing that you fold out that's fine but I I find it funny that Mark Gurman is sort of like

00:49:27   saying it could be anything essentially he wants to say it's an iPad he says it's iPad like or it's

00:49:34   basically an iPad but that one paragraph is so full of doubt it's like could be an iPad could

00:49:39   be a Mac could be a hybrid could be an iPad that runs Mac OS apps I don't know probably has Apple

00:49:45   Pencil support and I share his confusion about what this product is because I am also unclear

00:49:51   about it is it just a giant unfoldable iPad or is there more to it than that can you attach a

00:49:59   keyboard to it and have it be a Mac or is it just a big iPad is that doesn't have a kickstand how

00:50:04   does it stand up like I don't know I don't know it's it's a real mystery here Aaron Tilly and Yang

00:50:12   Jia at the Wall Street Journal have also published a report about Apple's foldable and ambitions they

00:50:18   also talk about a 19-inch folding screen which they reference would be quote intended to serve

00:50:26   as a laptop what is this computer what what is this what why as a laptop what does that mean

00:50:33   you use the bottom half of the screen as a laptop or not because Mark talks about it folds right so

00:50:37   it could fold to to laptop shape couldn't it sure and then you could also open it up which is why

00:50:44   you know as a convertible it seems interesting like look I have said for a while now that I want

00:50:50   Apple to try bizarre shapes of computers right I almost said form factor which I don't like

00:50:56   you know I wrote form factor twice in the document and deleted it today but I want weird computers I

00:51:02   want Apple to try weird computers I do I do and this is super weird right like what is it and

00:51:08   I'm sure that if they come out with this thing it's going to have a whole line of accessories and

00:51:12   they're going to be like this is how we expect you to use it like this and all that but like I love

00:51:15   the idea that they seem to be making a convertible essentially it's something that could be used as a

00:51:20   laptop used as a big screen is it an iPad is it a Mac not even Mark Gurman knows for sure maybe it's

00:51:26   both maybe this is the moment you know sometimes Apple likes to roll out major new features attached

00:51:32   to hardware right so the idea is we're going to hold on to trackpad support on iPad until the

00:51:38   Magic Keyboard comes out because then it's got a trackpad and now everybody can use trackpads

00:51:43   and you can pair external ones and whatever but like we didn't we don't roll it out until we've

00:51:47   got that thing I think that's a thing Apple does so is this the moment that Apple says oh yeah you

00:51:51   can run Mac OS or Mac OS apps on iPad OS is this product do they are they are they targeting this

00:51:58   in 2028 I don't know but I like as a laptop it doesn't make as much sense to me that seems really

00:52:09   weird but I don't know I don't know what this product is but I love that it's out here well

00:52:16   this is the issue sometimes with and I don't think his fault this is sometimes the issue with Mark

00:52:23   Gurman's reporting because he is so well sourced right obviously clearly he is the sheriff right

00:52:28   like he is the top game in town yeah he doesn't have vision into this necessarily or his people

00:52:35   don't know but what the point what I'm saying is we don't know right like is this comment should be

00:52:43   able to run Mac OS apps is that his opinion or is that something he knows like that's always the

00:52:51   problem with this stuff right but that is the fun in it too that reads like knowledge to me right

00:52:55   it reads like he knows something about iPad OS in 2028 being advanced enough to run Mac OS apps

00:53:01   2028 is quite specific but but I will go back to 2028 is when he's saying this product will come

00:53:07   out right and I don't think he's written a story and if this was more he would have a story about

00:53:13   it that Apple has a plan to run Mac OS apps inside iPad OS apps and he hasn't reported that I don't

00:53:19   think well this might be his March report for WWDC right that he does you know he always had that big

00:53:27   report at some point where he's like all right here's what's coming and like this maybe isn't if

00:53:32   he does know this this isn't enough to to do that whole report yet maybe or maybe he's not well

00:53:36   enough source to put it on Bloomberg if you reverse engineer this though it's also possible that there

00:53:42   is a project inside Apple that he knows about that lets iPad OS run Mac apps it certainly exists

00:53:48   well but here's the thing so he's talked to somebody and they're like yeah we've got that

00:53:53   running you know it's probably going to ship in the next couple of years but it's also possible

00:53:57   that they're just going to pull the plug and never ship it because it's very controversial on the on

00:54:02   the inside and we're trying it out but we don't know and that that kind of non-committal information

00:54:08   this is the sort of way that it would get presented right if I'm going to reverse engineer

00:54:12   which is you say it should be you know that there's something going on that if they want but

00:54:17   there's a question of will like will they do it it'll be there if they want it to be there but it

00:54:23   might not be there I I do I really do wonder about that because that is quite a little bomb to drop

00:54:28   like that and I think the reason that's not another story is largely because he doesn't know and this

00:54:35   is how that that comes out is this this whole paragraph is like Mark Gurman sort of trying to

00:54:42   get at what he what he the uncertainty that he's hearing about what's going on here and what he

00:54:49   doesn't know about but it's fascinating to see that because I mean his sources are great which

00:54:55   which the truth is this is a this is a product that we're talking about that's you know four

00:54:58   years out so there's a lot of vagueness about it right there's a lot of vagueness about it

00:55:02   that that was the biggest disappointment to me in this report is that's a long way away

00:55:07   that's a really long way away still and I understand you know like this is if they do

00:55:12   this and they do it right it could be pretty amazing and so I do want them to get it right

00:55:17   but that's a long way especially when Mark also talks in this report that Apple is exploring a

00:55:24   foldable iPhone which he wouldn't expect to see until 2026 and like if they do actually release

00:55:30   a foldable iPhone in 26 which I also think is too far away but nevertheless it would be even

00:55:37   worse that we don't get this iPad Mac thing until 28 right like you got like another two years after

00:55:43   foldables like begin yeah and I'll also say that the Wall Street Journal report also talks about

00:55:49   the iPhone and says that the plan Apple has right now is that it is an iPhone that folds inward so

00:55:56   kind of think more like z flip with a display that would be bigger than a 16 pro max I don't know I

00:56:03   don't know about that don't know about that are they going to put display on the outside I hope

00:56:06   so but I don't know they reference in the article that it's considered but maybe not decided upon

00:56:11   I don't know we'll see uh additionally in the Wall Street Journal report by Aaron and Yang

00:56:18   in this report they also talk about the iPhone 17 air that it will be quote ultra thin with a

00:56:24   simplified camera system with a starting price lower than the pro phones which is not where

00:56:30   I think we thought that this would go it's just literally the replacement for the plus yeah even

00:56:36   in terms of the price slot yeah sounds like I think I'm kind of happy to hear this because

00:56:40   I don't think this is the phone for me it will be really interesting but you know my concern was

00:56:47   like if they if they really went all out with it they could maybe try and make up for some of the

00:56:51   things that it's going to lose but I don't think I would want to simplify camera system and what

00:56:56   would definitely be worse battery life than the phone that I currently have just because it's

00:57:00   thin for sure you know yeah but I do still support this idea because this sounds to be potentially a

00:57:07   more compelling product than the plus phone because at least it's doing something different it has a

00:57:12   point of view and you can see people opting for it instead of the 17th yeah right yeah because it's

00:57:19   really thin and something else you know China going back to Mark Gurman he reported in power on

00:57:26   that apple is redesigning the magic mouse saying that they are quote aiming to devise something

00:57:32   that better fits the modern era and that apple is looking to create something more relevant while

00:57:37   also fixing long-standing complaints of course the way it is charged I find this interesting because

00:57:46   I just I think we spoke about this on the show before I just assumed that the magic mouse would

00:57:51   just go away and that was the end of apple's time with mice well your anti-mouse sentiments are not

00:57:59   shared at apple right now right but the thing is that good mice like the logitech mx master 3s that

00:58:06   I use right now they are best when they are most ergonomic and the the style of ergonomic design

00:58:16   that I think is required for mice is not really apple's style okay let me let me paint you a

00:58:22   picture because I was thinking about this too and I think this also goes back to our previous

00:58:26   statement about uh USB-C in the EU that like everybody got all upset that the magic mouse

00:58:32   didn't change but that was that was a port swap that's all they were trying to do there they

00:58:35   weren't trying to redesign that thing and and they haven't and that's fine here's let me pay my my

00:58:41   word picture for you here which is the last two times I've had a briefing about air pods

00:58:47   apple has boasted about all the work they've done to get biometric data about people's ears

00:58:57   so that they can fit they can build this design that is kind of if you look at have you ever

00:59:02   really looked at an air pod mic they look kind of weird I think but they look kind of weird and the

00:59:07   reason they look weird is they're trying to create a shape that is kind of conducive to the most ear

00:59:16   shapes around in the world of of people and they've said like their first thing was an all

00:59:22   one size fits all that was like just round and they realized that didn't fit a lot of ears so

00:59:26   they made shape changes and then they did it again with this latest version they said that they

00:59:31   changed the shape again based on even more data I asked them about this because I thought it was

00:59:35   compelling the first time when they said you know I got the sense they didn't say this but I really

00:59:39   got the sense that they had just used it people at apple had used it and were like yes it feels good

00:59:45   and that in the world people's ears are not like being represented inside apple like that there's

00:59:51   a broader range of ear shapes out there I say all of this to say I could totally see apple do a new

00:59:57   mouse that's shaped a little weird that apple thinks is like the best ergonomics for the

01:00:04   widest range of people which is not to say it will be like a very specific niche ergonomic mouse

01:00:12   but that they will boast about the ergonomics and the research they did and german suggest this when

01:00:17   he talks about it being ergonomic and that and that they will but it'll be like air pods not

01:00:22   everybody's gonna like it yeah but it will be something that they'll be able to claim is going

01:00:27   to be better for mouse users in general I could totally see them doing that a thing that's sort of

01:00:34   like a mouse but shaped a little bit strangely you grip it a little bit weirdly but it's more

01:00:38   modern I mean they want it to be stylish but they also want it to be you know be able to make some

01:00:43   ergonomic claims I totally can see that story being one that they would tell and finally apple

01:00:49   has made progress on the hypertension detection for the apple watch so rather than a system that

01:00:55   would be able to give you a blood pressure reading on demand say like the ecg on the on the apple

01:01:01   watch this system would warn you of hypertension which is a state of abnormally high blood pressure

01:01:07   and encourage you to have a traditional blood pressure test so this would be more warning thing

01:01:12   like the sinus like so you know you've got like a heart event or if you have sleep apnea you know

01:01:19   like the system can be like hey you should take a look at this and then go and get an actual blood

01:01:24   pressure test done but yeah another another thing that could potentially be coming to the apple

01:01:28   watch in the near future they've made some advancements on it so let's do a very quick

01:01:34   b-tails jason we don't have anything to say on this but as we are recording ios 18.3 is out

01:01:43   it never ends ios 18.3 is out now I am installing it as we speak maybe we'll have something to talk

01:01:51   well we will be able to be talking about this I don't know late probably next year now right

01:01:55   because I guess this is something worth saying next week is the holiday special then it's the

01:02:00   upgrade ease and then we'll be back to regular schedule programming in january january 6th but

01:02:06   i'm expecting in point three more apple intelligence stuff would be the expectation so we'll see here's

01:02:13   my guess i haven't gotten any briefings from this from apple about this yeah which leads me to

01:02:17   believe that maybe it doesn't have any major apple intelligence features or at least not yet because

01:02:21   that's the other thing they could do right they could roll that out in a later beta i think maybe

01:02:26   they just wanted to get this beta out the door to start the beta process but look everybody's going

01:02:30   to be going on vacation and and stuff at apple too for the holiday break yeah so i think i think this

01:02:37   might be more placeholdery than that but we'll see and we will catch you up if there's anything

01:02:41   to be caught up in january this episode is brought to you by our friends at fitbod if you're looking

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01:04:59   their continued support of this show and relay it's time for some ask upgrade questions

01:05:07   oh dramatic i loved it will says i loved hearing about jason's recent switch to an all laptop

01:05:16   lifestyle and i'm curious if and how this could impact backups obviously iCloud backups would work

01:05:23   but do you use time machine or super duper or backblaze or anything like that and does the

01:05:28   machine not being always turned on and plugged in to an external storage limit the usefulness of

01:05:34   these backups i'm still working on it but i use time machine to my server and that happens whether

01:05:41   it's awake or not so that one's fine i have been using carbon copy cloner and that will probably

01:05:52   continue because what i do is i have it attached and then at a time during the day it clones and

01:06:00   then it ejects the disc basically it just unmounts the disc so i figure that unless i happen to pull

01:06:07   it the computer off in the middle of a clone it will uh continue to do that i probably will

01:06:14   position a different disc at both places i work okay so that i've got two clones going on yeah

01:06:22   but um i haven't figured that one out quite yet but yeah that will be the end result is that in

01:06:28   addition to time machine uh and i have backblaze running on my server but not on my actual computer

01:06:34   but i do have it backing up the files on my server um so that's that's the answer is time machine plus

01:06:40   the clone does does that back up time machine on the server to backblaze does that work i

01:06:49   don't know i should check that could be interesting that one's a mystery also by the way yes i for

01:06:54   those who are asking i am i am on the macbook pro docked at my desk in the garage right now

01:07:00   how are you feeling about it so far uh i am learning about all of the edge cases like this

01:07:09   question from will that now come up where like here's an example i do podcasts in both places

01:07:16   i have different microphones in both places right well audio hijack doesn't like that doesn't like

01:07:22   that audio hijack doesn't have the ability to say it use this microphone or if not use this

01:07:28   microphone and you can put two microphones in there but then it throws an error every

01:07:31   time you start saying i'm one of the microphones in there and i don't want to do that so i i have

01:07:35   had to struggle with like all of these little details of how does this work and when does the

01:07:40   power shut off and all that stuff because you could set it as default audio input but then

01:07:46   you've got to trust mac os to set it correctly which i would not right well i and it's not going

01:07:53   to change my default audio input uh from one microphone to another it's not going to do that

01:07:58   and also there's output right because i also listen and i i this is a detail that i think a

01:08:03   lot of people miss is i listen to our conversation and headphones attached to my interface because i

01:08:08   can also hear my own voice and that's very important i don't use these headphones to listen

01:08:12   to any other sound on my system so i can't set my default audio output to my usb interface that

01:08:19   doesn't make any sense and i'm not moving all of my microphones from room to room that's stupid

01:08:26   i would never do that the whole point here is just the laptop and i have the two setups i don't need

01:08:31   to move my microphones i have the two setups so ends up being things like i what i realize is i

01:08:37   have two different stream decks and stream decks don't sync uh and so i just have the button i

01:08:43   actually i found a uh i found a shell script that you can run that will list all of your usb devices

01:08:50   that are attached to your system and so my shortcuts have been amended to basically say

01:08:54   if this one is there uh this is the name of the audio hijack session to run and if this other one

01:09:03   is there run this other audio hijack session you would have separate set like audio hijack setups

01:09:09   i was thinking i could have different automations on my buttons on my stream deck but i what i

01:09:13   decided to do actually is just have duplicates of my audio hijack setup set to the different

01:09:19   input devices and then the shortcut that i that fires when i press record sees which mic is

01:09:27   attached and runs the appropriate thing now i also did a feature request to rogue amoeba saying

01:09:32   you should probably have like a chain of input devices that are allowed so it's like use a and

01:09:38   if a is not there use b and then if you can't find one then give me that error that you like to give

01:09:44   me that you can't find it that would be uh nice but i'm not gonna you know i'm not gonna wait for

01:09:52   that so that but this is my point is it's stuff like this now that are coming up which is it's the

01:09:58   oh i can move my computer between setups but the the the accessories are different the setup is a

01:10:05   little different how do i deal with that that's the stuff i'm grappling with now but otherwise

01:10:11   i mean it's been pretty great i mean the nice thing is i add things on the computer in the back

01:10:17   and then i move the computer out here and it's the same computer so all those things are still there

01:10:21   that is fantastic but there's a lot more uh a lot more yet to do i guess i would say i just use back

01:10:28   players and don't think about it that's me oh yeah in terms of backup sure i just don't want to i mean

01:10:35   i'm not sure i need to do that all my super important stuff is backed up so many different

01:10:40   ways now including from the server via backblaze that that's what i yeah i'm doing but i don't just

01:10:46   i i've got my time machine and i've got my uh clones and i'm happy with that well my weird thing

01:10:52   is back plays in dropbox because i save literally every file in dropbox and so almost everything

01:10:57   that i have is either in dropbox or icloud it really is just the like the the clones are really

01:11:02   there and even the time machine they're really there for a quick for convenience sake time machine

01:11:08   is there so i can roll back to a file earlier like yesterday if i make a mistake and uh the clone is

01:11:14   there in fact to get to this computer state now um my migration from the max studio stalled out

01:11:22   and uh but my migration from the clone did not so i just use the clone of my max studio to migrate

01:11:29   to the new laptop so it's like for convenience sake more than anything else so i can save all

01:11:34   my preferences and stuff like that but like my important files are on or in the cloud somewhere

01:11:41   probably in multiple places plus in multiple backups etc etc and and i do also i mean i do

01:11:47   also have time a time machine drive attached to the computer that i'm talking to you from right now

01:11:51   that's nice and so even though i so it's like i save everything in dropbox so dropbox is on

01:11:58   backups and then backblaze is backing up my dropbox and then i have time machine also but

01:12:05   you know so like it's distributed in a way so i have it if i ever need it eric says if either of

01:12:12   you were offered a job at apple doing what you do best and didn't have to move would you take it

01:12:17   you'd have to give up your current businesses and go radio silent as a public person on the internet

01:12:22   this is just a version of that dodgers question honestly which is uh if they paid you would you

01:12:30   be a dodger fan it's like everybody's got a price uh i will also say that several of my colleagues

01:12:35   at macworld over the years went to apple and went radio silent at least on you actually don't go

01:12:41   radio silent as a public person but you do go radio silent for technology and things right like

01:12:48   i mean that's gotten better over time like it used to be like no you never speak you don't speak

01:12:53   anymore that's that's right it is it's it's better than it was but it's still true that you you're

01:12:59   giving all that up like chris breen who just retired congrats um but he went to apple that's

01:13:04   the upgrade theme music oliva music exactly um and he could still do that but um but he uh he had to

01:13:14   he was a person on the internet who had opinions about tech and all of that he set aside to go work

01:13:20   inside at apple and that's what i would say is um everybody's got a price i don't know what my price

01:13:28   would be to give it all up and go on the inside it would probably be pretty high because i feel

01:13:32   like once i give it all up there's no going back at least not easily because the damage will be

01:13:37   done i'll have to shut everything down so it would have to be a lot and i i was thinking about this

01:13:43   um because there's a story that i'm sure i've told before i might have even told it on

01:13:48   uh free agents podcast back in the day but i'll just i'll do a quick version of it here which is

01:13:54   early on in my career as an independent a friend of mine used to work at amazon and he

01:14:02   was pitching them on a job where they would get an editorial he was a designer on the homepage of

01:14:09   amazon and he said we need editorial for the homepage of amazon we need somebody who is looking

01:14:15   at what we're doing from an editorial and content standpoint to manage it and i know just the guy

01:14:21   and that was me and he set it up and amazon recruiters like set up a flight to seattle and

01:14:29   for me to be interviewed and all of these things and the day before the flight they contacted me

01:14:36   and said we've decided not to do this i was like that's fine like okay uh very funny that you got

01:14:42   to this point and then decided it but i think they rethought it or some inter i don't know what the

01:14:46   internal politics of it are but i was willing to talk to them because amazon and that sounds like

01:14:52   a huge interesting job and it was early on in my time but here's the thing one of the things i had

01:14:58   to do in that period where there were while i was being an independent there were also people coming

01:15:03   to me with job offers and i kept thinking you know i'm new to this is this going to last am i going to

01:15:10   be able to make a living at the very least i need to listen to the job offers but i had been doing

01:15:16   it long enough that i knew how much money i was making and that i had basically replaced my income

01:15:20   from idg and i was happy doing it and it looked like this business was solid

01:15:27   and so i started to think of what they would have to pay me i actually because i say everybody's

01:15:33   got a price i started to think what would you have to pay me for me to as eric's scenario

01:15:39   suggests to stay at my house but work somewhere else and do i have to commute like to apple you

01:15:47   know do i have to go ride on a bus for an hour and a half every day and each way like i right

01:15:53   like that's part of it too so do i do i work from home do i have to commute do i have to move do i

01:15:58   have to move out of the region these are all they all change the price right but what i realize the

01:16:03   most important insight of that amazon thing is that i started to think like if they offer me

01:16:09   this job what would it take for me to move to seattle and drop all my stuff and just do this job

01:16:19   and it was a great exercise because i looked at what i make and i look at our life and i look at

01:16:24   at the time it was like in my kids and all of that and i realized that it was the amount of money

01:16:33   people would need to pay me in order to stop what i'm doing which i like and when it's just working

01:16:39   perfectly fine to do something else is always going to be more than anybody should pay me

01:16:47   yes if that makes any sense it's like the amount of money you would need to pay me to stop doing

01:16:52   what i'm doing is not money you should pay me because i'm not worth it right like it would

01:16:57   it would need to be in the scenario of what if they paid you 150 million dollars to be a dodger

01:17:02   fan it would need it's a fun thing to think about but in reality anybody who would be willing to pay

01:17:08   that to me is not thinking straight right like it it doesn't make sense and it's it's mostly about

01:17:15   me now if my if my business was falling apart and i didn't have enough money to support myself and

01:17:21   somebody can well obviously my price is lower then but currently and certainly was the case when i

01:17:27   was a year in or whatever it was just a fun realization so everybody does have a price but

01:17:33   i would say i don't expect anybody this is why i've stopped thinking about it at all is this is

01:17:39   the true reason why i'm unhirable now not only have i done 10 years of being my own boss which

01:17:46   like i'm not i'm sorry i'm not receptive to not being in charge at this point that's just the

01:17:53   truth of it is i have my opinions and and and i i collaborate with people all the time we do it here

01:17:59   but like to just go and be a cog in the corporate wheel at this point like you had to be somewhere

01:18:04   at a certain time be at this meeting that you don't want to go to like when you have no control

01:18:09   over it that kind of stuff is difficult right i'd rather not right i'd rather not and i don't need

01:18:15   to and i can't envision a price that is rational that you would pay and so i realize now this is

01:18:21   why i think i'm essentially unhirable at this point in my career is is that is there's no job

01:18:28   that makes sense that makes sense that would pay me enough for me to take it yep and that's a and

01:18:35   i want to be clear here i'm not boasting about this this is a was a very important personal

01:18:40   insight and i feel very fortunate to be able to make it but right and it could change you know if

01:18:45   my business falls apart great yeah in the next five years i could be in the point where i'm like

01:18:49   huh maybe doing what chris breen did is a good idea because and i think chris was burned out i

01:18:56   mean chris yeah anyway i i'm not and there's no judgment here but it's like maybe a retirement

01:19:00   job where i work there until i retire and they pay me fine and i do and i'm i'm toiling in obscurity

01:19:06   is what is right for me at the time but right now it doesn't make any sense so the answer is to eric

01:19:11   is there everyone has a price but i can tell you in my previous dealings with apple where they have

01:19:18   recruited me before and after i worked at idg or i mean while i worked at idg and after i left i

01:19:23   talked to apple people about their jobs and when it comes to what they'd pay me for the job that

01:19:29   they were thinking of for me like i i gave them a figure i actually did give them a figure and

01:19:34   they're like whoa that's out of our price range but we do have like stock options it's like it

01:19:39   the answer was that even apple could not pay me what i wanted them to pay me so it's unlikely it

01:19:47   would it would take like an executive just like oh man we really want that jason energy it's the

01:19:51   only person at any cost or or to take them off the board there's that scenario too you want to

01:19:57   talk about your conspiracy theory yarn board that's like how much does it pay for jason to not i i

01:20:03   think the reverse is actually true which is that that apple would rather that i i'd be out here

01:20:08   doing what i'm doing than to have me stop it yeah but um anyway so that's the answer is look i am

01:20:16   sure that there is a price that i would be happy to walk away from everything i do because it would

01:20:21   be life-changing money but i don't expect that to exist anywhere except in the realm of fantasy

01:20:26   what about you mike it's not about the money for me um it's about the work because like if we

01:20:33   imagine a scenario it's like apple comes to me now and they're like hey you know that thing you've

01:20:38   been building for like the last 10 years throw it away now and come work for us i have too much

01:20:45   pride in what we've done to let go of that yeah so they would have to so like that i don't i actually

01:20:51   guarantee don't think right there's an amount of money that again would be even close to the realm

01:20:58   of realistic they're even past like realistic level one right it really is for me what is the

01:21:06   work because you're talking about throwing away what you built and are they going to give i would

01:21:11   say also unrealistic is well i'm going to need you can pay me this or you can pay me less but you

01:21:17   have to give me a five-year contract right like that theoretical dodger contract right um and

01:21:22   nobody's going to do that but it's like well i'm not going to shut down my businesses that i've

01:21:26   spent 10 years building to go do a thing that may or may not last a year right like no i'm right

01:21:34   right because you built this thing and you would have to walk away from it but but there are jobs

01:21:37   though like there are jobs that if apple came and said might come do this job i i think i would find

01:21:43   it very very hard to turn them down but they're jobs that they would not give me right they're

01:21:48   jobs that that like they would not give to me but like for for example i don't know what should like

01:21:54   you know i would want to work in the the top design team we're not going to give you that job

01:21:59   because i have no skills in that right like i'm not skilled enough for that or i want to be very

01:22:03   senior at product marketing so they're not going to give me that but like these are the things where

01:22:08   if somebody at apple came to me and said no you're the you're the only one we need we need just your

01:22:16   brain no one else's brain will do the job then then i would i would consider it right but like

01:22:22   that's never going to happen because it's not accurate they're not going to need me

01:22:25   and yet in another way it is perfectly accurate because what we're describing those jobs we need

01:22:31   your brain absolutely it has to be your brain those are the jobs we've built for ourselves

01:22:36   yeah exactly yeah yeah so so we're already there yeah they're already there hey mike we need

01:22:42   notebooks but it's not the ones you think you know like we need we need the other notebooks

01:22:47   only you can do it i want to be clear we're both very lucky to have ended up here we also worked

01:22:52   really hard and yeah uh and took risks and you know all of those things too it's all and and

01:22:59   not everybody as i used to say on free agents all the time uh not everybody can do the kinds of jobs

01:23:06   we do in the sense that like it's really hard you have to supply all of the all of the responsibility

01:23:13   like i talked to some people who are like i could never do it if i was my own boss and it's like

01:23:17   some people can't and and we are fortunate to be able to do that and have our projects and

01:23:23   you know and trust me i'm sure you feel this way too i absolutely have those days where i'm

01:23:28   staring at the computer i'm like and it's like there's no boss to set a deadline i have to do it

01:23:33   i just have to do it because it's my livelihood well i mean similarly i have the days where i'm

01:23:39   like man i wished i was just on a salary like that i didn't have to worry about money right now like

01:23:47   you know like i just wished that i knew what my salary was next month now the realistic part of

01:23:53   that is you can always be fired right and like and i know that so like really nobody ever feels

01:23:57   comfortable yeah and in a way classic i at least have a a sense of agency in that like i can do

01:24:05   things you know and but like which is much harder if like you do not have the control to move your

01:24:11   business forward but it's failing exactly exactly yes there's there's the the regular gig this is

01:24:17   i always thought about this um in the context of john seracusa who was sort of reluctant to leave

01:24:21   his regular gig for a long time was a regular gig is secure in a sense because you don't have

01:24:29   to worry about it they just pay you it until they stop paying you and that's the thing is that what

01:24:34   you're really what you really are is insulated from the vagaries of month to month because

01:24:42   they're going to give you your salary regardless whereas if it's your own business you are not

01:24:47   insulated from that and if the money doesn't come in you don't get paid and that's just how that

01:24:53   works and and so it's just different but look everybody's different we're very fortunate to

01:24:57   be able to do this and yes if you're a you know billionaire who wants to just set up jason and mike

01:25:03   llc and give us a lot of money uh we'll talk yeah if if you're a billionaire that would like to buy

01:25:12   relay or upgrade you know like hey if you're a goal hanger and you want and you want sure the

01:25:17   rest is technology you just you just call us we're here call us but what i would say is it's

01:25:24   you know i i'm i'm always if somebody approached me and said jason i want to talk about this job

01:25:31   i'll talk but i no longer feel like there's any uh likelihood that it's going to lead anywhere

01:25:40   yeah but i you know i i will i'm always gonna listen but it's not i think it's not realistic

01:25:48   at this point which is fine yeah it's a great question thank you eric for sending that one in

01:25:52   if you would like to send in a question of your own you can always go to upgradefeedback.com you

01:25:58   can send us your ask upgrade questions or also your feedback or your follow-up at any time you

01:26:03   can check out jason's work at sixcolors.com and you can hear his podcasts at the incomparable and

01:26:08   here on relay you can listen to me here on relay too and check out my work at cortexbrand.com

01:26:13   you can follow us on social media we're both on mastodon blue sky and threads i'm more on threads

01:26:19   than jason is but you know you can you can at least follow in there if you if you want to i've

01:26:24   been enjoying blue sky i you know not for just been enjoying it it's been the one i've been

01:26:29   checking first i had a post that went viral on blue sky oh did you what was it what was it about

01:26:35   um the the cal bears hired as an offensive consultant the former coach at washington state

01:26:45   who was fired for refusing to comply with their vaccination policy okay and my post was next year's

01:26:56   cal offense is gonna be great until the polio sets in and very slowly it gained speed and people

01:27:07   retweeted it or reposted it or whatever you do and uh i thought that was amusing to see a very slow

01:27:13   but viral spread of something on blue sky i hadn't had that happen before so that made me laugh

01:27:18   uh you can watch clips of this show on tik tok instagram and youtube or at upgrade relay

01:27:24   thank you to our members who support us of upgrade plus and thank you to our sponsors fitbod and

01:27:29   squarespace but most of all thank you for listening we'll be back next week with the upgrade holiday

01:27:34   special until then say goodbye jesus now goodbye my hurley