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546: Headline Snob

 

00:00:00   [Music]

00:00:08   From Relay, this is Upgrade, episode 546.

00:00:13   Today's show is brought to you by Ecamm, Oracle, and ExpressVPN.

00:00:18   It is January 13th, 2025.

00:00:21   My name is Mike Hurley, and I'm joined by Jason Snow. Hi, Jason.

00:00:25   Mike Hurley, it's amazing that this is episode 546,

00:00:28   and just to let people in on a little behind-the-scenes secret,

00:00:31   the document said 545, and Mike said 546,

00:00:35   and I got really freaked out and had to go to relay.fm/upgrade

00:00:39   to make sure that it was indeed, but we already did 545.

00:00:43   That one's in the can. This is 546, baby.

00:00:46   Well, I would take it further behind the scenes and say,

00:00:49   if you thought my energy was strange during the intro there,

00:00:52   it's because I was clicking around tabs

00:00:53   to make sure it was episode 546 or 545, so, you know, that's how it works.

00:00:58   I hope you're feeling better. You sound better.

00:01:02   Yeah, I feel much better. I feel much, much better this week,

00:01:05   but we haven't got time for that.

00:01:07   If people... I've just got one little follow-out here,

00:01:10   which is if people would like to enjoy a podcast

00:01:12   in which two-thirds of the hosts are sick,

00:01:14   and therefore the non-sick host has to take over an unaccustomed role

00:01:20   as the lead host, I recommend last week's episode of Connected.

00:01:23   Also, if you like reading rules. Reading rules, there's a lot of those.

00:01:26   Reading rules and not fully understanding them.

00:01:28   I think that's last week's episode of Connected.

00:01:31   Well, a ringing endorsement.

00:01:32   I mean, who wouldn't want to listen to a podcast episode

00:01:34   where two-thirds of the people are sick

00:01:36   and the other person was taken on a job that you hadn't taken on before?

00:01:38   I appear on that episode from a phone call from my Apple Watch

00:01:44   while walking the dog.

00:01:45   You do. That was very helpful.

00:01:47   That was one of those things which I see this in other podcasts

00:01:50   and TV all the time.

00:01:51   I was talking to you.

00:01:52   You couldn't hear me because you were on the phone to Steven,

00:01:55   but I kept addressing you, but that wasn't helpful.

00:01:58   No. No.

00:02:00   Now it is time for Snell Talk.

00:02:02   No, now it is time for Snell Talk.

00:02:03   I've already started.

00:02:04   Sriram wants to know, "Do you guys like to hear your own voice

00:02:08   when editing podcasts?

00:02:10   I do not like the sounds of recordings which I host."

00:02:13   Okay.

00:02:15   I like that Sriram says when editing podcasts

00:02:19   and not like when recording podcasts,

00:02:20   because obviously we like that because we do podcasts.

00:02:23   The answer is I actually was in...

00:02:26   We had a radio station in my high school,

00:02:28   and so I did a radio class,

00:02:31   and then I hosted a radio show weekly for a year,

00:02:35   my junior year in high school.

00:02:37   And between those things and your recording promos

00:02:40   and you're learning how to read like voiceovers

00:02:43   and cold reads and all those things,

00:02:46   which I never thought would be a major part of my career.

00:02:49   I think about it literally every time I do an ad read.

00:02:52   I think about that class.

00:02:54   Anyway, it got me over listening to my voice real fast.

00:02:57   And then I also made a lot of videos in high school.

00:02:59   I was doing video for years

00:03:01   and doing lots of editing of videos.

00:03:02   And I just, I got over it.

00:03:05   Even before the era of podcasting, I was over it.

00:03:08   And I find it almost charming now when people say,

00:03:11   "Oh, I just don't like to listen back

00:03:13   'cause I don't like the sound of my own voice."

00:03:14   And I just, I mean, I left that behind so long ago now

00:03:18   that I just, I'm just over it.

00:03:20   - It's not so far from me, but it is far, right?

00:03:23   Like it's, I don't know.

00:03:24   I think I got used to it like 13 years ago.

00:03:27   I've actually come all the way around on it now though,

00:03:30   where I am now very sensitive

00:03:33   to my voice sounding different.

00:03:36   So I am so used to the sound of my own voice

00:03:39   from editing myself and that kind of thing.

00:03:41   That if either like last week when I sounded sick

00:03:45   or if my audio, like from a podcast

00:03:48   that has been compressed in a way,

00:03:50   I am very sensitive to that.

00:03:52   I have a very good sense now of how my voice should sound

00:03:57   that I get very freaked out if I hear it done differently.

00:03:59   Similarly, I don't particularly like hearing to my voice

00:04:02   sped up in any way, like if you were to listen

00:04:05   to a podcast in high speed, 'cause it just sounds wrong.

00:04:09   - Sounds wrong.

00:04:09   That's right.

00:04:10   So last week must've been really rough for you.

00:04:12   - It was.

00:04:12   It was pretty bad.

00:04:14   Didn't enjoy it.

00:04:16   - If you would like to send in a question of your own

00:04:18   for us to answer on a future episode of the show,

00:04:20   please go to upgradefeedback.com.

00:04:22   And thank you to Sreeam for this question.

00:04:25   We have some followup.

00:04:26   We have lots of followup.

00:04:27   We have a response from the Bebonic company, the BBC.

00:04:30   - Oh yes.

00:04:31   - They shook a response out of Apple

00:04:33   over Apple Intelligence notification summaries.

00:04:36   - They did, of sort.

00:04:37   - I'm gonna read Apple's response they gave to the BBC

00:04:41   over the ongoing concerns that the BBC have

00:04:43   about the way that Apple Intelligence is summarising

00:04:46   the headlines of articles.

00:04:49   "Apple Intelligence features are in beta

00:04:51   and we are continuously making improvements

00:04:53   with the help of user feedback.

00:04:55   A software update in the coming weeks will further clarify

00:04:58   when the text being displayed is summarisation

00:05:00   provided by Apple Intelligence.

00:05:02   We encourage users to report a concern

00:05:04   if they view an unexpected notification summary."

00:05:07   So, I mean, we'll come back to the actual text of this

00:05:12   and what they're saying in a second,

00:05:13   but I will say hats off to the BBC.

00:05:15   They have really, they've, I think,

00:05:17   taken the charge on this.

00:05:18   I mean, I know there's been lots of reporting

00:05:20   all over the internet about having issues with this,

00:05:23   but the BBC, they gotta be in their bonnet over this

00:05:25   and they have rattled their sabre

00:05:27   until Apple has provided this.

00:05:29   - Right, so they have bonnets off to them, really.

00:05:32   - Yeah, bonnets off, bonnets off.

00:05:33   I don't know how this is gonna do anything more

00:05:36   than what Apple are currently doing.

00:05:38   Like, what is this label?

00:05:39   Where is it gonna be?

00:05:40   What is it actually gonna suggest?

00:05:42   And if you have to show the label,

00:05:44   like a label that's like, "Hey, this might not be right.

00:05:47   "Is it even worth doing it in the first place?"

00:05:49   Is like the bigger, more existential question.

00:05:52   - It's funny 'cause we talked about all this

00:05:53   and then that on upgrade last week,

00:05:55   and then just mere, I think like an hour

00:05:57   after we posted the episode,

00:05:59   there was this response from Apple.

00:06:01   And I thought, "Oh no, this whole story."

00:06:03   And then I read the response and I thought, "Oh, okay."

00:06:05   Because this is the biggest non-answer answer,

00:06:09   non-response response that you could give.

00:06:11   It reminded me a little bit of Steve Jobs saying,

00:06:14   if you want a bumper case, you can have one.

00:06:16   It's a just sort of begrudging comment

00:06:19   that somebody felt they were forced to make.

00:06:21   'Cause here's what they said.

00:06:22   First off, emphasizing beta at the beginning and the end.

00:06:27   I read that as them kind of saying,

00:06:31   "What do you expect?

00:06:32   "This is a beta.

00:06:33   "You should know that this is a beta.

00:06:35   "If you have a problem with it in a beta,

00:06:37   "file a feedback essentially, right?

00:06:39   "File a radar.

00:06:41   "We encourage users to report a concern 'cause it's a beta."

00:06:44   Which I don't love because it's a beta,

00:06:49   final version of software that's shipped out to customers,

00:06:52   that's advertised and that they send out notifications,

00:06:57   to offer, "Turn on this feature,

00:07:01   "turn on Apple intelligence."

00:07:02   So it's a beta.

00:07:04   It's a beta as a shield to allow them

00:07:06   to make statements like this saying,

00:07:07   "Oh, don't blame us, it's just a beta.

00:07:09   "And we're not gonna apologize for anything

00:07:10   "that happens in a beta."

00:07:12   Which shows a lack of basically taking ownership

00:07:17   of your own features that I find kind of breathtaking.

00:07:21   So don't love that.

00:07:22   And then the other thing I don't love in this statement

00:07:24   is what you mentioned,

00:07:25   which is the software update in the coming weeks,

00:07:27   which will put a warning label on it saying,

00:07:29   "This might be wrong."

00:07:31   Or saying, Guy English suggested that perhaps

00:07:33   they should just put an Apple logo next to all of them

00:07:35   and put their own brand on the line

00:07:37   and see how they feel about that.

00:07:38   That would be really powered by Apple intelligence.

00:07:42   Yeah, you can trust us, but don't trust us.

00:07:46   I don't know, 'cause the solution needs to be,

00:07:49   we mentioned some of this last week,

00:07:50   but there are ways Apple could work

00:07:52   to make this more reliable or to de-emphasize it.

00:07:56   And the number one thing that I take away

00:07:59   from this whole thing is not that LLMs are unreliable

00:08:03   because they can be unreliable in specific circumstances

00:08:06   like trying to summarize a summary, a headline,

00:08:10   but it points out to me that the rush

00:08:12   to integrate these features led to them putting something in

00:08:16   without maybe considering the best way

00:08:21   to get the best output to users for news summaries.

00:08:25   And that's because they rushed it.

00:08:26   So it's the, they rushed to integrate Apple intelligence

00:08:30   everywhere they could in the OS.

00:08:32   And this came up as like, yeah, yeah, yeah, summaries,

00:08:34   let's do it.

00:08:35   I'm really good at summarizing notifications.

00:08:36   Let's make it happen.

00:08:38   And I don't think anybody was saying

00:08:40   I would really like my news summaries to be,

00:08:42   or news notifications to be summarized.

00:08:44   I'm not sure anybody was actually saying that,

00:08:46   but it was an opportunity to put in Apple intelligence,

00:08:49   but then they just kinda slammed it in there

00:08:51   and they probably could do a more careful job of doing it.

00:08:54   And they didn't, and this is the result.

00:08:56   So the question is, what now, right?

00:08:59   Like is the warning label the extent

00:09:02   of what Apple's going to do here?

00:09:04   They're not saying anything more than that.

00:09:06   They probably aren't happy with it internally,

00:09:08   I would imagine.

00:09:09   - They can't be. - But I find it funny.

00:09:11   But I find it funny that they resort to lashing out

00:09:14   about the fact that it's, come on, it's just in beta.

00:09:16   It's like how many Apple intelligence ads are on the TV?

00:09:19   How many ways are they trying to push this feature to users

00:09:21   and use it to sell iPhones and then to hide behind,

00:09:24   oh, well, that is just a beta, come on.

00:09:26   - I mean, I can tell you what's gonna happen here.

00:09:29   They're gonna ship this and within a week,

00:09:32   the BBC is gonna write another story.

00:09:34   'Cause this is not going to solve the problem

00:09:38   that they have with this.

00:09:41   The problem that the BBC and other people,

00:09:43   like users and other outlets have with this,

00:09:47   is it often enough gives wrong or misleading information.

00:09:52   - I think the way I put it in my piece last week was,

00:09:57   for a certain percentage of the time,

00:10:00   it turns information into misinformation.

00:10:02   - Yeah.

00:10:03   - And I think this is the story of the AI era,

00:10:06   which is for the BBC,

00:10:08   the threshold of turning information

00:10:10   to misinformation is zero.

00:10:13   What is it for Apple?

00:10:15   And it seems to be maybe none, right?

00:10:18   Maybe they just don't care, but that's a problem, right?

00:10:21   That's a problem that the summaries

00:10:22   are turning information into misinformation.

00:10:24   And again, there are ways around it.

00:10:27   I wrote a whole piece follow-up on Tuesday

00:10:30   about just the issue of summarizing headlines.

00:10:34   Because what I don't want this to turn into,

00:10:36   people will do it anyway, right?

00:10:38   Is just have it be about LLMs being bad.

00:10:41   'Cause it's not about LLMs being as bad as this anyway.

00:10:45   Maybe they, look, they make mistakes, they do.

00:10:48   But it's a summary of a summary.

00:10:51   That's the biggest problem here,

00:10:52   is the way it's implemented is poor.

00:10:54   Because you're taking six or seven words

00:10:57   written by somebody summarizing an article,

00:10:59   and then your LLM is turning it into five words,

00:11:02   or four words.

00:11:03   And if you, so there's this app Artifact

00:11:06   that went out of business,

00:11:07   and you could mark any headline as clickbait,

00:11:09   and have it rewrite the headline.

00:11:11   What it did was it read the story,

00:11:13   and then wrote a headline.

00:11:14   And I spent half an hour on Tuesday

00:11:18   pasting the text of news articles into ChatGPT,

00:11:22   and saying, "Write me a headline with these specs,

00:11:25   "based on this story."

00:11:27   And you know what?

00:11:28   None of them were wrong.

00:11:31   All of them, I would say, were okay as headlines.

00:11:34   I'd say that a couple of them got the emphasis

00:11:38   of the story wrong.

00:11:39   And as a headline snob, as a newspaper and magazine editor

00:11:43   for many years, as a headline snob,

00:11:45   I always rewrote the headlines.

00:11:46   I was like, "No, no, no, no, these headlines."

00:11:48   I have very particular ideas about headlines.

00:11:51   And so a couple of those ChatGPT headlines,

00:11:53   I looked at and go, "No, that's not what the story is about.

00:11:55   "You missed it."

00:11:56   But the fact is, none of the ones I tried

00:11:59   got it factually wrong.

00:12:01   And that's because they had the whole story to consume.

00:12:05   And that's part of the problem with what Apple built here,

00:12:08   is that there's not enough data to summarize headlines.

00:12:11   'Cause headlines have no context,

00:12:13   because they're headlines.

00:12:14   The context is the story you're supposed to read

00:12:16   based on the headline, and they just messed it up.

00:12:19   - Yes, because as you said in your article

00:12:21   that I really liked,

00:12:22   humans aren't good at headlines either,

00:12:24   because there are external forces now

00:12:26   that push people to write bad headlines,

00:12:28   where the headlines are just to make you click.

00:12:31   And so if you're starting with clickbait,

00:12:34   you're not starting with a good spot anyway.

00:12:37   - Right, well, that's the worst scenario, right,

00:12:38   is that the headline is also bad.

00:12:40   And different organizations have different,

00:12:43   some news organizations are good at writing good headlines,

00:12:45   and some are very bad at it.

00:12:46   The thing that I find distressing,

00:12:48   and again, I come across, I'm like an old man,

00:12:50   but the fact is, I was rewriting people's headlines

00:12:52   in the early '90s, right?

00:12:53   So okay, yes.

00:12:54   I think there's a whole generation of people,

00:12:58   these kids today, no, a whole generation of people

00:13:00   who were brought up, basically,

00:13:02   they were forced to write clickbait headlines,

00:13:04   because that was, the journalism in that era,

00:13:07   in the web, the 2000s, 2010s era, so much of it,

00:13:11   especially in the period where everybody's

00:13:12   just trying to drive traffic,

00:13:13   and now we've got more paywalls and things like that.

00:13:16   But in that era, you had to write clickbait headlines.

00:13:20   And so people were trying to write them.

00:13:21   And so I see, even today, on sites

00:13:23   that are subscription-driven with paywalls,

00:13:27   that they write clickbait headlines.

00:13:29   And it drives me crazy, 'cause it's like, I'm paying you,

00:13:33   your headline should tell me whether the story

00:13:35   is of interest to me or not,

00:13:38   not to bait me into tapping,

00:13:40   realizing it's not relevant to my life at all,

00:13:42   and then tapping back.

00:13:43   You don't actually get more out of that.

00:13:45   I mean, I guess they have some ads on their pages too,

00:13:47   most of the time, but it's like,

00:13:48   really, if I'm a paying customer,

00:13:51   you gotta give me more.

00:13:51   You gotta actually tell me what's going on in the story,

00:13:54   and then that should intrigue me and make me wanna read more.

00:13:56   But you shouldn't be trying to deceive me,

00:13:58   but leaving out all that information.

00:14:00   So it's the classic example of like,

00:14:02   this place is going to kill you if you go there.

00:14:07   And you're like, uh-oh, I better click.

00:14:09   And then you click, and it's like,

00:14:10   this place is in New Zealand.

00:14:12   Inside of a volcano.

00:14:13   All right, yeah, it's in space.

00:14:15   It's space, it's Jupiter.

00:14:18   And you're like, wait a second, I'm not going to Jupiter.

00:14:20   Why did I click it there?

00:14:22   And that's the problem with it.

00:14:24   So yes, that magnifies this whole situation.

00:14:27   Sometimes the headlines are really bad.

00:14:30   But if you read the article,

00:14:31   and that's what I keep thinking,

00:14:32   is there is a way forward here,

00:14:34   which is providing Apple's summarization system

00:14:38   with more content.

00:14:39   But if you're going to summarize a short headline.

00:14:44   So here's one example.

00:14:46   The San Francisco Chronicle,

00:14:47   a paper, newspaper and website devoted to Northern California

00:14:51   wrote a headline last week.

00:14:54   And everybody knows about this news story now,

00:14:56   which is "Destructive California Windstorm.

00:15:00   Here's Where the Risk is Highest."

00:15:03   This is to Northern California readers.

00:15:06   Well, of course, when you tap on it,

00:15:07   you find that these are the Santa Ana winds

00:15:09   in Southern California, in Los Angeles,

00:15:11   hundreds of miles away.

00:15:12   And they were destructive.

00:15:14   As we know, it's a terrible situation

00:15:16   in Los Angeles right now.

00:15:18   The ChatGBT rewrite of that headline, by the way,

00:15:20   is Southern California braces for extreme Santa Ana winds,

00:15:23   which is what the story is about.

00:15:26   But the San Francisco Chronicle is like,

00:15:28   "What if we make all the Northern Californians afraid

00:15:31   that they're going to get a windstorm

00:15:32   so that they tap on our headline,

00:15:34   even though it's a paywall,

00:15:35   so they have to already be giving us money

00:15:37   so that we can deceive them into loading a few crappy ads?"

00:15:40   Again, it's bad.

00:15:42   But ChatGBT did a fine job with rewriting that headline.

00:15:45   So I think the issue here is not just the pure badness

00:15:50   of LLMs, which some people want to talk about.

00:15:52   The issue is, this is a bad feature,

00:15:54   implemented badly by Apple.

00:15:56   That's what it is.

00:15:57   Apple has a tool, which is an LLM,

00:15:59   and they applied it to a place where it doesn't belong.

00:16:02   That's the problem.

00:16:03   - Because you've mentioned it, I will say.

00:16:06   I don't know how helpful it is that your favorite tech

00:16:10   podcast talks about things that are happening--

00:16:11   - Expresses concern.

00:16:13   - In the wild.

00:16:13   - For me, obviously, I think anyone that pays any attention

00:16:17   to me and my life obviously knows how much I love LA County

00:16:22   and how much time I've spent there in the last five years.

00:16:26   And I am just, I'm devastated by the fires.

00:16:30   It's so horrific and so upsetting.

00:16:33   And I know people who have been moved from their homes

00:16:37   or have lost homes, just people I'm friendly with.

00:16:42   Everyone that is in our--

00:16:43   - Circle is fine, that I'm aware of at least.

00:16:46   And yeah, it's just, oh my God, it kills me.

00:16:50   And I feel so bad. - No, it's terrible.

00:16:52   - And that it's not even done.

00:16:54   - No, no, the pattern continues.

00:16:58   It's absolutely terrible.

00:17:00   Lauren's from Southern California.

00:17:02   And in fact, when she was in elementary school,

00:17:07   she lived in that area.

00:17:10   She actually lived just north of Sunset Boulevard

00:17:14   on Curson, so in the evacuation warning area, I guess.

00:17:19   And you could literally walk up into those hills right there

00:17:21   where there was fire.

00:17:24   So it's definitely affected.

00:17:26   Obviously, so many people as a Californian,

00:17:30   these things happen and it's terrible.

00:17:34   And it has to do with all the things that make us

00:17:36   love California and want to live here

00:17:38   are also things that can do terrible things.

00:17:42   We had a fire like this, we had a few fires like this,

00:17:46   one very close to us up in Santa Rosa in Sonoma County.

00:17:51   And yeah, suffice it to say that in our house,

00:17:55   there's been a lot of, we already have a go bag.

00:17:59   And we tested it out because we got that tsunami warning

00:18:02   a few weeks ago.

00:18:03   We were like, all right, well, let's use this as practice

00:18:05   'cause it looked like the tsunami was not gonna happen.

00:18:07   We're like, well, where are the cat carriers

00:18:09   and where's the go bag and what's all that?

00:18:12   And this is another reminder of how tenuous life

00:18:17   in California can be because we are at the whim

00:18:20   of our wonderful climate.

00:18:21   It is also our terrible climate.

00:18:23   Both of those things go together.

00:18:24   So nobody's talking about, I mean, this is the truth

00:18:27   that it's January and it's sunny and pleasantly warm

00:18:31   in LA this week.

00:18:32   That's why the fires are happening.

00:18:33   And they haven't had any rain this winter,

00:18:36   which we've had a lot of.

00:18:38   So a lot of terrible things, but it's like, yeah.

00:18:40   So, and I mean, what do you do?

00:18:42   It's also, it's nature, but obviously all of us

00:18:45   feel terrible for all of our friends

00:18:47   and really everybody else in LA who's affected by this.

00:18:50   It's awful.

00:18:51   - Yeah, like just on that, like I saw Lucas Short Bloomberg

00:18:53   in his newsletter wrote something.

00:18:55   I just felt so perfectly encapsulated.

00:18:57   I wanna read it.

00:18:58   It says, "What makes LA so magical also makes it vulnerable.

00:19:02   The dry desert climate exposes fast areas

00:19:04   to the risk of fire.

00:19:05   The tectonic plates underneath our feet

00:19:07   mean semi-frequent earthquakes.

00:19:09   Living in Los Angeles has always meant compromise.

00:19:11   You accept the heightened risk of natural disaster

00:19:14   to reside in paradise."

00:19:15   I was just like, oh my God, how beautiful.

00:19:17   Like how beautifully written in it encapsulates it so much.

00:19:20   So I just wanted to mention it because it came up

00:19:22   and just, you know, obviously we both have a connection

00:19:26   to that area.

00:19:27   And so it felt like I wanted to say something.

00:19:31   - For sure.

00:19:32   - This episode is brought to you by Ecamm.

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00:21:07   Before I found Ecamm Live,

00:21:11   I may have used Ecamm products for years,

00:21:13   but before I found Ecamm Live,

00:21:15   it just wasn't possible for me to stream from my Mac.

00:21:17   Like it just, you just couldn't, it was impossible.

00:21:20   Macs just couldn't do it.

00:21:22   And they built the tools to mean that you could.

00:21:25   And now while there might be other solutions out there,

00:21:27   they do not feel like Mac apps at all.

00:21:31   And that's what I love about Ecamm Live

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00:22:42   of this show and Relay.

00:22:43   Let's get back into some follow-up.

00:22:47   - Ah, yes.

00:22:48   - I saw this going around.

00:22:49   I saw some 9to5Mac.

00:22:50   - Semiconductor analyst, analysisist, Tim Colpen

00:22:55   is reporting that TSMC in Arizona

00:22:59   is now producing the S9 chip for the Apple Watch

00:23:02   or they're just about to.

00:23:04   This Arizona plant is currently making the A16 processor

00:23:08   which is going into the older phones that Apple is selling.

00:23:10   But this is a, you know, for right now,

00:23:13   a chip that they need and maybe will continue to need

00:23:16   in new products and they're looking to make it in America.

00:23:20   So there are less sophisticated production lines

00:23:23   than the cutting-edge three nanometer stuff

00:23:25   that's in Taiwan, right?

00:23:27   In fact, Mike, you might call these legacy nodes.

00:23:31   - Oh, you know what, Jason?

00:23:33   I would, I would call them that.

00:23:35   - You should call them legacy nodes.

00:23:36   But the fact is that this is part of a much larger story

00:23:38   about TSMC being given money, encouraged strongly by the US

00:23:43   to build up some chip supply chain in the United States

00:23:49   because there's a great fear

00:23:51   that if all of the chip supply chain is in Taiwan

00:23:54   and China attacks Taiwan, that that would be extremely bad

00:23:59   for, I mean, and the only reason I would disagree with that

00:24:03   is that I think it might be extremely bad in so many ways

00:24:05   beyond can computers be purchased?

00:24:08   - Yes.

00:24:09   - I think it may not matter, right?

00:24:11   Like, but anyway, and so what would they make

00:24:16   at the Arizona plant?

00:24:17   And here is a great report about that,

00:24:19   that they're making Apple Watch chips,

00:24:21   they're making A16s, and I'm sure, you know,

00:24:25   it may be the case that it's always the more

00:24:28   of the legacy nodes that get built,

00:24:30   obviously the cutting-edge stuff gets built in Taiwan

00:24:32   and then they kind of roll it down to the stuff in the US.

00:24:35   But still, I also wanted to mention actually,

00:24:38   since you brought this up,

00:24:39   there's a great New York Times story,

00:24:42   we'll put it in the show notes,

00:24:43   about the people who've come from Taiwan

00:24:47   to help set up the factories in Phoenix,

00:24:50   and how that has transformed the area around the plant,

00:24:53   and there are people who are like from Taiwan

00:24:56   who lived in other parts,

00:24:57   where there was like a Taiwanese community

00:24:59   in a far off part of Phoenix, 'cause Phoenix is enormous,

00:25:02   who have come to this area to set up businesses

00:25:06   and to help make those people feel more at home and adapt.

00:25:10   - Tiny Taipei in the desert, they call it,

00:25:12   which is a beautiful phrase, I like that.

00:25:15   - Yeah, right, and the goal is,

00:25:17   I mean, obviously the goal is not to have

00:25:19   just a bunch of people from Taiwan come to Phoenix

00:25:21   and make chips, 'cause the goal is to have

00:25:23   American workers working on it too,

00:25:25   but the challenge is that the TSMC people

00:25:27   are the people who know how to do this,

00:25:29   and so there's this, the mixture of the people from Taiwan

00:25:33   who are working for TSMC and then the people from America,

00:25:35   it's just a great little story,

00:25:37   I thought it was really well reported

00:25:39   about all the cultural issues that go involved,

00:25:42   that are involved with moving from somewhere very far away

00:25:44   with a very different culture,

00:25:46   and plopping down in the desert,

00:25:47   and what does that mean, and how do you live your life,

00:25:50   and it's just, it's a really interesting story,

00:25:52   so we'll link to it in the show.

00:25:53   - Yeah, I mean, and this is, you're saying,

00:25:55   like, you know, TSMC, they get a lot of benefits

00:25:58   to doing this, and then companies like Apple

00:26:00   can ride that benefit, like, this benefits Apple,

00:26:03   because they can say, look what we're doing in America,

00:26:05   we're back into that again.

00:26:07   But I don't disagree with the premise anyway,

00:26:10   like, even if you take out the we're worried

00:26:13   about Taiwan part, I do think that there is a benefit

00:26:17   to if you can do it, having these things around the world

00:26:20   in different places, creating jobs for different people

00:26:23   who might not be otherwise working these kinds of fields,

00:26:25   like, I have no problem with that, I think it's a good idea.

00:26:28   - Yeah.

00:26:30   - This morning, you sent me a YouTube video

00:26:33   for the Gemmoji ad.

00:26:35   - Yes, 'cause you said you hadn't seen it.

00:26:37   - Yeah, I had not seen it, so I saw it

00:26:39   for the first time this morning.

00:26:41   It's a good ad.

00:26:42   - It's a good ad, very catchy, catchy.

00:26:44   - Yeah, it's a good ad, it's a catchy ad.

00:26:46   I would love to know, and I don't know if anybody out there

00:26:52   can tell me the answer to this.

00:26:55   I'm not convinced that these are all actually Gemmoji.

00:26:59   - So there is a disclaimer on the ad.

00:27:03   - Okay.

00:27:04   - And I think it says, "Gemmoji animated by human animators,"

00:27:09   or something like that.

00:27:11   - Okay.

00:27:12   - But that is a question, right,

00:27:14   is are those really Gemmoji at all?

00:27:17   Did they start as Gemmoji,

00:27:19   or did they kind of get there later?

00:27:24   I don't know.

00:27:25   - It doesn't matter to me.

00:27:26   I'm not like, "Oh, this is like a scandal,"

00:27:29   but like, 'cause some of them do genuinely look like

00:27:31   what stuff that I have made from Gemmoji.

00:27:34   - Yeah, so it's a static Gemmoji's,

00:27:37   comma, professionally animated.

00:27:39   - Cool, I'll buy that then.

00:27:40   - I don't know if they used a higher resolution

00:27:44   Gemmoji pipeline in order to get them to look better for TV,

00:27:48   but I think the implication is that they are Gemmoji.

00:27:51   Now, how many thousands of them they had to generate

00:27:53   before they got the ones that were good enough

00:27:55   to then have them professionally animated.

00:27:58   But I think it's a really effective ad.

00:28:00   We've been talking a lot about Apple Intelligence

00:28:03   and the ads and that it's a beta and all those things.

00:28:05   I think this ad is the best endorsement

00:28:08   of Apple Intelligence that I've seen.

00:28:11   - Yeah, well, 'cause Gemmoji is the best feature.

00:28:13   (laughs)

00:28:14   That's why.

00:28:15   - Yeah, fun.

00:28:16   (laughs)

00:28:17   And the song is an earworm, gets stuck in your head

00:28:20   and it's all just, you're gonna be thinking about

00:28:21   Bukatini with some peas, Socrates on mountain skis

00:28:24   for a long time after you watch that ad.

00:28:27   And I watch football, so I see it every commercial break.

00:28:30   - This song, I can only imagine there was two briefings,

00:28:35   which was, can you make a song which is kind of part,

00:28:40   we didn't start the fire, if that's the name of the song.

00:28:43   Right, is that the name of the song?

00:28:45   We didn't? - Yep, yep.

00:28:46   - And part Technologic by Daft Punk.

00:28:48   And then just smushed them together

00:28:51   and you came out with this song.

00:28:52   Like that's what this song is.

00:28:53   I think it's a bit more Daft Punk than anything else.

00:28:57   But yeah, this is like, oh, what if we made

00:29:00   our own version of Technologic

00:29:03   and then just made Gemmoji for that?

00:29:05   I think that's what they're doing there.

00:29:06   And I like it, it's fun.

00:29:07   It's a good song.

00:29:08   And I'm actually happy that they made an original song

00:29:11   to do this.

00:29:12   - Yeah, it's a band called The Dare,

00:29:14   which is actually a guy.

00:29:16   It's a guy whose band name is The Dare.

00:29:19   - That's fun.

00:29:20   - But he has actually, he is like from New York

00:29:23   club musician and DJ, I think.

00:29:27   And that's cool, right?

00:29:28   Like I think they did, what it doesn't feel like

00:29:30   is a kind of like silly commercial jingle.

00:29:33   It has the vibe of all of those cutting edge songs

00:29:36   that Apple does.

00:29:38   - They make a Gemmoji that looks like this guy at the end.

00:29:42   - Oh yeah, see, there you go.

00:29:43   - That's fun, that's fun.

00:29:45   But yeah, he obviously wrote this song

00:29:47   for Apple for Gemmoji, right?

00:29:49   Like there's no way that he made this before.

00:29:53   - Actually, I was thinking if you did make this song

00:29:56   and then somebody at Apple heard it,

00:29:57   they'd be like, oh my God, that's perfect for Gemmoji.

00:29:59   But I was like, probably not, probably not, right?

00:30:01   It's still an earworm and the ad is fun.

00:30:05   And it's like, oh yeah, you can make like ridiculous things.

00:30:09   A horse wearing a tie, sure, you can do that.

00:30:12   - Okay, this is pretty great, Jason.

00:30:14   In the description for the YouTube video,

00:30:18   they have the prompts.

00:30:20   - Oh, look at that.

00:30:22   - You know what, Apple, whoever made this video,

00:30:27   whoever made this, bravo, you thought of everything.

00:30:31   I'm like, oh, did this work?

00:30:32   It's like, no, they have got,

00:30:33   all you have to do is find the pieces.

00:30:35   They put it all out there for us, right?

00:30:37   Like, oh, I'm like, oh no, no way.

00:30:38   But Eggman was fried egg with arms and legs,

00:30:41   poodle shopper, pink poodle holding multicolored

00:30:43   shopping bags, sunglasses, walking.

00:30:45   Like it's the actual prompts,

00:30:47   'cause like they don't make any sense in English,

00:30:49   some of them, right?

00:30:50   Tomato face emoji wearing long body trench coat,

00:30:52   hat, glasses, legs, red hands.

00:30:54   Bravo, gotta say, bravo.

00:30:58   Handsome horse in black suit and tie with flowing mane.

00:31:01   - So I guess you could try and make them yourself, right?

00:31:05   Based on these prompts and just to see how it comes out.

00:31:08   I really like this ad, I think it's a good ad.

00:31:10   And it really is, in my opinion, the only ad they should,

00:31:15   about Apple intelligence, 'cause the rest of them,

00:31:17   they've not engendered kind thoughts, I think,

00:31:21   from people in general on the internet.

00:31:23   But I think, but look, this is like gemmoji,

00:31:26   'cause gemmoji is basically fun and harmless.

00:31:31   - Yes.

00:31:32   - Where a lot of the other stuff,

00:31:33   there's a lot more quibbles to be had by it.

00:31:36   And this is a good ad to show off what it can do.

00:31:39   - Yeah.

00:31:40   - You wanted to talk about script debugger.

00:31:43   - Yeah, just really quickly, I wrote about this last week.

00:31:46   This is long-term follow-up for upgrade, like really long,

00:31:51   like episode 338 of upgrade,

00:31:54   which for those who do not remember that far back,

00:31:58   I can tell you that is the episode

00:32:00   where we stopped using call recorder.

00:32:02   By sponsor Ecamm, they moved on to better things

00:32:05   with Ecamm Live.

00:32:06   - Well, they didn't have a choice.

00:32:07   - Well, they were getting pinched by Skype on one side

00:32:11   and by the operating system on the other side.

00:32:14   And they decided that it was over and they shut it down.

00:32:18   And that prompted me to write an article as well,

00:32:21   which was called "The Mortality of Software,"

00:32:23   which contained a meme that I had forgotten existed,

00:32:26   which is Simone Durochevar, who used to be a relay host.

00:32:31   It's a Thanos and child Nebula meme

00:32:36   where it's, "Did you drastically reduce export times

00:32:39   with Apple Silicon?"

00:32:40   "Yes."

00:32:41   "What did it cost?"

00:32:42   "Everything."

00:32:44   And it's a picture of call recorder.

00:32:46   This call recorder couldn't make it.

00:32:48   Couldn't make it to Apple Silicon,

00:32:49   was getting squeezed by Skype.

00:32:51   So we gave it up.

00:32:52   And my piece was basically like, okay,

00:32:55   apps come and go, and it really sucks

00:32:59   when an app you rely on gets discontinued.

00:33:02   It happens, but it stinks.

00:33:04   It's a lousy thing to have happen.

00:33:06   But I thought at the time,

00:33:07   and this came up again this week,

00:33:08   and what prompted me to write that article,

00:33:10   is there are also a lot of apps I rely on and love,

00:33:14   and that a lot of Mac users rely on and love,

00:33:15   that are indie apps.

00:33:16   And they are the product of one or two or three people,

00:33:19   a single person or a small team.

00:33:22   And those people are human beings.

00:33:25   Not only are there all the risks,

00:33:27   I mean, very sadly,

00:33:28   remember there were those great shortcuts utilities

00:33:32   that were written by Alex Hay,

00:33:34   and he passed away.

00:33:36   And in that case, they actually,

00:33:39   the group that picked them up,

00:33:41   including our friend Rosemary,

00:33:43   worked with his family.

00:33:46   But a very difficult situation to even do that.

00:33:49   A lot of times I think that in situations like that,

00:33:51   it's just over, right?

00:33:52   The code just disappears and is gone.

00:33:55   That's a rare kind of success story

00:33:57   of being able to pick up Alex's legacy.

00:33:59   I mentioned all this because script debugger

00:34:02   from late night software has been around for 30 years.

00:34:05   It is what it sounds like,

00:34:06   which is if you were somebody who wrote AppleScript scripts,

00:34:09   like I did, it gave you a debugging platform

00:34:11   that was incredibly useful.

00:34:12   You could put, you could stop, you know,

00:34:14   and check the variables at any point.

00:34:16   It gave you output of where all the variables were

00:34:20   and what they were so you could figure out

00:34:22   why AppleScript wasn't working right,

00:34:24   which boy, that is required

00:34:25   'cause it's often so impenetrable.

00:34:28   Just an incredibly useful utility.

00:34:31   And the fact is that its authors are retiring,

00:34:35   which they should.

00:34:37   Like if they can retire, they should retire.

00:34:40   But it means the app is gonna not be updated anymore.

00:34:42   And they're doing a very nice thing

00:34:44   where they're gonna, they promise updates

00:34:45   for any issues in the next six months.

00:34:47   And then at that point they will,

00:34:49   and they've announced that they're gonna stop selling it.

00:34:51   They'll stop selling it in six months.

00:34:53   And then they will actually post like all the versions

00:34:56   back to version five or something

00:34:58   with serial numbers on their website.

00:35:00   And basically say, if you've got a compatibility issue

00:35:03   for a past, you know, you really need a version

00:35:06   that runs on this version of Mac OS or whatever,

00:35:08   you can have it, which is great.

00:35:10   Like this, so the right way to do it.

00:35:11   But the bottom line is that the next time

00:35:14   there's an OS update that breaks Scriptabugger,

00:35:17   you can't use it beyond that point.

00:35:19   That's just the truth of it.

00:35:20   And look, if AppleScript was a thriving world

00:35:25   that Apple was putting lots of like time and money into,

00:35:28   and it was a major part of Apple's strategy going forward,

00:35:31   it would probably be a viable reason

00:35:33   for somebody to buy this business and move it forward.

00:35:35   But it's not, it is also kind of fading away.

00:35:40   I haven't even used Scriptabugger

00:35:41   like a fraction of how much I used to

00:35:43   because I've moved so much of what I do

00:35:45   to shortcuts and to Python.

00:35:47   But I still, ironically, I used Scriptabugger

00:35:51   the very day before this announcement came across my timeline

00:35:56   because I was being frustrated by something in AppleScript.

00:36:00   I was like, what is happening here?

00:36:01   Let's go into Scriptabugger

00:36:02   and figure out what I need to do.

00:36:04   So it's a bummer, but again, it just reminds me

00:36:08   of that whole mortality of software thing,

00:36:10   which is I worry that the Mac as a platform

00:36:13   has a lot of go-to apps that were built

00:36:15   in the early days of Mac OS X,

00:36:18   or maybe even the later days of classic Mac OS.

00:36:20   And they're indie apps, and they've been put together

00:36:23   by small teams or individuals.

00:36:25   And the danger is that all of those apps

00:36:27   are of a certain age,

00:36:29   and their developers are of a certain age.

00:36:32   And if something happens to them,

00:36:36   or they just say, I'm going to retire now,

00:36:38   which they have every right to do,

00:36:40   the fear is that that's the end of those apps.

00:36:43   And my larger fear is that so many apps on the Mac

00:36:46   date from that period,

00:36:48   that the Mac has kind of gotten along

00:36:51   with a lot of developer support

00:36:54   from kind of the gray hairs of development.

00:36:59   And they have provided a continuity.

00:37:02   My counter-argument would be the only people

00:37:03   who care about those old apps are old people,

00:37:05   and they'll all fade away together.

00:37:07   We'll all retire together, and none of us

00:37:09   will need BBEdit anymore or whatever.

00:37:10   But I would say that's not necessarily true.

00:37:12   James Thompson is a year younger than me,

00:37:17   and lots of people use PCALC of various ages.

00:37:20   It appeals to all sorts of ages,

00:37:21   but he's just one person writing that code.

00:37:25   So I think when you have a platform as old as the Mac,

00:37:30   41 years old and 25 years, as we said last week,

00:37:33   for Mac OS X, this becomes a risk.

00:37:36   And also I worry about just the sort of like,

00:37:38   it's like an old car or something like that,

00:37:39   where the miles add up.

00:37:43   And I don't think Apple, right?

00:37:46   Apple is not even that focused on it, the truth, right?

00:37:50   'Cause Apple has been focused for the last decade plus

00:37:54   on, you know, gosh, 15, 18 years on iOS platform software,

00:37:59   more than Mac software, for good reasons.

00:38:01   But the Mac has been able to kind of get by.

00:38:03   So anyway, it's just another one of those signs out there

00:38:07   that I was struck by that it wasn't,

00:38:09   we're shutting this down

00:38:10   'cause we can't make any money at it.

00:38:12   It was not, we're shutting this down because we, whatever,

00:38:15   because Apple's made it untenable.

00:38:16   It was, we're shutting this down 'cause we're retiring

00:38:19   and we can't open source it

00:38:20   'cause it's got a lot of stuff in it

00:38:22   that can't be open sourced.

00:38:23   So it just has to go.

00:38:24   A little like how in a different context,

00:38:26   James Thompson made dragfang go away.

00:38:32   That was because of a technical issue,

00:38:33   but this is not really a technical issue.

00:38:36   It's just, we can't do it.

00:38:39   We're retiring, we're over.

00:38:40   So something to keep an eye on,

00:38:42   and it's just something that fills me

00:38:44   with slight existential dread for being a Mac user

00:38:47   is other software that I rely on that has a developer.

00:38:51   Again, they don't need to work until the day they die

00:38:54   in their 90s in order to please me, right?

00:38:57   They don't need to do that.

00:38:58   They need to do what's right for them.

00:38:59   And if they can retire, they should retire.

00:39:01   But still, what does that mean for everybody else?

00:39:05   I don't know.

00:39:06   - Big feelings for a follow-up item, you know?

00:39:10   - You know, that's what happens.

00:39:12   You go deep, you go back to 3.38 of upgrade that far back.

00:39:16   - Big emotions. - Feelings deepen.

00:39:17   Big, big feelings.

00:39:19   You go deep, you get the big feels.

00:39:21   That's just how it is, Mike.

00:39:22   - I understand.

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00:40:35   of this show and all of Relay.

00:40:38   So last week on the show, we gave our feelings

00:40:44   about what Apple should and could do in 2025.

00:40:48   Well, now it's Mark Gurman's turn to do the same.

00:40:52   So Mark published his first kind of newsletter for the year

00:40:57   in which he broke down what he is expecting

00:41:00   to be the entire year's worth of stuff.

00:41:04   And I want to go through the big highlights here

00:41:07   'cause there's some reporting we've heard before,

00:41:09   some stuff, little tidbits that are new,

00:41:11   but it's always interesting to kind of look at

00:41:14   what is your feeling on this

00:41:16   if you know a bunch of stuff, right?

00:41:18   Well, we're giving our vibes, right?

00:41:21   Like this is what we think,

00:41:23   but what happens if you actually know?

00:41:25   So we're going to do this kind of chronologically.

00:41:29   The first updates that we're expected to see this year

00:41:31   would be new versions of the MacBook Air

00:41:33   featuring M4 chips.

00:41:34   Mark spoke about this and actually made me think about,

00:41:38   me and Steven were talking, I think over the weekend

00:41:40   about like the M2 MacBook Air.

00:41:43   Does that replace the M1 MacBook Air,

00:41:45   like in Walmart and stuff?

00:41:47   Like is the M1 going to go away?

00:41:48   'Cause Mark talks about like the M4

00:41:52   probably will replace the M3

00:41:54   and the M2 he thinks will remain,

00:41:57   not that the M3 will shuffle down.

00:41:59   And I think that makes sense.

00:42:00   - Yeah, I sent you and Steven a link

00:42:03   because you guys were having that conversation

00:42:05   about how the M3 MacBook Air was $899 at Amazon.

00:42:10   Like what?

00:42:13   So I feel like the question of what happens

00:42:17   with a MacBook Air line is really interesting

00:42:18   but I think their margins have gotten to the point

00:42:20   where yeah, they could kick the M1 and M3

00:42:24   out of the product line if they wanted to,

00:42:26   make the M2 cheap and then introduce an M4 and be fine.

00:42:31   - Yeah.

00:42:32   Some new products are likely to come in the spring.

00:42:36   The iPhone SE is expected to be the highlight of that

00:42:40   with the modern design, with Face ID

00:42:41   and Apple Intelligence support.

00:42:43   Mark mentions that he thinks that the new design

00:42:46   and some of the new features could push the price up

00:42:49   and says that they could maybe keep the old device around.

00:42:52   And I just think this is a terrible idea.

00:42:54   - So if you look at the way he worded that,

00:42:57   I think he shifts from knowledge to punditry

00:43:00   in the middle there. - Yes, he does.

00:43:02   - Where he's like, "I think they should keep

00:43:03   the old device around and push it down to $200

00:43:05   for some markets."

00:43:06   And it's like, okay, well, you can think that

00:43:07   but are they gonna do that or not?

00:43:09   - Yeah, I don't think so.

00:43:11   - Well, I mean, a device that doesn't run

00:43:13   Apple Intelligence that's got a lightning port on it,

00:43:15   I mean, I don't know.

00:43:18   - Here's the thing, here's what I'll say.

00:43:20   I could imagine a scenario where like,

00:43:22   what we were just talking about with the Walmart MacBook Air

00:43:25   that there are some parts of the world

00:43:27   where they keep the old iPhone SE around

00:43:30   and it's sold through certain partners

00:43:32   at a really cheap price.

00:43:34   - Yeah, you definitely don't see it on Apple's website

00:43:37   and it's not part of their marketing,

00:43:38   but you can still get it in certain markets at a low price

00:43:42   because that market needs to have an entry iPhone

00:43:45   at that price.

00:43:46   Yes, I agree, that could happen.

00:43:48   - And also, at this point, if they have not found a way

00:43:52   to make like a Face ID design phone for this price,

00:43:55   I don't know what's going on, right?

00:43:57   Because there was a time where a Touch ID based phone

00:44:01   cost a lot of money and they did it for a long enough time

00:44:03   that they got the price down.

00:44:04   - Face ID started in 2017, okay, right?

00:44:09   So that's seven years ago, well, six plus years ago

00:44:14   'cause it was in the fall with the iPhone X.

00:44:17   Okay, you should be able to get that

00:44:19   in your base model phone now, right?

00:44:21   You should be able to do that.

00:44:23   There's gotta be a way.

00:44:24   The first, I mean, have they upgraded all the specs

00:44:27   in the latest Face IDs?

00:44:28   Well, maybe they go back to the cheaper,

00:44:30   more readily available, not quite as great version

00:44:33   that they can put in this version.

00:44:35   But yeah, that seems to make a lot of sense to me.

00:44:38   Just, they could do it, they could do it.

00:44:40   They may have to forego, as with any hardware redesign,

00:44:43   you have to forego some of your really sweet margins

00:44:45   on the product that's been in the line forever.

00:44:48   I get it, but that's why you waited seven years.

00:44:52   - And also, this is a product that you know

00:44:55   is gonna be around for a super long time.

00:44:57   So could you not, is it not possible to think about

00:45:01   the profit margin in the long term

00:45:03   rather than just in the short term?

00:45:05   - And it's an important product for them.

00:45:07   It really is important for them.

00:45:08   And keep in mind too that they can't sell,

00:45:11   the current model's not on sale in the EU, for example.

00:45:15   It can't be, because it has lightning on it.

00:45:17   So they need to get it out there,

00:45:18   having a base model iPhone to get people in the store,

00:45:21   to get people to become iPhone customers

00:45:24   who might otherwise not be in the ecosystem.

00:45:26   There's so many reasons to do it.

00:45:27   And so yeah, it's time.

00:45:29   - I really look forward to only partly

00:45:34   all of the moratoriums for the home button

00:45:36   that will be written on that day.

00:45:38   - Oh, the memorials of like, RIP home button.

00:45:42   It's like, somebody will work up an AI-generated image

00:45:47   of a tombstone where the home button has been laid to rest

00:45:51   in the family plot next to the headphone jack.

00:45:53   - Well, I always think about the Verge article

00:45:56   about the MacBook Air design

00:45:58   and how they were sad that it was gone.

00:46:03   In a way that I just don't understand.

00:46:06   The MacBook Air's wedge is truly gone and I miss it already.

00:46:10   That article didn't make any sense to me.

00:46:11   I know it's all about opinion.

00:46:12   - Nope.

00:46:14   - It's written by Victoria Song,

00:46:15   who is one of my favorite reporters at the Verge,

00:46:17   but you can't agree on everything.

00:46:19   And I don't agree on this one.

00:46:20   (laughs)

00:46:21   - Also, let's be clear.

00:46:23   A Verge piece has a weight,

00:46:26   and a piece by Victoria Song has an extra weight to it.

00:46:28   And that is, that post, that story was a classic blog post,

00:46:32   which is, look, I know that it doesn't make sense,

00:46:35   but I'm just sharing some vibes here,

00:46:38   which is, boy, I loved that wedge-shaped MacBook Air

00:46:40   and this is the end.

00:46:42   And to frame it as the Verge decries

00:46:44   the elimination of the wedge.

00:46:46   - Sure, sure.

00:46:47   - I'm sure they didn't mean it,

00:46:48   but I rolled my eyes at it too.

00:46:50   I'm like, come on, that's just progress.

00:46:52   That's just the world moving.

00:46:54   But again, I think the point was just,

00:46:56   hey, things move on.

00:46:57   Scriptabugger gets discontinued.

00:47:00   It happens.

00:47:01   - I will say though, there is somebody in my house

00:47:03   who I know feels this way.

00:47:05   So I guess I can't say too much.

00:47:08   And it is a point of contention in my home

00:47:11   that Adina really does not want to update her

00:47:13   M1 MacBook Air 'cause she much prefers that design

00:47:17   to mine in a way that I just,

00:47:19   I cannot get my head around it,

00:47:21   but she prefers it. - I completely disagree.

00:47:23   - And I don't understand it.

00:47:25   - I was the world's biggest MacBook Air fan,

00:47:27   but I love the new design so much.

00:47:29   - It's the best.

00:47:30   - I rolled it down.

00:47:31   So this is part of the story,

00:47:32   that just a little sidebar here.

00:47:35   Now that I've got my MacBook Pro,

00:47:36   Lauren's got my M2 Air and Jamie's got the M1 Air

00:47:40   that Lauren had that I had previously.

00:47:41   So that's gone down to another one.

00:47:43   She was on an Intel MacBook Air so bad, so bad.

00:47:46   Oh my God, it was the computer we got

00:47:47   when she went to college.

00:47:48   And oh, if you can just imagine a MacBook Air

00:47:51   of that vintage, a six-year-old, seven-year-old MacBook Air,

00:47:54   Intel, going to an M1, huge, huge jump for her.

00:47:58   It's great.

00:47:59   But I was struck by the sentimentalism, I guess,

00:48:04   that came out in this moment when I was migrating computers,

00:48:08   because first, Lauren says to Jamie,

00:48:12   you take good care of that thing.

00:48:14   That was my computer.

00:48:15   I really loved it.

00:48:17   And I thought, well, that's, I mean, come on, that's silly.

00:48:19   And then Lauren sat down on the couch

00:48:21   like a couple of days ago with my old M2 MacBook Air,

00:48:24   midnight MacBook Air, and was doing something.

00:48:26   And I was like, oh, I have those feelings too.

00:48:28   You better take care of that thing.

00:48:31   I love that thing so much.

00:48:32   - I have such a strong attachment

00:48:34   to my M2 MacBook Air.

00:48:35   Like, I love that computer so much.

00:48:37   And then I probably mentioned this in the show,

00:48:39   but like I put stickers on that laptop.

00:48:42   I've not done that in a long time,

00:48:44   but I'm just like, no, I'm good.

00:48:46   Like this computer's moved in with me.

00:48:48   Like we're not going anywhere.

00:48:50   Like I genuinely, like I can imagine,

00:48:53   like I will use this MacBook Air

00:48:56   until Apple takes a big jump with the MacBook Air again.

00:48:59   Like, you know, they have to make a big jump

00:49:02   for me to want to move 'cause I just,

00:49:04   for what I am doing on that computer,

00:49:06   it's like, it's perfect.

00:49:10   - So just also as a little note,

00:49:13   as part of this computer exchange process,

00:49:15   I went to Etsy as I do and bought a rainbow Apple logo

00:49:22   sticker and affixed it to the Apple logo on my MacBook Pro.

00:49:27   And in a quiet ceremony, while the migration was going on,

00:49:31   the Apple rainbow decal was removed from the M2 MacBook Air

00:49:36   because you need to tell those two things apart

00:49:38   and the rainbow one is mine.

00:49:40   So that's how we did it.

00:49:42   - And also you're probably the only person in the house

00:49:44   that has such a strong affinity for the rainbow logo.

00:49:48   - Of course, it's just that, you know,

00:49:49   it's more that that was a midnight

00:49:50   and I've got the space black and they're close enough

00:49:54   in color and shape at this point

00:49:56   that we need to be able to identify who's is who's.

00:49:59   And so I get the rainbow and I de-rainbow the other one

00:50:02   and Lauren can put stickers on it if she wants to.

00:50:05   But I actually was shopping.

00:50:08   There was a surprising lack of Apple,

00:50:11   well, I guess because it's the Apple logo,

00:50:13   but like the people on Etsy who do the rainbow Apple logo,

00:50:16   I'm really surprised that there aren't more

00:50:19   just like colored Apple decals that will go on

00:50:23   the shape of the Apple logo on a Mac laptop

00:50:25   because I'd get Lauren, I found one,

00:50:28   but they didn't have models.

00:50:30   They didn't go to the trouble of,

00:50:32   the good Etsy shops as somebody who's done this

00:50:35   like 10 times now have measured the exact measurements

00:50:38   of every Mac model and the Apple logo on it.

00:50:41   And they just put the model in your picker

00:50:44   when you're ordering your decal.

00:50:46   And the one that I found that had like a purple

00:50:48   or an orange or whatever, they just had dimensions.

00:50:51   And I was like, oh my God, I have to go measure the Apple

00:50:53   and see, I don't wanna do that.

00:50:55   But anyway, that would be cool because that's a fun way

00:50:58   that even if you don't love stickers, you could,

00:51:01   and Apple won't let you buy computers in fun colors,

00:51:03   you could just put a fun color on the Apple logo.

00:51:06   You could do that.

00:51:08   - Going back to Mark's report.

00:51:10   - Yes.

00:51:10   - Kind of also in the spring,

00:51:13   probably along with the iPhone SE,

00:51:15   a new versions of the iPad and the iPad Air,

00:51:19   these will both get faster chips.

00:51:21   So the regular iPad would probably get an A17 Pro

00:51:25   for Apple intelligence.

00:51:26   And Mark believes that the iPad Air could go to an M4,

00:51:30   which I guess makes sense.

00:51:32   I mean, it's powerful,

00:51:33   but it's gonna stick around for a while.

00:51:36   - Yeah, and I know that the thought is always,

00:51:38   well, why would you do that?

00:51:40   'Cause that makes it less differentiated with the iPad Pro.

00:51:43   I think Apple has shown

00:51:44   that they kind of don't care that much.

00:51:45   And there are so many other things about the Air

00:51:49   in terms of compatibility with Magic Keyboard

00:51:52   and in terms of the OLED screen, right?

00:51:55   Like the Pro has, there's enough there.

00:51:57   If the Air ends up with the M4, it's fine.

00:52:00   - It's vastly differentiated at the moment.

00:52:02   And also as well, don't forget that the M3

00:52:05   was a bit of an ugly duckling kind of chip.

00:52:07   - And Apple's making so many M4s, right?

00:52:12   And they're gonna make even more with the MacBook Air

00:52:14   when it goes to M4.

00:52:15   M4 is the right thing to put in there.

00:52:18   And then at some point, the iPad Pro will get a M5 or M6,

00:52:23   and it'll differentiate again.

00:52:24   But until then, there's plenty to differentiate

00:52:26   those two products other than the processor.

00:52:28   - The thinness is a big one too.

00:52:32   - Thinness, OLED, new keyboard.

00:52:34   Although he says they might update

00:52:37   the 2020 Magic Keyboard, right?

00:52:39   Which is what the Air currently uses.

00:52:41   - Yeah.

00:52:42   - That's interesting.

00:52:44   - He just says Magic Keyboard updates.

00:52:46   So what they will be, not entirely sure.

00:52:49   - Yeah, that's weird. - But something.

00:52:53   A home hub device.

00:52:55   So as a refresher of the specs,

00:52:56   seven inch screen can be wall mounted

00:52:58   or placed on the counter.

00:53:00   Mark Gorman was originally expecting a March release,

00:53:02   but this could take a bit more time.

00:53:04   A quote from his article,

00:53:05   the device's operating system, code named Pebble,

00:53:08   is heavily tied to AppIntents,

00:53:11   features coming in iOS 18.4 and iOS 19.

00:53:15   So it's plausible that the hardware itself

00:53:17   will ship a bit later.

00:53:19   So there you go, there's a little detail

00:53:21   of how does this thing work?

00:53:23   It's somehow going to use AppIntents.

00:53:27   - Right, which is a question,

00:53:29   'cause there's a whole it can't run apps,

00:53:30   but like, does it run AppIntents

00:53:32   and does it run them remotely?

00:53:33   Or what's exactly going on there?

00:53:34   There's a lot of mystery here.

00:53:35   This also is a suggestion that

00:53:37   as the last remaining big WWDC features,

00:53:42   the personal context and the AppIntents

00:53:45   that are still not shipping,

00:53:47   that you build a piece of hardware

00:53:49   that's tied around them and you're like,

00:53:51   okay, can't ship it.

00:53:53   Can't ship it until you've got that stuff shipping

00:53:56   in a product, which is going to be, again, 18.4.

00:53:59   And the way he words this, first off, I think,

00:54:02   well, one of two things is probably true here.

00:54:03   Either AppIntents is coming in 18.4 in a limited fashion,

00:54:08   and then they're going to kick the rest of it into iOS 19.

00:54:11   And I do wonder about that.

00:54:13   The other way to read this is it'll be in 18.4,

00:54:17   unless it slips to 19,

00:54:20   which may be.

00:54:21   - Yeah, it's a little unsight,

00:54:22   'cause I mean, this is always a thing

00:54:23   that we knew was going to be limited in 18.4,

00:54:26   'cause I think it's just certain types of apps, right,

00:54:28   and then expected to expand.

00:54:30   But any of the above could be true,

00:54:34   because, I mean, it's January now,

00:54:37   and there is not currently a shipping beta

00:54:41   that includes any of this stuff.

00:54:44   So-- - Nope, nothing.

00:54:45   - How far do we go?

00:54:47   - Yeah, that's a good question.

00:54:50   By the way, I wanna back up for a second.

00:54:52   I do wonder if, when there's a new version

00:54:54   of the low-end iPad and the iPad Air,

00:54:56   I do wonder if they will try something to get the iPad

00:55:00   and the smaller iPad Air to be the same size

00:55:03   so they can have a single keyboard accessory for both.

00:55:07   - Yeah, why not?

00:55:09   - Maybe. - Yeah, why not?

00:55:10   - 'Cause right now they've got that kickstand thing

00:55:13   on the one, and then they've got the old 2020 keyboard

00:55:16   on the other.

00:55:17   I wonder if they might go to a single accessory

00:55:19   that works with both of the small sizes at least,

00:55:22   even if the large size remains using the existing.

00:55:25   They could also change the iPad Airs

00:55:27   to use the new Magic Keyboard instead,

00:55:31   but they would have changed the dimensions

00:55:33   in order to match.

00:55:34   And actually, they're too thick, right?

00:55:35   I think that they actually can't do that, but we'll see.

00:55:38   We'll see, but that's a thought,

00:55:39   is that maybe they're trying to sync up.

00:55:40   The reason there's a Magic Keyboard update

00:55:42   is they're trying to sync up the shape

00:55:43   of their low-end iPads

00:55:45   so that they can use the same accessories.

00:55:47   - Yeah, 'cause we've got a 10.9-inch and an 11-inch.

00:55:50   They're the screen sizes,

00:55:51   and so with that comes slightly different.

00:55:54   I think, yeah, just going to 11-inch on the iPad

00:55:57   would be a good move if they can make it work.

00:56:00   - Yeah, I mean, even if it's just the shape of the hardware

00:56:02   and not the size of the screen would be a way they could do it.

00:56:05   Well, we'll see, we'll see.

00:56:06   - MacStudio will get an update to the M4 generation

00:56:11   due in the first half of 2025.

00:56:14   The Mac Pro, as well as expected,

00:56:16   but the timing is not clear.

00:56:18   I don't think it's gonna happen.

00:56:20   - He, yeah, he really equivocated about this.

00:56:22   Like, there might be a Mac Pro.

00:56:24   What he's not saying is the Mac Pro

00:56:25   will ship with the MacStudio.

00:56:26   Now he's certain the MacStudio

00:56:28   is going to update in the first half,

00:56:29   but the Mac Pro is just a cloud with a question mark in it.

00:56:34   And when I read that newsletter,

00:56:37   I thought it sounds to me like summer or fall,

00:56:41   and that's interesting.

00:56:44   That's interesting.

00:56:45   But yeah, they might skip it.

00:56:47   I still am not entirely convinced

00:56:50   that there isn't like a Mac Pro strategy

00:56:53   hiding in the background

00:56:54   where they actually do have a plan

00:56:55   to differentiate the Mac Pro.

00:56:57   But to me, it's just as likely that the Mac Pro is a,

00:57:00   you know, we designed this case,

00:57:01   so we might as well update the chips in it,

00:57:03   but no, it doesn't make sense for anybody.

00:57:05   We'll see.

00:57:05   - As much as it hurts people,

00:57:07   I just don't understand the business case

00:57:10   for the amount of development that it would take

00:57:13   to make an effective Mac Pro

00:57:15   and how much it would have to add to macOS

00:57:18   and Apple Silicon to make that work.

00:57:20   And I'm just not sure that I see the business case for it.

00:57:25   - I could see a partner too.

00:57:28   They could do their little partner thing

00:57:29   where they design something

00:57:30   and then have somebody else sell it,

00:57:33   where they say, "You know, it's the MacStudio,

00:57:35   "and if you need those cards,

00:57:36   "here's our mega thunderbolt connection kit thingy

00:57:40   "that is being sold by Belkin or whoever."

00:57:44   (laughs)

00:57:45   And you can put the cards in there, and then they work.

00:57:47   I don't know, I don't know, we'll see, we'll see.

00:57:49   I wonder if they're holding out for a future

00:57:52   where they actually do decouple,

00:57:54   optionally decouple the GPUs

00:57:57   and do something very different in the Mac Pro.

00:57:59   But again, nobody buys the Mac Pro.

00:58:01   Sorry, fans of the Mac Pro.

00:58:03   Essentially, nobody buys the Mac Pro.

00:58:05   So it's a tough one.

00:58:08   - Quite more conversational Siri would be debuting in 2026,

00:58:12   but if we're following this chronologically,

00:58:14   we will see it at WWDC.

00:58:16   So this would be kind of around the middle of the year.

00:58:18   - Right, right.

00:58:19   They'll announce something for next year

00:58:21   about Siri being better.

00:58:22   - Yeah, and this will probably also tie up.

00:58:25   I was thinking when we were talking earlier,

00:58:27   I could imagine genuinely that we might,

00:58:31   I mean, we spoke about this before,

00:58:32   but just thinking about it now,

00:58:33   we will still be getting Apple intelligence features

00:58:36   from iOS 18 post WWDC.

00:58:38   - That could be.

00:58:41   - Right.

00:58:42   - That could be.

00:58:42   - Because there are a few big stuff left

00:58:44   and we may still see that. - I kind of doubt it.

00:58:47   I feel like 18.4 will probably ship in maybe May

00:58:51   and we'll be like at last, the last bill of goods from.

00:58:54   - We'll see.

00:58:55   I don't know.

00:58:56   - And then in June, but you're right.

00:58:57   It could slip.

00:58:58   It could slip.

00:59:00   It's possible.

00:59:01   And the question, I wonder if what they're doing right now

00:59:03   to go back to that app intense statement that he made,

00:59:06   I wonder if the debate right now inside Apple is like,

00:59:09   what can we ship now?

00:59:12   I mean, 18.4 as a way to say, yeah, yeah, yeah,

00:59:15   we shipped this feature we promised.

00:59:17   And what do we boot out of this feature?

00:59:21   Like app intense is an interesting one

00:59:23   where there are whole like classes of app intense

00:59:27   for different kinds of apps.

00:59:29   And I really do wonder if they're like,

00:59:31   if we're gonna ship this, we can only focus on

00:59:33   these limited sets of classes

00:59:35   and potentially some of the ones that they said

00:59:37   they would support in 18, they just kick it to 19

00:59:40   and say, look, we know we need to do more, but we just can't.

00:59:43   And so they focus on the ones

00:59:44   that the hardware requires maybe,

00:59:47   and the rest of them, they just put it in the keynote again

00:59:51   for June and see what happens in the next cycle.

00:59:54   - Mark calls out one of the things for iOS 19

00:59:59   could be an AI powered health coaching service,

01:00:02   which could potentially--

01:00:05   - He's been talking about that a while, yeah.

01:00:06   - That could potentially, depending on what that means,

01:00:09   that could potentially solve an issue

01:00:10   that I have with Apple's overall health strategy,

01:00:13   which is they give you information,

01:00:16   but give you zero context of what any of it means

01:00:19   or how any of it works together.

01:00:22   - It's true, it's true.

01:00:23   - I'm not ready to talk about it yet

01:00:24   'cause I've not given it enough of a college try,

01:00:26   but in the last few weeks,

01:00:27   I've been trying out a Whoop band,

01:00:29   the familiar with this company, W-H-O-O-P.

01:00:32   They're like a-- - No.

01:00:33   - It's just a strap that you wear.

01:00:35   And it's doing a lot of stuff, it's measuring stuff,

01:00:38   and it's even pulling in data from my Apple Watch.

01:00:40   And they actually take multiple pieces of information

01:00:43   and give me suggestions about my day

01:00:45   and how I might wanna use my energy throughout the day

01:00:50   in a way that I wished that Apple Health would.

01:00:52   And maybe this could be a step to that,

01:00:54   but I also feel like I'm being,

01:00:56   I'm hoping too much from it, but nevertheless.

01:01:01   - There's an ad, another effective, actually,

01:01:04   I would say, Apple ad is this ad called Quit Quitting.

01:01:06   That's about you quit your New Year's resolutions

01:01:09   on the second Friday of January on average.

01:01:12   And it's a what if, but what if you didn't,

01:01:14   what if you had, and it's an Apple Watch ad,

01:01:17   and it's all about fitness.

01:01:19   And it's a good ad.

01:01:21   I mean, it's not bucatini with some peas,

01:01:24   but it's a good ad.

01:01:26   But what strikes me about it is,

01:01:30   I get the aspirational aspect of it,

01:01:32   which is like the Apple Watch will help you

01:01:35   stick with your fitness regimen, it'll measure and all that.

01:01:38   But when you talk about the AI powered health coaching

01:01:41   and all of that, it strikes me that this is an area

01:01:45   where Apple with all of its data

01:01:48   does not really lend you a helping hand to,

01:01:53   I mean, they'll do like,

01:01:54   "Yeah, you closed your rings," and stuff like that.

01:01:56   Or, "Oh, you're a little behind on your rings.

01:01:58   Maybe you should go for a walk," or something like that.

01:02:00   But it's dumb.

01:02:01   And there's something better to be done with this.

01:02:05   And if you look at that ad, you think of Apple's,

01:02:08   what Apple wants the Apple Watch to be,

01:02:10   which is a companion that helps you get over the hump,

01:02:14   not quit your goals, fulfill your goals.

01:02:18   That's a health coach, basically.

01:02:21   So they do need a feature like this, AI powered or not,

01:02:23   they do need a feature like this

01:02:26   to fulfill what their clear aspirations are.

01:02:28   - Talking about the Apple Watch,

01:02:31   the Apple Watch SE will get a redesign.

01:02:34   Interested to see what this is.

01:02:37   I really want them to just make a plastic Apple Watch,

01:02:39   right, but I don't think they're gonna do it,

01:02:42   but I think it would be fun.

01:02:44   And the Ultra, the Series 11 and the Ultra 3,

01:02:47   is it Series 11 or Series 12?

01:02:51   It'd be Series 11?

01:02:53   Yeah, I'm gonna go with that. - Oh, that's this year,

01:02:55   would be a Series 11. - Yeah.

01:02:57   Series 11 and the Ultra 3

01:02:59   will get high blood pressure detection,

01:03:02   and the Ultra 3 will get satellite connectivity.

01:03:05   - So high blood pressure detection is interesting.

01:03:07   So you can have hypertension and get medicated and all that,

01:03:10   but also what will happen is this is gonna be more like,

01:03:13   not we're gonna take your blood pressure

01:03:15   and give you your details and send it to your doctor.

01:03:18   It's more like if it detects

01:03:21   that you've got high blood pressure,

01:03:23   you're having a high blood pressure event,

01:03:24   it's like having an AFib event or something like that,

01:03:27   they will send you an alert

01:03:28   and say you need to talk to your doctor.

01:03:30   And I have a friend that this happened to,

01:03:32   he ended up having a very high blood pressure incident

01:03:37   and went to the hospital

01:03:39   and was in the hospital for a few days.

01:03:41   I'm like, it's a whole thing.

01:03:42   And so the idea that people who are,

01:03:44   again, if you're maintaining,

01:03:47   that's not what this feature is.

01:03:48   This is one of those classic Apple features in a way

01:03:50   where they're turning the weakness of the Apple Watch

01:03:52   into a benefit, which is, okay,

01:03:53   we can't act as your blood pressure cuff,

01:03:57   but we can throw a warning

01:03:59   when your blood pressure seems high.

01:04:01   And for some people, most of us, I think,

01:04:04   are oblivious of lots of aspects of our health

01:04:07   to be told by the Apple Watch, you have a problem,

01:04:10   talk to your doctor now, tell them this.

01:04:12   That's good.

01:04:13   That's great.

01:04:14   Yeah, even if the answer is, yeah, you have hypertension

01:04:17   and you need to go on this medication

01:04:18   and you need to check your blood pressure every day,

01:04:21   your Apple Watch is not necessarily gonna do that part of it

01:04:24   but it could do the warning part,

01:04:26   which is, then there's a montage at WWDC about,

01:04:30   or sorry, at the Apple Watch launch

01:04:31   about how it saved more lives.

01:04:33   And that's the goal.

01:04:35   - Put one of those in every one.

01:04:36   - I know, but that's the goal.

01:04:37   That's what they're trying to do.

01:04:38   Literally, if you ask the Apple Watch people

01:04:40   and the watchOS people what they're trying to do,

01:04:42   they'll say, "Sell products and save lives."

01:04:45   Those are the two things.

01:04:45   - I mean, and that kind of rules.

01:04:47   I mean, I have that thing, it's a very minor thing,

01:04:49   but the vitals widget that's on my home screen,

01:04:53   I mean, I could see that I was sick.

01:04:55   The device knows, it knows,

01:04:59   because like, hey, look, something's wrong here.

01:05:01   And it was right, I was sick last week.

01:05:03   And my Apple Watch knew that

01:05:06   in the level in which it can know that,

01:05:08   which is like, it could see that there were a couple of things

01:05:10   that were out of line.

01:05:12   - Yeah.

01:05:14   - The iPhone line, really the only thing of note

01:05:16   is the iPhone 17 Air.

01:05:19   It will be thin, it will feature Apple's own modem,

01:05:23   an A19 chip and a single camera.

01:05:27   This is the thing I've been wondering about.

01:05:30   Like, there's been lots of rumors back and forward,

01:05:33   but Marc's saying this, makes me like,

01:05:34   "Okay, that phone's gonna have one camera."

01:05:36   That is gonna be complicated for people, I think,

01:05:39   especially in our sphere,

01:05:42   who might like the idea of a super thin iPhone,

01:05:45   but with one camera.

01:05:47   And Apple are betting that this will outsell the Plus,

01:05:50   but won't outsell the Pro,

01:05:51   which I think is the right way to think about it.

01:05:53   - I think that this will be a winner

01:05:55   in the way that the Mini and the Plus were not.

01:05:58   I imagine that they will put one of their versions

01:06:01   of a 48 megapixel with the bin pixels

01:06:03   so that they can do a full 48,

01:06:05   or you can do a 24 megapixel with binning,

01:06:08   or you could set it to a 2X zoom, essentially,

01:06:11   which is just using the center portion,

01:06:13   which gives you a zoom,

01:06:14   even though it's not a camera with zoom.

01:06:17   I think that that's all good.

01:06:20   They said, he said that it'll be about as thin

01:06:23   as the iPad Pro, right?

01:06:26   So that's thin, that's really thin.

01:06:28   - There was another rumor, Meng Qiquo rumor,

01:06:32   that at its thinnest part, this will be 5.5 millimeters.

01:06:36   The 11 inch iPad Pro is 5.3.

01:06:39   So yeah, that is genuinely,

01:06:43   that five millimeter range, at the moment,

01:06:47   technology of this ilk cannot be thinner than this.

01:06:51   Like it can't, because there are factors like buttons,

01:06:56   if you're gonna have any buttons,

01:07:01   there is just a thickness level

01:07:03   that they literally have to be at.

01:07:05   So that five millimeter range seems like the absolute,

01:07:10   like thinnest piece of technology can be.

01:07:13   And I will say that that iPad is so thin,

01:07:17   and a phone that thin would be quite special.

01:07:20   - It would be, and that's the thing is,

01:07:22   tech nerds who want all the things will get the Pro.

01:07:28   But a lot of people, regular people,

01:07:31   and also some tech nerds, I would say,

01:07:33   will say that the iPhone is so advanced now,

01:07:36   that giving up some of those features

01:07:40   in order to get this super thin, awesome new thing

01:07:44   is worth it for them.

01:07:45   So I'm looking forward to seeing this product.

01:07:48   I definitely think it will do better

01:07:50   than the Plus and the Mini,

01:07:52   because it's offering something more substantial

01:07:56   than screen size differences.

01:07:59   And I know it's like, well, wait,

01:08:01   it's just a different dimension that's getting thinner.

01:08:02   But like, yeah, I know, but I don't know.

01:08:05   It's gonna feel like no iPhone before it,

01:08:07   and that has some value.

01:08:08   - I'm gonna make a mic prediction here, Jason.

01:08:10   Are you ready?

01:08:11   - Ready.

01:08:13   - Steven Hackett, Federico Vittucci, and Marco Ammann

01:08:16   will all buy this phone.

01:08:17   Not one of them will be using it

01:08:19   before the iPhone 18 comes out.

01:08:20   That is my prediction.

01:08:23   - I love it.

01:08:25   I love the prediction. - Those three guys

01:08:26   are like in this realm, and they will want it,

01:08:30   and I understand it,

01:08:31   but they're all gonna struggle

01:08:34   with the problems that it has over time.

01:08:37   - I agree.

01:08:38   I think, I wanna say that one of them won't,

01:08:41   but I think you're right.

01:08:42   I think that that's exactly what's gonna happen,

01:08:44   is they'll all buy it,

01:08:45   and they'll all get a replacement for it

01:08:46   before the cycle is up.

01:08:49   Yeah. - Yep.

01:08:49   Apple is working on adding heart rate monitoring

01:08:53   to the AirPods Pro 3.

01:08:54   It's something that Marc has reported about previously

01:08:57   that we haven't gotten to yet, and mentions in this again.

01:09:01   They're also working on temperature sensing

01:09:03   and other physiological measurements in general.

01:09:06   I find this to be an interesting one.

01:09:09   Like it would, I guess it would set apart

01:09:11   the Pro models again, right?

01:09:13   Like, so it has an extra feature

01:09:14   that regular AirPods don't,

01:09:16   but I really, for me, I'm not sure

01:09:20   who this customer is.

01:09:23   - I think that the AirPods base is broader

01:09:27   than the Apple Watch base.

01:09:29   - And that there is also a certain percentage of them

01:09:31   who do not overlap.

01:09:33   And I think this is a way for Apple

01:09:35   to basically start getting health data

01:09:37   from people who are not using Apple Watch.

01:09:42   So it's not a huge selling point, I would say.

01:09:45   I feel like it's more that Apple,

01:09:50   as you buy these because you want a new pair of AirPods,

01:09:52   one of the things that it's gonna get you

01:09:54   is more data in the health app,

01:09:56   and that they want that to happen.

01:09:57   But I don't think a lot of people are like,

01:09:59   "Oh man, take my temperature in my ear, let's do it."

01:10:02   - It's a nice to have, right?

01:10:04   The heart rate monitoring in AirPods Pro,

01:10:05   it's a nice to have.

01:10:06   I just, I don't see it as like a potential,

01:10:09   like a real selling point.

01:10:10   'Cause for me, the person that I'm thinking of, right?

01:10:13   Because the difference here is this is only really useful

01:10:16   for when you're working out,

01:10:17   like that's gonna be the pitch for it.

01:10:18   And it's just like, if you really care

01:10:19   about your heart rate monitoring when you're working out,

01:10:21   you probably have an Apple Watch.

01:10:23   - Yeah, but some people might not.

01:10:25   And I think it gives value there.

01:10:27   There's also heart rate monitoring for people

01:10:29   who do not work out, who are like,

01:10:31   where you're walking and your phone

01:10:33   and your AirPods are measuring your exertion,

01:10:34   and they can tell you things about

01:10:36   whether you're getting in better shape or worse shape.

01:10:38   I think there's also some warning stuff.

01:10:40   Like if they can do AFib detection or something like that,

01:10:42   then they're gonna throw an alert.

01:10:44   But it is different in the sense

01:10:45   that it's only when you've got the AirPods in, right?

01:10:47   It's not all the time with your Apple Watch.

01:10:49   So it's less, look, I like this.

01:10:52   I don't think this is a game changer.

01:10:54   I think this is more showing that Apple has realized

01:10:59   that all of its products should have health sensors in them

01:11:01   and contribute to the whole.

01:11:03   I'll also say it's possible that if you've got

01:11:06   an Apple Watch and you've got AirPods Pro 3

01:11:08   with these new sensors, that they are gonna be able

01:11:11   to coordinate because I suspect some of the monitoring

01:11:15   will be more accurate in the AirPods than in the Apple Watch,

01:11:20   believe it or not.

01:11:20   That there might be things that you could measure better

01:11:23   in the ear, like temperature, than you can on the wrist.

01:11:28   But certainly to make it more accurate

01:11:29   by having two different data points.

01:11:30   And I think Apple's goal is ultimately

01:11:32   this constellation of devices thing

01:11:34   where they've got data everywhere.

01:11:36   - I mean, maybe eventually.

01:11:37   I believe Mark Gorman's report is that it wouldn't be

01:11:40   as accurate, at least to begin with.

01:11:42   But that's to begin with, right?

01:11:42   - Okay, and we'll see.

01:11:43   - Maybe it works in the--

01:11:45   - We'll see.

01:11:46   They take temperature in people's ears, so I wonder if--

01:11:48   - He said not far off, though.

01:11:52   So again, it might get better over time.

01:11:54   And look, Upgradients, if you have opened a thing

01:11:57   to write to me to tell me you don't wear an Apple Watch

01:11:59   but you'd love this, great.

01:12:00   I'm not saying nobody wants this.

01:12:02   My point is that it is a, the Venn diagram of like,

01:12:07   would like heart rate monitoring, and does,

01:12:11   like an Apple Watch--

01:12:12   - And doesn't have a tracker of some sort.

01:12:14   - Like that is like a very small market for me.

01:12:19   For features in one of Apple's most popular products.

01:12:24   Like that's kind of what I'm getting at.

01:12:25   - I think Apple has to go into this thinking

01:12:28   it's either additive or they're gonna be able

01:12:30   to reach people who are never gonna,

01:12:32   who aren't tracking, aren't fitness tracking

01:12:35   and aren't doing any of that.

01:12:36   And they can still get some vitals from them

01:12:38   and use it as part of the health app.

01:12:40   I think that's gotta be what their goal is.

01:12:41   But I know, I don't think it's gonna be a selling point.

01:12:43   Like, I don't think that's part of it.

01:12:45   The hearing aid part is a selling point.

01:12:47   This other health stuff is more just like,

01:12:49   comes along for the ride, which is fine.

01:12:52   - And then kind of the last timed thing in the year

01:12:54   is that the MacBook Pro will get an M5 update,

01:12:57   but not expecting much more.

01:12:59   Mark notes that Apple is planning a bigger update

01:13:01   for the MacBook Pro in 2026,

01:13:03   as it marks the 20 year anniversary.

01:13:05   Do you think, would you expect them to make

01:13:10   a big deal product wise at the 20th anniversary

01:13:14   of the MacBook Pro?

01:13:15   - No.

01:13:17   I don't either.

01:13:18   - I don't think anybody cares.

01:13:20   - No, I mean, this is one of these things

01:13:22   which reminds me of like,

01:13:23   remember that rumor of like the Steve Jobs edition

01:13:25   of the Vision Pro?

01:13:27   Like it feels like that kind of thing.

01:13:28   Like, I don't think Apple's making a big deal

01:13:30   of the 20th anniversary of the MacBook Pro.

01:13:33   Like that doesn't, and like making a big change

01:13:35   to the MacBook Pro because of it.

01:13:37   - It's literally just the anniversary

01:13:39   of the Intel transition.

01:13:41   Because it was the PowerBook before that.

01:13:44   That's it, it was the PowerBook.

01:13:45   - So I don't, I'm not sure that I see it.

01:13:46   - PowerBooks existed since the 80s.

01:13:49   So MacBook Pro, it's literally the name.

01:13:52   - Maybe they have some new features next year

01:13:56   for the MacBook Pro, right?

01:13:57   But that doesn't, it's not like,

01:13:59   oh, we're gonna hold them for the 20th anniversary.

01:14:02   Like, I don't know if I,

01:14:05   I don't think those two things match up for me.

01:14:07   - I don't believe it.

01:14:08   But he's talked about this in the past.

01:14:09   Yeah, it's, they will eventually do a MacBook Pro

01:14:11   that's got, you know, super.

01:14:14   - A lidscreen?

01:14:15   - Dual tandem OLED screens and stuff like that.

01:14:18   Sure, I mean, there's room for there.

01:14:20   And cellular would be great, sure.

01:14:22   - 'Cause they got their own modems

01:14:23   chasing any day now, you know, any day now.

01:14:25   - Any day now.

01:14:27   Well, maybe that new iPhone SE or whatever.

01:14:29   So we didn't even mention the fact

01:14:30   that there's some speculation

01:14:31   that they're not gonna call it the iPhone SE.

01:14:32   That they might call it something like the iPhone 16s,

01:14:35   which I think is fine because it says what,

01:14:39   it says what features are in it, right?

01:14:40   It says it's from the 16 line and it's from that era

01:14:42   and it's got that chip and you kinda know what it is.

01:14:47   And it allows it not to be quite as much of an outlier.

01:14:50   And the problem about like 16 sounding data,

01:14:52   it's like, well, in an era where they sell

01:14:55   multiple previous generations of iPhones,

01:14:58   I don't think it's a problem.

01:14:59   - I don't know.

01:15:01   'Cause I feel like we'll be up to iPhone 20

01:15:03   and they'll still be selling this version of the product.

01:15:05   And I think that that makes it a bit more complicated.

01:15:09   - Maybe, although it might also be

01:15:11   that they're committing to update it

01:15:13   maybe every two or three years instead of more than that.

01:15:16   - Maybe.

01:15:17   Mark also says that throughout the year at least,

01:15:20   we'll get a new AirTag, a better range,

01:15:22   new version of the HomePod mini and the Apple TV

01:15:24   that are quote,

01:15:25   "Built with Apple's new smart home ecosystem in mind."

01:15:29   - Okay, all right.

01:15:31   I still think that there may be an Apple intelligence story.

01:15:33   I got some feedback from somebody who was like,

01:15:35   "What do you mean Apple intelligence

01:15:36   "doesn't really make sense on tvOS?"

01:15:37   I'm like, well, no,

01:15:39   I'm thinking like Apple intelligence on tvOS

01:15:41   is things like it's related to things that tvOS does,

01:15:46   or it's as a home hub

01:15:50   where part of their smart home ecosystem

01:15:52   is tagged with Apple intelligence of,

01:15:55   we're gonna control this or that.

01:15:56   I don't even know.

01:15:57   But like whatever they're doing there

01:15:58   makes sense to get everything kind of up to speed,

01:16:00   thread radios and all those,

01:16:02   and whatever else they're doing

01:16:04   as part of this forthcoming focus on the home

01:16:08   that they've sort of not had up to now,

01:16:10   which is great, like it's past due,

01:16:11   but great bringing on.

01:16:13   I did not love that Mark Gurman referred to the Apple TV

01:16:18   as a laggard.

01:16:19   (laughing)

01:16:21   - I mean.

01:16:22   - 'Cause like technically it's,

01:16:23   so here's the thing, technically it's not a laggard.

01:16:25   Technically it is still by far the best,

01:16:29   most powerful box you can buy for your TV.

01:16:32   It's only a laggard because Apple won't sell

01:16:36   a cheaper version to get their market share up.

01:16:39   Now I would argue that at this point,

01:16:41   again, they should really do that.

01:16:43   You're never gonna really compete with Amazon and Roku

01:16:46   because they're not playing the same game.

01:16:48   They're selling you stuff or getting your data

01:16:53   and they're happy to make a,

01:16:55   some of those things have such a, they're so slow.

01:16:58   It's such a bad interface.

01:16:59   I've tried them.

01:17:00   They're not very good.

01:17:01   Apple stuff is vastly better.

01:17:03   - Apple is a laggard in other ways

01:17:05   and the software is part of the problem.

01:17:08   Like there are parts of tvOS that could do

01:17:11   with a lot of work and there are also things

01:17:13   that tvOS lacks because Apple's unwilling to do deals

01:17:17   that people want them to do.

01:17:18   - Yes, I agree with that.

01:17:19   Although in most cases, if you compare it

01:17:21   to what the state of the art is with the other TV platforms,

01:17:25   it's not, like it's a laggard from the ideal.

01:17:30   - Yeah, that's kind of what I'm saying.

01:17:33   There are very few features of Roku or the Amazon Fire stuff

01:17:37   that I would look at and say,

01:17:39   well, I wish I had that on Apple TV.

01:17:41   In fact, the one that you mentioned, you alluded to,

01:17:43   is some people have made a deal with Netflix

01:17:46   so that Netflix is integrated into their stuff

01:17:48   and Apple just hasn't.

01:17:50   And, you know, somebody needs to,

01:17:52   Apple needs to swallow their pride there

01:17:54   'cause it really hurts their product.

01:17:55   But in most cases, that stuff on the other side,

01:17:57   there are, there's like a live guide that Amazon,

01:18:00   I think has and like,

01:18:02   look, they need to do more with tvOS.

01:18:05   But just saying they're a laggard is weird to me

01:18:07   because in a lot of ways, they,

01:18:11   like if you use any of the other products,

01:18:13   you realize how much better Apple's hardware is.

01:18:16   Like just it's faster and more capable and more responsive

01:18:20   than the stuff on the other platforms.

01:18:22   But they are also, as Joe Rosenstiel has detailed,

01:18:25   repeatedly on his blog,

01:18:28   there are so many areas of low-hanging fruit for Apple

01:18:31   that they just have not taken off the tree,

01:18:34   like including like a live guide.

01:18:36   That would be one of my number one features is,

01:18:39   Apple TV needs a live section

01:18:41   that is properly like showing everything

01:18:43   that's currently on on anything that you've got that does,

01:18:47   you know, whether it's a free ad supported streaming

01:18:49   or you get Peacock and you get 20 channels with that,

01:18:52   and you've got ESPN, you know, whatever it is,

01:18:56   like, oh, that's such a great trend

01:18:59   and Apple's just sort of like very much living

01:19:02   15 years ago in that.

01:19:03   So, okay, I guess they're a laggard in some places,

01:19:05   but I laugh 'cause he tossed it off like,

01:19:07   oh, what a laggard, it needs a hardware update.

01:19:09   And it's like hardware update is not Apple TV's problem.

01:19:12   Right, that's not the problem.

01:19:13   'Cause he was saying it in the context

01:19:14   of there'll be a new Apple TV box and like great,

01:19:17   but like doesn't matter, doesn't matter,

01:19:20   it's the software that's the problem.

01:19:22   - I'll finish this out by reading a quote from Mark Gurman.

01:19:25   It's like that 2025 is ultimately remembered

01:19:28   as a stepping stone towards more revolutionary products

01:19:30   rather than a year of remarkable innovation.

01:19:33   2025 will set the stage for future years of advancements

01:19:36   in mixed reality, smart home accessories

01:19:38   and foldable devices.

01:19:39   Do you think it's a good way to look at the year maybe,

01:19:41   right, like if it does end up playing out that way,

01:19:43   'cause obviously, you know,

01:19:44   they're laying some of the groundwork

01:19:46   for some of the stuff they wanna do in smart home,

01:19:47   maybe if that ends up working out for them.

01:19:49   And also if they're gonna get to foldable,

01:19:51   they have to first make off iPhone super, super, super thin

01:19:54   and maybe this is the way they get there.

01:19:57   - So yep, I agree with Mark too.

01:20:00   When I wrote my predictions column in Macworld

01:20:02   for this year, I was like,

01:20:05   that's why the article ended up being

01:20:06   it's the year of Apple intelligence again,

01:20:09   is like, feels like a lot of that is going on.

01:20:10   And then on the hardware side,

01:20:12   it's just gonna kinda be mostly,

01:20:15   other than like that home thing is really interesting, right,

01:20:17   that home gadget, but most of it is gonna be,

01:20:20   the truth is Apple's products

01:20:22   are in pretty good places right now.

01:20:24   They don't need, they'll put the new chips in them

01:20:26   and that'll be great.

01:20:27   Like, I don't think this is a year

01:20:28   where any of these products needs a big overhaul

01:20:31   and I don't expect that they'll get a big overhaul.

01:20:33   They'll have that thin phone,

01:20:35   we have the weird smart home,

01:20:37   whatever thing they're doing with that screen

01:20:39   and accessories and modules or whatever.

01:20:43   And everything else is gonna be Apple intelligence,

01:20:46   Apple intelligence, Apple intelligence

01:20:47   and that's what this year is gonna be, I think.

01:20:50   - Yep.

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01:22:40   It's time for some ask upgrade questions to finish out.

01:22:47   Today's episode, Adam writes in and said,

01:22:50   "I recently got my first Apple Watch

01:22:52   for the holidays this year,

01:22:53   and while exploring the settings,

01:22:55   I found a hand washing timer.

01:22:57   Do either of you use this?

01:22:59   Do you know anyone who does?"

01:23:01   Adam, did you miss COVID?

01:23:03   (Adam laughs)

01:23:05   Look, here's the thing.

01:23:07   If you weren't thinking about it at the time,

01:23:12   it is weird to see now, right?

01:23:16   Like, it made sense then, that was when they launched it.

01:23:19   Even though there was like this rumor going around

01:23:22   that Apple had apparently been working on it for a while,

01:23:24   which I'd never believe, I'm sorry, I don't believe that,

01:23:27   'cause why would you do this?

01:23:29   No, but it's still there.

01:23:31   I mean, for me at the time, it was helpful,

01:23:35   because it was just a reminder on my Apple Watch

01:23:38   like that I am doing what I'm supposed to be doing.

01:23:41   You know, I'm washing my hands,

01:23:42   I guess like 15 seconds or 20 seconds is the countdown.

01:23:46   It's still on for me now,

01:23:48   and I still see it and laugh every now and then,

01:23:51   because just like this idea of my watch

01:23:53   shooting the countdown for me, but yeah, it's there,

01:23:55   it works, and that's that.

01:23:57   It was a crash program for Apple

01:23:58   to build a COVID-related feature into watchOS,

01:24:01   and they thought they could train their model

01:24:04   to look at the accelerometer data on the Apple Watch,

01:24:08   detect that you were washing your hands,

01:24:10   and then automatically give you a timer

01:24:12   to encourage you to wash it

01:24:13   for the appropriate length of time.

01:24:15   And they rolled it out, and as is sort of typical,

01:24:18   first off, hand washing never goes out of style,

01:24:19   but it took so long that the heights

01:24:22   of the COVID functionality

01:24:24   that would have been nice in the moment,

01:24:26   you know, they sort of missed that,

01:24:28   but it was one of the things that they got out to show,

01:24:30   like, oh, like, we're doing this,

01:24:31   along with the detection thing they worked on with Google

01:24:33   that kind of didn't go anywhere.

01:24:35   That's what it is.

01:24:37   I don't use it, I never did.

01:24:40   I don't know anybody who does,

01:24:41   but then again, I don't have conversations where I say,

01:24:43   hey, hand washing timer.

01:24:46   - So I always had like a thing that still happens,

01:24:49   and I kind of can't believe it,

01:24:50   where like, you know, you get like the loud noise detection?

01:24:55   - Got that yesterday at the basketball game.

01:24:56   - Right, we'll talk about that in Upgrade Plus, actually,

01:24:58   I want to hear about that.

01:24:59   - Okay.

01:25:01   - That I get that from a hand dryer, right?

01:25:04   So like, I put my hands in the hand dryer,

01:25:07   the hand dryer, and it sets off

01:25:09   the loud noise detection thing.

01:25:12   But it does it after a hand washing detection event.

01:25:15   Now I feel like these two things should work together.

01:25:19   Like if hand washing event,

01:25:21   do not worry about a very quick loud noise

01:25:25   for the next minute,

01:25:26   because it's probably a hand dryer, you know?

01:25:29   - Oh, interesting, yeah, yeah, yeah.

01:25:30   - Like, I feel like they could put these two things together.

01:25:34   - But what if you were washing your hands while loading--

01:25:37   - Great point.

01:25:38   - Things onto a plane?

01:25:40   - It's a great point, Jason, it's a great point.

01:25:41   - I know, thank you.

01:25:42   Thank you, that's why people listen to the Upgrade program,

01:25:44   it's hypotheticals like that, so whatever.

01:25:47   - Mattias writes in and says,

01:25:50   "I recently got my first Apple Silicon Mac

01:25:52   "and was wondering if there are any useful iOS

01:25:55   "on the Mac apps.

01:25:56   "Right now I use Overcast, but not really much more.

01:25:59   "Do you use any?"

01:26:00   This was a feature that had so much promise,

01:26:05   but nobody wanted to use it, right?

01:26:08   The issue was so many developers opted out of it.

01:26:10   Like, I went through the apps on my Mac today,

01:26:13   my MacBook Air, and the only one that I have is Overcast.

01:26:16   - You know, the ones that I use,

01:26:22   and some of them are gone now, I use the MLB app,

01:26:26   but they removed it and said, "Use our website."

01:26:29   And the fact is their website is pretty good,

01:26:31   and their website is in fact more functional

01:26:33   than their iOS app in terms of like multi-view and stuff,

01:26:36   and you know I love a QuadBox.

01:26:38   Fubo TV, my TV provider, actually my former TV provider,

01:26:45   oh, they have an iPad app that I use to watch Fubo on

01:26:52   on the Mac, but YouTube TV, my new TV provider for now,

01:26:58   they just want you to go to tv.youtube.com,

01:27:01   and their web interface is very good, and it's fine.

01:27:03   Fubo has a web interface too,

01:27:05   but I did like the fact that it was self-contained

01:27:07   and not in a web browser.

01:27:08   It was kind of nice.

01:27:10   And Overcast I use every Monday to check our MP3 files

01:27:15   before posting the episode.

01:27:18   I upload them to Overcast, and then I play them back,

01:27:20   and I check the chapter art,

01:27:22   and I check the chapter titles and stuff like that.

01:27:25   I'm not sure there's more, although I feel like

01:27:29   I've got an answer to this question,

01:27:30   which is I've been using more stuff, but it's not true.

01:27:32   I've been using more stuff using iPhone mirroring now.

01:27:34   - Yes, that has kind of made it,

01:27:36   iPhone mirroring and iPhone widgets

01:27:39   and all that kind of stuff has really made

01:27:42   the need for this less.

01:27:44   But definitely, there were apps that I wanted to use,

01:27:48   and either what happened was I just never got done,

01:27:53   so I like whatever, I just let it go.

01:27:55   But there were a couple of apps that I wanted

01:27:57   the iPhone versions of on the Mac.

01:28:00   The developers didn't enable it,

01:28:01   but that actually encouraged them to make a Mac app,

01:28:04   like Timery is one of them, where Joe of Timery,

01:28:08   Timery Joe, or Joe Timery. - Joe Timery.

01:28:11   - I ended up just really going down the route

01:28:13   of using Catalyst and making a Mac app,

01:28:17   a Mac version of Timery, which is definitely better

01:28:19   than what would have been just the iOS version on the Mac.

01:28:23   - Right, right, 'cause it's got access to the menu bar

01:28:26   and stuff like that. - Yeah, yeah.

01:28:28   Jerry says, "With the rumored launch

01:28:30   of the new Apple Home devices with screens,

01:28:33   where does the HomePod line go?

01:28:35   Is there a future for both of these devices,

01:28:37   or would the HomePod and HomePod Mini be discontinued,

01:28:40   in your opinion, in favor of these new devices?"

01:28:43   - I think Apple's done the work to engineer the HomePod,

01:28:45   and I think it will keep around.

01:28:46   I think that the new device will be a HomePod.

01:28:49   I think it will be called HomePod,

01:28:50   whether it is called, I heard a prediction

01:28:53   on Connected last week, HomePod Touch.

01:28:56   - Yeah, that came from this show.

01:28:57   Someone wrote into this show and said that.

01:28:59   - Oh, interesting, well, my official Mac world prediction

01:29:02   was they will call it the new HomePod.

01:29:05   - Yes, I can see that too.

01:29:06   I think HomePod, as we know it, is not long for this world.

01:29:10   That thing. - But I think,

01:29:12   I feel like those speakers will stick around.

01:29:15   I think that they-- - The little ones,

01:29:17   but I don't think the big ones, for very long.

01:29:19   - Maybe not the big ones, maybe not the big ones,

01:29:21   maybe the little ones, or maybe there'll be

01:29:23   a redesigned version that's kind of in between,

01:29:26   that's more affordable, but here's the thing.

01:29:28   I don't think Apple wants to cede the home speaker market

01:29:32   to the competition, especially because having,

01:29:36   if they're gonna base everything on AirPlay 2

01:29:38   or things like that, or they've got a home strategy,

01:29:41   a smart home strategy, they wanna make sure

01:29:43   that they're selling things

01:29:44   that give you the best experience.

01:29:47   If they had a partner that they felt did that,

01:29:50   I think they would work with them,

01:29:51   but I don't think they feel that they do.

01:29:55   So I think having some speakers you can put in your house

01:29:59   is a thing that they're going to continue to do.

01:30:01   Although again, the argument is,

01:30:03   if all of Apple's stuff works with the partner speakers,

01:30:06   then Apple doesn't need to make speakers.

01:30:08   It's just, I think that that's not where they are right now.

01:30:10   So I think HomePod speakers will stick around.

01:30:13   I'm very interested in the idea

01:30:14   that you won't need a big HomePod anymore

01:30:17   because one of Mark Gurman's suggestions is

01:30:20   that this HomePod with a screen will have a speaker dock

01:30:26   essentially that you can put it in.

01:30:28   It's like the iPod Hi-Fi is coming back, Mike.

01:30:30   And that's interesting, right?

01:30:32   'Cause that's the idea like you put it on a wall

01:30:34   using a little wall thing, or you can put it in a speaker,

01:30:37   and then it's a HomePod with a screen at that point,

01:30:39   but it's one product that does

01:30:40   these two different kind of contexts.

01:30:42   And he mentioned in his story also the idea

01:30:45   that Apple actually thinks that they might be able

01:30:47   to sell multiples of these.

01:30:49   And I thought, well, if you can get the price down,

01:30:50   so it's not an unreasonable price

01:30:52   to have these little HomePods in your house,

01:30:55   you could put them in a couple of rooms

01:30:56   and carry them around and do whatever,

01:30:58   and that could be interesting.

01:30:58   So I think they're revamping here,

01:31:00   but I do feel like having a device or set of devices

01:31:04   that will give you pleasant sound from Apple Music

01:31:07   in your home is a thing that they still wanna do.

01:31:10   - Michael asks, "Having used the Vision Pro

01:31:13   for several months now,

01:31:15   do you think a Vision Pro monitor product

01:31:17   could be an interesting, least viable product?

01:31:20   How much of your use of the Vision Pro

01:31:24   is outside of the vicinity of a Mac?

01:31:26   Would this work maybe at $1,000?"

01:31:28   So a bit more context around this.

01:31:30   Basically, what if a Vision Pro,

01:31:33   but it had kind of nothing inside,

01:31:36   and it was essentially just to give you

01:31:38   a very large screen for a Mac?

01:31:41   Do you think that that is an interesting product on its own?

01:31:44   - I don't.

01:31:45   And I think the number one reason is

01:31:47   the cost of the Vision Pro is the displays and the sensors,

01:31:51   and you still need those for something like this.

01:31:55   I mostly don't use my Vision Pro with a Mac.

01:32:00   In fact, I almost never use my Vision Pro with a Mac.

01:32:02   I am almost entirely, like if I travel

01:32:05   or I've got a very specific context, I might use it,

01:32:07   but I've got screens at home, I'm doing fine.

01:32:10   I'm mostly at home anyway.

01:32:11   And so I'm using it for other stuff.

01:32:14   But even if you just said,

01:32:16   well, what if Vision Pro focused on that?

01:32:19   Like it would still cost too much money

01:32:21   because of all the other things that go into it.

01:32:25   So I like it as an additive feature

01:32:28   that makes the Vision Pro more appealing

01:32:30   to people over time and in certain contexts like travel,

01:32:34   but the Vision Pro just needs to get cheaper, period.

01:32:37   And although some of that could be done

01:32:39   probably at the expense of features nobody cares about,

01:32:43   I don't think you could make like a Mac virtual display

01:32:46   that would be like the Vision Pro for a low price

01:32:50   unless you could make the Vision Pro for the low price

01:32:52   because of those displays,

01:32:53   because of all the sensors that are required.

01:32:55   - But even if you could,

01:32:58   I don't think this is a product that is really that worthy.

01:33:03   - I don't think Apple wants to make like X-Real glasses

01:33:05   that have very little like spatial tracking

01:33:07   and you just plug them into your Mac

01:33:09   and you've got a screen in your face.

01:33:12   I feel like the X-Real wants to make that, that's great,

01:33:15   but like I don't think Apple wants

01:33:16   to make something like that.

01:33:18   I think that they have bigger plans.

01:33:21   - Mac virtual display is a really nice feature of VisionOS.

01:33:24   It is not the only reason to use it and it shouldn't be.

01:33:29   If that was the only reason to use it,

01:33:31   they're like they've kind of messed up, I think.

01:33:34   There are other many good features

01:33:36   that are part of VisionOS.

01:33:37   I just like using VisionOS.

01:33:39   I think VisionOS is a very enjoyable operating system to use

01:33:44   when it works correctly.

01:33:45   When your eye tracking is working correctly,

01:33:47   which it doesn't always, but when it does,

01:33:50   most of the time, it's like say like 90% of the time,

01:33:53   I have no problems.

01:33:55   When I do have problems, it's like, ah, that's annoying.

01:33:57   But the Mac is like a nice part of it.

01:34:02   That is not the product.

01:34:04   You shouldn't have done all this

01:34:06   and then just end up with this product

01:34:07   that is just a monitor that you strap to your face.

01:34:09   That's not really a worthy exploration in my opinion

01:34:13   for Apple to have gone that far.

01:34:15   Like maybe if you would have started with that

01:34:18   and then built it out to what the Vision Pro is, then fine.

01:34:20   I don't know why you would have done that,

01:34:21   but that would have made more sense.

01:34:23   The idea of like getting to Vision Pro

01:34:25   and then just shrinking it down to this thing

01:34:27   you can just plug into a Mac doesn't.

01:34:29   - Right, and it's glasses or goggles or whatever

01:34:32   that don't track your movement.

01:34:34   And so there's just a big screen in your face

01:34:37   and you sit there and type away.

01:34:39   Again, that's more like X-real glasses.

01:34:43   It feels like to me and I was like, that's fine,

01:34:45   but I don't see Apple finding that to be a use case.

01:34:48   That's not what we're going.

01:34:49   I actually think a more exciting use case

01:34:53   is a Vision Pro that runs Mac OS

01:34:57   than a Mac with X-real glasses attached to it.

01:35:00   But yeah. - Yeah.

01:35:01   - Yeah.

01:35:03   You can send in your questions along with your feedback

01:35:05   and follow up by going to upgradefeedback.com.

01:35:08   If you have enjoyed this episode and think to yourself,

01:35:11   oh man, they're wrapping up now.

01:35:12   I'd like some more of it.

01:35:13   Well, let me tell you, you can actually get more of it.

01:35:15   Just go to getupgradeplus.com.

01:35:17   You can sign up, you can support the show

01:35:20   and you'll also get more stuff.

01:35:21   I wanna ask Jason about his experience,

01:35:24   which looked like what was essentially

01:35:25   courtside basketball seats,

01:35:27   which you posted on those guys.

01:35:28   - Yeah, it was.

01:35:29   - I wanna hear all about that.

01:35:31   You can find the video version of the show

01:35:33   by going to YouTube and searching for Upgrade Podcast

01:35:35   and we'll be there and you can watch along with us

01:35:37   if you would like to do that.

01:35:38   Thank you to ExpressVPN, Oracle and Ecamm

01:35:41   for their support of this week's episode.

01:35:43   But most of all, as always,

01:35:45   I would like to thank you for listening.

01:35:47   Until next time, say goodbye Jason Snow.

01:35:49   - Goodbye Mike Hurley.

01:35:51   (upbeat music)

01:35:54   (upbeat music)

01:35:56   (upbeat music)