MacBreak Weekly 389 (Transcript)
Leo Laporte: It's time for MacBreak Weekly, we've got a great
panel for you, Alex Lindsey is here, Rene and Andy, we're going to talk about
Tim Cook's interview with the Wall Street Journal in great detail, what does he
mean “A new category?”. We will talk about what an iWatch could do, might do and how much it should cost, all that and more, coming up
next on MacBreak Weekly.
Netcasts you love from people you trust. This is TwiT.
Bandwidth from MacBreak Weekly is provided by Cachefly. At cachefly.com. This is MacBreak Weekly episode 389, recorded Feb 11, 2014
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Leo: It's time for MacBreak Weekly, the show that covers your Apple sphere of
influence... How about that?! That's a good one! Alex Lindsey is here, speaking
of spheres of influence, he influences all, he was
doing the This Week in Alex Show a little earlier, thank you for filling in for
me during that time...
Alex Lindsey: You got in
here late...
Leo: Rene Ritchie from
iMore.com, thank you for being here, how is it in... wait a minute, your set has changed again!
Rene Ritchie: I'm not in Watrilla, I actually found a worse place to go, I'm actually in Winnipeg Manitoba right now.
Leo: Oh, no, no.
Alex: Did you decide it
wasn't cold enough where you were?!
Rene: Out of the freezer
and into the ice.
Leo: Winnipeg is the place
where summer is 3 weeks long.
Rene: Yeah, it's actually
the coldest place in the world some of the time!
Leo: I had a friend who
played in a rock band who played a gig in Winnipeg. I actually asked him
“What's the worst place” he said “Winnipeg”. I won't say the name of the
band... very well known rock band. It was like
without hesitation... Winnipeg. Summer or winter? Winnipeg.
Andy Ihnatko is here with his robotic dentistry, once
again on display.
Andy Ihnatko: On that list of “Once I become a psychotic trillionaire”,
I would love to go to a place like Winnipeg, and simply say that “either you
really, really love this place, or you're simply stuck here, I will contribute
$15,000 dollars per person, up to $500,000 per family if you want to move, I
will underwrite your moving expenses” and just see how many people actually
stay! “Oh, it's a brisk -42 today”!
Leo: There are a lot of
places, Alaska is like that...
Andy: It's a very odd place
to choose to live, that's what I'm saying.
Leo: I watched the “free
the whale” movie last night...
Andy: Free Willie?
Leo: No, the other one,
where he was trapped in Alaska with John Krasinski. I
don't know why I was watching that, there was no child with me... I just...
Andy: Just wanted to feel
good again today.
Leo: That's it. I do too.
1090 in the chat room says “You're now in the cold part of Canada”.
Rene: Yeah, the coldER part of Canada!
Andy: They would put that
on a bumper sticker and at that temperature adhesive doesn't work.
Leo: But think of the great
groups that have come from Winnipeg, Curtis B points out, including “The Guess
Who”, “Bachman-Turner Overdrive”, and Neal Young. And I think out of Winnipeg
is the key in that phrase!
Rene: The guy who invented
plane DE-icing lives in Winnipeg.
Leo: Not a surprise! I've
never been there, and I would love to. Why are you in Winnipeg?
Rene: I am visiting my good
friend Kevin Michaluk from crackberry.com we're doing
a bunch of work and if you're going to work, it might as well be too cold to go
outside.
Leo: Is that his
apartment? It's a nice place.
Rene: Yes it's his house.
He very kindly gave me his podcasting setup to use.
Leo: Beautiful. You sound
good, you look good, and you have stairways. I like stairways on television
sets, they go somewhere or they go nowhere...
Alex: Why don't we have any
here?
Leo: I actually, believe
it or not, it was in the spec. The original spiral staircase from the screen
savers is up the road a piece, a guy has it – I met a guy and he said “you know, I have your staircase.” I was “What?!” He said “Yeah, you
know when they took apart the set, they sold it off and I have the spiral
staircase.” I said I want it but we never did manage to hook up and get it.
Maybe we still will.
Alex: Great, then we'll
have you walking down the stairs at the open of the show...
Leo: The best part of the
show!
Andy: That's also great
design aesthetic, you put that in the plan that “I want the set to look like
the set of a 1983 action movie, with unnecessary railings and balconies
everywhere, and a machine that does nothing but turn out geek gear and spit out
fire every 8 seconds.
Leo: Brilliant! I think
the reason a staircase works on a television set, is it gives you a cue that
this is a real space and there's more above or below, and that's a good cue to
have, especially in a space that's basically a box. Anyway, we are not here to
talk about silly things like Winnipeg and staircases, we are here to talk about
cabbages and Kings, we are here to talk about Apple. And the reason I'm not in
a great big hurry, is it's basically the same stories we had last week. Tim
Cook says “Apple is working on some really great stuff”...
Alex: R-e-a-l-l-y r-e-a-l-l-y great stuff. And there's lots of rumors that those things are – I think we've all collected that those
great things are Apple TV and iWatch.
Leo: I don't think that he
even... this was very much like he told all things 6 months ago. He told this
to the Wall Street Journal – it's a longer interview that talks about how Apple
is buying back 14 million shares, which means Carl Ikod...
Alex: Not many people push
him to the curb. They pushed him to the curb and he gave up. That's because the
investment firm said that they aren't going to back him. Once they announced
that, there was absolutely no chance he were going to
get it.
Leo: In the 1980's, you
spelled greed ICHAN. He's the rebel investor, the guy who comes into a company,
buys... he may be one of Apple's share-holders. He says (as a stock holder – he
owns 4 billion dollars in shares) “I want Apple to give some of this cash –
this hundred sixty seven billion dollars it has in the bank – to it's share-holders.” Back to him,
basically! This is really what's wrong with the stock market! Carl Ichan couldn't care less about anything except “I bought 4
billion worth of Apple shares, I want it to be worth 8 billion dollars now!”.
Andy: “I don't have that
much on me right now, I don't bend down in the street
to pick up a million dollar bill if I find it there in the gutter”!
Rene: It's not about the
long term value of the company, it's about a quick pump and dump, which is sad
because it affects so many companies so badly.
Alex: The interesting date
to consider in this whole conversation, is 2024. At
the rate Apple is buying back, they will be private.
Leo: You think they
will... the plan is to buy back 60 million, not to buy back all the stock.
Alex: What I'm saying, is
if they keep on doing it at the rate they are doing it at, which they could
afford to do... if they do it at the rate they are doing it now, their cash
position would continue to increase if they bought 10% of their stock back per
year.
Leo: Who is ISS? Is that
his investment company?
Alex: No it's not his, it's
another one.
Leo: He wrote “Dear fellow
Apple share-holders, while we are disappointed that last night ISS recommended
against our buy back proposal, we do not altogether disagree with their
assessment.” Basically, ISS said “On the spectrum of options for allocating
capital, the board appears to have been sluggish, only in returning excess cash
to share-holders.” “Even though the company has in place one of the largest buy
backs in history...”
Alex: It's not one of, it's THE largest buy back in the history.
Leo: “We agree that this
effort seems like bailing with a leaky bucket, given the scale of the company’s
cash reserves”. I think Apple's point of view, and Tim Cook's point of view is,
“We want the cash in case”.
Alex: In case they want to
buy AT&T, in case they want to buy Disney, or they want to buy something
really, really big, you want to have that kind of cash available, because it
gives you all kinds of freedom.
Leo: Carl Ichan says I see money in that vault, and I want some of
it! Anyway, he's backed down...
Alex: How old is he? How
much longer do we have to put up with this?
Rene: 932 like Yoda.
Leo: He's an older man,
good looking fellow, nicely dressed,
Andy: He doesn't appear to
be wearing sunscreen, so that's not a problem...
Leo: I wonder what he
plans to do with all that fast fortune?
Rene: Probably not give it
away back to the share-holders.
Alex: He's probably not
going to go the way of Bill Gates with the Red Hot Chili Peppers...
Andy: He does seem like one
of those billionaires that like it when people pay attention to the things that
he says...
Leo: 77.
Andy: So when he makes all
these statements like kind of – I wonder how much of this is really motivated
by this intense belief that this is something Apple should do, and how much of
this is just that I get to be “wise old investment guy” who gets to- Oh look, a
microphone, I'll say something profound and interesting.
Leo: Apple has not made a
lot of big purchases, you know they've bought little
stuff...
Alex: I think I read that
they've never bought any company for more than a billion.
Leo: They're fairly
frugal. Tim Cook told Wall Street Journal though, We have looked at big companies, we have no problem spending 10 figures. How many
is that – I have 10 fingers...
Alex: That would be a
billion.
Leo: Right. We have no
problem spending 10 figures, what about 11?
Rene: They're not going to
spend it on Instagram was his point.
Leo: For the right fit
that's in the best interest of Apple in the long term. No problem,
none, zero.
Alex: I think that the
challenge for Apple would be the mix of cultures. I think buying a company
that's that big, I think the biggest problem would be trying to assimilate that
many employee's, I think that almost every time we see this kind of merger's,
it's pretty ugly.
Leo: It's ugly! Think of
AOL-Time Warner! HP-Compaq...
Alex: Especially when you
have such a specific culture at Apple, which is very different than most other
corporations. I think that would be a difficult mix, if you had too many people
in a new company.
Andy: Although they buy a
lot of companies, can you name the last time they bought a company that had it's own public identity? They buy
a lot of little companies that are starting up that seems to have the technology that they
want.
Leo: Filemaker...
that was years ago but it was the last big name acquisition.
Rene: Next was probably
their biggest integration, but that went the other way.
Leo: Yeah.
Rene: And even now, it's a
big struggle. They used to have enough people that you could do a mentor
relationship with new people and really acculturated them quickly, and then
they grew so fast they had to start establishing Apple University, and teach
more like a lecture hall, because the people who were new to apple, started
outnumbering by vast quantities the ones who were established at Apple. And
that's a huge problem right now and any large scale purchase will only
exasperate that problem.
Leo: Horace Dediu, he's so funny, he looked at Apple's 10-Q, and he
said based on the app sales, iTune sales and all of
that, he said if you just split iTunes off into its own company, it would be
130 on the fortune 500!
Rene: Bigger than Kraft,
bigger than the Gap!
Leo: It's doing ok! Gross
revenue, he figured out, based on all the information of iTune's,
gross revenue is 7 billion dollars a QUARTER! On the yearly basis the iTunes
saw 4 services group had gross revenues of 23.5 billion with the growth of 34%
year over year.
Alex: It's not bad if you
like that kind of thing, money hand over fist.
Leo: I'd take it! But
really, and I don't know anything about running big companies, but it does
raise the question, if you have a massive bunch of... I remember when Microsoft
first started taking off, they didn't know what to do
with all that cash! They bought certificates of deposit, they bought CD's, they just kept buying CD's! It's like putting it in your
mattress, what do you do with it all?!
Alex: What makes it more
complicated is most of it is off shore, so it's not complicated as people...
Leo: Well, there's a tax
consequence if your re-patriot it as well.
Alex: Which
--- avoided.
Leo: I think 70% of that
is off shore, so that means 70% of that is effectively untouchable, I think. Unless you want to pay a fairly high corporate tax.
Alex: Or you spend it on
things overseas.
Leo: They could have
bought AT&T! It's market caps 200 billion, they
could have bought it.
Rene: The FCC comes with it
though, which you don't want!
Leo: Yeah, you don't want
that.
Alex: I think what's more
interesting, as you look at the Apple TV issues, with that kind of money, is
Apple looking at going head to head with AT&T and Verizon and so forth, in
specific markets. As much as Google has done with the
fiber...
Leo: Look at Apple... I'm
going to try and put myself in Tim Cook's shoes. Apple's got a nice little
business, doing ok. And he even says “we want to adjust for the long-term
interest of the share-holder, not for the short-term share-holder day trader”
And what he's really saying, is we want to plan for
the long term. So what is the long term? It's not about bringing the stock
prices back up, you are about what's the next thing,
right? Because you can't just coast off into the sunset.
Alex: I don't think the
information companies will get to do what the next big thing is until they
start side-stepping the cable companies.
Leo: The last thing you
want to do is get into an existing business, right? You're saying become a
middle man for content?
Alex: Not a middle man for
your own content, I mean – so the thing is, I just don't think you can do
things that are aggressive, and to prove models when you aren't – when you are
trying to go through companies that have a traditional model that you have to
maintain. I think that Apple – in the same way that Google has done fiber in a
handful of places to experiment, if you look at what's happening in Austin,
when fiber went to Austin, it put an enormous amount of pressure on AT&T,
who is now reacting.
Leo: How about this:
Sprint has now backed off acquiring T-Mobile, regulators were pretty clear that
isn't going to happen, so yesterday Sprint said We're not going to buy
T-Mobile, T-Mobile is only 18.3 billion.
Alex: But I don't think you
want to buy any of the existing ones, I think you're just buying a lot of baggage.
But I think that looking at specific markets and building out your own network
that supports those markets, that allows you to prove what's there, when people
start to see that, it creates consumer agitation. People get upset that they
don't have that where they are.
Leo: Mark Grman wrote a great article on 9-5 about what you can tell
what Apple is planning based on the hires Apple has made, and we've talked
about this a lot. So Cook said nothing, but every time he says this, he gets
massive head lines. “There will be new categories, we're not ready to talk
about it, but we're working on some really great stuff”. Which
could be a para-phrase of what he said 6-8 months ago. He said “Anyone
reasonable would consider what Apple is working on, as a new category. Apple is
still a growth company”. That's sort of what investors are worried about, they
want a growth company but Apple has not really been showing the kind of – at
least it's last quarterly report showed slow growth that might concern the market.
Alex: I think a re-vamped
Apple TV and an iWatch are two very different markets
and I think they are pretty close to the surface. We're seeing enough rumors
that I think it's more of a when than if. I don't know whether the Apple TV is
going to be an actual screen or not, but I do think that a hobby is going to
turn into a business.
Andy: That's a definite.
But I have to ask myself, when he talks about a new category, is it a new
category for Apple, or for the industry? I'm pretty sure it's just for Apple,
but I wouldn't put it past them to create something that they feel is so
separate from anything else that's ever been made, that they could call it a
brand new product that has never been made in this form.
Alex: I do think that one
of the interesting – a lot of the rumors with the Apple TV, if they open this
up to games and lots of development and apps on your TV, that might not be an
entirely new category, but it entirely changes the offering that they're
putting on the big screen.
Andy: Particularly – I
think that one of the least appreciated announcements from the last WWDC was
IOS in the car, because when you take – at the surface you're talking about a
way to make your phone integrate better with that little dinky little screen
that's in your center console, but really what you're talking about is the
ability to project an operating system onto a much dumber device. In which your
iPhone is still critical to the process, your iPad is still critical to the
process, but you can actually put it in a place – interact with it in a place
where it's not actually a hand-held device. So I wonder if that really is one
of the key things about the Apple TV, not just the idea of having a mirrored
display, or having an Apple TV display, but the idea of your phone being the
host for a much more rich interface, a much more rich experience because of the
fact this Apple TV can simply take all of this IOS info-structure, and simply
use that just as a way to project it on to an electric screen.
Alex: And I have to admit,
I've really been thinking about the whole TV tuner issue, and being able to
actually integrate with the cable companies and possibly even have a DVR or
anything else that even looks like that, I find myself irritated – I'm
irritated with the Comcast tuner that we have now, and thinking that if Apple
TV – that's the last little bit because I always have to go back and forth
between Apple TV and the standard cable tuner, being able to get that out of
the mix, I think that would be – I would never go back. If I
could mix my cable viewing with my Apple TV with everything else.
Leo: I don't know, I
agree... that's what Steve Jobs said in his biography, is it's terrible, it's
crap. It's been crap for years.
Alex: It's so horrible,
every time I use Comcast, I'm just like “this is
amazingly bad!”
Leo: We had Tivo which was better, we had replay which was better.
Andy: But this is the scale
of the problem that Apple faces if they want to do something that ambitious
with Apple TV. Remember that a lot of what they're able to do with the iPhone –
merger 1.0 was due to the fact that they were able to negotiate terms with
AT&T that were essentially “if you want this hot new phone, you've got to
do exactly what we tell you to, and that includes info-structure at your end to
make stuff work”. And the only reason why they were able to make that work, was
because AT&T was really on the ropes, and I wouldn't go as far as to say
that the iPhone was a lifeline for them, but if the iPhone had not worked out
for them, they probably would have been bought out by someone else long before
now. But cable companies are doing extremely well, there are very few of them
who have the sort of like nationwide overage that AT&T would have, and so
if Apple wanted to do that sort of integration where you would able to put
something akin to a cable card inside of an Apple TV to make it into a cable
tuner, they still have to talk to Verizon and talk to Comcast and talk to Cox
and these big providers, and say “We would very much like it where people
wouldn't have to pay $15 a month for your cable box, and another $20 a month
for this multi-room service, we would very much like our $99 device to work so
well with your system that you don't have to charge them for pretty much
anything.” And given that all these companies are so well they feel as though
they can punch HBO and Netflix around, Apple is going to get laughed out of the
room if they offer that sort of a thing. That's why I really don't think that
it's – I would be surprised if anything akin to a cable box or a placement or a
tuner that works off of anything other than their broadcasts.
Leo: You don't want to
deal with cable. Here's an interesting thought from someone in our chat room, Areo of course facing a supreme court challenge, if they win... what if Apple buys Areo?
Alex: I think it's a
complicated business.
Leo: That's the company
where you essentially rent a dime sized antenna in a metro area and watch off the air
TV on your Apple TV. Do we agree that's the one thing missing that would make
Apple TV a compelling product, is live television?
Andy: Not really. For
sports, it would be great, but how much of live sports, like day to day, are
even being broadcasted?
Alex: Even when you think
you're watching it live, you're watching it recorded. I already know who won
when I turn the Olympics on, we do a lot of live streaming, and I think there
are 3 reasons to have it live, that's breaking news, sports, and interactivity.
And you've got to have one of those 3 or it's not worth it.
Leo: I'm going to record
to say “Interactivity” is key to all future media.
Because that's what we do, and that's why we do it live. Hey, I want to show
you the Chevy ad, speaking of the Olympics, I was watching and I saw Siri in a
Chevy ad! This is why you should not ask Siri to read your text messages... Is
this a compelling ad?! I can't wait to get that!
Alex: It's a funny ad!
Andy: I wish I knew how
much different that is from like my old beat up beater that simply has a bluetooth button that can activate Siri.
Leo: My texts are read to
me. I don't think when you – I'm not sure, correct me if I'm wrong, when you
integrate Siri into the car, it's not like you have IOS in the car, it's just
simply a pathway to the...
Andy: An easier button for
activating it. Instead of reaching up to the home button to do that because you
have it safely docked.
Leo: And notice, by the
way, the guy did what everybody does, he said Siri. I always do that too – why?
You don't need to address her when you use it.
Alex: But it does feel
more... I don't know...
Andy: Well then it becomes
more like “What? How should I know who called you the last time?! I'm not
talking to you, I'm talking to Siri! Who is Siri?! It's my phone. That's not
your phone, phones don't have names, you're going to
tell me who Siri is right now!”
Rene: That's part of the
genius of Siri is that they gave it a Pixar like personality, and that took
away some of the hesitation or discomfort from a normal person using the
system.
Alex: When Siri first came
out, every time somebody would ask me how Siri was, I would ask her to open the
pod bay doors, because the reaction was different every single time.
Leo: You know, by the way,
Microsoft bought Tell Me, also has a fairly good voice control system, but they
are going to add a Siri like assistant to Windows phone 8.0 called Cortana, and she is this character from Halo – quite
beautiful – voluptuous character from halo...
Alex: Only Microsoft can
take a perfectly good idea and make it weird!
Leo: They just a couple of
days ago, invested 15 million dollars in foursquare, that will be the location services. I think Microsoft is playing catch-up all along
here, in fact we just saw an interesting story here, we'll find out in a couple
of days at Mumble World Congress, Nokia which is now owned by Microsoft, will
be introducing its new Android phone. And it will be forked because it won't
have the Google Play-store, which you really want, it will have its own Nokia
app store built into it. I think it's pretty clear that Microsoft is not going
to give up, but they're going to make a mess, they always do! The real threat
is Android, is it not? And in fact, much of the Siri function is better than
Android.
Andy: No, not really,
they're just so different. I don't think you can compare Google now to Siri,
because Siri really is exactly what the – it would be much more difficult to do
that kind of in car demo on an android device, because remember that Siri is
really a micro-app platform...
Leo: My Moto-X knows I'm
driving, if a text message comes in, a very nice lady comes on and says “You
just received a text message from Lisa, would you like me to read it to you?” I
say “Yes”, I don't have to touch or look at anything, it reads me the message,
I blush, it says “Would you like to reply?” and then I say “yes” and dictate
the message, and then it reads me back the dictation...
Alex: Which you blush
again...
Leo: Which I blush again,
but then it's very accurate, which is interesting, and then sends it without
any interaction except voice.
Andy: That's a Motorola
feature, for one, and secondly, Siri, what I love the most about Siri, it's
been set up to be smart enough to understand if it doesn't have enough
information, it's just going to bounce you back. You can say “Siri, create a
calendar appointment” and it will say “Ok, who is the appointment with, where
is it, what time is it”, whereas in terms of stock Android, you do have to make
sure that it is in the format that this voice recognition software is
expecting, and if you are missing something, unexpected things can happen. They
did create a personality that you expect to have a conversation with to get
something done.
Rene: There are also
different services, like Siri is at its heart a sequential inference engine and
all it does is ask a question, it remembers what the previous discussion was
about and bases its future responses on the ongoing discussion, it does that
very well, and it can link into a bunch of other services, most of which Apple
doesn't exploit yet, but Siri is built to spring board now, could theoretically
have all sorts of services and apps hooked in. Where Google Now pulls in tons
of data and then learns a lot of intelligence about you, what your air flights
are, where you're going, and it does that prognostication thing which is really really convenient if you're willing to give them the
access.
Andy: I keep saying that
the signature difference between these two services is that Siri is like the
personal assistant in the next room who will do what you ask it to do, Google
Now is more like the Valet in terms of the upstairs, downstairs, Downton Abbey, where you basically pick up your coat and
there's already a theater ticket in the left hand pocket and it's already been
dusted down, and there's already a car waiting for you outside, this is the
time you're supposed to be going out to the theater with Lady whatever her name
is.
Leo: Lady Askwith! I like it, that's what I want!
Andy: I think also, Google
Now would be the one to recognize that “Ok, I sense that your wife is in the car
so I'm not going to read THAT to you”!
Leo: I see the appointment
you're going to, your wife is with you, we'll just skip this for the moment.
Alex: No, really, dictate
it to me... No, I'm not going to!
Leo: He also talked a
little about Google selling Motorola to Lenovo, I wasn't surprised, says Tim
Cook, it was a logical transaction. He also pointed
out that Motorola was a financial disaster for Google. He also said that Google
isn't committed to the phone business. “I think it's hard to do hardware, software,
and services and link all those things together”. You know it's hard, Tim! You
know it's hard! “That's what makes Apple so special, it's really hard, so I'm
not surprised that they are not going to do that”.
Rene: We had a chance to
speak to Ben Thompson earlier in the week, and he had a very interesting take,
his theory was that Motorola has always been for sale, that Google needed to
buy it because of the Motorola patent threat, but what's in it for Lenovo, is
when they manufacture phones in China, there's no IP protection, so it's very
easy to have low cost phones, but in North America, the cost of licensing IP's
makes a phone $50-$100 more expensive. But now that they can cross license
Motorola patents, they can reduce the bill of goods
and compete on the price. Google was never interested in doing vertical
integration for existing product lines, they want to do that for the future
product lines with things like robots and Nest that do home automation, the
things that are really, really hard, they want to help drive forward by doing
the entire widget. Everything else including phones, they're much happier to
have a horizontal layer on top of everybody's else stuff. And that made a lot of sense to
me, at least.
Leo: Yeah. Who is Ben
Thompson?
Rene: He does Critiquery. What's interesting about him, is he worked on Apple University at Apple, and then he went and worked on
Windows 8 at Microsoft, so he has a very broad range of experiences to draw
from.
Leo: That's a very good
site, we've quoted from often. I think it's pretty obvious Google didn't have a
big loss selling Motorola, they got a lot of great stuff, and I think they got
some concessions out of Samsung as a result of the sale, that I hope will make a Samsung less crappy.
Rene: It was a good chess
move.
Leo: It was a chess move –
it felt like that anyway.
Andy: In terms of the big
box of stuff they got out of it, but at the same time, I think there is more
depth to this move than anybody is going to guess. The conversations that I was
having with people I know inside Google, who've been friends for years – well before
they even became employees at Google, talking to me about work that is being
done, without violating anti-trust, of course, but the buzz that they were
doing internally to make the Moto-X as good as it could possibly be, it left me
with the impression that this wasn't simply a stock transaction or an IP
transaction, or simply as a way of bullying Samsung. A very large part of the
Google – inside the Google campus, this was an opportunity to create something
that was a more Apple-like Android phone, to the extent that they actually
succeeded with the Moto-X.
Leo: Asked about the
possibility of a larger phone, Cook told the Wall Street Journal “What we've
said, is until the technology is ready, we don't want to cross that line. That
doesn't say we'll never do it, we want to give our Customers what's right in
all respects.”
Rene: They don't like all
that, at all.
Leo: I don't even know
what he's talking about! “There are many different parameters to measure a
display, and we care about all those, because we know that that's the window to
the software”.
Rene: They looked at all
that, and they looked at Pantel displays and they
were kind of revolted by...
Leo: As they should be, I
agree...
Rene: They don't think it's
worth it doing big phones. It's the same thing with LTE, they are very slow in getting there because they wanted low power radio's...
Leo: Can you not do an IPS
LCD in a 5” screen?
Rene: It depends, you're
Apple things are harder, it's the same reason your Amazon tablets have higher
technology levels than the Apple ones, because it's easy to make a small batch
of that stuff, it's really hard to make 100 million of those things. Apple is
not using OLED they're not going to use Pentel, they have to be able to make 100 million really high
quality LED IPS display's.
Leo: And that might be
tough.
Andy: And the other
consideration is, whenever they make this move, that will be the only source of this type of phone for the entire world. Whereas if
an Android device maker, or even a Windows tablet
device maker decides “What if we had a new LCD technology that had yellow as a
discrete color?” If that turned out to be a terrible product, or drive up the
price or just drain the battery, you still have a million devices that don't
have that bizarre technology. Whereas if Apple screws up with
a large screen iPhone, every large screen iPhone in the entire world is screwed
up.
Leo: Galaxy S5, we're
starting to see rumors that's going to be announced soon as well, may have, in fact
a QHD screen which would give it more than 5.25” screen would give it more than
500dpi, which is...
Alex: Absurd. I'll say it,
I'll call it.
Leo: I think at this
point, anything past 300 probably wasted, right?
Andy: If you happen to have
a hawk who likes to do multi-touch, the hawk will be chasing vermin on that
screen until the cows come home.
Leo: But that puts
pressure on Apple, because for one thing Apple – you don't think so? I think
people pay attention to numbers, as stupid as that is, Apple – that's why they
said “We have a 64bt processor”.
Rene: In Samsung's defense,
it's the same reason why they have a 7” tablet at 500dpi, because they want 1
screen resolution target, and that has to scale down, because otherwise the
large tablet will look silly. So if you have the 5” galaxy s5 with that
resolution, and then the note and the mega and whatever else, because they do
phones at every quarter inch screen size, the ones that started getting toward
6 and 7 inches still look good, and they only have one resolution to target.
Leo: I had a G2flex,
that's the curvy LG phone, and 720p screen in a 6” phone, it really doesn't
look good! You've got to have some resolution there!
Andy: Rene, is that really a problem because the Android world doesn't have a problem with
all these completely disparate phone, hardware, from completely disparate
makers that can choose their own resolutions on the fly...
Rene: I don't know if
that's a problem, but I got a chance to interview Samsung, the product director
for Samsung's mobile divisions, and that was his reasoning, is that they wanted
to be able to present a consistent screen size to developers.
Leo: Screen resolution,
not screen size.
Rene: Yes res, sorry. A
consistent screen target for developers, and they're doing their own developers
conference, and they're trying to move Samsung in a certain direction, and that
was the official corporate reason for why they are doing it at least.
Leo: Anything else about
the Tim Cook interview? We really parsed the hell out of that thing. I think we
got all of it... Do you want to mention anything about Sapphire? They are
firing up that Sapphire plant in Arizona.
Alex: I do find it
interesting they are doing it in Arizona rather than...
Leo: Well they bought it
so it's already there.
Alex: But I mean I'm
surprised that they are building it in the US rather than China.
Leo: That is interesting.
This was a company that...
Rene: Gorilla glass was
already in the US...
Leo: And they acquired
this company, this is not a new building for Apple. They and GT Advance are
going to open a facility in Mesa... earlier this year, according to Mark Germen
with 9-5 Mac, “we learned that Apple is aggressively pushing to make the
facility operational this month” and that “It will produce a critical new
sub-component for Apple devices”. We've speculated on this show that might be
the Sapphire on the finger print sensor, or the Sapphire on the lens, but,
“Thanks to new documents and information, 9-5 Mac has uncovered with the help
of annalist Matt Margolis, we have a clearer picture of Apple's plans.” Here we
see some parts, and he says it “Appears Apple is planning to build Sapphire
Crystal Displays for future iPhones”. Not touch finger print readers, not lenses
for cameras...
Alex: That's a lot of
Sapphire.
Leo: That's a lot!
“Documents detailing inspection tool components explained their purpose.” It
doesn't really mean much to read this stuff, “high quality Sapphire”...
Sapphire is stronger than glass, in fact it's used on
high quality watches, expensive watches, because it doesn't scratch. Normally
in material science, the trade off is plastic doesn't
shatter, it's softer, but it scratches. If something is brittle enough not to
scratch, it's also brittle enough not to crack. So finding a
material that can both resist scratching and not shatter.
Alex: I think it would be
great to have it for iPhones, I still think it makes more sense for a watch
than for an iPhone screen, but it would be great to have it on an iPhone
screen.
Rene: Mark's point, I
think, was they did the math on the amount they were producing, and it would
take an awful lot of watches to use up that much glass.
Leo: They're saying – they
bought these testing units, the first 518 units, according to Margolis, could
build one hundred and three million and one hundred and sixteen million 5”
display's a year. 5” display's. A watch would be
considerably smaller. They're ramping up to do a lot of something...
Alex: And it could be just
that that's what they're going to use for all their display's,
that could be another...
Leo: And, they've ordered
over 100 tons of graphite.
Alex: That's a lot of
graphite!
Leo: To heat the
furnaces?! That would be a selling point! There's a few things that are kind of
ignored in the specs olympics,
because they don't really lend themselves to specs very well. But longer
battery life, I guess that lends itself to a spec, better battery life, and a
better resilience. My daughter has gone through like 6 iPhones, they just crack all the time!
Alex: I drop mine all the
time – I'm going to curse it right now – but I drop mine all the time and I've
never had a cracked screen.
Leo: She has a case and it
won't crack if it hits anything but the front, but if it hits the front – this
is true of all smart phones – you've got a glass panel, it's very difficult to
protect that.
Andy: I've got to say that
ever since Apple stopped making the dual side sandwich of the iPhone 4, that's
when I stopped breaking phones.
Leo: That was a bad choice.
Andy: for some reason, I
have no evidence to prove this, but I suspect that one of the reasons for the
design change is that. I don't Apple could have been blind to the fact that
they were getting a lot of phones back with back panel cracks. Even when I was
accidentally dropping an iPhone – later phones – They were doing pretty ok by
then. Although it would be difficult – how would Apple actually sell that point
though, if they say “Our phones are now made with a Sapphire front screen, and
they are less likely to crack than anything else”, so are they implicitly
encouraging people to say “Please don't put your phones in those ugly cases
that we absolutely hate”, and can they say that without saying essentially
there is now and expanded warranty on cracked screens?
Leo: I think they could do
an ad in which they drop phones! Remember the old Samsonite ads where they add
a gorilla handling the bags? Give a gorilla the phone, he throws it and stuff
and it comes out fine...
Andy: I bet that that
commercial would be the most expensive thing that Apple has made in 10 years,
with all the lawyers that have to look at - “Don't say will drop, say if
dropped, don't say shatter proof, say shatter resistant, actually, don't say
shatter resistant, if you can try not to say shatter, if you can say it's the
most durable phone we've made, not ever, how about in the last 2 ½ months...”
Leo: I feel like, maybe
it's just me because I have such bad experience with my kids – both of my kids
have broken their phones many times.
Alex: My kids have too.
Leo: I think this is
something that generally consumers would get excited about.
Alex: That's definitely one
of those things that I think that...
Leo: More so than a 64bt
processor, or a faster thing, or even a higher DPI screen. Better battery life
and it doesn't break?! That's a pretty compelling... I think that's what real
people want.
Alex: I think that the 3
things that you do, is that it doesn't break, better battery life, and you have
better better low light performance on the camera.
Leo: Oh, low light on the
camera – better camera – that's a constant issue.
Andy: Lets also highlight
that this is a feature that Apple can really make a lot of use of, because
Apple loves talking about materials, and if they say that this is not just
another rink-a dink blister packed android phone, this is a high quality phone
made out of the best materials that exist.
Leo: And they are making
enough that they could put it in the watch too.
Andy: It's a slam dunk for
a watch, unfortunately I'm wearing a test watch today...
Leo: WAIT...What is that?!
Let’s see that a little longer, is that a – is that the steel?
Andy: Pebble steel watch.
Leo: Look at that, that's
nice! It still looks clunky, I've got to say, it doesn't make it a fashion
statement.
Andy: I'll have to say that
it's at least within the bandwidth that you would expect a men's watch to be.
This is absolutely hopeless for... (music starts
playing)
Leo: Did you just start
music on your phone?!
Andy: Yeah, one of the
coolest things about it is it does have a music controller, and so and by
trying to show you how cool it scrolls through things, I accidentally started
the music, and when it gets to the end – as it keeps moving, it will update and
show you.
Leo: I've seen a lot of
Pebbles, I have one too; I've seen a lot of pebbles amongst our Tech journalist
friends. I saw my first Pebble in the wild sighting yesterday, I was picking up
Lisa's son Michael, he had a play date, and the 16year old brother was watching
them and we were leaving, and the brother looked at his wrist, and then got his
phone out, and I said you must – is that a Pebble? I was far enough away, but
the fact that his phone rang after he looked at his wrist told me he's got a
pebble on, and he did indeed. This guy is kind of a geek, but I mean, he's a
real person.
Andy: This is my first time
wearing a pebble as my daily driver, and I'm really digging it a lot because
you forgot about how many times you reach in your pocket for absolutely nothing
that merits taking it out, and that includes Oh, the phone is ringing, I want
to mute whatever is playing, I just want to touch this button, I don't want to
have to even walk across the kitchen where I left my phone to find out who is
calling, and all that kind of stuff. We can talk about that later if you like
though. All I wanted to say is that if you had my real phone, for some reason,
architect's hate men of average height who wear watches, because door knobs are
exactly at the height of my wrist, and so every watch I own will usually have a
scratch here and here where I simply graze it against a door knob at some
point. So that's why if people are really hot about the idea of Sapphire faces
on watches. We all know the famous story about in the development of the
original iPhone, very, very late in the game, Steve Jobs threw his sample
iPhone at the engineers, showing them all the horrible scratches on the front,
and saying “We are not going to let our phone look that crappy after people
have it in their pockets for 3 months, we're having a glass screen on this
thing!”. And I'm sure that that same mentality is right here, because you don't
spend all that time trying to develop a legitimately beautiful product only to
let users make it look crazy and horrible after a couple of months.
Leo: So should I... See,
I've been waiting for the Apple, I figure if I buy a pebble now...
Alex: I'm stalling. Same as
when I had my Trio and I knew there was a phone coming, so for like a year I
was just dragging along, and I'm doing the same thing now.
Leo: I have bought a
Pebble and it still looks good, but I'm just thinking “If I buy this deal, I'll
really, really regret it in 3 months”.
Andy: I don't know, it's –
there are so many open questions about how Apple would actually implement this,
do they actually feel like a watch like this makes sense, that can actually
control a phone directly? And also, would they make it open enough so that it
would work with – you won't be locked into an iPhone, but also that if Nest
wants to do a controller, given who they are owned by right now, if Nest wants
to make a controller for the Apple watch, would they do that? So far they've
got no problem with putting that stuff into the IOS store, but how open will
this device be, and how soon?
Alex: I think the other
question too is, how many Apple users really care? I
think a lot of them, if it fits into their eco-system, 50-60, maybe 70% of the
Apple users will be like “Awesome”.
Andy: I realize this is the
sort of conversation you have when you're 3 hours into a pot-filled cabin
weekend with all your friends, but it's like “is that the proper roll for Apple?” If Apple really wants to aspire for
greatness, do they really want to make products that are only going to appeal
to people who own other Apple products, or do they really want to legitimately
realize that there are wrists, there are pockets, there are desktops, there are
notebook bags that we are not in right now, and we want to reach out to those
people as well. It's more impressive for Pebble to say “We are creating a
platform so that most people who own phones can benefit from this device, no
Blackberry, no Window's phone yet, maybe they will fix Window's phone or
Blackberry, but...
Alex: If Apple only
attracted people who already owned iPads and iPhones and Mac's, - and a lot of
them were really excited about it, that would be the largest electronic watch
ever made. I think that the issue is, at least in the first year or two, they wouldn't need to pay attention to anybody outside
of their own user base.
Andy: Just like the
original iPod was Mac only at first, but at some point they had to prove it was
a great product, and also they were a great company capable of creating a great
product, they had to do a Window's version of it. It's sort of like – Hey, we
built a moon rover that works great in earth gravity, with lots and lots of
options around it. That's great for someone who grew up on earth, and has
access to earth all the time, and can control the earth. Come back and tell me
when you can build something that can work outside of your own environment and
eco-system.
Alex: I think that that was
also when Window's was so dominant, I think a lot of
people who are using these watches are going to be in an IOS dominant world. I
think they might do it eventually, but I think they could go 2 years without
paying attention to anyone else, and sell more than they could make
Andy: That would be
successful. That's why I underscore the need to be in Colorado or Washington state, and be very, very high to have this sort of philosophical
discussion. It's – Apple is a company that is capable of, and has achieved true
greatness in it's own time, and I would hope that as
they are creating new markets, opportunities and products, they don't feel as
though everything they do has to be so tightly wrapped up in their own
eco-system, that they're incapable of creating something for people who haven't
bought into that eco-system. That would be a shame, I think.
Leo: We're going to take a
break, when we come back, a new special channel for the Apple TV and lots more.
Alex Lindsey is here from the Pixel Corps, Rene Ritchie from imore.com, Andy Ihnatko from the Chicago Sun
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MACBREAK2. I love that... If you didn't see the edits on there, it's really a
great ad. Alright, continuing on. Did
you see there's a Beetle's channel on Apple TV? I guess it's for a limited time,
Rene: I think it's in
recognition of the Sullivan anniversary.
Leo: Yeah, February7th was
the 50th.
Alex: I was like “Why is
everyone talking about the Beetles?!” And then I was like “It's the 50th anniversary, idiot!”
Leo: He describes – Steve
Jobs described the Beetle's as the Model for Apple's business. He said “My
model for business is the Beetles”. They were 4 guys that kept each others’ negative tendencies in check, they balanced
each other and the total was greater than the sum of parts. Great things in
business are never done by one person, but done by a team. I don't know about
Ringo, you could leave Ringo out. No, I love Ringo.
Andy: I have to say that
during the Grammy's, I had this observation, I had it tweeted out that “You
have to remember that even on the worst day of Ringo Star's adult life, he was
still one of the Beetle's”. If he spills coffee today, slips and breaks his hip
on the kitchen floor and nobody recognizes him when the ambulance comes, he's
still one of the Beetle's.
Leo: So is Tim Cook
Apple's Yoko? No, Scott Forstall...
Alex: Hmmmm...
Andy: I don't know that we
need to go there! It's definitely one of those similes that you have to cut off
at around 1966 because there was a point at which all these people hated each
other and they couldn't record...
Leo: Steve had a little
bit of a rose colored glasses view of the Beetle's. Remember, Apple didn't get
the Beetle's on iTunes for a long, long time, it was a
big deal when they do... They actually had a lawsuit with Apple Corp and they
told Apple Corp that we will never get in the music business. Oops! And then
they did, and it all started up again. Apparently there's footage from the Ed
Sullivan show of their first appearance, available “for a limited time” this is on the new
channel, you can listen to the US albums. That's kind of cool. A new channel on the Apple TV celebrating the 50th anniversary of The Beetle's. Itunes radio
comes to Australia too, Hello Australia, and all the
ships at sea... Apple's iBooks court monitor, the
ongoing case. You remember that Apple did not like the court appointed monitor
in the iBooks case, they said “He doesn't know what
he's talking about, he's never done this before, he's getting a lot of money
and he's really pissing us off”. Michael Bromwich, they went back to court,
saying “No, there was a little stay there”, according to the Wall Street
Journal, the US court of Appeals Judge... actually the court of appeals
reviewed the decision, and what they said is Bromwich stays in place, but his
duties are a little narrower, he is authorized to request interviews and
documents from the company ONLY to insure that Apple has policies in place to
prevent future anti-trust violations. And that senior executives and board
members understand them. So I don't know if that really cut him back that much.
Rene: His request to get
Johnny Ive on the stand probably won't go anywhere
now.
Leo: I don't know! Future
Anti-trust violations... Johnny!
Alex: I do think that's
what they really want to do, is not have him talking to people who don't really
have any impact on the iBooks situation.
Leo: I think they felt
like he was a little bit of a loose canon, that they
had to pay him too much and he didn't have the expertise, and how he's
subpoenaing members of the board of directors and executives – I mean who is
this guy?! I can understand why they would feel a little bit that way, and I
think they probably realized they will have to put up with him...
Alex: I think they realized
he was just kind of doing the “Cha-ching”.
Leo: That's what Lawyer's
– that's how it is.
Rene: He didn't work so hard for this cushy
assignment to waste it now...
Alex: Exactly.
Leo: We kind of talked
about the watch, did we mention Mark Germen's great article? You can make some
decisions or some thinking about what Apple might be doing with the watch,
based on who they have hired, because it really isn't merely fitness stuff.
There's a lot of health stuff in here, they've been meeting with the FDA,
you've got Bud Tribble, Bob Mansfield, two of their
super stars on the team, Kevin Lynch who they brought in from Adobe, and then
in the Fitness realm, of course Jay Blahnik, we've
mentioned him before from – he's the guy who did the fuel bend at Nike, Tim
Cook on the board at Nike, so that make sense. But they've also brought in
health folks, a guy who was a scientist at Phillips research, named Roy Rayman – ooh, I like his name... he's a sleep expert.
Alex: I think the bigger
picture here of course, is that Apple has hired 100 people to think about
watches, and so obviously what they're trying to do is try to make what – at
least when they come out the door, the best watch they can possibly make, that
does as many things as it can, well. They're definitely not taking this likely, this isn't going to be an experiment.
Leo: They're throwing a
lot of things against the wall, but it does sound like based on what the health
book is keeping track of in IOS 8, Germen says “According to the sources
familiar with IOS 8's health book, Apple has preparing its device to be able to
measure hydration – that's the first I've heard of that. Blood pressure,
glucose, pulse and heart rate.
Rene: One thing to remember about this stuff is that Apple doesn't just
work on one device. Some people are saying, “How can they do all this this
year, the technology is not ready, it's just impossible, it's too late.” Does
this mean it's delayed? All it means is that Apple like with every other
product is working on this year’s version, next year's version and then four
years out. And whether we see, if the center technology is not ready yet, we'll
just see at a later point in time. Everything they are working on now is part
of the product cycle of this device. Not necessarily this specific generation
we'll see now.
Andy: Absolutely. The version 1 will have
limited feature set, but every feature will work perfectly or at least that
will be the ideal.
Leo: But they hired the guy with white hair in
a lab coat. That means to me...this guy is an expert on measuring pulse.
Alex: But I think a lot of this stuff is also,
you're going to be thinking about what you want three versions down when you
make the first one. Because you got to think about a lot of those bits and
pieces. I definitely agree with Rene and Andy that...
Leo: You are not going to read the tea leaves
and say oh, look.
Alex: No, we'll get something simpler. I mean
the first iPhone didn't have any apps.
Rene: First iPad yeah.
Andy: I'll put it this way. If any company can
successfully sell a product that requires you to insert a catheter, I think
it's going to be Apple.
Leo: Wow! Ouch!
Andy: Leo do you want the data or do you not
want the data? Yes or no? It's that simple.
Rene: How badly do you want the data?
Leo: Alright. Just bringing it up, just
mentioning it.
Rene: But I think it's like what we discussed
previously like passbook and everything else. We'll see the first generation of
the technology, they'll become a lot more promising as
more stuff falls into place.
Andy: How much do you think they're going to
have to charge for this? I have been turning that one over in my mind, how much
could they charge for an Apple watch, regardless of what it does, to make it
into an attractive accessory to all the other Apple
that stuff that you have.
Leo: I think we can answer the question how
much could they charge? I don't know if we can say how much they will
charge.
Rene: Will they play the Panerai Rolex card?
Leo: Well it's not $50,000. But I would say
they can charge somewhere up to $500 for it.
Rene: What was that Galaxy Gear was that
$300-$400?
Leo: It's $400.
Alex: Yeah.
Andy: Look how well that did.
Leo: Actually you know, I have a Martian, I have a Pebble and I have a Galaxy Gear and the one I wear
all the time: Galaxy Gear.
Alex: How much is that?
Leo: I think its $400. How much was it? 3 or
$400, I think you're right.
Rene: We have to wait for the Wall Street
Journal leak and then it will be exactly half of that.
Leo: Can they go over $500?
Alex: I don't think they would. But they could.
Leo: $300 for the Galaxy Gear.
Andy: $250 for the Pebble still.
Alex: I think it'll be $399- $499. I think
that's the range.
Leo: Maybe you know now that I am seeing these
other watches are that much, I'm thinking they could go to 7.
Andy: Oh God no! That's stupid. That's crazy
pants.
Leo: That's crazy talk?
Alex: I think it depends on what it is.
Andy: I myself am thinking they got to price
this at under the iPhone. For every $25 they charge above the cost of a non-contract
iPhone right now, that increases the degree of difficulty I think by a couple
percentage points. I don't put it past Apple to create a product that is so
compelling to demand a premium price, but I'm thinking that they're going to be
aware of how much these competing things work. How much these competing things
cost. And they have to start thinking about how much can we charge for a device
that pretty much nobody has right now. Remember when the iPad first came out,
everybody was throwing out that it was going to be a $1000, it can't be a dime less than $700. I think I said $700-$750. I think that one
of the reasons why Apple got the price under $500 is that, they understood this
was a brand new thing, that they were not going to be able to tell somebody,
'well, this is the reason why we charge a $1000 for our notebook is that it's
$300 better than the $700 notebook.' This is a watch that they will have to
convince people that they actually want and need. So, that's why I think that,
I don't know what the target really is, but again I'd be really surprised if
it's much above the cost of a new iPhone.
Alex: I think there is a psychological barrier
for $500. I think a $499 watch would do much better than a $500.
Andy: That's crazy. $700 is crazy pants, $500:
'okay tell me what it does and you got to absolutely...You got to blow me away
for $500
Leo: If it just does what the pebble watch
does, it can't be more than $200-$300 bucks right. It's got to be Pebble watch
price. So the Pebble watch ha notifications, you could play stop music, actually there's a little Flappy bird game you can
play on it. You wouldn't really want to play games on it, it's like snake.
Rene: Remember what Steve Jobs did with the
iPhone. He said, this is how much an iPod costs, this is how much a phone costs
and altogether these things would cost you this...
Andy: And then three months later he said,
'guess what we are dropping the price by several hundred dollars.'
Rene: And they did that with Apple TV and they
did that with the iPad when it went to the mini. So, they've got a history of
putting things at what the market will bear and then making it cheaper...
Leo: So it does the Pebble, it does the Fitbit thing, maybe it adds some unusual stuff like
hydration, you know measuring your hydration...
Alex: Heart rate.
Leo: Heart rate and perhaps even blood oxygen
that kind of thing. So, let's say...and one more thing let's say it's gorgeous,
let's say it really does...I mean the Pebble watch and all the others are
clunky as hell. A guy might be able to put up with it, as you say Andy. What if
it's really slim, it's beautiful. You are not embarrassed to wear it. In fact,
it is a piece of jewelry. Remember they have hired a lot of fashion people.
Andy: But now you are getting into even another
problem where you've got people like...Their best hope is to try to sell to
people like me, who still wear watches and it was just five years ago that I
bought my first watch that was not made out of plastic or had Star Wars logo of
some kind on it. And even there I thought that okay $200 is a reasonable amount
of money to pay for a watch because underneath me there are people who stopped
wearing watches a long time ago. Above me there are people who are saying, ‘I
just paid $2000 for a watch because you don't understand every piece was pulled
right from the buttocks of the most rear jeweled insect that science can find
inside the Amazon.' These watch aficionados for which they are not going to
give up their favorite watches for an electronic gadget. Remember the other
variable that we are not putting into this conversation; we are talking about,
‘okay here's the $400 Samsung, here's the $250 Pebble, well how about the $99 Fitbit that has been so strong is because it is so
affordable, you can take a chance by it.
Leo: What if Apple doesn't try to compete with
those and says,' no, we are going to go after product for the very well off.'
Rene: $2000 Blackberry.
Leo: There you go. Why is that $2000?
Rene: It's a Porsche designed Blackberry.
Leo: You have that?
Rene: Kevin has that.
Leo: You dog you! Look at that. How many of
those did they sell?
Rene: I don't know, but they have a Porsche
design store and they have one in gold if you want to start going up to the
tens of thousands.
Leo: I am going to guess that they sold about
three. One to Alicia Keys.
Alex: They gave her that one. That's part of the
signed deal.
Leo: But I do think that they could go
after...what if...okay, Apple used to be really not a company of the people, it
was always the computer for the rest of us, but it really was a computer for
the people who had a lot of money.
Alex: It's a company for the people who have a
lot of money.
Leo: So what if they just embraced that and
say, 'hey we're Porsche, we're BMW.'
Alex: Well that's why I think you would look at
a $499 range.
Andy: They wouldn't get away with that.
Leo: Why not? Who’s going to stop them?
Andy: People who have money to spend on things.
I think Apple understands that, here is how much money...we can sell...the
reason why our budget Macbook is a $1000, but if they
tried to make a $2000 one, well, it's the exact same thing as our $1000 version
but it is framed in pure glimmering green and it's exclusively for the upper
class people...
Leo: You know what's a deal breaker more for me
is what we talked about earlier, which is the openness of it. All the other
competitors, except maybe for Samsung, but the other guys are open and I
think...
Rene: Well they have to be though.
Leo: Well they do and I don't think Apple, it's
not in Apple' blood to be an open product. I want it to be an open
product.
Andy: I think as I keep talking about this, I'm
more inclined to think that; I'm right handed so I wear my watch on my left
wrist, I'm inclined to think, Apple make a right wrist product. So you will
still wear whatever your favorite watch is on this wrist but there will be
another device like a Fitbit that is more like a band
than an actual wrist device that allows you to deliver new services and new
censors that can then be appreciated through a device made popular.
Leo: Oh no! No!
Alex: Yeah the only thing I think...so I had a
Nike Fuel Band for quite some time until I broke it and I guess I feel like
once my Nike Fuel Band stopped working, I didn't have the need to go get
another one. Because I didn't like having two wrist
experience. I think that was the issue that I didn't like having both of
them. And I did find though that I almost wanted to just use my Nike Fuel Band
instead of my watch, you know as a watch. And that what led me to definitely
feel like if Apple did what the Nike Fuel Band did and did a lot of other
little bits and pieces, I'd much rather have that than the watch that I have,
which is in a reasonable price range to switch over. But I think that the
reason I think Apple won't extend is that they just want it to work. Especially when they first come out of the gate. I think
maybe they'll look at expanding to other markets or other platforms once it's
working. But I think the way to guarantee that it's really going to work
smoothly is to not try to integrate with Android and a bunch of other
platforms. I know that we just started getting back into software development.
My programmer was asking me what platforms I want to develop on and I was like
yeah just the Mac, so we're first going to do the iOS because I don't want to think about it. I don't want to think about how we're
going to work with a whole bunch of permutations it's just too much trouble.
And I don't need to.
Rene: Yeah it's kind of like second level
dependencies and Apple really likes being able to move quickly and not have to
worry about what other people do with their stuff.
Alex: Yup.
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Alex: You know what makes a good neighbor?
Leo: What?
Alex: Good fences.
Leo: Yeah, that's exactly right. Don't ask for
trouble, be proactive.
Alex: And the thing is a lot of times we get
stopped. I come from a family of lawyers so you get stopped, even I get
stopped, oh you know it's going to be expensive, and everything else and being
able to find something that's going to tie some of these materials up is so
important at the beginning not when you are in conflict. You have to do it when
you're all friends. That's when you want to make the agreement.
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show. legalzoom.com. Give it a try today. What else
should we talk about? Anybody got anything here? iOS 7.1, it's going to come out in March. It's not
going to come out, it is, it's not, it is going to
come out in March.
Rene: There's no GM yet. There's no final seat
for developers yet. GM candidate...
Leo: So it means March probably huh.
Rene: Yeah.
Leo: But do you think the beta 5...have you
heard from your sources is good enough to get the job done?
Rene: I haven't seen anyone throwing their
phones into the...(laughing)
Leo: I think it is much needed. I don't think
they should delay it too much longer.
Rene: I think they should have put out a 7.0.5
for everybody that fixed a lot of the lingering bugs already. Its way too long for a 7.1
Leo: Perhaps they have been waiting a little
too long.
Andy: It's annoying. Just this morning I was
doing some reading on my iPad and my iPad re started twice. And I was like oh
that's bad.
Leo: Isn't that frustrating? So it's happening
to you too?
Andy: Yeah and I don't blame anything larger
than the scale of what they are trying to do with iOS 7. But it's like oh man, I remember when this never
ever happened. The last time this would have happened would have been so long
ago I couldn't even remember it. So, It's not unreliable but it's just...
unfortunately this is a humanizing moment for iOS 7...
Rene: Every re start is a punch in your Apple
heart.
Andy: It's like when you see your favorite
action star, when he knows he doesn't have another movie coming out for another
four months, it's like oh he doesn't always have those rippling abs and that
sun tan. That's really only something that he has when it's time for... okay.
He is human after all okay.
Rene: When you find out your father didn't know
the answer to that one question.
Andy: Or when...cooking temperatures for like
pork were recently reduced by the USDA like three years ago and I always used
to hate like my mother's pork chops but now I'm cooking them...and so I thought
I hated pork but now I'm cooking at the right temperature and like oh my mom didn't know everything about how to cook. This
is moist and tender and delicious and flavorful instead of tough and leathery
oh.
Leo: Oh!
Andy: She could have made use of this
information had she had it but she didn't have it, but okay.
Leo: Oh! Let's see. Flappy
Birds. We haven't really mentioned it. The latest...
Alex: Is there anything new now other than it's
no longer there.
Leo: I think we need a special logo, 'Flappy
Bird. America held hostage, stage 14.'
Andy: I can't believe we are not talking about
Bob Costas' eye infection. International news story, but fine
if you want to have your click grabby sort of headline about Flappy Birds.
Rene: I tuned into TWIT breaking news and I
didn't see it and I was just brokenhearted.
Leo: So the latest is that Forbes sent a
Vietnamese speaking reporter to Hanoi to speak to Dong Nguyen. I don't
need to explain the Flappy Bird flap, do I?
Alex: We should probably catch everybody up.
Would you catch everybody up? I've done it so many times now, I'm sick of
it.
Alex: Flappy Bird was released...
Leo: Flappy Bird was something you'll tell your
grand kids about...
Alex: ...the day that Flappy Bird ended. It's a
very, very difficult game evidently. I have not played it but I did download it
because I found out that it was going to be gone. But you know it picked up, it
became very...I think there was a reporter or there was a Youtube channel I think that really talked about it and pushed it into a...
Leo: Well there is some speculation that what
pushed it...it came out in May you know. That what pushed it into the top was
that somebody bought perhaps some reviews. Because all of a sudden reviews
started appearing for Flappy Bird in December and the reviews feed ramped up
quiet quickly and then tapered off and then ramped up again because people
started using it. If you look at the early reviews there's very certain
similarity to them that is a little bot of a
giveaway. Flappy Bird obviously had the wings to make it as a real viral
success. So it did go viral thanks to this strategy. Nobody suspects that those downloads aren't real because all you have to do is
look around you. Everybody is playing this stupid game. By the way Paul Thurrott has the highest high score of anybody in the
TWIT family. You want to guess what Paul Thurrott's highest score is?
Andy: 17.
Leo: No. Paul has 131 points. But there are other of us. I have 5.
Andy: I just don't know what the selling point
of this game is because everybody who recommends or talks about it talks about
this is the stupidest, frustrating , awful trolling game I have ever played in
my entire life.
Leo: But you can stop playing it, that's why.
Andy: But why would I want to download it then?
I want to have fun when I play games.
Alex: They have a game like that in real life it's called golf.
Leo: Yeah it’s pretty much like golf.
Andy: You fail most of the time, you're mostly
frustrated and every once in a while you get a tingle that you might not be a
complete failure and then you decide you have to play it over and over
again.
Andy: But at least you are outside, you might
even see a...
Alex: You argue with yourself that you are
getting a tan and some exercise except that you are driving around in a cart.
Leo: A good walk ruined.
Andy: And sometimes a girl comes up in another
cart and sells you beer. I don't see where this is a valid complaint.
Alex: You know my family's gold course has a cannon.
Leo: What?
Andy: A beer cannon?
Alex: No it's just a regular cannon.
Leo: Does it carbide?
Alex: Yeah it's carbide cannon, It's a big cannon. No it's not a carbide cannon. It's a big cannon. We just don't put
cannon balls in it. You can hear it for miles when they set it off.
Leo: Are you getting invaded?
Alex: No, it's when you do a shot gun start. So
what happens is that when you have a tournament you put everybody on all the
different holes so that you are not starting one at a time. And so it's called
a shot gun start so...
Leo: So it's something that everybody on all 18
holes can hear. Is it 9 or 18?
Alex: It's 18. It's a really big golf
course.
Leo: You have a family 18 hole golf course?
Alex: We had a farm that wasn't making any
money. So the best thing to do with it is make a golf course out of it.
Leo: Do you charge people for using? Can
strangers use it?
Alex: It's a public golf course. It's considered
one of the best in western Pennsylvania.
Leo: So it's a business.
Alex: We have the Pittsburgh Steelers who come
by and play.
Leo: Do you use the cannon on the Pittsburgh
Steelers?
Alex: Only if they are there for a short gun
start.
Leo: Now you know why there are all lawyers in
his family.
Alex: My brother runs it. It is the craziest
golf course ever because you just got to go to birdsfoot.com just to...you sign up for the newsletter just so you can get my
brother's emails. Like the emails he sends out are the funniest emails.
Leo: Is there a picture of the cannon on the
website?
Alex: Do they have the commercial? So my brother
Joe...
Leo: Is this yet?
Alex: It might be.
Leo: Click to view. Aw.
Alex: Oh you see that's my whole family.
Leo: Here's the whole family. Birdsfoot golf
course. Is that your brother?
Alex: No that's just one of our...
(In the commercial man saying: When we bring people here for the
first time...)
Leo: We shoot them with the cannon.
Alex: That's my dad.
Leo: How can I do a whole hour on Triangulation
with you and this did not come up.
Alex: I don't know how it did not come up.
Andy: One brother is making a movie and the
other brother owns a golf course. That's a sitcom family right there.
Leo: I am telling you Arrested Development in
real life.
Alex: Yeah Exactly. So they have the best
movies. So my brother just goes out with a couple of cameras and shoots these.
Yeah he shoots this, my brother Joe.
Leo: Oh yeah, we've worked with Joe before. We
used Joe as a cameraman. He's using a 5D looks like here.
Alex: Yeah he did use a 5D for this. He did a
commercial where he used the FS700 so we've got like a slow motion guy hitting
a...not many golf courses get a guy to come out and put a FS700
shooting...that's my brother Travis. He is the funniest guy. The funniest guy I
know.
Leo: Who gets to drive that?
Alex: My brother Rob actually used to drive it.
Leo: Whose Michelle?
Alex: That's my cousin Michelle. She plays the
bagpipes. She gets out there with a kilt and plays the bagpipes. It's
amazing.
Andy: Serious question okay. Have you ever
pitched or been pitched for a reality show?
Leo: I think we should do it.
Alex: We have been pitched for a reality show
because our family is crazy.
Leo: There's machinery and we like that.
Alex: There's my brother Rob running the
machinery, family business.
Leo: We call him three fingers Rob. Wow
that's a nice golf course wow.
Alex: It's a really nice golf course. That's as
serious as my brother ever gets.
Leo: This is so cute, you've got an and everything.
Alex: Yeah this is the long version not the
commercial version. You can cut it off.
Leo: So if you are in the Pittsburgh area go to the Birdsfoot Golf
course.
Alex: Right. But you should sign up for
the...just to read my brother's prose.
Leo: I really want to see a picture of the
cannon.
Alex: I don't know if they have any of the
cannon's.
Leo: Like how big? Is it a army surplus cannon?
Alex: I don't know. It's someone my brother knew
of course. I don't know if we actually own the cannon. I know we bring it out
and fire it and it's a big cannon. You can hear it
from my parents’ house and its miles away.
Leo: Wow. Well there we go. We've learned
something new.
Alex: Yeah just when you thought you knew
everything about me.
Leo: I will never learn everything there is to
know about Alex Lindsay that's for sure.
Rene: Layers upon layers upon layers.
Alex: I don't know how we got into that. That's
an epic...
Andy: Because we were talking about Flappy Birds
and we're talking about golf.
Leo: okay Flappy Birds. Let's get back on
topic. So the guy who created it according to the Verge, he told the Verge
$50,000 a day. It's an ad supported program. I can vouch for its
addictiveness because everybody here plays it. And then I was talking to
one of our interns, everybody in the high school like within three days
downloaded it. It really is a viral hit. But oddly enough last week, Dong
Nguyen the author tweets, “I am sorry ‘Flappy Bird’ users, 22 hours from now, I
will take ‘Flappy Bird’ down. I cannot take this anymore. “I cannot take it anymore, I'm going to pull...," he tweeted this on
Saturday, "tomorrow I'm going to pull the program from both the Android
and the iOS app store." That's it. And "by the it's not for sale and yes, I still make games,
goodbye."
Alex: The question is a whole bunch of people
must have downloaded it over the weekend like me and I'll eventually get around
to selling it. It seems like it may increase the amount of money he's actually
generating by all this. In a month he'll say people talked me into releasing it
again.
Leo: We don't know how many he sold on the app
store, but on the Android 50 million copies. Presuming he sold 150 million total, he's going to reap the ad rewards as long as people
continue to play that game. So, he's made a lot of money. Robert Scoble agrees with you, he thinks it's a marketing ploy. He
says," in six months watch he'll say from the creator of Flappy Birds,
Crappy Birds."
Alex: This doesn't make any sense at all.
Andy: Especially with the Forbes article that
says one of the reasons why he pulled that because he didn't want to be responsible for people too addicted to a game and it really
upset him. And that I hope that proves to be true because that's really a
wonderful altruistic motive. But as soon as that thought completed itself in my
head, I realized that yeah but you know, you could have pulled the plug
immediately without pre announcing it if it really was upsetting you that
badly. But no you basically gave the entire world warning that you know that
viral hit that everybody is talking about, you will not be able to get it. It
goes into the Disney vault along with the song of the south on Monday.
Leo: There's also some other theories. Some of
his friends told Reuters that he pulled him off because he got a cease and
desist from Nintendo. Apparently he stole the columns directly from Super
Mario. And then Nintendo says, 'we don't know.' They didn't deny it but they
didn't say they did either. Of course there's the additional point that when
you make a lot of money in Vietnam and a number of people pointed this out to
me, stand back because here comes the government and in fact, the Forbes guy
said the interview was delayed because Dong Nguyen had an interview with
the Vice Prime Minister right before, clearly looking for tax revenues. So, it
may also be that...
Rene: A lot more trouble than it's worth.
Leo: Yeah a lot of trouble. A lot of money is
going to end up in the hands of the Vietnamese government.
Andy: Or maybe it was like, there's
a famous story about Whitey Bulger here in
Boston, where somebody who is sort of connected somewhat to him won the
lottery. Won a million bucks in the lottery and guess what a week later it
turned out that 'I forgot to say that I'm actually in a pool with Whitey Bulger so the lottery should send the money to Whitey
instead.'
Leo: Yeah send it to Whitey.
Andy: The most interesting line from all this is
his saying, 'this has ruined my life.' And it's like there's like so many
ways...again get your smoking jacket get a snifter brandy, settle into you
leather armchair lean back and wonder all the different ways in which...
Leo: There's an excellent after market in
phones with Flappy Bird installed on eBay. Here's an iPhone 5, 16 gigs with
Flappy Bird. So far 10 bids, $6,000, but you can shop around because there are
a 'buy it now' for iPhone 5 for $1,000.
Alex: We get paid to work with a lot of ad
agencies for viral marketing campaigns and none of them has been as effective
as this.
Leo: You can't can viral. If
you could...
Alex: It wouldn't be viral.
Leo: It wouldn't be good. There's something
magical that happens that no one really understands why.
Rene: A Boy, a pipe and a dream.
Andy: At the same not everybody posts something
on Youtube with the goal of becoming a viral
sensation. It would have made them very happy if their piano recital or
whatever had gotten oh jeez 10,000 people thought this is really really great, but if it's suddenly 5 million and now they
are getting a phone call from the Jimmy Kimmel show, they are getting a phone
call from the Today show and they are like, I thought that maybe a hundred
people would see it and now this is all everybody is talking about all across
the country this weekend. That has the capability of freaking some people out.
It's possible that, I do think this is in some form a marketing campaign. But
it's certainly possible that he was just not prepared to have the viral hit of
the entire globe this week. I'd much rather make a comfortable living in
anonymity than make a fortune as the face of this viral hit.
Alex: I've already made a comfortable living.
Leo: He's easily made over a million dollars
and in Vietnam that goes a long way.
Andy: I am talking in general. There are some
people that if you gave them a deal with the devil but let's say a friendly
devil that just expects you to make him a nice Thanksgiving dinner. I'll offer
you two different versions of success. You can either have the sort of success
where you will do a line of apps that will do very, very well and earn you a
comfortable living of maybe $130,000-$140,000 a year but consistent for five
years. Or I will give you that exact same amount of income as the viral hit of
the planet. You will have one hell of a summer. There will be t-shirts base on
your game. There will be sitcom pitches based on your game. Everybody will know
who you are and everything you went through to produce this game. There a lot
of people who would much rather say, 'I will take half that money if I get to
have the anonymity of no one knowing who the hell I am.
Leo: Interesting story on the Bloomberg
Business Week, the iPhone is a new international currency. Vernon Silver said,
"I live in Rome, where domestic work comes cheap and technology is
expensive." One worker who was I guess doing his laundry, I don't know
heard he was going to the states, she said pick me up an iPhone, I'll take that instead of cash for the month's work. So he went to the Apple
Store on Fifth Avenue, lining up he said, “I was surrounded by
shoppers speaking languages from around the world. The salesman looked stunned
when I said I wanted just one unlocked iPhone." He said, "we just got a new shipment. We got the gold model, the
most popular in Europe and the easiest to resell. To my right, a man with a
credit card from a Saudi bank was trying to buy his third and fourth phones of
the day." So Silver says, “make it two. There was
one more step, the salesman grabbed a landline from
behind the counter to connect me with my bank’s antifraud department. Purchases
from this store, he said, are red flags to the credit card companies." So
apparently this has become a currency. The iPhone is a currency. The priciest
country Brazil, an iPhone is worth $1,196. Jordan, Turkey,
Romania, Greece and Hungary all worth more than a $1,000.
Alex: I have to admit, I have often
thought about it. I just don't have the time or I'm just too lazy. But I'm in
and out of Africa all the time and when especially when something has just been
released, I get a lot of emails from folks like, 'hey I'll pay you 50% more
than you paid for your iPad or iPhone or whatever.' And it's been clear that if
I bought in 10 iPads I could definitely pay for my entire trip.
Leo: It's called
iPhone arbitrage. Kyle Wiens of IFixit, we've talked to him many times said he was in Cabo
and the dive leader offered free boat trips if Wiens ever returned to Mexico with iPhone, not for free to sell it at the US price,
the price that Kyle paid for it because there is such a markup in
Mexico. iPhone aritrage.
Just thought I'll pass that along, if you're planning to travel you might want
to pick up a couple of gold iPhones before you go. It's interesting;
this is a long standing tradition. When I first
went to Eastern Europe in the 60's, Levi's blue jeans worth
money, big money.
Alex: I have a lot of artwork in my office that
I traded logo-ed shirts for in Africa. And
they didn't want the money. I said I'll pay you cash, they said, 'no we'll have
the shirts because I can get the cash anywhere but I can't get that
shirt."
Leo: When we were in Egypt, our guide said,
'next time you come back bring a lot of ball point pens, we can't get them and
the kids love them.'
Alex: i take whole packs
to Zimbabwe.
Leo: Yeah and you hand them out because they
are cheap. And they prefer that to money.
Alex: i keep on
meaning to like when I go there I keep on meaning to like get Pixel Corps ones
so that they always remember me like twenty years later they'll remember...
Rene: The Pixel Santa.
Leo: They'll be a cargo cult now twenty years
from one worshiping the Pixel Corps. Oh the great God of Pixel Corps
came to our land and gave us pens. By the way Bitcoin real quick and then we are going to get to our picks of the week. Bitcoin two
things. One Apple has killed the most popular Bitcoin wallet app in the app store. Apple really doesn't like Bitcoin.
Rene: It wants no part of it right now.
Leo: We want no part of it. And there is a
Trojan you should watch out for OS 10 that targets your Bitcoin wallet. So watch out. We are going to get to our picks of the week in just a
second. Our show today brought to you by 99 designs. That's my pick this week.
99designs.com. we’ve used them before. This is the place to go if you need
designs. If you need graphic designs for landing pages, websites even like
email templates, t-shirts, that's what we use it for, car wraps whatever. Apps. If you got the next Flappy Birds, you can write it,
program it like nobody's business but do you have the design sense? 99 designs has the designers. 280,000 designers are waiting for you to
go and pitch them. They call it a contest, where you say, 'here's what I need.'
We just did one for our new hoodie and we got 5 designs. We actually liked the
designs so much that we got at least 5 of them. And you can vote if you would
like. If you go to our blog insidetwit.tv and scroll down. There's links to the four designs. There's design A which is a beautiful four
color design. Then there's the next design, you want to show them all? That's
the vertical design, design C. Remember these letters because we're going to
have you vote. These all came from 99 designs designers. I love these. We
actually couldn't choose. Design B is the graffiti design which I really like.
Design D is the steam punk. So these will go on a hoodie that we will sell. You
can cast your vote on our straw pole at strawpole.me/1079823. Wow he's gotten
into the millions now straw poles. strawpole.me/1079823 or just go to insidetwit.tv, actually you need to because you want to see the
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their hoodie designs, we can't wait. Let's get our picks of the week. Andy Ihnatko we'll
start with you.
Andy: Real quick because I have actually
recommended this one before. This is a Mactubes which
is my favorite Youtube down loader for Mac. But John
Syracuse posted a video to the lightning fast F1 Ferrari tire change pit stop
and it was so fast and I really wanted to look at it in greater detail but it
was going too fast. So Mactubes can pretty much get
any...sorry screwed up my monitor set up. But the idea is that you just get the
URL from the top of the address bar, plug it into Mactubes,
it will let you either watch the video or via a little pop up in the corner of
the screen it will show you all the different video files that are hosted on
the actual source video files. It will let you download the HD version, the SD
version of the it if you want the really awful open source compressed version, it lets you get that. The idea though that now let's say Quicktime file that's on your desktop that you can then
watch. And then there are also lot of stuff on Youtube that are like 1970s TV show that are technically not out of copyright but
nobody is claiming them and if you are going to be able to watch this old Tony
Randall TV show of which there were four episodes this is your only opportunity
to do it which is to watch it on Youtube. You can
also download it in case it goes away later on. So I use it all the time for
stuff like that and also again if I really need to super slo-mo through Ferrari pit change. It's free, I believe it's
an open source project. I've been using it for years. It's a very quiet little
app but it works great.
Leo: Very nice. Mactubes. Always
god to have some way to get those videos. Rene
Ritchie, you're pick of the week. Oops you're muted dude. Unmute.
Rene: Sorry. My pick of the week is Threes. You
might not like me for recommending it because I can't stop playing it. I've
been losing sleep over it but it's a load of fun. I play this in lieu of Flappy
Birds.
Leo: Much better. Much more
satisfying that Flappy Birds.
Rene: Absolutely. So basically the red and the
blue numbers you can combine together. 2 and 1 makes three. Then you can
combine any pairs. So for example, there's two 12's there, I can combine those.
I can combine two 3's and you want to basically get the highest number you can.
Every time you combine something it's value goes up.
It's a lot of fun. I wouldn't say it's a math game, some people call it a math
game but you are really just adding some numbers.
Leo: It's a matching game with numbers.
Rene: It's a matching game absolutely. You have
one chance and as soon as the screen is full and you can no longer match any
tiles the game is over. I've gotten to about 9,000 some people in my game circle.
It's quick so you can get in and out. It's incredibly fun. It's addictive in
the right way, it's not maddening, it's actually
enjoyable. And it filled that Flappy Birds hole in my heart.
Leo: it is the greatest game ever. Brian
Brushwood showed it to me on TWIT, I recommend it yesterday. It is very
addictive and very hard to stop.
Rene: And the best thing about it, there's no in
app purchases, there's no in app ads. They just ask you for a small amount of
money upfront and just let you play.
Leo: What are you showing there Chad?
Chad: This is a new viral way of sharing stuff.
It's a GIF that plays over and over again. I've been seeing this on Google+, on
Twitter.
Leo: It's in fact an ad.
Chad: It's in fact an ad for Threes. It's on
their website, it's a GIF so they can throw it absolutely anywhere and it kind
of shows how it works and everything.
Leo: This is the thinking person's Flappy Bird
and it is spreading just about as fast. There's something about it that's
really satisfying.
Rene: I hope more developers take up this model
because It shows you can have a successful game
without doing incredibly...
Leo: It's a $1.99 and that's it. No in app
purchases, gosh I pray this is a success. Alex Lindsay your pick of the week
looks like a cable.
Alex: I got a cable. Turns out I think
Thunderbolt is the future.
Leo: No!
Alex: I hesitated to recommend anything in this
area for a while because I really wanted to test a lot of this stuff. One of
the hardest things to do with what we do with live streams and hangouts and so
on so forth is getting regular videos, so cameras you know you're HDMI camera
or you SDI camera into Wirecast or Hangouts or
Skype or whatever. And we have a lot of different interfaces and we have kind
of decided that this is, not the only one we use but definitely the one we're
using now the most which is the Blackmagic Ultra
Studio mini recorder.
Leo: I'm holding it in my hands now Mr.Chad so you can show the world.
Ales: So this is about $150. It's tiny. You need a Thunderbolt
computer but you can take SDI or HDMI. So you plug the Thunderbolt in, it's
powered by the bus.
Leo: This comes from the computer like tmy MacPro let's say, is it the
Apple video interface? Because I thought they had to reverse engineer this you
know.
Alex: There's the box for it. So it's a
Thunderbolt and it's a SDI and/or HDMI to the Thunderbolt. So it's basically
just a very inexpensive way for you to get either you switcher output or your
camera output, whether it's a little HDMI camera or a SDI camera or SDI feed
into your computer.
Leo: So you would hook into your computer?
Alex: So that way you would want to get you
video camera say your G10 like these little cameras...
Leo: Oh so it comes this way.
Alex: It goes in.
Leo: It goes this way. So it goes in the SDI or
HDMI port and out the Thunderbolt port and into your computer.
Alex: And this will just show up on your
Hangouts, on Skype.
Leo: Do we use these, John?
John: We tried it for Tom...compatibility with Skype.
Leo: Oh so a lot of Black magic stuff Skype
doesn't see for some reason. We haven't figured that out why.
Alex: We don't use Skype very much, we mostly
use Hangouts...
Leo: Works with Hangouts, though? Web RTC and
all that?
Alex: Yeah. And we use two different ones. We
use the AJAIOXT. The reason we like the AJAIOXT is because AJA has a great
interface that lets us know what the video pipe is, that's not what you get
with this but this is 1/10th the price. So we use both of those. Most kids will
have one or the other. But if we are having any trouble we'll put the IOXT in.
But the IOXT is bigger and more sensitive and so on and so forth. So anyway
that's the ultra-studio mini recorder, but if you are trying to get started and
you want something inexpensive to get your video in for a live streaming, this
is a great solution.
Leo: Thank you. That is from Blackmagic Ultra Studio mini recorder. How much?
Alex: $145.
Leo: And I was just going to ask you about
this. Uberconference has been getting a lot of press
lately.
Alex: We just started testing it.
Leo: This is web RTC, in other words it's
Google Hangout compatible, conferencing.
Alex: I haven't used Uberconference from the video. I have been using the phone version.
Leo: It does support phone calls in.
Alex: Uberconference,
the Uberconference phone is just awesome. What's
really cool, the funniest song, 'I'm waiting on the conference call,' you know
that we enjoy. There no pins that drive me crazy. I
hate pins so...
Leo: I do too because you get the number and
then you go oh! What's the pin?
Alex: And the problem is you can't just click on
something and get there and I am on probably 5 or 6 conference calls per day.so Uberconference works out. They now have integration
with Hangouts so you can have people in a Hangout but then on of the people can
be in a phone to Uberconference and you can be
integrating...
Leo: So it's not doing video then?
Alex: Not that I know of.
Leo: But it uses Hangouts as a back end?
Alex: You can now integrate it with Hangouts. Uberconference works on its own as well. SO I have the Pro
Plan so I can have a 100 people on a call.
Leo: Which is $10 bucks a
month.
Alex: $10 bucks a month, it's nothing so...
Leo: There's a free plan that is actually does
a lot of...
Alex: Free plan does 10 people. So for most
people that's fine. We do a lot of things that require a lot of people.
Leo: i wanted to ask
you about this. It's gotten a lot of press lately.
Alex: Yeah so we're experimenting with this
mostly because it integrates with Hangouts and we're always looking at anything
that touches Hangouts, we pay a lot of attention to. We have six Pro accounts and we also use Team speak. This is one of the
easiest ones and because it ties into Hangouts it's a great solution.
Leo: So I just wanted to mention, if you didn't
get t play Flappy Bird at all, Kongregate with a 'K' has a Flappy Bird, flash Flappy that you can play.
Alex: Is it exactly the same?
Leo: It's exactly the same.
Rene: There are clones too.
Leo: Yeah there are a lot of clones but this is
exactly the same. It's Flappy Bird online. There a ton of them on Kongregate, there's more than one. So that's weird. I was
just playing it, I don't know what happened.
Forget Kongregate just do flappybird.io. That's
pretty much the same isn't it? Are you getting any sound?
Chad: No.
Leo: That maybe be my
machine. And I guess they pay for it with that little Amazon ad on the right
there. Oh! Enough of that. Ladies and Gentlemen thank
you all for being here. Thank you to Andy Ihnatko,
the Chicago Fun Times, my friend. Great to see you again and you're little
robot dentist friend. We thank Andy for being here. We thank Alex Lindsay for
joining us with his golf club and cannon. I want video of the cannon.
Alex: Okay, we'll work on that.
Leo: Pixelcorps.com. Soon?
Alex: It's this month. By the end of the month
we'll be opening back up.
Leo: And the Exquisite Corps. And Mr.Rene Ritchie
of imore.com and a littel tip of the hat to crackberry.com for the use of the facilities of the hall. Apparently squishybird.com is even better. We do this show every Tuesday at 11am. Oh Squishy Bird, it's full screen. Oh but watch out if you don't...Oh no! Am I trying to get squished?Rene: You're the thing, you're the
thing...