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from relay this is upgrade episode number five hundred and fifty two for February the
twenty fourth twenty twenty five upgrade sponsored this week by vitally Google Gemini and express
VPN I am your host one of your regular hosts Snell, but I don't normally do this part. Mike does all the work.
Mike Hurley is unavailable because he is on officially
on paternity leave.
So I am joined by my first in a cavalcade
of all star co-hosts.
It's Casey Liss.
Hi, Casey.
Hello, Jason.
I am so thankful to be here.
I am so very lucky to be the first one.
It's a bold strategy for you going with me first
because it's only downhill from here, but I respect,
I respect that.
Let's see if it works out for me.
It's a very strong.
The truth is I was kicking off with Steven and then
Mike said, no, no, no, no, no, I'll be there that
week.
And that was last week.
And so you're going to be second track, which I
would argue if you're making a mixtape or a, or a
CD or a
playlist, right.
As high fidelity would tell you that, uh, number
two, the second track.
It's very important.
Like that's the key.
I appreciate it.
But that's what I appreciate.
You want to be a number one.
Um, and that's, that's okay too.
So we're going to start this episode with a
Snell talk question.
Uh, this question comes from me, Jason Snell.
This is from you to you.
To all of us, including you, Casey,
because the question on everybody's mind is,
did Mike and Adina have the baby yet?
I am happy to reveal that they did.
There was a question. Mike was like,
I'm not sure if that's going to be public by the time you do upgrade.
But about an hour ago, he was like, yeah, okay, you could do it.
Yes, please welcome to the world, baby Sophia.
My understanding is that everybody in the Hurley family
is doing okay.
There's an Instagram post, there's a picture of a baby,
people can check it out.
Sophia was born on Saturday, the 22nd of February.
And Mike posted on Instagram, Feb 22,
which made me laugh because that's how not English he is.
He didn't do 22 February, he did February 22.
But congratulations to the Hurleys.
That's so great.
It was unexpected and sudden, according to Mike.
They were not due until later this week.
This was gonna be his padding week.
Ha ha ha ha ha. do until later this week. This was going to be his padding week.
See getting used to it already that nothing goes as planned with children,
both in the good and the bad ways, getting used to it from the start, but no incredible congratulations from me as well to all three of the hurlies.
This is incredibly good news.
I haven't had the chance to ask him all the questions because all I know is like
you said, it was unexpected and I don't know the chance to ask him all the questions because all I know is like you said, it was unexpected
and I don't know, other than the obvious,
I don't know what that means.
So I'm very excited and curious to hear
what the birth story is to the degree
that the two of them are willing to share,
which may or may not ever be public to be clear,
but I'm excited to hear it
and I'm very, very happy for them.
And like you said to the best that I've been told,
everyone's doing great.
Obviously everyone is upside down and inside out,
but everything is fine and proceeding as you would expect.
Yeah, no, it's great.
It's great news.
I'm really excited about it.
I'm so happy for them.
I do, I will say, I always, when I have,
I talked to a friend who's had a baby
and they say that it went really fast,
they're saying it like, oh man, it went really fast.
Like they're, they got the thousand yard stare
and they're like, it went so fast.
I can't even, and I just, I just, it makes me mad
because our children did not go fast.
They went excruciatingly slow.
Same.
Yep.
We, we, you know, I think Lauren was in labor
with Jamie for more than a day.
I think it was second day and they were like,
you know, this isn't progressing.
I mean, it was, it was, uh, and, and with Julian
was very similar, it went on and on and on and on.
And so I do have a friend who like literally, um,
she, she took a taxi to the hospital and, um, they
got her into her, her room and she went into the
bathroom of her room before she'd ever been in the
bed and she just had the baby in the bathroom,
hospital room.
Oh my word.
And that's like, that's fast.
Right.
And I'm like, that seems, that seems horrible
for you, but also kind of good for you.
Cause it just happened and then it was over.
Tracted is not good.
Anyway.
So yes, congratulations to Hurley's the, the
paternity clock already had started, but now
it starts for real real.
Uh, don't know when Michael be back, but he's going for real real. Don't know when Mike will be back,
but he's gonna take a couple months off at least.
We have, like I said, I've lined up.
I have one slot, I think, unless he comes back early,
because the baby was early, but probably not.
I think it's more likely he'll come back later
rather than earlier, where he'll say, I'm not ready yet.
But I've got a long list of people lined up,
starting with Casey, to fill in for Mike.
So I hope everybody enjoys that.
And then of course, welcomes Mike back when he comes back.
I will definitely welcome Mike back.
I already can tell you that.
Because this is his way of reminding me
all the work he does on Upgrade.
Thank you, Mike.
Now I would like to turn to a brand new segment on Upgrade.
That's right.
Does Mike know about it?
No, he doesn't.
It is a new segment that we're inaugurating right now, and it's called Fatherly Advice, where I turn to my co-host, who is a father himself. And we provide Mike with, up here at the top of the show, where Mike might still might actually listen to it with a little story or a tidbit about being a parent advice, whatever you want.
And Casey, it's your turn. Do you have some fatherly advice or something similar to talk
about where Mike can hear us, but not respond? Even better. That's the best kind. Yeah. So
quintinently, I'm going to plug our show, Mike and my show. We are doing an episode of analog
that Mike had mostly
coordinated on his side.
Uh, that'll be out in the month of March where he's collecting fatherly advice from all of
his co-hosts, I presume, including you, Jason.
Um, and so there's going to be a lot in there, but I'm going to, I don't recall exactly what
I had told him when we spoke about this and collect, he collected my two cents, uh, a
week or two back.
But what I'm going to go with is that it's important,
so many things are important when being a parent, but it's important among many other things to be
incredibly flexible and understand when you need to pick your battles. That's true of pretty much
any relationship in life, but especially with parenting and you definitely know, need to know
which battles to pick and you'll learn over time. And as a silly anecdote for this,
which is kind of actually tangentially related,
I remember before I was a dad
that I would look at new parents,
and this is when I still went to an office and whatnot,
I would look at new parents that came in
with like baby stuff all over their shirts.
I don't wanna be any more graphic than that,
but typically on the shoulder area,
there's baby stuff all over their shirts. They just come in. Who knows where it came that, but you know, typically on the shoulder area, there's baby stuff all over their shirts.
They just came in from Casey.
Honestly, nobody knows.
That's the thing.
Uh, they would come in with this like stuff all over their shirt and I'd be like,
what are you doing?
You couldn't spend the time to just change before he got to work.
And I think once I went back after Aaron had Declan and Aaron had very long labor
for both Declan and Michaela, uh, I think it was within a week or so of going back to work that I looked down
and I saw a stain on one of my shoulders and I realized.
You're that guy.
Yep.
I get it now.
I get it.
The, the, the things that I thought mattered, they don't matter.
No.
And new things matter now.
And that's okay.
And so you gotta be flexible and you gotta know when to choose your battles
and somewhat within yourself.
Do I, do I really need to change the shirt or not? But often,
and usually with your children. And I don't mean that that sounds negative to
say, pick your battles. I don't mean it that way at all,
but you have to figure out when to be flexible and when to not. And you know,
I don't have any specific advice with regard to that. You know,
obviously each situation is different. Each parenting style is different. Um,
but it's important to realize that, oh, you know what?
Even though this is not what I prefer, it'll be fine.
It'll be fine.
And I don't think that being a helicopter parent
and steering the child every second of every day
and telling them exactly what to do when
is not personally my approach to parenting.
And so that implies that you're gonna have to let them
do something that's maybe a little bit more dangerous
than you want because that's part of learning
is screwing up and getting hurt
and allowing them to pick themselves up
and helping them pick themselves up.
So be flexible and pick your battles
is I think what I'm gonna go with for today.
I mean, you strike me as somebody
knowing you a little bit about who likes it
the way he likes it.
Right.
Like you have your opinion, like this is the way to do it, this is the way I like it. Right. Like you like it a certain, you have your opinion.
You're like, this is the way to do it.
This is the way I like it.
And boy does having kids disabuse you of that
really rapidly.
Very quickly.
Because you just on the priority list, you
realize that that you thought that was priority
number one and it's actually priority number 100
and that your kids have the top 99 priorities.
So you just have to roll with the punches and,
and that's just the truth of it.
I love what you said about letting them
fail. Um, I, and learn, right. Or, or make a mistake and learn.
And there was a point where one of our kids had gotten way behind.
I don't even remember which one now, honestly, it's been so long.
I got behind on their homework and the teacher was like, they need to,
they've not turned in all this homework and it's going to be not,
it's not going to count and they need to do it and all these things. And Lauren got really
kind of upset about it and said, they're going to get a bad grade and all this stuff. And I said,
okay, first off it's sixth grade or fifth grade. The grade they get has no impact on their life
at all, will not affect their life trajectory in any way. And I said, we can, we, we can give them feedback, but maybe having a whole
bunch of the work that they didn't do get marked as a zero and they get a bad
grade in the midterm report card in fifth grade when it doesn't matter is a
good learning experience for them.
And it was one of those things that like, Oh yeah.
And I don't think Lauren necessarily agreed with me because I think she's like, no, it's a bad grade. You shouldn't get them. And it was one of those things that like, oh yeah. And I don't think Lauren necessarily agreed with me
because I think she's like, no, it's a bad grade.
You shouldn't get them.
And it's like, I know you shouldn't get them.
I know, but maybe getting them is that little shock
that that kid needs to go, oh, oh no, I can't let that slide.
And better to do it now when the grades don't matter
than for them to do it in high school
where it's gonna kill their A-list of colleges
because they messed up when somebody's looking.
No, I couldn't agree with you more,
just a very quick anecdote about my own life.
I was a relatively decent student,
and I like to think of myself as reasonably bright.
I was never a valedictorian or anything like that,
but I was a pretty good student.
And this was all through elementary school,
middle school, high school. I I was a pretty good student. And this was all through elementary school, middle school,
high school. I went to a very small high school.
And I don't recall where I graduated within our like
a hundred person graduating class, but ultimately
I didn't really have to try that hard growing up.
And that sounds like a flex, but it actually ended up being
very much to my detriment because then I got to college
and suddenly not only did I need to try, I
needed to try real freaking hard.
And so it ended up that I really had wished for failures in the past as silly as that
may sound because that would have better equipped me.
This is exactly what you were saying.
That would have better equipped me for when I really needed it.
You know, here at 18 years old, just arriving at Virginia Tech and realizing, oh no don't know how to study I thought I did but I don't yeah this is
gonna be a problem yeah so and you're now you're surrounded with a bunch of
people who were also the same student that you were and you used to be
surrounded with people where you like you could get by because everybody else
oh those guys all have to work but I don't and now guess what those guys
aren't in your college with you there They're it's, it's all people with better grades than you who are in your college.
Yeah.
So true.
Uh, well that is fatherly advice.
Thank you, Casey.
And, uh, and, uh, yeah, I'm going to try to do that with many of my, uh, there's
a, I might be inviting lots of fathers under the podcast.
I'm just saying it may happen that way.
And so, yeah, it,
it's a fun time for us to think about Mike and everything Mike thinks he's going to go through
and then what he's actually going to go through. But let's move on to a more familiar, uh, chapter
marker, right? More familiar with show art, something, a segment I have art for, it's the Rumor Roundup. Yee-haw. Yee-haw, thank you.
Couple items in Rumor Roundup.
By the way, it is, actually there's only one item,
Mark Gurman's newsletter,
which very kindly generates itself on Sunday
for us to pick apart on Monday.
Didn't really have any rumors into this week,
but there is a, but yet, Casey List came through
and texted me this morning
when I was having my tea in the morning,
saying,
here's a story, we'll link to the article on the verge
reporting about these leaks from a leaker named Majin Boo
who says this is what the iPhone 17 is gonna look like.
And I would say if you're following along with upgrade
and you're following along with iPhone 17 rumors,
you will not be surprised at this.
It is what we've been talking about,
but this is just saying again, reinforcing the idea
that what Apple's doing with the industrial design
of three of their phones this fall is they're taking the,
I guess what is John Siracusa call it on ATP,
the camera mesa,
and extending it all the way across.
So it's like the mesa is now just a full bar
at the top of the iPhone, which is a very different look.
Even if the camera bump is so large now
that you might as well just embrace
that it's going all the way across.
And of course mesa is Spanish for table.
And I would say, if I had to describe this to people
who haven't seen it, it used to be a table for four up there
but now it's gonna be a table for six.
That's so true.
That's what's going on here.
I mean, we tend to get used to everything
but I look at this and I'm like, hmm.
I mean, I know Google Pixel does this.
I don't know how I feel about the industrial design
of the bar going all the way across,
but honestly, I was on a Zoom call with my family last night
with Lauren's mom and dad and siblings.
And we do those in the living room on Apple TV.
And I use continuity camera.
And I was looking at the camera bump on my iPhone 16
and thinking, yeah, they're all ugly. Like it's not, it's not like this is going to make it uglier.
In fact, this might make it a little more consistent in that it's, it's pretending,
right? It's pretending that it's not going all the way across the phone, but at this point,
it's going almost all the way across. Why not embrace it? Yeah. I think you're right. That
familiarity is what's making me,
familiarity with the current Mesa, the table for four, the four top.
Yeah.
The familiarity with the four top, if you will,
is what makes this very distasteful to me at first glance.
And visually, it's not doing a lot for me,
and there's a lot of empty space in the span between the triangle O cameras
and the dual, what is it, lens and a lidar
on the other side of the phone.
Yeah, there's just a lot of emptiness there.
It's the flash, I think it's the flash and the lidar
on the far side.
Sorry, yes, he says, that's what I meant to say,
my apologies.
So the cluster is still clustered, which is interesting.
Right, exactly, and I presume that's because they need
the two cameras next to each other for spatial video.
Yeah, I think that's it.
But I'm not entirely sure.
I mean, maybe they could have made like a cyclops looking
thing by putting the other camera dead center.
Maybe that would have been worse.
But that being said, even though visually this doesn't do
a lot for me, the thought of having a more consistent back,
especially with which to set my phone down,
that sounds very appealing.
And the other important thing about these renders is that for the pro max and the
pro, if I understand this right, it looks like that the metal there's metal for
the camera Mesa and the surround around the edge of the phone.
I'm having a hard time painting a word picture here, but the surround around
the edge of the phone is metal.
And then there's a large glass section that is
within the metal that permits presumably not only cellular radio, wifi radio, but also
a chi charging and MagSafe charging. And so the key here is that if I'm understanding
this right, that, and if you look at the photo, if you're looking at this show art or what
have you, if you look at the photo, it's like this maroony red section.
And if that is glass, then that means there's a layer,
if you will, of metal around it,
which is incredibly important, I presume,
for more robust drop survivability.
If you drop your phone,
I've shattered a couple of back glasses on iPhones,
and it's infuriating every time because you feel like,
why is this all glass?
Why is this all glass?
Couldn't we put something around this?
And that's what these renders seem to indicate
is that they're putting a little sliver of metal
around the whole thing in order to presumably help
with the strength and robustness, for lack of a better word.
I don't know, I don't know.
It's, right, they only know, I think the truth
is that a lot of this is coming from Case Leak, where they
know all they can do is intuit what
it looks like based on the dimensions and the shapes
that they've been given.
And so there's a real question about what
is in that cutout area?
Is that raised?
Is it just a different material?
And then what happens when you drop it?
And you would think that that big table would
capture many of the drops and the edges at that
point, because it's raising it up.
And honestly, what does it like to use it on a
table?
Does that stabilize it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
Cause that would be, I was, I was tapping on my
iPhone, uh, on the, on the tabletop the other day
and being like, yep, that's right.
Don't tap in the bottom right corner.
Everything just wiggles. Uh, and maybe this would be better for that right, don't tap in the bottom right corner, everything just wiggles.
Maybe this would be better for that, I don't know.
But I don't love the look, but I guess what I'm saying
is I don't love the look, but I don't really love the look.
When I look at it and think about it,
the existing camera thing
is not particularly attractive either,
it's just necessary.
And what they're doing is they're making it
so that the phone is thinner,
except for the part that's not.
And this is just kind of embracing that and that reality of it.
And hopefully those cameras on it are not themselves sticking out,
but that's what happens currently.
So maybe so.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was thinking about that too,
that it would bum me out if the Mesa continues to have even more depth.
I mean, that's to your point on it, the peaks in the Mesa.
Yeah.
And to your point, that is the way it is now.
And it's like, it's not that big a deal, but I don't know, having it be completely flush
would be such an improvement.
I think both aesthetically and, you know, in terms of sitting it down and so on and
so forth.
So I would love it if these were sitting flush.
It doesn't give me vibes that they are flush.
Said differently, I think you're correct
that they do protrude a little bit more.
Which is too bad, but you know, I'll take what I can get.
And even though again, aesthetically,
this is doing very little for me.
I think in terms of behavior in real world, you know,
toughness, I suspect that this will be a upgrade.
Oh, nice. I like what you did there. All right.
We're going to move on to yet another segment.
That's all before the first ad break, no less.
Yet another segment that I have art for.
This is the B-Tails.
Mm hmm.
Whoo. Okay.
Sorry, I forgot which role I'm playing.
I know. I'm not used to this.
I know it's weird.
Just a real quick one, Vision OS 2.4, developer beta one was released by Apple.
This is the thing that basically Mark Gurman reported
about a week ago because somebody who got the Apple briefing
obviously talked to him.
I mean, just as somebody who got the Apple briefing,
I can just tell you now,
somebody who got that briefing talked to him. I don like, I mean, just as somebody who got the Apple briefing, I can just tell you now,
somebody who got that briefing, talk to him. I don't know why, but
100%
presumably whoever got it had their own
channel that they could have done a story for
under embargo and instead just decided to just
what the heck, just give it to Mark Gurman and
see what he does with it. Anyway, so it's
everything that was already reported, but
anyway, Apple intelligence is in there now. And
then there's a bunch of stuff that's not in there now,
but will be there at some point that they told us about,
which kind of frustrates me because I installed the beta
on my iPhone and on my Vision Pro in order to do this.
So the Apple intelligence stuff is what you'd expect, right?
It's writing tools and image playground
and all that stuff is there now.
And, you know, one of the things when they mentioned
Apple intelligence and they introduced it back last June is they didn't mention the Vision Pro.
And we were told, I don't know if you heard this, Casey, but I heard from sort of behind the scenes, somebody was like, Oh, it'll come to the Vision Pro.
Don't worry about that. But it wasn't on the record. Wasn't official. And there was no time frame. Well, here it is. Right. So here it is. They say it's going to ship in April. It's in beta now. But there are other things that I think are way more interesting than
than Apple intelligence. So first off spatial gallery app. Yes, I am very interested in this.
So I also got a briefing. I forget what day it was. Perfect time. But we got a briefing. The same,
I think it was the same day. And they they spoke about a spatial gallery app, which they basically
said, this is my interpretation anyway,
that there's going to be spatial content
and I don't believe it's immersive.
Is that correct to the best of your knowledge?
It's simply spatial content.
It's not immersive, right?
This is spatial means not immersive, basically.
So 3D stuff, pictures.
Right.
And also panoramas, which aren't, panoramas are in here and they're not 3 also panoramas, which aren't,
panoramas are in here and they're not 3D panoramas,
I don't think, I think they're just panoramas
that wrap around you, but it's like,
this is the other stuff that's not immersive video,
basically.
Right, so again, and I have a lot of trouble
describing this to people that don't have a lot of time
with the Vision Pro, but if you think about it,
there's, you know, you're looking at a rectangle
in space, but that rectangle is flat,, there's, you know, you're looking at a rectangle in space,
but that rectangle is flat,
and that's like watching a regular video.
Then you're looking at a rectangle or a square in space,
and there's depth within that rectangle or square,
and that's spatial, that's what we're talking about.
And then immersive is when you can actually tilt your head
and look around and see different,
you know, a different perspective as you're looking around.
It's a full 180 degree filling your vision
and 3D kind of thing.
And that's like the ultimate,
but there's a lot of 3D content that you can do,
like with your own pictures,
as well as the panorama stuff, which is not 3D,
but it's wrapping around you
to give you that kind of full thing.
These are the other, yeah,
the other things that Vision Pro does
that are interesting.
And so they built this app and it's interesting
because it's interesting
because it's like, in my story, I think I said,
it's like the TV app, sort of, in the sense that it's sort
of like, here's some stuff we want to show you.
It's like a featured area in the TV app.
It's a curated by Apple, Apple does the updating.
It's not all Apple content, but it's all curated by Apple.
And in the demo, they showed that there's some third party
3D content that they're highlighting, which is nice.
But also there's Apple stuff.
And my question is, what is it exactly?
Like they have a shot of Jason Segel that's in 3D
with the little clapboard in front of him from shrinking.
So like, okay, but what I don't know is,
and they say that they've got Severance content too,
although I don't think I saw that,
but what I don't know is, is this what that rumor was about Monarch,
where they said Apple had a 3D camera on set
for behind the scenes stuff, but we never saw it?
And because what I'm afraid is that this is like
a picture of Jason Segal behind the scenes,
and that's all it is.
That like, here's our extra content in the spatial gallery.
It's a photo that's in 3D that That like, here's our extra content in the Spatial Gallery,
it's a photo that's in 3D that somebody took
with an iPhone or whatever on the set.
It's like, that's sort of interesting,
but like, what I'm hoping is that this will actually
contain some 3D video content as well,
that maybe, because we've been frustrated,
all of us who are kind of fans of this immersive stuff,
that there hasn't been any immersive stuff
that's been like behind the scenes
on an Apple show or something.
Is it maybe there's some 3D video of it instead,
and that's where they're doing their VAM,
their value added media stuff for behind the scenes?
I don't know.
My fear is that it's like, hey,
it's like looking through a Viewmaster or something. That's a throwback. Where it's like, hey, it's like looking through a Viewmaster or something.
That's a throwback.
Where it's like, hey, here's Jason Siegel in 3D.
Yep.
And then you're like, OK.
And then you swipe to the next one.
So we'll see what's in the spatial gallery.
But it could be interesting, because that is the idea,
is they want to also highlight third party apps that
have interesting content.
So you could imagine the IMAs app might show up in here.
And I have had some other people send me links
to other 3D content apps on Vision Pro.
And this is a way for Apple to float that stuff up.
So if you're a Vision Pro user, you can see that stuff.
And then there are links off to those apps and stuff.
So I'm afraid the spatial gallery
is not going to really kind of like be earth shattering, but, um, but it is the answer
to the question, why is Apple not trying to push more of this stuff to, and show off what
the vision pro can do? I think this is them trying.
Yeah, agreed. And what I like about the spatial gallery is not only is it giving us more unique
content, you know, it's not immersive as we discussed,
but at least it's stuff that's if depending on how you classify it,
you could argue is unique to the vision pro or certainly within the Apple
ecosystem anyway is unique to the vision pro.
And what I love is that the implication here,
if not the direct statement from Apple is that it will be updated regularly.
And I mean, to their credit, they're doing more immersive.
It seems like they're picking up a little steam
on the immersive stuff, but still not as much as I would like,
and I think I speak for you in saying that.
Indeed.
And so here, at least, it's not immersive,
but at least we're getting more unique stuff for the Vision Pro.
And the other thing that I really like about this,
and they did not say this, to be clear.
This is me now wishcasting it there,
is if you have a mechanism by which there is a place that companies or people
that Apple have a relationship with can send their content and then it can be shown to
users, I could imagine them opening this up to anyone and saying, hey, if you just happen
to be a very skilled amateur photographer and you take,
you know, a really great panorama of something, submit it to Apple.
And maybe it'll get featured again.
This was not stated.
This is just me guessing.
I would go further and say, I wouldn't be surprised if there is a shot
spatially on iPhone contest or something like that.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that the winners get shown in the spatial gallery. Yep. Yep. That might be a way that they might structure like that. Oh yeah. Right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And that the winners get shown in the spatial gallery.
Yep, yep.
That might be a way that they might structure all that.
There is also, like there is for the Apple Watch,
there is now going to be a Vision Pro app on iOS,
on iPhones and iPads.
Vision Pro app, you know, Vision Pro stands alone
unlike the watch, which sort of doesn't stand alone
and you need it for maintenance.
But what they're trying to do here,
it actually reminded me a lot of the app
that Meta makes for the Quest,
where you sort of don't need it.
Maybe you need it a little occasionally,
but what it does let you do is browse what's going on,
browse what's in the app store.
And my understanding is you can send,
you basically can get apps and they will be queued
up and downloaded by your Vision Pro when you're not, I think when you're not using
it as long as it's awake.
And that is, and media as well, that you'd be able to like take media and say, put that
on my Vision Pro and it will be there when you put it on later, which is again, I've
done that on the Quest a lot where I've bought, I've heard, I've heard about apps and then I've, I've sent them to the meta quest from the meta quest app.
So, um, it's just another like laying, laying more foundational work. And I think this shows
how, what a early stage product is, is right. And to be, to be kind about it, like this is,
this is something that they could have shipped day one, but there
was no way they, it was too early for them to do it, but they are now putting
in the work to get something like a vision pro app on iOS.
Yeah.
And I think the key difference, if I understood correctly from the briefing,
the key difference here though, is at least the way it used to be when the
Apple watch was new was that the Apple watch app only showed up, if I recall
correctly, once you, you made it an Apple Watch.
I think I have that right, I might be lying to you.
Where either way, even if I'm wrong,
the Vision Pro app, my understanding is,
you absolutely can get that as just a regular iPhone user.
We don't know because it's not in developer beta one of iOS,
but the idea is if you have a Vision Pro on your account, the app shows up. If you don't have a Vision Pro on your account,
the app shows up.
If you don't have a Vision Pro on your account,
you can still go to the app store and download it.
And there's a lot of marketing stuff in that app too.
So there's a lot of, isn't this cool?
You can dream on your future Vision Pro
from the Vision Pro app if you want to.
And then, so I wrote a piece a few weeks ago
about the first anniversary of Vision Pro.
And I wanted to make the point that
even though we complain about especially like
how slow they've been to roll out immersive video stuff,
and it's really been a surprise.
What's also been a surprise and a good surprise is
Apple has not stopped updating and improving the Vision Pro over this first year.
So many of those features, Spatial Personas
is a great example of that, Mac Virtual Display
getting improved.
These are major things that make the Vision Pro
much, much better at what it does,
and they have been rolling those out
over the course of the last year.
Well, here's one that was a complaint that we had from day one about Vision
Pro, which is that guest mode was bad.
Right.
Yep.
And they've already improved guest mode a little bit because it'll remember your
most recent guest settings, which is nice.
But this new 2.4 is going to have an improved guest mode where you can,
on your iPhone, you can approve what your guest is doing,
add apps for your guests to use,
and it's got a workflow where you can tap through
and get your AirPlay automatically
so you can see what they're seeing in the Vision Pro.
So this is very clearly from feedback
for people being frustrated who want to show this to other people and they
can't absolutely.
And to back up just a half step, the way it works today is on 2.3
or whatever the current version shipping version is.
What I would have to do is I would have to put the vision
pro on, then I would have to go into control center and say, I
would like to do guest mode.
And then it'll ask me, okay, well, what, what apps do you
want to permit, or do you want to permit all of them?
Do you want to turn on airPlay, et cetera, et cetera?
Then I say, okay, go.
And then I take the Vision Pro off
and then the next person has five minutes to put it on
and start the eye tracking calibration process,
which I get, I mean,
there's nothing inherently wrong with that,
but what Jason just said,
and it's important to see the difference,
is that in this new world, let's say Erin wanted to try the Vision Pro on or do something in the Vision Pro,
she just puts it on her head. And then my phone will say, oh, hold on, somebody that's not you,
just put the Vision Pro on. Are we cool? And it's not even in the app. It's actually like
one of these things like continuity cam or something like that, where it like slides up and says,
hey, Vision Pro is in guest mode. What do you want to do? And then you go through and give it, uh, you know, your authority, which is so
much better than having to put the thing on, put the helmet on yourself and then
hand the helmet to a friend, right?
Like much better, so much better.
Now we haven't tried this because again, although I installed betas on my phone
days before going on vacation, uh, It's none of it is there.
I actually don't know if the guest mode is there.
I haven't tried that one yet, but the, uh, the other stuff isn't there yet, but,
but it will get there eventually.
Um, and, and then also having it be, I mean, you can get a view into what they're
watching, but like to have it be a kind of grease the skids for getting, uh,
airplay up and running.
So that you can just see what they're seeing on your iPhone is great as well. So I think or iPad, I think most of this stuff is iPhone or iPad. Yeah, I mean, I've, I've done a guest mode like,
you know, months ago, I did guest mode where I had the vision pro mirroring to a TV in the living
room and that, that, that worked. And it's nice to have like a more group experience. This was like in February of last year when everyone was trying it. And that worked and it's nice to have
like a more group experience.
This was like in February of last year
when everyone was trying it for the first time
and everyone else wants to see what the person
in the Vision Pro is doing, et cetera, et cetera.
So, and that is great.
The one crutch or crux or issue with this
which the chat room is talking about
is that DRM stuff is hidden
and I have every reason to believe it will remain hidden.
Because it's AirPlay.
It strips anything that's protected content
gets pulled out of AirPlay, that's just, and screenshots.
Which is annoying to begin with, but I get,
but the real crummy thing is,
if you're trying to like talk a person through a demo,
like, hey, I want you to go do the dinosaur experience,
and then I want you to go watch
a little something in Disney Plus,
and then I want you to go do something else.
The problem is not only is that blacked out when you're looking at the AirPlay version, it's actually blacked out, if I recall correctly, in the Vision Pro itself, which is inferior.
I'm pretty sure that's true.
That's not great.
And so, and so this would be one thing if I just can't follow along watching somebody watch Avengers in 3D.
Fine.
No worries.
But everything is black.
And with an immersive experience,
I think literally you're just staring into the void
because it's just all black.
Yeah, I sent you a screenshot
because I was actually using Call Sheet
in Vision Pro last week.
And the moment that I took the screenshot,
the movie I was watching with Call Sheet to the side
turned black for a second.
It took the screenshot and then it turned back into the movie and I thought oh no
And I sent you the screenshot and as I look at me watching a black rectangle with call sheet there
Which I mean again I get that 100% particularly from the airplay perspective
But I wish there could be some middle of the road where what's reflected in airplay is black, you know that that's fair
But whatever seen within the goggles within the vision Pro themPlay is black, you know, that's fair, but whatever's seen within the goggles,
within the Vision Pro itself, that was still, you know,
this regular full fidelity, you know,
exactly what you would always see.
Yeah, well, good to see more Vision Pro updates
on the way, right?
That by the time we get to WWDC, Vision Pro will already
be up there with the iPhone, the iPad, and the Mac
in terms of supporting
Apple intelligence. And that's good because that was not a given.
No, definitely not.
It's nice to see them. They are continuing to move ahead and address some of the big issues.
I have a very quick question for you related to this. Do you happen to know off the top of
your head how much RAM is in the Vision Pro? Does it have eight gigs or whatever the magical minimum
is for Apple intelligence? It obviously't know, it obviously has enough
to do Apple Intelligence, because it doesn't.
But I don't know if they disclosed that or not.
Off the top of my head, I don't know.
But it's a, it's a,
Oh, it looks like, you know.
According to Wikipedia, doing 10 seconds of Googling,
it's 16 gigs.
So that is definitely more than enough.
Powerful, powerful system, powerful system.
There you go.
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All right, Jason, would you like to lawyer up for a moment?
Let's lawyer up, clunk, clunk.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Apple is turning off advanced data protection in the UK.
I would just say, as foretold, in a previous episode
of Upgrade,
we're not saying it's good, but we're saying we saw it coming.
This is, of course, due to changes in UK laws
that demand access to end-to-end encrypted data.
And so they said, Apple, you've got to give us a way
to access it.
And what Apple did was not do what the UK government seemed
to be asking, which is create a system with
a back door. Instead, they said, we're going to turn off ADP, Advanced Data Protection.
We're going to turn it off in the UK. And when they made that announcement, before they
made that announcement, they had actually changed the software configuration on Apple
devices so you couldn't turn it on if you were in the UK. And so that's the case now.
You can't turn it on if you're in the UK. And so that's the case now. You can't turn it on if you're in the UK.
If you do have it on, Apple says they
will have to disable it in the near future.
Apple actually can't remote disable it
because that would completely invalidate the entire concept
of advanced data protection.
But I've seen lots of speculation about this.
It seems like the most logical thing will be that at some point
access to cloud services will probably get cut
off if you keep it on, right? In order for Apple to remain within the letter of the law, they'll be like your iCloud
will not update anymore. They haven't said any of this, but that's, I think, reasonable speculation that that will be
the stick.
I thought they did. I thought they did say that. I don't know if I'll be able to cite my source quickly while we're recording, but I could swear that they did say at some point.
It will. You will lose iCloud access. That's interesting. Don't turn it off. I mean, what I've seen is that you will have to disable it and we will provide future guidance, but it's logical that that's what will happen is that the stuff that is covered by ADP will stop working until you turn it off, if you're in the UK. Right, again, check my math on that.
I can't cite a source off the top of my head,
but I'm pretty sure.
Common sense is the source,
regardless of whether Apple said it or not.
I think it's clear.
Now, I wanna be clear about what ADP does,
because Apple has a bunch of different products
that do sort of similar things here.
There's ADP, there's lockdown mode, which is different.
ADP, the whole point of it is,
there was a selection of Apple services
that Apple held the key to,
which meant that Apple could,
well, first off, Apple could respond to your help from you
where you're like, oh no, I lost my password
and now I'm locked out of all my stuff.
And Apple's like, ah, that's okay.
We have a key for that.
So we can go through a password reset system,
an ID reset flow,
and we can get you back into your account. But also it allows Apple to respond to legal requests
from law enforcement to unlock the contents that you've got on their servers and let law
enforcement look at them. So what ADP did was take a bunch of those services and create a new version where
Apple doesn't hold the key, which means that if you lose your access, if you lose your login,
or one of the other, you know, a device that's got access to a key that will unlock it,
which does include, it's not just your devices
and it's not just like your Apple ID,
it can be a device password.
And actually, if you have a backup contact,
I forget, is it the legacy contact?
You can basically give a friend and say,
you can unlock in an emergency, you can unlock my Apple ID.
They can do that, but Apple doesn't have a key.
And those services are freeform,
wallet passes, voice memos, Siri shortcuts, Safari bookmarks, reminders that aren't on
a Cal dev server, reminders to iCloud basically, notes, photos, iCloud Drive, and most importantly,
iCloud backup because iCloud backup includes device backup and messages backup. So this is the
famous San Bernardino example for example, for instance, and there are others like this where
like, oh, it's all encrypted, all their messages are encrypted, their devices are encrypted. But
if you've got Apple's key to iCloud backup, you've got their device backups and their messages backup,
and Apple can decrypt the backups
even if the stuff that's on the cloud server
is end-to-end encrypted.
So it's this specific set that is covered by ADP,
and Apple introduced this while it was feeling pressure,
right, from governments about like snooping.
I feel like they built this feature to basically say, look, now we, now we don't even have the key, you just go away and don't come to us.
And what the UK government has done and said, actually legally now you
can't not have the key and therefore they're going to turn ADP off.
Yeah.
I mean, it makes sense and it's a bummer that this is happening. Like I, I, I find it very frustrating that the UK has decided that not only do
they get the data of their citizens, which in and of itself is kind of gross,
but given Mike's not here to defend himself, given that the UK loves
themselves, the security camera and loves to watch on their citizens.
Um, I'm not entirely surprised that they wanted this, but the thing that really
grinds my gears about it is that the way the law is written, well, two things.
First of all, the way the law is written is that they can get access to any user
worldwide, which no, I don't love that.
I don't love that at all.
And, um, and secondly, Apple isn't allowed to say anything about it,
which is also really gross.
Like I kind of understand where they're coming from
on that one, but I find that very, very gross.
And so, yeah, a country that loves to surveil
their citizens wants to be able to surveil their citizens
news at 11, like in and of itself,
this is not that surprising,
but the fact that they try to reach
into other countries' citizens,
I find really a dramatic and gross
overstepping of what is really agreeable and acceptable. And that's one part of
this story that we'll have to play out, right? Because what Apple didn't do is
turn off ADP for everyone in the world. And so there's a scenario
here where the UK government basically comes to Apple and says, you need to, I
mean first of all they could come to Apple and say, you need to, I mean, first of all, they could come to Apple and say, this isn't what we asked for. Which would even though it effectively is, it isn't exactly what
they asked for. But they could also say, no, I want to get that guy in Singapore. You know,
I want to get that person in the in Saudi Arabia. I want their data. And they're not in my country.
And they haven't been in my country, but it doesn't matter. We have reasons to get their data. And they're not in my country and they haven't been in my country,
but it doesn't matter.
We have reasons to get their data, give us their data.
And if they had ADP on and they go to Apple,
what happens then?
Because Apple would be in violation of this law.
And I think that, you know,
I don't know enough about international treaties
and you know, but it is, and the question is,
would they push it that far or is this enough?
Cause they're basically, Apple is basically just reverting
off of a feature.
This is not new.
I, there are a lot of, I would say mostly from people
who make a living making people upset and frightened.
That's just my take on it.
I think there are a lot of people out there who really make a living frightening people upset and frightened. That's just my take on it. I think there are a lot of people out there
who really make a living frightening people.
That's what they do.
Who say, oh, Apple has completely caved into the UK
and this is terrible.
But the truth is, this is actually Apple reverting
to the previous system where this stuff is, you know, the key is held.
And that's not great, but it's not Apple building a whole new system to hand all your data to
the UK.
It's literally the, uh, if the metaphor is like the back, this is not the back door,
it's the front door, which is what I think Tim Sweeney said.
It's like the house never had a door.
And a couple of years ago when people were sniffing around the front door, Apple built a door.
And then one of those people,
this metaphor is getting out of hand,
said, no, actually, if this house is in the UK,
you need to leave that door open.
But the door was, there was never a door before.
That's the point here.
So it's not great.
I wanna read part of Apple's statement that they released,
because I think this is an interesting choice that they made.
They said, we are gravely disappointed
that the protections provided by ADP
will not be available to our customers in the UK,
given the continuing rise of data breaches
and other threats to customer privacy.
As we have said many times before,
we have never built a back door or master key
to any of our products or services, and we never will.
Now, they don't mention the UK law in particular,
because legally they're not allowed to.
That's not great.
Don't love that.
But I do, that last sentence is really interesting, right?
Cause that's Apple putting a stake in the ground saying,
no master keys.
We're not gonna make a master key for you.
And, you know, first off, great.
And secondly, if they stop saying that, pay attention, right?
Like if they stop saying, oh no, no master keys, that means something very bad has happened.
Yep.
It's a heck of a canary for sure.
And what's also interesting about this is the implication there, or at least the way
I read it is that, okay, your move.
And if the UK compels them to build a back door or master key or what have you,
this is Apple pretty much saying, we're going to leave the UK or at least that's
how I read it, which I can, I find it hard to imagine that they would actually get
to that point, but this is one of the only things that I think Apple might actually
grow a backbone and put their heels in the sand and say, nope, I'm sorry, we're not gonna do it.
I think this is an interesting game
that the UK government is playing,
because obviously, and this is the weird thing
about talking about Apple these days, right?
One of the weird things about it,
I know Mike and I have talked about it a lot,
I know you've talked about it on ATP,
like Apple's bigger than lots of countries at this point.
And so the balance of power is interesting. Like the UK government obviously has a culture,
as you mentioned, it's a culture of surveillance
and we're protecting you by watching everywhere
and all of that in some ways that some of the laws
in the US, as long as they're being enforced anyway,
are opposed
to. Um, but this is one of those cases where I do wonder about the politics of it. Cause it is politics, right? The, if
the UK government, if somebody in the UK law enforcement says, you know, we're going to push Apple on this and we're
going to demand something and we're going to hold them in violation of this and all of that. At some point, if you're a politician who is in charge of those people, if
you're Keir Starmer, or one of the people in his cabinet in the UK government, and you consider the risk that what Apple's
going to do is say, put out a press release that doesn't explain why, but says Apple to cease operation in the United Kingdom,
Apple to lay off all of the thousands of people.
This is similar to the inverse of a story
we're gonna talk about a little bit later.
Apple to remove billions of pounds of investment
from the UK, relocate jobs out of the UK,
and say, we can't tell you why,
but we deeply regret and we'll miss the UK,
but we can't be there anymore. Like, deeply regret and we'll miss the UK, but we can't be there anymore.
Like that's what Apple has over the UK government.
And I gotta say, like, we can't pretend
that that wouldn't matter, right?
Like if you're Keir Starmer, do you want that
because there's somebody down in your law enforcement
or intelligence group somewhere
who has gravely overreached with their demands of Apple.
And personally, I don't think he can make that choice.
I don't think a politician is going to tell the people
in this country that one of the major tech companies
in the world is gonna pull all of its sales
and all of its jobs out of your country
because somebody says, well, it'd be easier for us
if we could tell them to unlock this guy's phone
in Saudi Arabia, right?
I don't actually believe that that's a winning.
And that's bizarre, right?
It's bizarre that Apple could like overpower
people inside the UK government,
but I think that's where we are, honestly.
I do think that that would be a really bad moment
for the UK government if they pushed them that far.
I couldn't agree more.
And we're not really in a position to throw stones
given that we barely have a government
at this particular point in time.
I like to talk about other governments,
Casey, right now.
I like to talk about them.
Anyone but us, good grief. But no, I think this feels to me like the UK vastly overplaying their
hand, because I really do believe that for all of Apple's many faults these days,
particularly in the last several months, I really think, like I said a minute ago
that they will stick to their guns on this.
I really do believe it.
And I think it would be ruinous for both ruinous, maybe a little bit
dramatic for an entire government, but go with what I'm the vibe of what
I'm trying to say here, that it would be ruinous for the UK to actually
compel them to do this.
And I think that Apple would at the very least, you know, start pulling out
features or perhaps entire products or stop selling products in the UK.
And I think Apple is of the belief that if they really do play this game of
chicken and if the, if the UK really doesn't flinch first and so Apple has to
say, okay, we're pulling out, you know, that beautiful thing at Battersea, which
I haven't seen, but I've understood to be just phenomenally pretty that office
at Battersea and all of those jobs, as you mentioned, I really do think Apple would start to say, okay, we're going to wind all this down unless you guys,
you know, find you folks find a solution that's, that's more agreeable.
And I don't see the UK winning that game of chicken.
I really don't.
And as a potentially former world leader, as a resident of a potentially former world
leader at this point, I think that the UK is playing this hand
as though they still own half the planet and they don't.
And so I don't think this is going to end well for the UK
if they decide to stick their heels in.
A very reasonable approach to this is the UK says,
okay, well, you've done the ADP thing, we'll call it even.
And we'll go with that.
That's the real politic here, right?
Is declare victory. Exactly.
This is the truth.
As I get older, I realized that a lot of this in politics
is about the appearance of success more than it is success.
So with this, if they want to,
the UK government can declare victory.
They made one of the tech giants change their policy
because of them and move on without pushing it
because they know that if they push it much further,
it could actually go sour on them.
Now, not to say they won't try it, they could try it,
but I feel like there's a lot of this, and this is
actually, I think true for a lot of stuff happening
in the U.S. right now that we'll get to and stuff
we will not get to.
But there's a lot of that aspect, which is, you know, sometimes it's not about doing the thing.
It's about saying you're going to do the thing, declaring victory, and then not talking about it
ever again and moving on. Because you get to just, and I know that this is kind of cynical,
but there is some truth to the fact that if you're a politician and you can say, yep, check that box, moving on,
nobody goes back and says, wait,
in fact, I'll get to this a little bit later too,
there's a related story about this.
Nobody goes back and says, wait,
you checked that box, but then nothing happened.
It's like, I don't know, I checked the box,
what do you mean?
Let's move on.
So there's some of that.
I have one more lawyer up
that I wanna get to really quickly
and it's silly, but it's fun, which is,
remember Casey, you remember when they did that thing
where the porn app went on AltStore pal,
the alternative app store in the EU,
and they said, it's the first porn app approved by Apple.
And Apple got very angry, very angry because they wanted to.
Hey, Apple was so angry.
I mean, they were going to scold that porn app regardless, but like, uh,
alt store just amped it up a little bit by saying Apple approved, Apple approved.
Apple was like, we do not approve of this app.
And he's like, I didn't say you approved of it.
I said, you approved it.
Well, good news everybody, because Riley tested of alt store has posted that
because Riley Testet of AltStore has posted that Apple has changed their form email
for approval slash, what is it?
Approval slash readiness for apps
that have been notarized for use in the EU.
It used to say the following app has been approved
for your distribution.
And it now says the following app
is ready for distribution.
It's so happy. It's so petty.
Honestly, it's petty on every side and it makes me so happy because ultimately it's such a silly thing.
And it's one of those like, you know, Michael Jackson eating popcorn gifts, you know what I'm saying?
It's just like, there's no real stakes here.
Everyone will be fine.
But it's just so funny.
And it's, you know, as Merlin says a lot of times, you know, words have meaning.
And even though I think Riley took a little bit
of creative license, like strictly speaking,
what was said was true that, you know,
Apple approved it.
Yes.
But nevertheless, it is funny to me
how quickly a company as big as Apple can move
when they have a little bit of egg on their faces.
I like to think that somebody,
it went down a large chain of managers
to whoever is in charge of the email templates for developers.
Like who's that person?
And they're like, oh boy.
Which intern is that?
Right.
Yeah.
Who's got to do the email temples.
Anyway, that's okay.
Now things are not, they're no longer approved.
Future porn apps in alternative app stores
will merely be ready.
So didn't that solve a problem?
Okay, I've promoted this twice,
so I'm gonna just jump to it now, which is,
we're leaving lawyer up sort of,
but we're still in kind of a political sphere,
which is on Monday, as right before we recorded this,
Apple put out a newsroom post, uh, so basically a press
release, uh, saying that it's investing $500 billion in the USA, USA, USA,
USA. Oh God, I can't even say that.
I know, I know, I know.
Apple today announced its largest ever spend commitment.
That is a bad phrase.
You should feel bad for writing it.
With plans to spend and invest more than $500 billion
in the US over the next four years.
What an interesting increment of time.
Yep.
Apple and partners will open
a new advanced manufacturing facility in Houston
to build servers for private cloud compute.
And Apple will also double its US advanced manufacturing
fund, create an academy in Michigan to train the next
generation of U.S. manufacturers and grow its research
and development investments in the U.S. to support
cutting edge fields like Silicon engineering.
It's really weird reading stuff like this in front of you
Casey, because you are the one who reads this stuff on ATP.
It's strange.
And it talks about how, look, here's the thing about this. This isn new and a lot of people I predict because it just came out are gonna point to this and they see see see what?
Apple's doing with the Trump administration see
Apple's been doing this for a while now folks
Apple has been talking about how many jobs it creates and listing a bunch of states where Apple has business
prominently like oh we're in Texas and Oregon and and and and
California and Utah and New York and North
Carolina and all these things. This is entirely precedented. It at least started in 2018, which
yes, was the first Trump administration. And they announced the $5 billion advanced manufacturing fund.
It came right after they repatriated a bunch of money back from overseas due to tax breaks that they got to bring it back into the U.S. If you remember back then,
they announced what is now their Austin campus. But I will say, this is a political game Apple
has been playing since then, including during the Biden administration, because in 2021,
they did this and put out a press release with a whole bunch of stuff, including $430 billion in US investments and another new campus in North Carolina.
Now, video editor of the show, Chip Sutterth, has been sending me these links for a while now.
That, remember the thing about checking the box and then nobody checks what happened to the box after it was checked?
That North Carolina hub three years later is
basically on hold and Apple has not talked about
whether they will actually build it or not.
And they talked about investment in, in Raleigh
Durham area schools and all this stuff.
And it's like, it's unclear what's going on there.
But just to be, just as a note, it's not something
that I've really brought up on the show, but I
just want to point out like sometimes these
things get promised and then there's a question about if they ever get delivered, but they get promised. And, and so I'm curious how you feel about this, Casey, but I look at this and I say, this is modern Apple doing what it feels is now from, you know, in the last eight or 10 years, necessary
relationship maintenance with the U S government to point out how much it
loves the United States, even though it does things in other countries, it puts
a lot of money into the United States.
It's got campuses and it's, it's a little bit like how they spread everything
in the Apollo program over all 50 States.
It's like, look, how many States we're in. We impact all of these jobs in all of these states.
And it is in some ways the inverse
of what I described about the UK stuff.
It's Apple saying, look how much money we put into the US
and how many jobs we put into the US.
And doesn't that mean that you, American government,
like us, a great American company?
And I could argue that investing in America for a big American
company is not, is not bad.
In fact, it's good.
The fact that they have decided to make it a press release item
every few years does suggest that they feel they have to do
this in order to please anybody with power in Washington.
You know, for me, I'm just happy that at least this grift is happening in the traditional
way rather than in the slimy way of, you know, of the former Trump administration and this
Trump administration.
Uh, no, I kid slightly, but I mean, I think, you know, I'm going to have to read all those
letters now, Casey.
So thank you for sending them.
I know you're welcome.
You're welcome. Yeah. No, you can send them'm going to have to read all those letters now, Casey. So thank you for, I know you're welcome.
You're welcome.
Yeah.
No, you can send them to me.
It's fine.
Okay.
But no, I think this, this feels particularly gross to me right now because
it's not my team that's, that's on the field, if you will.
And so I'm more sensitive because, you know, when, when, when it was my team, it
was like, oh yeah, you know, they're just go America. Right. Why? Why not? But now it was like, oh yeah, they're just, go America, right, why, why not?
But now it's like, oh, this feels gross.
Four years, that's awfully conspicuous,
as you said earlier.
But ultimately, what I'm trying,
what I've been wrestling with a lot lately,
and we've talked about this on ATP,
you guys have talked about it quite a bit here on Upgrade.
I think my view, my mental model of Apple is very different than the reality of Apple.
And I think that's always been true, but it's been particularly stark to me anyway, very recently,
as it seems like Apple in some, or Apple as a whole, and sometimes Tim individually, is, you know,
getting on one knee and kissing the ring and doing a lot of things that I find in, in contrast to what
I think Apple stands for. It would be like if Apple said to the UK, Oh yeah, you're right. Let's put
that back door in totally. I would find that super gross. And this it's not apples to apples,
but it feels similarly gross. Now I'm glad that you, you went back and looked at how this has been
for the last almost 10
years, because that makes me feel a lot better about it.
And what I think this is, and I think you said this a moment ago, is this is Apple maintaining
their relationship with the US government.
And I think it's a little grosser at sometimes than others, both irrespective of what team
you're on or whatever the case may be.
But it seems that Apple being as big as they are,
and you mentioned earlier,
as big as bigger than a lot of countries,
they have to play politics and Tim has to play politics.
And even though I find a lot of their actions,
particularly of late to be pretty gross,
ultimately at the end of the day,
it is Tim's job and Apple's job to continue to exist
in whatever climate they happen to find themselves in.
And hopefully push forward and push for what they think is right and what they think is
best, for example, going carbon neutral in things, in products where they can.
But ultimately, it's not their job to change governments.
It's their job to do whatever they need to,
to work within the government of the day.
And intellectually, I get that,
but my heart, that kind of hurts at the moment.
And I know that that's unfair,
but that's just kind of how it feels.
Yeah, I think this is the truth.
And the reason that I mentioned
that it's happened multiple times before
is that I do think that this is more about,
it's less about who is president,
and more about the scrutiny
that tech companies now undergo.
Like there was an era where American tech companies
standing astride the world and being incredibly powerful
was not considered particularly political.
In the US, it was just considered a win, hooray.
US companies are powerful.
And then there was a turn where it was like,
oh, now we're gonna investigate these tech companies.
And while Apple has missed a lot of that drama,
it hasn't missed all of it.
And I keep saying this on this podcast,
but it is just like that dynamic with Keir Starmer,
not wanting to tell the citizens of the UK
that Apple is going to pull all its jobs out
and stop selling iPhones and all of that. I think that the same is true here where it's hard for an
American president to say the US is the home of the number one tech company in the world,
but they're our enemy and we're going to destroy them. It's not really what they would really want
to do is say, yay, USA number one. That's what they want to do.
But there are increasingly, if not quid pro quos,
and sometimes there are, the sense
that Apple needs to put out press releases talking
about how many jobs it creates, talking about how much money
it's committing, even if it was already
going to open that factory, even if it was already
going to build that campus.
Or, and I think to a certain extent,
they lean into doing a little more of that
because they know it looks good.
And the cost of not doing it is going
to be more than the savings that they would get by putting it
in a different country.
And so let's just do it.
Let's build that thing at the Triangle in North Carolina.
There's a lot of great college graduates there.
It's a great place to have a campus.
Let's build one there. Maybe eventually sometime. And
so that's just sort of regardless of American politics right now. I think that that is where
tech companies are and where Apple and Tim Cook are trying to do this, which is navigate
a way to show their value to not just Donald Trump, but to America and all the people in power
to say, we are a good American company
that does things in America for Americans.
Even if they were doing most of it already,
it changes the narrative a little bit
about all Apple does is outsource everything to China
and say, no, no, no, that's not true.
We do so much here in America.
And I think a lot of that was true before,
but in 2018, what Apple felt they needed to do was say it out loud, right? To say, we get all our glass from Corning in Kentucky or wherever. I think it's Kentucky. Like, they need to, they feel they need to say that because they need to say, okay, we're going to show our work about how we are a good American company so that we don't get regulated and we don't get treated badly. And part of that is, because I know people out there who have seen this will know that the president
of the United States has already posted a thing
in all caps on his social media site,
taking full credit while misspelling a word.
Part of the quid pro quo, part of the reason you do this
is you are allowing whoever is in power
to take credit for what you're doing.
And that's part of what this is.
And that was true of what this is.
And that was true in 2018.
It's true in 2021 and it's true today.
You don't have to like it, but I think that, I think that that's,
that's what's going on here.
And it's sort of the, the bigger picture of, of we live in an era where Apple is
so huge that it, it, it, and it's under enough scrutiny because it's category is
under such scrutiny that it needs to prove to provide enough cover to people in power that they can say, Oh, see, like, like Donald Trump did today.
See, Apple is investing in the USA.
Isn't that great?
And that's like, that is the game they're playing.
Yep.
I couldn't agree more.
And, you know, a complimentary read of this is, and you implied this or kind of
sort of said it a second ago, and you definitely were talking about this a
little while ago, a very complimentary read of this is, well, you know what?
This is already in the works anyway.
And we didn't know that.
And perhaps they wouldn't have made such a stink about it, but it was
already in the works anyway, who cares?
Let's just get ourselves a win.
Let's cozy up with the people in power and say, look at us and look at all the
great things we do for our country. And the complimentary read is that, okay,
yeah, I guess they're making a big, you know,
a big fastouche about it for arguably no true real reason.
But all this stuff was maybe already in the works anyway. And either way,
whether or not that's true or not.
Another thing I think that's worth noting
is that Apple's under a lot of regulatory scrutiny
in a lot of countries around the world,
but including America.
And granted, the political atmosphere now
is a lot different than when this regulatory scrutiny
really started to take a monocle to them, if you will.
But no, I think to curry favor
with the American government broadly
is a very good idea
for Apple. And so if you take my emotions away from it for a second, and if you take away the
fact that I don't like this from an emotional standpoint, if you look at the brass tacks,
from a business standpoint, it is very much in Apple's best interest and Tim's best interest
for the government to like Apple. And so by that
metric, Tim and Apple are doing exactly what they're supposed to be doing, even though I
personally find it to be a little bit gross. I will say, I believe this press release would exist
even if Kamala Harris was president, because it existed when Joe Biden was president. And I think
the reason is the atmosphere wouldn't be that different in terms of tech under scrutiny. And if Harris was president and it was a Republican Congress,
maybe, I mean, first off, as we saw with Keir Starmer, who is a member of the Labour Party
in the UK, and yet they are still pressing this, like the Democrats would also still be saying,
oh, you know, big tech danger, etc, etc. They don't want to get beaten on that on like national security by the
Republicans. And then the Republican Congress would have their committees where they're looking at big tech and what is
Apple doing and all of that, like, it would be the case regardless. It's the it is not necessarily about the specific
players. It's about where we are with big tech and politics and how these big tech companies are reacting to it.
But I'm going to say this again, and then we can move on,
which is I think that ultimately, there is not
enough credit given to the idea that some
of these dominant companies around the world
are American and that the US government is going
to give them leeway because
you don't really want Apple, Google, Microsoft, Facebook to be enemies.
You want them to be examples of American reach in the world.
Now that may have consequences for those companies elsewhere in the world.
And we've seen that, but I do think that I do think that it just feels unlikely to me that any American government is going to attempt
to destroy one of the great American companies,
just like I think Keir Starmer is gonna have a hard time
trying to call Apple's bluff about Apple potentially
leaving the UK.
I think, and that says something about the power
of tech companies, I guess, but you never know.
You never know what politicians might do
You never know. All right. We are gonna take a break right now for where a familiar voice is going to send you a message
This episode of upgrade is brought to you by Google Gemini
I tried Gemini a couple of days ago the Gem Gemini Live, where you can just talk to it.
And it really is wild to have a full-on conversation with this thing.
I was messing around and asked it to give me a few ideas for hosting during the holidays,
and when it starts giving you results, you can just stop it and say, okay, but what about
something low-key for a smaller group?
And then it will adjust to that.
So you can just keep going until you get an idea that you want.
I think that's what I would use it for the most, brainstorming things.
It's so good if you don't know where to start, or you hit a wall, you just go to Gemini.
It helps you get the ball rolling, but you can use it for all kinds of stuff.
If you want to learn something new, you can have it give you advice, ask it to explain
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Imagine being a student, and you've got this personal tutor on hand.
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Just try it out.
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OK, let's talk about phones now, Casey.
How about that?
Yes, please. Let's talk about phones now, Casey. How about that?
Yes, please.
Let's talk about computers and computer phones.
The iPhone 16E was announced last week and I called it that it wasn't the SE.
I feel good about that.
In our paternity draft, I got a couple of points.
That makes me feel nice.
It's a weird phone, right?
I mean, it's got, it's like both familiar and unfamiliar.
I'm fascinated by the choices Apple made
about what they said.
Likewise.
Was worth putting in your SE successor, your low end phone.
What features it's worth putting in
and what features it's not.
So like the hit list is, it's got an action button,
it's got an OLED screen with face ID and
the notch. So it's basically like the iPhone 10 screen, which was seven years ago. It's got a
ceramic shield on the glass, but they make a point of saying it's not the new ceramic shield that's
on the latest models. It's the previous generation ceramic shield. So it's not as shieldy as it was.
It's got USB-C instead of lightning. It's got Apple intelligence and an A18 processor. That's all
great. What it doesn't have is,
it doesn't have the new photographic styles.
It doesn't have MagSafe.
It doesn't have colors.
It comes in black and white.
It doesn't have millimeter wave.
It doesn't have ultra wideband.
Curious, right?
Like it's just fascinating to see.
I'm sure there is a very specific manufacturing reason
why all of these choices were made,
but I am fascinated about what gets left out and what gets put in a phone like this.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
We spoke about this on ATP last week because in a very rare lucky break for us, it was
announced on a Wednesday before we recorded.
And at the time I didn't have a lot of, I didn't have a lot that I'd read about it.
I didn't have a lot of time to think about it.
And now that I've had a little bit of time to process and,
and hear some input from others,
the things that make the most sense to me are I think a combination of two
things.
A lot of people have spoken about and written to ATP and potentially to upgrade
as well to say, look, this isn't the, yeah, on the surface,
this is a consumer phone, but this isn't really a consumer phone.
What this is, is a bulk purchase phone.
So as an example, here in Richmond, Virginia,
Capital One is one of the largest employers.
They're a large credit card company.
In fact, they're merging with Discover Card as we speak,
as far as I know.
Really big, really, really big bank, effectively.
And most of their employees, excuse me, get issued phones.
And I think most of them get issued iPhones.
And so I bring this up to say, I could imagine a place like capital one,
buying hundreds, thousands of iPhone 16 E's or 16 E as connected called it.
That was 16.
Uh, anyways, I could see them buying, you know,
hundreds or thousands of these. And if you're buying this as a corporate device,
do you really care if there's MagSafe? Do you really, does the colors are need to be,
need to approve a corporate device? Do you care if you don't have millimeter wave?
Does anyone care other than me, if they don't have millimeter wave?
I can make an argument for ultra wide band perhaps, but
the photographic styles, who cares? So like if you look at it through that lens, and I don't know
if this is true or not, this is just a guess. If you could even say that it's a 16 enterprise edition.
Again, that's not factual, but you could squint and you could see how that could be the case.
And the other thing is you got to remove a bunch of stuff in order to hit a particular price point. And, uh, as we record,
it was earlier today that Ben Thompson at Strutechery put up a post about the
16e and what his, and what his point was among other things was,
look,
phones have effectively gotten cheaper because they've stayed the same price.
And I always forget that that everything in life has so much more expensive now,
but except iPhones.
Now this one is like, what is it?
130 bucks or 170 bucks?
It's more than the-
40% more in actual dollars,
like today's dollars from the one
that was for sale yesterday,
but not, right, cause it's 599 instead of 429.
But yes, Ben did the calculations and it's true.
Like if you look at the March over time of buying power for 29, but yes, Ben did the calculations and it's true.
If you look at the March over time of buying power
and inflation and all of that, it's still,
I mean, this is the thing is I'm sure he went into it
thinking it's actually not more expensive
and what he found was, no, it's still more expensive.
This is that thing, right, Casey,
where you want the black and white clarity
like the iPhone 16E, you want it in black and white,
but it's actually in shades of gray like an iPhone 16 Pro.
So, sorry, I'm not that I'm bitter about it,
but it's complicated, right?
Like it is more expensive,
but it's not hugely more expensive.
And Ben says, like, and also like,
if the idea was that the cheap phone really
helped Apple in emerging markets, it's not really like that clear that it has very much.
So it is, it's complicated, right? But they did. I mean, you have to say they made a decision.
I feel like a lot of this ends up being about margins and about, I mean, they're probably
on the iPhone 14 production line.
Uh, Dan Moran made that point last week on the six college podcast. I think he's right. Like they,
they took the iPhone 14 off sale. The iPhone 16 E seems really iPhone 14 E in a lot of ways, 14 E,
but it's not. Uh, and so like, you know, it's, it's Tim Cook's Apple. I'm sure some degree of
this is literally, they looked at the,
they're going to a much more expensive product line.
Those face ID sensors are not as expensive
as they used to be when the iPhone X came out,
but they're still expensive.
And the OLED screen, it's not the new one
with the dynamic island, but it's still expensive.
And they did the math and they said, well,
I took the MagSafe and the colors away,
and it still needs to be $599. And Tim Cook was like, fine, that's fine.
And that's, it's not very dramatic to say that somebody with a spreadsheet somewhere looked through the parts bin and looked at the cost.
But that's probably what happened.
Yep. No, I think that's exactly it is. It was a combination of what is the ultimate goal? If you take my theory as fact,
in that this was the 16 enterprise edition,
if we keep that lens,
if we look at everything through that lens,
what are the things that we can drop?
Because unquestionably,
you can't have it all at this price point.
It's not a cheap phone.
I'm not trying to say it's a cheap phone by any stretch,
but you can't have it all.
So what are you gonna drop?
And you're gonna drop the things that maybe a corporate
or educational customer won't care about. phone by any stretch, but you can't have it all. So what are you gonna drop? And you're gonna drop the things that maybe a corporate
or educational customer won't care about.
And again, I can't stress enough, this is not factual.
I have no birdies, but this is the most logical
interpretation I can find, because otherwise,
some of these removals or some of these things
that have been left behind, if it really is a consumer phone,
why not have the photographic styles? MagSafe is freaking great. I love MagSafe. I would desperately miss MagSafe.
I would probably miss MagSafe more than Ultra Wideband. A lot of these things that are left
behind look really weird if you look at it from a consumer's perspective, but looking
at it from a corporate perspective, they make at least some modicum of sense.
Right. You end up with people who are just like,
I just want an iPhone.
I mean, I might buy one of these for my mom
because long story short, her phone broke
while my sister was visiting her,
and so she bought her an SE.
And the problem is my mom has really struggled
in the desert with kind of wrinkly fingers.
She can't get Touch ID to work.
And my sister bought her another Touch ID phone.
I'm like so mad because like, no, she can't do Touch ID. We need to get her a Face ID phone. I'm like so mad because like no she can't do touch ID
We need to get her a face ID
So she still has to put in her password every time it makes me so mad
I might get her one of these I told this to Mike by the way over the weekend and he said you're a good son
That was very nice. Thank you, Mike
And there's there's a marketing product line thing, too
I mean it creates this $5.99 $699, $799, $899,
$999, right? And then $1199 for the big one. But like, it does that where you can get an
Apple intelligence model for $599. The $699 phone is not an Apple intelligence model.
There's, and then over time, I do think that they'll probably update this phone every two or three
years. And that's good enough, right?
And they'll increment the number
to whatever the latest is.
You know, it is not, look, it's probably not for anybody
who listens to this podcast, although I have been surprised.
There are a lot of people who just don't care
about their iPhone and it's all,
there is an argument to be made that they're all so good
at this point that it's fine.
Like it's fine and you buy it and then you use it for seven, that it's fine. Like it's fine and you buy it
and then you use it for seven years and it's fine.
And who cares?
And I think that other than the people who want a small phone
and unfortunately the truth is small phone era
is just over Apple.
If enough people bought it at Apple would make one,
not enough people buy it.
It's sad, RIP, iPhone mini, but that's just how it is.
But a lot of people don't really care about all these super powerful features.
So I, I consider MagSafe curious and I wonder if it, there was just simply an
engineering decision where it's like, we can't put that in and do this other
thing that we need to do because you know, all the accessories and now you've
got this weird outlier that's a 16, but it's not compatible with MagSafe accessories. It's not great.
Not great, but you know, Apple, we've seen it with the Apple pencil.
We've seen them in a bunch of other areas.
If it comes down to a little confusion in the product line or money,
Apple chooses money every time. It's like, Oh,
you got four Apple pencils there.
And they're like, sorry, I can't hear you.
I'm counting my money right now.
Because I do think that that's the, you know, there's a lot of us on the outside are like,
but oh, but your product line could be much cleaner and nicer.
And then there's somebody with a spreadsheet inside of Apple who's like, Nope.
Right?
Like that simple.
Um, always moving toward perfection, but never ever, ever reaching it because reasons.
And, and that, that feels like that's part of the iPhone 16 story.
You know, the big story though is the C one, right? Like this is, we've been talking to six years.
We've been talking about Apple building its own cellular chip, right?
It bought Intel's motor business.
Actually it's longer than that because I believe there were rumors that Apple was trying to build a cellular chip themselves and
They and they were very frustrated
So it's probably more like eight years or ten years that this has been going on
but six nearly six years ago Apple bought Intel's modem business for a billion dollars and then hired a bunch of people and
It's taken them this long, but they've got the C1, which is their first beachhead
in not having to pay Qualcomm for chips.
Still had to pay them for licensing patents probably for a long time, but not chips anymore
in some of these products.
I don't know.
We don't know enough about it.
The product is not like out yet.
We don't have the details.
I have predicted in the draft that there will be some scandal that comes out that Apple probably
already knows is true about the specs of this thing, but that they haven't talked about it.
And then somebody will find it and go, Oh no, the C one doesn't do this. And there'll be a, you know,
tempest in the teapot and then everybody will forget about it. But like, I feel like this is
what this phone is going to be remembered for. because this is the first step into a new world where I assume, you know,
we are now on the path where eventually every Apple product,
please, please, please, including Mac laptops, please, please, please,
will have an Apple cellular chip in them.
Yep. Now, it's obvious that this was coming at some point.
I mean, you don't have to be a talking head like the two of us to look at Apple
and realize this is a fundamental technology and so many of their products,
please, including the MacBooks, please. And so they're going to want to control this.
I forget the quote. Do you know exactly what quote I'm thinking of? But, you know, it's
in our best interest to control all the stuff that our products rely on. It was said much
more eloquently than that, but you get the point. And so it is clear that they've been
working. I mean, obviously we've known
it, but even if we didn't know it, it would be clear that they've been working toward
this for a long time. And it makes a lot of sense to take a phone that I don't think a
lot of consumers are going to buy. Some certainly will. I'm not trying to say none of them will,
but some will, but I don't think a lot of consumers will buy it.
It's not the core iPhone. It's not the core iPhone.
It is the most outlier of new iPhones ever.
Exactly, and so you take this,
what presumably may not be,
certainly in terms of like,
your average consumer is not going to be
the most popular phone,
and you experiment there,
and it makes perfect sense.
And one of the interesting things
that this phone does have,
which we have not mentioned yet,
is of all the 16s,
or no, it was all the 6.1-inch phones,
I forget the asterisk they put on the statement,
but it has better battery life
than most of its contemporaries, if not all.
And there's something we said for that.
26 hours of constant video playback?
That's pretty good. That's pretty good. And the reason I bring this
up in the context of the C1 is that they said during their presentation that this is the most
power-efficient modem on the market. And so you can imagine and you know you can see how these two
are related. And we had an ATP a handful of people that wrote in and said look the only thing I care
about my phone is battery life. Everything else is secondary to that.
So you know what I'm going to be buying myself?
An iPhone 16e.
And you know, I get that.
And as a quick aside, another thing that a handful of people said was that I guess MagSafe
can interfere with pacemakers, which means that if you have a phone without MagSafe,
that's a great thing if you also have a pacemaker.
So that's another example.
But anyways, coming back to C1, this is extremely exciting
and I am really happy and curious
to see how this rollout goes.
Because I remember years ago,
and I'm sure you do too, Jason,
there was several years ago now,
I don't recall which phone it was,
but there was a lot of brouhaha,
some of which may have been invented,
some of which was probably real,
but oh, if you have a Qualcomm modem,
then your phone is faster, better, I forget the details.
But if you have one of the Intel modems,
then yours is like hamstrung from the factory.
And I forget if it was speed or power.
There was some issue, I don't recall what it was.
I think it was top data rates, I think it was.
And it was not a huge difference,
but it was enough for nerds to notice and say,
oh, you want the secret Qualcomm version, not the secret Intel. Exactly. Exactly. And so
I'm very curious to see, as you said a moment ago, what's going to be the drama here. We already know
some of the drama is no millimeter wave, but again, I think the only person in the entire planet that
cares about that is me because I happen to have a spot where, which is millimeter wave. And I haven't
been there in a long time, to be honest with you, even though
it's right around the corner from me, but it is incredibly cool.
And so I should back up a half step.
If you are, if you have service that supports millimeter wave, which I think
in America might only be Verizon, which I have 18, I think AT&T does it too,
but I'm not sure.
Is that right?
Okay.
My mistake.
Um, either way, if you happen to be within, I think it's literally eye shot of a tower
that supports millimeter wave, you can,
and I personally, with my own telephone,
have gotten two and a half gigabits per second
over the freaking air.
It's incredible how fast this is.
It's got very low range
and doesn't go through walls very well.
So it's kind of like Wi-Fi.
But if you were in...
So I did this over at the, um...
at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco,
at their little duck pond and all of that.
And the first Apple device that supported millimeter wave,
which I think was an iPad, I took over there.
And it was the exact same thing,
which is like, oh my goodness, it is incredibly fast.
But it's not very popular because yeah,
the range is terrible on it.
It's fast, but the range is terrible on it.
And it's essentially like a hotspot
from your wireless carrier.
It really is just like a 5G tech demo, right?
Like it doesn't seem like it's very practical,
but it's cool, but it's not very
practical and it's like, I totally see why Apple in building the C one was like, Nope.
But there'll be some other quirk.
I feel like it's almost certain.
Maybe not, maybe not, but it feels like there'll be some other quirk about it.
Now Apple didn't talk about this a lot.
And I know some people have said like, aha, they didn't talk about it a lot.
That means something. I was like, I don't know. I was unsure if they were going to even mention that it's in there, but they did.
Agreed.
They mentioned it. And there's like a paragraph from Johnny Sruji. And somebody did a like a brief interview with Johnny Sruji about this Apple chip chief, chief, chief, chief. That guy, you know, Mr. It's Johnny who y'all know. Not that one, the other one.
Uh, and that's it.
So they did a little, I would say part of the reason they did a little is
because the goal is not for you to notice, right?
The goal is to ship it and have it just be fine.
What they're not doing.
And Mark Gurman has talked about them building the C2 and the C3,
of course that like we know that this group works many generations ahead of reality, right? Like we
know that. And I think Gurman's report said they expect to match or exceed Qualcomm. You don't know
what Qualcomm is going to do in the intervening time with the C3 or something like that. So like,
it's not like they can boast, ah, we've beaten Qualcomm.
It's really just like, look, we're in the game.
Yes, we built this.
Let's not make a big deal out of it.
I don't think that's because there's a scandal coming
or something like that.
I think there'll be some dumb manufactured thing
that people notice.
I do think though that it's just,
it's not something to boast about.
And so they're doing the minimum boast, right?
Which is like, yeah, we made it and that's it.
No, I couldn't agree more. You know, just to tug on that thread just a little bit,
if the C three is the one that just really sticks it to Qualcomm,
could you call it maybe like, I can imagine like C three performance optimized.
And then you would have the Apple C three PO. I can just see it now.
See, I thought you were going to say's really gonna happen with the C4,
which offers explosive speeds.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Even better.
This is all gonna happen.
Even better, we'll see.
Everybody get ready for all the Star Trek memes next year,
or later this year when the M5 comes out,
cause the M5 was the ultimate thinking AI computer
in a Star Trek episode.
And at least John Maltz and I
are gonna be flooding the internet
with the ultimate computer episode of TOS memes next fall, in the fall.
One other quick thing to mention before we move on is that I saw a video from YouTuber
Andrew Edwards and as far as I know, he was the only one that got invited into Apple's
lab and was with Johnny Srouji that we were speaking about earlier. And he didn't have any interviews on camera or anything like that.
But a little bit into the video,
let me see if I can grab a timestamp here after my YouTube ad all vamp while
that's going on in the, in the YouTube video, um,
at about five minutes and 15 seconds or thereabouts,
he kind of casually mentions that the A18 and C1 working in concert
supports dynamic traffic management.
And the example he used was you have just sent a photo to somebody.
Like I just sent Jason a picture from, you know, the UVA football game or what have you.
And it's going, even though I'm sitting there and also like trying to refresh scores on
ESPN or something like that, it knows that my priority is likely to get that photo to JSON as quickly as possible.
So that if I understand this and what Andrew was saying correctly, the A18 and C1 can work in concert
to say, yes, the user me does want to look at ESPN, but the very first thing you need to do is get
that photo to JSON as quickly as possible. And it can make that kind of quality of service determination behind the scenes.
This is not something that I'm doing personally, it's doing on my behalf, but
that's really cool.
And this is when Apple is at its finest is doing these little tweaks and doing
these little things in order to make the whole, the whole experience that much
better.
And I'm really excited to see where this goes, if this is the case.
And certainly if indeed these chips are that much power friendly, which I have no reason
to believe they aren't, think of any time that your phone is in a spot with crummy service.
And there's not a whole ton Apple can do about this, I don't reckon.
But what your phone does is it tries even harder to reach the near cell phone tower.
So it will power up those radios even more.
But what if those radios are inherently
more power sufficient?
And I'm talking well out of my comfort zone.
I don't know if that's even realistic,
but I can see how if this thing,
which is arguably one of the most power-hungried things
in your phone, especially when the screen is off,
if we can make that more power efficient,
we could see tremendous battery gains
across the entire, maybe iPhone 17 lineup.
And let me tell you, I am here for battery gains.
First, I would like you to be hired as the Colorzar,
but after that, I would be here for power gains.
I would love it.
I'd like somebody who's not colorblind
to be the Colorzar.
I just want there to be one.
Oh, there.
So the thing about that,
I saw that video and it's very interesting,
but it is marketing, right?
Like I don't know enough about cellular chips to know.
Like for all I know, Qualcomm has a system
that allows their customers who are building phones
to prioritize certain kinds of traffic.
They may have their own QoS
quality of service kind of plan where you're like this is a priority now
this is a priority. So one way you do marketing is you claim here's a great
thing that we built, your competitor also does that, but you don't mention that.
Another thing is though, and what strikes me about this is I was thinking
like even if Qualcomm does offer
this sort of thing, it may be that they don't offer it
in the way that Apple would like them to, right?
And this takes us back to the bigger point,
and it's sort of like, if you think back to the Intel Mac era,
for example, is Qualcomm cellular chips,
like Intel processors
are made for a market, right?
Like they talk to their customers,
they'll do things for special customers,
but basically like Intel made a chip
and like PC makers could use it and Apple could use it.
And maybe Apple talks to them and says,
could you please do this?
And occasionally that, like they did that MacBook Air chip,
but then they did turn around and start selling it
to everybody else as well. Right? Like, and I'm sure Qualcomm does that too. Again, I
don't know enough about the cellular chip market, cellular motive market to know, but
I imagine it's very similar where Qualcomm has got parts and they talk to their partners
about what they need. But in the end, they make a part that is productized. It is for
anybody to buy on their price list, more or less.
And that is not what Apple does with Apple Silicon.
And I think that's why it has so much interesting potential,
is that, look, I have over the last few years
had a chance at some of these product launches
to talk at least briefly with people
who are involved in the Apple Silicon process.
And what they keep impressing on me.
And again, this is also marketing,
but I do believe that this is how they think,
which is every Apple Silicon chip,
they know what products it goes in, right?
Like they build it for specific products.
The M4, they're like, they know it's going in,
the iPad Pro and the MacBook Pro and the MacBook Air.
And like they could tick off every product it's designed for. And that gives Apple some special
powers to do what Apple wants for the products that it's building. And so when I look at the C1,
that's what I think is maybe they're talking a good game about this stuff, but Qualcomm does something similar. But what it means is that Apple can now
control, especially going forward when this is everywhere, it can build in stuff that is optimized
only for them, because they don't make that product for anyone else. It doesn't need to do
anything, right? And therefore it's more efficient because they don't need to do anything that is some other customer
of Qualcomm's needs that Apple doesn't need or a specific thing that Apple would really,
really, really like Qualcomm to have done five years ago and Qualcomm just won't do
it. Like they can just do all that stuff now. And that's, that's why the C one is exciting
to me is because it suggests that Apple by taking complete control over it is
going to get is going to get benefits in terms of functionality and in terms of
optimization because they're just making it for themselves.
Yep, I couldn't agree more.
It's a very astute point.
And, and again, like that's where this gets really interesting is seeing Apple,
you know, working on both sides of the table, so to speak, and that, you know, instead of asking Qualcomm,
may we have, now it's just, okay, we need GoBuilding.
It's hard to say no to your coworkers.
You know, and so I think this could be very interesting.
And I think C1, it's interesting in and of itself for sure,
but at this point, we're just trying to get to table stakes. And again,
we don't even have millimeter wave and whether or not you think that matters
personally, factually speaking, it's not table, or it is table stakes.
I guess I should say, and we don't have it yet,
but maybe the C2 does have millimeter wave and maybe the C3 is where we start
to get really interesting and exciting stuff. And I am very,
very excited to see how this goes.
And you made a very good point earlier
that this is one of those like kind of flies
under the radar sort of things
that we probably won't hear all that much about,
but I think this is where a lot of the interesting stuff
with iPhones and hopefully Macs, God help us, I hope so.
That's where a lot of the interesting stuff
is gonna be happening in the near future, I think.
Yeah, I hope this is the thing that leads to cellular Max
because we're not gonna get into it here.
You can listen to a recent episode of ATP
where they went through it again
about why Marco and Casey want cellular Max
and I co-signed the entire thing because I agree.
You know, very quickly.
You can tether, but it's not great.
And we like it better if you don't have to.
You can tether, but it'd be better if you don't have to just very, very quickly.
Uh, I forget how this came up, but we were talking, I think a friend of mine was over
who was also an Apple nerd like me.
And we were talking about this briefly and, and he had made a joke that, Oh, I'm going
to have to upgrade my laptop recently or soon.
And Aaron was like, I'm sorry, what?
And he was saying, no, no, no, because he might have cellular MacBooks.
And she was like, what are you talking about?
And I said, oh, well, you know, we might be able to get an internet connection on my MacBook,
blah, blah, blah.
And let me tell you, I have not, I have no interest in upgrading my M3 Macs MacBook Pro.
I genuinely don't like it's great.
But if there is a cellular MacBook Pro, I will insta buy it at any cost.
I don't care.
It will be immediately purchased at any cost whatsoever.
I am that excited for it.
Yeah, and it's fine if you don't get it,
but my problem is when people don't get why we want this
and therefore say it shouldn't exist,
because you're basically saying,
look, I know you like it, but no, you can't have it.
And like we can talk until we're blue
about why we think cellular in Mac laptop would be great
because I think cellular in iPads is great.
And I don't buy non-cellular iPads anymore
because it's great.
But we're not gonna get into that now.
Don't at me.
Don't at me.
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relay.
Casey,
it's gadget time.
Oh, I'm excited.
It's gadget time. I wanted to having you on, I wanted to do a little home gadget check-in because I am
a big believer in home gadgetry, especially I would say ambient information.
I know you recently, I don't know if you want to give people a little update.
You did, you recently did a project where you basically have this super stealthy thing
in your light switch that gives you ambient information with, which is like, I tell people
what you did, because if they don't list ATP, they don't know this.
We should start there.
Sure.
So I somehow, for some reason, I don't really know why I got it in my brain that I wanted to be able to know
a couple of things about the state of my house and world.
And I wanted to be able to know that,
as you said, ambiently.
Ambient is the perfect word for it.
And we had in our kitchen a former telephone jack
that I took away, because we haven't had a home phone
in years, and I put just a blank there.
And it occurred to me, wait a second,
what if I got programmable LEDs, and I could turn on LEDs or turn them off based on the state of certain things
and that did not pass as I like to joke the historical commission which is to say my beloved
wife Erin said I don't know if I'm really in love with that idea but we were able to reach a
compromise which is there's a like this odd manufacturer of smart home
stuff which I'd never heard of previously called home seer, H-O-M-E-S-E-E-R.
And they make light switches which are the standard paddle light switches that you'll
see in most homes in America anyway.
But what's interesting about them is that they're dimmers and on the side there's a
series of seven LEDs that by default indicate how powered the fixture is.
Is it very dim or very bright?
But you can tell it not to do that
and instead give you full control
over how those LEDs are lit, what color they are,
which ones are lit, et cetera.
And we're probably gonna talk about in a minute
or maybe we'll talk about it next.
I've become one of those home assistant zealots
slash people that won't stop talking about home assistants
and I'm talking to you about it.
This is me rolling my eyes.
Yep.
Yeah, I know.
And it's fair because we are the worst.
It's just like CrossFit.
You know, as soon as you start CrossFit
or as soon as you start home assistant,
all you can talk about is CrossFit or home assistant.
And so in any case, what I've done is I've set up
with home assistant such that there's a,
again, there's seven lights.
I'm only using three of them at the moment.
One of them will turn red when the garage door is open
and it will turn itself off when the garage door closes.
One of them will turn white when the Volvo,
Aaron has a plug-in hybrid Volvo,
and when it's charging, it'll turn white.
When it's charged, it'll turn off.
And then John Ciracchiusause, my cohost on ATP,
turned me on to these long range,
but very low power smart home gadgets
by a company called Yo-Link, Y-O-L-I-N-K.
And so I installed one of these, like a contact sensor.
That's one of those things where it knows
if things are closed or open.
And I installed one on my mailbox.
So when the mailbox is opened,
it's a little more complicated than this, but on my mailbox. So when the mailbox is opened, it's a little more complicated than this, but
the short of it is when the mailbox is opened, then a blue light will appear
on this light switch that is in the kitchen and they're very physically
small LEDs, they're only a millimeter or two across.
So if you're looking at it, you 100% can see them very easily, but if you're
just kind of passing by, you might not even notice.
And this has been such a delight for me, not because any of this is really useful.
Like in particular, whether or not the car is charging, is that really actionable?
No.
Am I going to postpone a trip somewhere on account of the car still being charging?
No, but it's neat that I know that it's charging.
But the ambient thing, it makes you know like, oh, did I forget to plug in the car?
Oh, no, it's charging.
And that's it, right?
It's like you otherwise would have to go outside and look,
or go in the garage and look and see whether the car is
charging or not.
But now you know, oh, yeah, no, I did it already.
I don't need to worry about it, which is, you know,
that's what's great about this ambient stuff,
is it lets you know at a glance whether something is going
on that previously would have required you to either go somewhere or bring up a computer to look,
right? Or a phone or whatever. And instead, just like the lights on. And like, imagine,
I think this is a real thing. Like the, the, a light in your house lets you know if you left
the garage door open. Like that's great. That is, that should be a feature of houses, right?
Exactly.
And it's just silly things like that.
And more than anything else, it was like, I nerd sniped myself and I just, I
wanted to see if I could do this.
And I was able to, and I honestly believe that it looks pretty reasonable.
They, this is a manufactured, uh, you know, a smart light switch.
It's not me drilling holes into like a blank outlet cover or anything like that,
which is as hard I would, as I may have tried, it would have looked janky.
And so the historical commission was right to veto it, but, uh,
I think it looks pretty good, but I gotta tell you,
there's another ambient thing in my life that I'm really enjoying that I know is
also entering your world,
or has actually been in your world for a long time.
So I, Marco brought, talked about this thing called Terminal.
Now, full disclosure, they are going to sponsor ATP
in the future, but I had never heard of this.
Marco bought it off his own volition,
with his own money, et cetera, et cetera.
They did send me the one I'm about to hold up for free,
but it's this little like E Ink thing
that you can put all sorts of interesting stuff on.
So for me, I have it at the moment split in half
and the left-hand side shows the agenda, if you will,
for the family for the next few days.
And then the right-hand side is split in half again.
So there's the weather in the upper right. As
I look at this and then speaking of ambient computing on the bottom, right. Um, we've
been having some problems with both our indoor, our main refrigerator and our garage refrigerator.
And we got different yield link devices. I actually haven't spoken about this on ATP.
We got different yield link devices that'll tell you temperature. And we were trying to
figure out,
are these fridges really broken or not?
And so what I did was I used Terminal,
now to be clear, that's no vowels, T-R-M-N-L.
But I used Terminal and their custom plugin system,
which we'll talk about more, I'm sure, in a second.
And I actually have, now granted,
it doesn't update very frequently,
but I have the current temperature
of both the indoor fridge,
the indoor freezer, the outdoor fridge, and the outdoor freezer on here, just because we were
trying to keep an eye on it. As it turns out, we're getting a new set of fridges on Friday,
so that'll go away. But the point is I can, because I'm a dork and because I can write a
little bit of code and because of Home Assistant, I can put something like that, the temperature of
a refrigerator inside my house, I can put that on that, the temperature of a refrigerator inside
my house, I can put that on this little E Ink thing that will probably live on a
refrigerator at some point, but currently is just sitting on the window sill in
front of the kitchen sink, which is also pretty central to the kitchen.
It is so delightful.
And I love this thing and the battery life, especially if you get the extended
battery, which is not very expensive.
And that's what I did.
The battery life is preposterous.
It's measured in months.
It's really, really good stuff.
That's the beauty of E Ink.
So this is actually shockingly similar to my existing E Ink calendar that I wrote about
a few years ago that I still use that's in my kitchen.
The big difference, it's basically the same screen.
I think mine has a second color, but otherwise it's basically the same.
Black and white screen, E Ink, doesn't
use power except when it's drawing, otherwise there's no power. And my thing is a Raspberry
Pi so it's got power all the time and no battery. This not only is a much better case, because
mine's a 3D printed case, it's got the battery which is great. And it's an ESP32, which is
like this other thing I've got the Ink Plate 6 Color, which I have been experimenting with lately, and its battery life is also bananas. And the reason is these ESP32s are super low power,
they've got a sleep mode. You basically tell it to wake up every so often and check a remote server
via your Wi-Fi. And then they check, and then they write to the E Ink screen, and then they go back
down and use essentially no power until they wake up again.
And this is why you can have them last forever
and ever and ever, because a phone screen,
you've got to power it and backlight it
and all those things.
You don't have to do any of that with E Ink.
It doesn't have any backlights or anything.
It's just natural light on it like anything else,
like a piece of paper, but it's great.
I'm exploring the terminal stuff because again,
I wanna, I love the idea that somebody made a product of this
and it's a nerdy product, but it is a product.
And that is in contrast to my thing where I bought a screen
and a raspberry pie and took a GitHub project
that was written in Python, that was like a German guy
who wrote a, it was like a German guy who wrote a,
it was like a portal themed desk calendar. It was, and I, I, you know,
I tore apart most of his code, uh, and made what I wanted.
And I've used it for a few years now. This is like that,
but turned into a product. The case is so nice.
It's so well done because it's not a 3d printed case. It's a mass produced case.
Um, you know, they're using injection molding or something to do it. It's got that battery
in it. And then they put a web interface on it. So basically you go to
their website and there are apps that you can get and there are plugins that
you can write yourself. It's basically using HTML technology for the display
and the way it works in order to keep it all sort of server side is it uses all that.
And then it renders it into an image and the image is what gets downloaded by your terminal at your house.
Right.
Like, so all the brains are on the server.
They are not in the terminal.
The terminal knows enough to wake up and ask when it asks, what image do you have for me?
And it asks, when should I wake up next?
And that's it.
Right.
Exactly. That's, that's all it does. So I when should I wake up next? And that's it. Right. Exactly.
That's, that's all it does.
So I love, I love this.
I have played with this.
I have it, um, in my kitchen right now, right next to my other thing.
And what I've ended up with is I've got a couple of boxes that are generated by.
As a part of my weather station and as a part of building this other thing, I've
got, I've already got some JSON files on my web server.
That's my server in my house.
And so I can have a custom plugin for terminal
that just looks at my JSON files on Snell's own
because that's what is Snell.
It's a real web server in my house.
So, and displays those.
So I've got, basically I'm caching Apple's weather kit data
locally because there's an API cost for it, right? And as a developer, I've got a
developer account. I can load it a lot, but if I had lots of devices
loading it a lot, it might be a problem. So I have my server every 10 minutes or
15 minutes or whatever, I don't even remember what it is, 30 minutes. It goes
and pulls weather kit data from Apple and just writes it on my
server so that all my other scripts just look at my server instead of making an
API call. It's easier and it's just a JSON file. So I was able to get that up
and running where I have a little thing with the high for the next six
days or something and a little graphic of what the conditions are
going to be, a rain cloud or a sun or whatever.
And then on the left side, what I ended up doing, I was using their calendar plugin,
but I found it hard to read. And the thing is, I solved this problem. I have a Python
script that outputs an image with my calendar and Lauren's calendar on it already. So I
actually just have it loading that image.
That's super cool. I love that. I genuinely love that. I'm not trying to be sarcastic. That is really genuinely great.
I mean, because I'm reusing. So here's the truth of it. I suspect that in the end, I'm going to like the case and battery of it so much. And the web stuff is okay, although you've got to learn somebody else's web framework in order to get the layout right.
And the problem I have with a terminal is that I already solved this problem myself.
Yeah.
But this is the thing is most people haven't and I love that they are making this.
It's still a super nerdy product, right?
But it is a level down from having your own Raspberry Pi and your own Python
script that you have hacked to connect to various APIs in order to get it to work. Right. Like I already did that.
If you gave me a terminal now, I wouldn't do that because why,
but I've already done it. So I suspect that in the end,
what my terminal is going to end up being is just displaying images
generated on my server by my scripts, because then I have like we have,
it's like your ambient lights.
I have, if it's gonna, if Apple weather says it's gonna rain today, it puts a,
an umbrella on the screen of my calendar.
Nice.
And this actually happened last week where Lauren was going to walk out the door and
she said, oh, the umbrella is up.
I better bring an umbrella or a raincoat because it was, it wasn't raining, but it
was going to rain that day, according to weather.
Um, if it's trash night and our trash night alternates between, um, bottles and cans and, uh, paper.
Alternate weeks.
So it puts up an icon on Thursday night.
That's either an icon of bottles or it's an icon of boxes.
Right.
And, and it's great because I don't need to look it up.
It's just right there.
It's like, oh, it's paper tonight,
and then I'll take out the right one.
A little ambient thing, it's fun.
To do that in terminal, then you're dealing with logic,
which it doesn't really wanna do.
And I was just like, I'm not,
this is why I probably am just gonna keep doing this myself,
because I've gone too far. Like I, some people said he should have stopped before he went too far, but he
went too far. Um, but for, for people who listen to shows like this, I think this is
a great sort of starter kit for doing ambient devices to forgetting a great, what's great
about having a low power display into your life. Because while it's actually not great for stuff like your fridge
temperatures, because I've got a Lamentri time that shows like the
current time and temperature, and it's not an e-ink device, it's a different
device. I can use that feed and show current temperature on the e-ink thing,
but it only updates every half hour or whatever. So it's not actually the current temperature. And so it's not for that. It's not going to,
you could have it show whether your garage door is open or not, but it would actually
be telling you what your garage door was doing the last time it refreshed.
Exactly right. It's in coincidentally, I did do that. I very briefly integrated like home
assistant terminal and whatnot. And it wasn't that terribly difficult to do. Uh, but then
I real, cause I didn't realize how infrequently the terminal updates,
which to your point is something like half an hour by default. And they're working on
bringing that down, but the battery is, it'll kill the battery battery when it does it.
That's the, that's the problem. Uh, and if you want to put this on magnets on your, on
your, uh, on your fridge, you really want it to last three months or whatever, which it probably will.
I've got that little ink plate six color and it's been running for a couple of weeks now,
checking my calendar, again, a version of my calendar image every three hours or something,
which is all I need for my calendar, really. And it's two weeks and going strong.
I don't know how long it's gonna last,
but it's like one of those examples of,
once you've got a device that will go for weeks or months
without a charge, you can just put it without a cord
on your fridge or wherever.
Exactly.
And you don't need a cord dangling,
you don't need anything like that.
And then every so often you take it off
and plug it in for a couple hours
and then it's good for another few months. It's awesome. That's why I do recommend if people are interested in this,
that they try the terminal. Not a sponsor here. I don't think it's even a future sponsor
here. But like, what this is, this is it is a lot of times I write about this stuff and
people are like, Oh, but Raspberry Pi and Python and I have to write a script that is
writing images
onto an image file that then gets put on email.
It's too much, it's just too much.
And most people don't have Dr. Drang like I do
where I can say, hey, Dr. Drang,
I need your help with some Python.
True story, there's a couple posts on Dr. Drang's site,
which I guess I need to link to now, where he helped
me out with part of this project. And so most people don't have that. My point is, that's
okay. Terminal is an attempt to make something that again is not, it's super nerdy, right?
It's just not so super nerdy that you need to be writing your own custom Python script.
And that's, I think that's good.
I also like the fact that they are open sourcing
their firmware and there's a way to get it
to not use their servers.
And they have a commitment that if they go out of business,
you can basically make it run
without using their servers at all.
You can use their software on your server.
There's so many other ways to do it.
But also, they're trying to put a nice UI on this
so that more regular people can say,
can I just add the Google Calendar widget
and put in my calendar?
Or the iCloud Calendar widget and put in my calendar.
And then put a weather forecast in with my zip code
and get something that is nice
and updates every three or six hours.
And is all the things that are good
about using an E Ink display for this kind of ambient information where like now you've
got, imagine a piece of paper, except it's your Google calendar or your iCloud calendar.
That's awesome.
That's kind of awesome.
Yeah.
And that's what this is.
And the genesis of this, part of the reason I was so excited about it was we, we literally at the end of the very last day of the month,
I will go into my Apple calendar on my Mac and into the calendar app and I will
print the family calendar because at this point it's just Aaron and me for all
intents and purposes. We know the kids aren't old enough to have their own real
calendars and well I'll print the Apple calendar and I will put that on magnets
and I'll print the Apple calendar and I will put that on magnets on the fridge. And that's great because our lives are not that busy that the calendar changes all the time.
But you know what's great than a calendar that never changes is a calendar that will
change and will update itself. And so this thing, even if to your point earlier,
even if it only updates every three or six or nine hours, it's still better than one that only
updates when you go upstairs
and print a new copy and then bring that back down.
Like that is a much preferred version of all of this.
Then then then the piece of paper, you know, that's just stuck on your fridge.
So I am really enthusiastic about this.
Once we get our new fridges, hopefully Friday, I will be able to repurpose
that corner of the terminal.
And I will probably mount this on the incoming fridge
at that point.
And I'm really excited about it.
Very, very nice.
Well, we're gonna talk about Home Assistant and Upgrade Plus.
So everybody hang on for that.
But this is gonna be the end of the regular episode.
You can send us your feedback, follow up on questions.
I have to read it, so be nice.
Upgradefeedback.com.
It just, please, I beg you. Uh, but thank you to our members who support us with
upgrade plus. We will be talking about some other Casey stuff, home assistant.
Maybe we'll talk about call sheet a little bit. Get upgrade plus.com. If you
want to buy a gift for Mike and his baby, um, upgrade plus is a great way to
support Mike and his growing family. How about that?
That is a thing that Mike wrote, but I am just going to keep on saying it.
You can obviously find us on YouTube by searching for Upgrade Plus.
Thanks to our sponsors, Vitaly, Google Gemini, and ExpressVPN.
But most of all, thank you all for listening.
And most of all, thank you, Casey List List for guesting for Mike, the new dad.
You're doing your friend a solid
and you're doing me a solid too.
Thank you so much for being here.
Now, the pleasure is all mine.
It is such a pleasure to be on the show with you.
And if you'll permit me to blow a little smoke here,
Upgrade is such an impossibly good program
and I get more annoyed at Upgrade
than I think I do at any other show
because you guys make such good points so often
in every single episode, there's at least one of you that
at least once I say, God, I wish I thought of that.
And so I know I'm preaching to the choir since you're listening to me say this on upgrade.
But for what it's worth, you can extract this and use it elsewhere.
I love this show so much.
I love this show so much.
And you two are so great together.
And even though it's fun to have a little diversion, nevertheless, I am really excited for Mike to come back
and to get more of Upgrade in my ears,
because it's one of my favorite podcasts.
Yeah, bad news is you can't listen to this episode of Upgrade
because you already heard it.
I know, right?
Well, I can, and I can think about it,
but that idiot Casey that never got anything right.
Yeah, what's wrong with upgradefeedback.com, I guess.
Um, you can send your own feedback in about yourself
if you really want to.
Right?
Yeah, no, I really appreciate it.
Thank you so much for being here next week.
Mike will be back because we pre-recorded an episode because I'm on vacation next
week and Mike is on paternity leave and like, what happens to the podcast then?
And the answer is we pre-recorded something that I think is really super fun.
And I hope you will all like, and I hope nothing enormous happens in the news in
the next week because we're not going to cover it next week.
Instead, we're going to have some fun.
So anyway, thank you all again for listening and thank you, Casey.
Mike and I will be back next week.
Thank you, Jason.