Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast - Thoughts on Apple Vision Pro and WWDC 2023!
Episode Date: June 9, 2023It's WWDC time! In this episode we break down everything Apple announced at its annual developer conference, from iOS to MacOS to.. VisionOS? Unfortunately, in order to fit everything we had to skip o...n doing trivia in this episode, but don't worry! If wacky tech trivia is what you live for (like us), we did a trivia collab with the Vergecast where we went head-to-head so make sure to check that out! We also hopped on at the end of their emergency WWDC podcast for a fun lightning round at the end. There's a ton to get into with everything that Apple announced. This is a long one, but we hope you enjoy! Links: Listen to Vergecast: https://bit.ly/vergecastwwdc Trivia episode: https://bit.ly/bonustriviawvfrm Shop the merch: https://shop.mkbhd.com Shop products mentioned: Apple MacBook M2 Air 15 at https://geni.us/V28KGOc Apple AirPods Pro 2 at https://geni.us/bIizFt Apple Watch Ultra at https://geni.us/JQO0 Twitters: Waveform: https://twitter.com/wvfrm Marques: https://twitter.com/mkbhd Andrew: https://twitter.com/andymanganelli David Imel: https://twitter.com/DurvidImel Adam: https://twitter.com/adamlukas17 Ellis: https://twitter.com/EllisRovin Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wvfrmpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@waveformpodcast Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/mkbhd Music by 20syl: https://bit.ly/2S53xlC Waveform is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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What is up, people of the internet?
Welcome back to another episode of the Way4Podcast.
We're back in the studio and we're your hosts. I'm Marques.
I'm Andrew.
And I'm David.
So last episode, pretty chaotic. I know. It was insane.
We had a pretty crazy travel schedule and we did want to have a little fun while we were out there.
But now we're back and we do want to get into the weeds on all things WWDC.
It was kind of the news of the week and it was one of the more packed WWDCs ever.
It was lit.
I mean, I haven't seen every WDC ever, but that was pretty action-packed.
It was busy.
So we're going to go through all this stuff. And there's a lot more coming,
and of course coverage on the other channels, but we should just dive right into it.
Hardware stuff, software stuff, headset headset new product category
first gen stuff
let's just start with
the basics
yeah
MacBook Air
MacBook Air got a 15 inch version
yeah
yay
it's bigger
we were hoping they would do this
eventually
yeah the details are
it's bigger
it's
so
so you had the M2 MacBook Air
it was 13 inches
now we have the M2
15 inch MacBook Air it has a 15.3 inch we have the M2 15-inch MacBook Air.
It has a 15.3-inch display of the same quality and brightness.
It also means you get a bigger battery to match the battery life of the 13-inch Air.
And it also means...
Two more speakers.
Yeah, two more speakers.
So two extra force-canceling woofers.
Maybe it's got a little extra bass depth.
We'll see.
That's it.
Same laptop.
Oh, there's one more color because there's four colors now there used
to be there's always was it always four okay same four colors but not black now they don't come
black is not one of them it's not one of them i'm sorry it's space gray i guess is what it's called
and there's a trivia episode if you want to get that yeah then there's silver midnight and star
light uh it's 12.99 they have the 13 inch M2 still, of course, for $1199.
Oh, sorry, $1099.
Yeah, it dropped.
And they still have the old design 13-inch Air M1 for $999.
Do not buy that.
It's interesting.
I don't hate recommending it to people who don't need M2.
It's just you also get an old design.
The screen on the new one is so much better.
I think the screen's worth $100. Yeah, I think so too. That's fair. Yeah get an old design. The screen on the new one is so much better. I think the screen's worth $100.
Yeah, I think so too.
That's fair.
Yeah.
So it exists.
It's the thinnest, lightest 15-inch laptop I think I've ever seen.
It's 3.3 pounds, and it only has two ports.
Yep.
Two USB-C and one audio jack.
Yeah, still in my book here.
Yeah, I do think if they were going to make it that much bigger,
they should have added one more USB-C port.
I would have liked that um yeah but hey i mean yeah i i think that the versatility of the
13 inch is amazing for a lot of people but having that option to have the 15 inches pretty epic
yeah like i think there's some people who don't need everything in a macbook pro but
would still like the bigger screen and i think this is exactly where they're yep that's exactly
why it exists you'd be surprised at how many like corporations will issue macbook airs now or um like a friend
of mine works at this uh company and they they issued everyone 14 inch macbook pros but honestly
they probably could have just done 15 inch macbook airs and they would have saved some money yeah
there are an ungodly amount of people that walk into a store and just say, what's the cheapest 15-inch laptop that
you have? And Apple would have to go, oh, we have a 16-inch MacBook Pro. And then they go,
oh, never mind. And to me, so this is sort of my analogy in the video that I'm going to eventually
talk about this laptop. It feels like it's the Tesla Model Y of their lineup or the 13-inch is
the Model 3. That's an amazing analogy. Yeah. when Model 3 came out, it was like, oh, yes, finally, an inexpensive version of the car,
and it's great.
But guess what most of the population is actually looking for?
Something a little bigger, a little higher off the ground.
So when they made a little bigger,
a little higher off the ground version of it,
it became the best-selling car.
And the 13-inch MacBook Air is the Model 3.
It was like, you have an entry-level laptop.
It's the one most people are going to get.
But guess what?
Most people want a little bit of a bigger screen.
15-inch laptops are the most common form factor.
So guess what?
They made the 15-inch version,
and I predict it will be their best-selling computer.
Just like the Y was the best-selling car.
So there you have it.
Then they did Mac Studio and M2 Refresh across the board.
Yes.
So we have M1 Pro and M1 Max and M1 Ultra stuff in Mac Studio. Or no, not even M1 Pro. M2 Refresh across the board. Yes. So we have M1 Pro and M1 Max and M1 Ultra stuff in Mac Studio.
Or no, not even M1 Pro.
M2.
Now it's M2.
Now it's M2 Pro, M2 Max, M2 Ultra.
That's the new chip.
The big bad M2 Ultra.
They also got HDMI 2.1, which is great to see.
And then they also went, wait a second.
We didn't finish the Pro lineup there are the mac lineup we have uh we have one more mac to add apple silicon to
and the mac pro got apple silicon yeah it happened it was about the most boring version of the mac
pro getting apple silicon you could possibly imagine. Yeah. It was basically the exact same Mac Pro cheese grater that we know from the Intel days.
But instead of GPUs that you can take out and put back in, and instead of RAM that you
can take out and put back in, it's just the M2 Ultra, same one from the Mac Studio, and
a bunch of PCI slots.
That's basically it.
And that's it.
That's it.
And it's so big.
It's gigantic and
there there is no discernible thermal difference between the two like there's plenty of space in
the uh in the Mac studio so they'll perform the same it's just if you need PCI this is a computer
for you yeah yeah and there was like a there was one of the towers in there with the the lid off
or whatever you want to call it so you could see inside.
And there was nothing in the PCIe slots.
And then there was just the chip.
It looked like when a bachelor gets their apartment and they just have a lawn chair
and a TV in the middle of the room.
There's just absolutely nothing in there.
It was cool to see the M2 Ultra die in there, though.
That looked pretty cool.
It's big, yeah.
It's very big.
It's bigger than I expected. Yeah. I do want to talk about M2 Ultra a little looked pretty big yeah it's very big it's bigger than i expected
yeah i do want to talk about m2 ultra a little bit in detail because it's actually a way bigger
update than you'd probably expect uh especially considering m1 ultra right was not a huge lift
you know it was two m1 maxes that were fused together and that's obviously huge performance
gains uh but then when the m2 max came out it was
like it was so close in performance to the m2 ultra and we actually had a nice briefing about
the new max the new m2 ultra and the reason it's such a big difference especially for us is that
the original m1 ultra because it was too fused together it kind of just had twice the performance
but in parallel it wasn't exporting our videos twice as fast because they didn't have a hardware
way for them to do that they're just like oh if you need to like export twice as many tasks you
can do them all at like their linear speed but in parallel they didn't work together as much as they worked at the same time.
At the same time.
So if you had twice as many things to do at the same time, you would see a benefit.
But if you wanted to do one single thing twice as fast, you didn't see that as often.
Which seems like the obvious thing, but I guess with super pro workflows,
maybe you're doing a bunch of things.
They actually told us they were like, yeah, but like, you know, you could,
you could export a 480p version of this and a 720p and a 1080 and a 4K and 8K at the same time.
We're like, OK, YouTube does that for me.
It's like I would I guess it's good to do that because we can upload it for subtitling.
Yeah, I was.
It's funny, like going out of compressor and making nine versions of video at once.
Like I'm sure somebody does that.
But for ours, it's like I usually do a couple back-to-back exports i do the 4k one that goes to youtube and then we do
subtitle captions and i don't need to upload a 4k version of the video to them to do captions so i
just export the smallest possible version yeah like a 480p version so that i can upload a hundred
megabyte file so i do two exports and then maybe i do a audio and sfx tracks for when we do our
dubbing so it's like
there's a bunch of stuff happening but i always do them like one after i never even thought about
the fact that we could do them in parallel so we should probably set up a workflow well it takes
like 10 seconds after i know how long does it take to export a 480 already rendered timeline
but setting up a macro where you can just do everything at once that would be fine it's cool
until you accidentally only upload the 480p version.
Which never.
But yeah, for M2 Ultra,
the thing that's amazing about it,
they changed the hardware a little bit
and changed the software a little bit, the firmware.
And now it's 1.8x faster than the M2 Max.
Because it can now put all those resources into one task,
which is amazing.
So I think that we're going to see a
huge gain on m2 ultra over m1 ultra which is very exciting uh they showed us a lot of pretty crazy
uh demos with it where they were just like playing back 12 streams of 8k video in real time yeah you
know um but you can get up to 192 gigabytes of RAM in the M2 Ultra which is pretty insane
30% faster
GPU, 40% faster neural
engine, yeah
up to 6 Pro Display XDRs, we're never
going to utilize that, that's fine
don't tempt me with a good time
you get a bunch more I.O. also in the
M2 Ultra just because you have more space
than like a M2 Studio
that's going to come out
right uh i think the io on the mac studio is the same i thought it had like the mac pro on the
studio is the same yeah that's what i'm saying the mac pro though is like where you're getting
a bunch of extra io over them yes yes yeah okay so to be fair they took away the sd card slot
yeah wow all right let's go through all the new Mac Pro stuff. Mac Pro, same exact chassis,
but no SD card slot.
Yeah.
What?
I don't know.
What?
That was useful.
So that's number one.
Pros don't use SD.
They just put it back on.
They just put it back
in the laptop.
It's right here
in the MacBook Pro.
But it does gain
six or eight on the back.
I think it's eight.
Yeah, eight Thunderbolt ports on the back
and the top pci slot a lot and then two hdmi 2.1 and two uspa and then six open pci gen 4
uh slots the bottom one is a compatibility slot that's great the mac studio has all the same ports
and hdmi 2.1 instead of 2.0 as the last mac studio yeah but obviously the
old mac pro you could stuff a terabyte and a half of ram in there you can't do that anymore because
the ram is built into m2 so you can do 192 gigs which is a lot but it's not what you could do
before so that's interesting and then no gpus at all yeah just m2's gpu yeah and you could do
obviously other cards and things like if you want
to put in a card with a bunch of cuda cores to help render things you can do that but that won't
be your video card that would just be like a rendering card you can do audio cards you can do
storage cards which is what i'm probably going to end up doing yeah uh but that's that's the
difference that is what makes this product very strange is that the the cheese the old cheese grater was just
like it's upgradable so that over time you can just keep swapping stuff out and you keep the
chassis and this one is just like a lot of the chassis everything's built in it's on the main
board it's fused to the main board and all you can really do is pci expansion which for the people
that use pci expansion for like audio stuff, useful,
but it's a very large chassis for one small subtask. And I imagine this is a much smaller
audience than even the old Mac Pro was. I have a theory. Go for it. Most of my theories about
Apple are based on things that they've already done because they're so lockstep predictable as
a company. They do things over and over again. i think they're going to redesign the mac pro for the next gen and here's why this is
the ultimate laziest we went from intel to apple silicon but didn't change the chassis what did
they do in the first macbook air the same exact thing they had the intel macbook air and then
they just took the exact same intel macbook air swapped it out with apple silicon and they were
like haha performance but the next gen's gonna have a redesign and sure enough we got the m2 took the exact same Intel MacBook Air, swapped it out with Apple Silicon, and they were like, ha-ha, performance.
But the next gen's going to have a redesign.
And sure enough, we got the M2 with the redesign that was built around the chip.
Now Mac Pro happens.
What happens with the Mac Pro?
They went straight from Intel to Apple Silicon,
and you go, wow, look at all that performance.
But it's not built for this chip.
I think the next-gen Mac Pro can be smaller thermally.
It can have a nicer design
and it doesn't have it could be on your desk even it could have four pci slots instead of six yeah
and you can shrink that thing down and make it nice and i think that's the next mac pro the
hardest thing about that though is just the sizing of the the cards you're putting in the
the expansion slots it's gotta be big enough for the cards yeah that's the weird thing because
like ultimately like you said it's you can't replace ram and all that because it's all on the chip so we all kind of saw that coming
and thought it'd be smaller but when you think of all the expansion slots they could only make it
so small if you want to put six slots there yeah so what do you like are you imagining a smaller
cheese grater yeah yeah yeah maybe not it's gotta be a smaller case it's gotta be maybe it's still
a cheese grater because airflow and iconic. Maybe it's still a cheese grater because Airflow and Iconic Design, whatever.
It's like the die-cast cheese grater model.
Can you take bets now when this is going to happen?
Oh, when it happens?
I like that we're already on to the next macro.
You just got what you wanted.
This was the Shet Marquez up.
Is this what you wanted?
I know.
Is this what you wanted?
Yeah.
No.
When is this going to happen?
It's the lowest priority thing.
It's the Tesla roadster of their lineup.
Four years.
Before a redesign?
I think two years.
I think they should have offered two Mac Pros this year
if they were going to do this.
They should have offered that mini ITX version
where it has four PCI expansion slots and it's smaller.
And cheaper?
And cheaper.
Yeah, this Mac Pro starts at $7,000.
That's crazy.
It's expensive,
but it has respectable
baseline specs.
Yeah, you only get
M1 Ultra.
Yeah.
Or the last baseline Mac Pro
was like kind of a slap
in the face
where you were getting
the base one.
I think absolutely spec'd out
this thing's like $20,000
which is significant.
It's $12,000.
$12,000?
If you see that screenshot
it's because people love
to just add like Final Cut and Logic and all the stupid add-ons down the list.
And that's the absolute highest you can get.
The maximum you can spend on the computer itself is just over $12,000.
How would I know that?
I wonder.
Oh, no.
I didn't think that's going to happen.
So, yeah.
So, that's the Mac pro and the mac studio that's
the max mac os also changed oh right we got we got a new mac os yeah i guess that kind of brings us
to the software section yeah because that's most of what wwdc is typically we talk software os
updates and apple's got a bunch of os's we don't usually get this much hardware so it was like
yeah we left there and I was like
if we didn't get hardware
sure this would be still interesting but there would be
not nearly that much to talk about
Mac Pro was at like minute 15 out of 2 hours
they were cruising
when we sat down and they first started
going and I couldn't get the wifi working
so I was starting to do things on my phone
my phone was like heating up by how fast I was typing
like I couldn't keep up and it was like by the time we got to mac pro i was like
finally they finally got to it that was 15 minutes into a two-hour adam and i were looking at it to
like find the clip of them reacting and i'm like adam you have to go earlier he's at like minute
he's like minute 40 i was like earlier he's like 30 earlier and then he got to 20 and it was still
after it oh my gosh it was like 12 to 15 minutes.
That's wild.
They were flying.
Like Ellis and I were taking notes.
And like at the beginning, we're like talking, cracking jokes.
And then we just get real quiet because we're just trying to keep up.
Yeah.
It was a lot.
Let's talk software.
So macOS Sonoma is what's showing up on every Mac now.
Didn't you?
You predicted the name.
I didn't actually predict the name.
Oh, okay.
We were kind of joking on Twitter.
What happened was,
I think we were joking about like Macalus.
It was the trivia question.
It was the trivia question
where Ellis said like,
what was the name of Silicon Valley?
And then I thought that it was the wine,
the like wine country area.
Is that one of the multiple choice ones?
Yeah.
Yeah.
My prediction was Alcatraz. I said Alcatraz. It wasn't actually Alcatraz it wasn't actually yeah anyway yeah you were
talking about the trivia but it's more fun to just ignore the facts and lean into the meme
I agree screenshot of you going Sonoma and that's like the exact the caption it's fake news but I'll
take it yeah yeah no context at all uh no it's a pretty small update, but there are some interesting things, some highlights.
Number one, I don't know why,
but you can take widgets out of the sidebar now
and just throw them out anywhere on your home screen.
Does anybody, do you guys use widgets at all?
I don't really even, I have like two in my sidebar.
Weather, because we have a terrible air quality alert out here,
and then screen on time.
But now you can use the TickTick widget on your desktop.
Well, okay.
So the big widget update
is that in iPadOS and macOS
you can interact with
widgets inside of the
widget without opening the app. Believe it or not
you couldn't do this in any widget
on the iPad ever. I hear the rant coming
do we want to focus on macOS first?
Before we go straight into it?
I just know where this is going
and I think we should focus on...
Okay, okay.
Okay, so yeah,
you could put your widgets anywhere on the Mac.
Widgets are,
I don't use widgets,
but I think I just,
my screen's a mess all the time
with just like different sized windows
and that to me feels like
my clicking through widgets.
But some of the,
for people who do use it,
I could see them being kind of cool.
It is nice how they like
deactivate sort of behind when you have another window active
and it fades nicely into the background.
It's beautiful.
A lot of people using computers with one screen like that,
I just use my window full screen all the time, so I never use a widget.
I always look at the demos and they did the demo of that,
and I was like, you know how I know I'm never going to use this because the demo is just
a small window in the middle of the screen and then a bunch of widgets around it i never use a
small window in the middle of my laptop i think this is part of their merger of the ios ipad os
mac os thing they're slowly trying to get everything to look more more and more similar
and if you can just like throw widgets
like you see this screenshot right
this just has widgets all over the
display which in my opinion makes it
look really messy but people
think it looks like an iPad well it looks
more like an iPad now yeah that's true
this reminds me of Windows Vista when they
were trying to say how like Vista was gonna be
the new sick operating system
because it had all these like widgets on the screen that no one ever touched because your Windows full screen all the
time. Hey I was a widget boy in Vista days. I had XP. A wee widget lad. I had XP for like months when
Vista was out and I was like oh my god I want this AeroGlass so bad and I had installed a theme
on Windows XP that gave me the transparent
glass and the widgets and I was like, hell
yeah, I kind of have Windows Vista.
And it's stable. Yeah, and then I actually
got Vista and I was like, oh, this is
I guess. You load it up, you're like, I can see
the weather and you're like, I don't care anymore.
Yeah, I didn't need to see the weather.
I'm just going to put all the widgets on a separate desktop.
That's actually not a bad
idea. As someone who has two monitors,
that did cross my mind.
What if I just put them all on the corner of one of the monitors?
Or if you're like,
oh wait, that's what we already have.
Because macOS lets you swipe
between virtual desktops,
you could have a virtual desktop that's all widgets.
So you just use the three-fingered gesture.
What did we have before?
Wasn't it called when you pinched out that's a control center that used to be a widget panel
that's this i don't know that's like brands all the gestures i don't know what that's all though
there used to be a widget panel where you literally it was like a search box and a bunch of widgets
in mac this is like the virtual home screens i think they just change where they put widgets
every update and just see what catches on.
Yeah.
That's basically it.
So Sonoma.
Yeah, Sonoma has widgets now. There's not a ton of updates in Sonoma.
It's probably the smallest OS update
out of any of the products that Apple has.
You also have enhanced screen sharing,
which is fairly cool.
I think it's the sickest feature.
Yeah.
And it works
in pretty much
any video conferencing application
but it can separate you
from the screen
that you're sharing
and sort of like
overlay a small version of you
because it's doing
semantic segmentation
cutting you out
and it can do
a bunch of different things.
It can put you
in a little circle.
It can put you
just with your body
right in front of it.
I think that's really cool
because it's good
to have that interaction
with the person and also see their screen.
It's like foreground, background, like give you, yeah.
I really like that.
The like cut out on the iPhone
of like holding down and bring a subject out of a photo.
You're basically doing that.
It's that for video in real time
in whatever app you want.
It's pretty useful.
If you think about it, Zoom kind of does the,
or I forget if it's Zoom or something,
but they do the, they'll blur the background for you.
They all do. So pretty much what it's Zoom or something, but they'll blur the background for you. They all do something like that.
So pretty much what it's doing is just eliminating that behind you.
Yeah.
But it looked really good.
It looks really good.
They have a bunch of really funny, really dumb things
where you can hold both hands and there's some fireworks.
There's a bunch of effects.
Who wants this stuff?
Even the demos they were doing of it felt like delayed.
It was like thumbs up, hold it for four seconds, and then like. Fireworks. effects i who wants this stuff like the demos they were doing of it felt like delayed it was
like thumbs up and it was like for four seconds and then like yeah i think every video conferencing
app has these like really gimmicky really kid like childlike things that like nobody really
likes and cares about you know how there's like a button to raise your hand in google meet i just
picture you going like this and then like 90 hands come up from behind you like I'm raising my hand. That would be useful.
That would do that. That would actually be useful.
Yeah. We also got
Safari got a little bit of an
update. There is more privacy
features in it and they also have
what is it called? Profiles
now. Yeah. Which is something that
Chrome has had for a very long time.
So that's cool. I immediately
thought it kind of looks like Arc now.
Like some of the things they were adding.
MARK MANDELBAUM- With the profile switcher.
MARK MIRCHANDANI- The profile switcher
kind of looks like Arc.
MARK MANDELBAUM- You can also now
create a web app from any app and put
the icon on your desktop.
MARK MIRCHANDANI- Which you could also
always do with Chrome.
MARK MIRCHANDANI- Yeah.
Or in Windows for like 10 years.
MARK MIRCHANDANI- Yeah.
Before Facebook Messenger, back when I used
to use Facebook Messenger, before they had an actual web
app, that was what I would do. You could just remove the url bar and it would just be an app that you
could launch it was a chrome window sick uh they have a game mode game mode which is huge because
everyone uses max for games um i'm really pumped that they used like a a really hard game to prove
they use death stranding which is a very hard game to run and that's how they showed it i thought there was supposed to be a a there is a translator now a translator so
did you do you catch this they have an api or they have a thing now where you can basically
move like developers can take their game and translate it to um metal Oh. Or use the Metal API and easily move it over to Mac.
And a lot of people,
apparently people can just do this
without being the developer,
but a lot of people were just taking existing games
that they own and moving them over
and then trying them on Mac.
So people were playing like Cyberpunk on their MacBooks
and getting pretty good frame rates.
That was actually an interesting development.
Yeah.
Yeah. Seems pretty big for gaming. Okay. That is actually an interesting development. Yeah. Yeah.
Seems pretty big for gaming.
Okay.
Well, game mode, if anyone's wondering,
is basically just like a priority of the game on your CPU, GPU,
and it also doubles the sample rate of Bluetooth.
So if you're using an external controller,
it'll be more responsive.
Yeah.
It also with AirPods as well,
just like less latency between them,
which is actually really awesome. Yeah. And I think they assume well, just like less latency between them, which is actually
really awesome.
Yeah.
And I think they assume
that your computer
is going to be plugged in
while you're playing
a video game anyway.
So if that uses more battery,
you probably don't care.
And last but not least,
probably the most important
possible thing.
You want to take it away, Marques?
Oh, yeah.
I love these things.
No, I actually unironically
really love these.
So there's now this,
you know,
the screensavers from Apple TV that were like these crazy HDR
helicopter flyovers of like major cities or super cool things.
They are bringing them to Mac OS now and they shot a bunch of new ones.
And I was talking to the guy, Phil, who shot these because, because believe it or not,
really hard to shoot some of these.
And if you look at them for like, if you have an Apple TV that goes to screensaver mode
and you watch one of the screensavers for like five, six seconds in a row, you're like,
oh, this is kind of a cool shot.
And then it keeps going for another like minute and you're like, this is a really long shot.
And it keeps going for another two minutes and you're like, how did they make this?
And the answer is 8K slow-mo from some incredible like aerial camera setup and uh really impressive
stuff it's also really cool that when you then log in after the screen savers on it like nestles
into your background and then becomes like a free like that's just such a nice touch of just like
hey we have a 8k video like screensaver and then just like turns into your desktop though i know
it seems so little but that's the kind
of stuff that Apple does that makes it feel
I have to find the looping point.
I will not until I find a loop.
It's really hard. They're good.
It's forever. Samsung also used
to do this. I don't know if you remember this on like the Galaxy
S9. They would have like these
wallpapers or
yeah these wallpapers when you unlocked your phone
before you like well before you unlockedapers when you unlocked your phone before you
like well before you unlocked it when you turned it on it had like a wallpaper
and then you would unlock it and it would sort of like nestle into the
background yeah but they got rid of those but now they're bringing them to
the desktop here I like it cool we should take a break yeah we got a lot
more to talk about there's a bunch more software there's iPhone stuff AirPlay
stuff air pod stuff iPad stuff widget rant and maybe
even a vision pro thing or two so we're gonna talk about it if we get to it yeah we'll probably
we'll maybe get to it this time so uh also all trivia this week is in our collab episode so
we've got way too much to talk about to do trivia today so sorry for you trivia lovers. Be right back. shot, you're always taken care of with a sportsbook born in Vegas. That's a feeling you can only get with
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I am so dreading groceries this week.
Why? You can skip it.
Oh, what? Just like that?
Just like that.
How about dinner with my third cousin?
Skip it.
Prince Fluffy's favorite treats?
Skippable.
Midnight snacks?
Skip. My neighbor's nightly
saxophone practices uh nope you're on your own there could have skipped it should have skipped
it skip to the good part and get groceries meals and more delivered right to your door on skip
all right welcome back let's get into the new iPhone software, iOS 17.
See what I did there?
Yeah, see, now you clicked.
No, okay, so there's a lot of good stuff in iOS 17.
It's funny because there's so much other stuff
that it kind of went under the radar,
but if you just look at this list,
there's a bunch of really smart stuff in here.
Two main things that I noticed
has an overarching theme to pay attention to for this.
One, Apple doesn't love saying the same words on stage as other companies.
And specifically, if you went back to Google I.O. and you saw what they said on stage,
it was mostly AI, AI, AI, AI.
And they would say AI any chance they got about any feature that used any sort of machine learning or anything.
Pump the stock.
I don't even know if Apple said AI once on stage.
Did they?
Maybe once or twice?
They said Transformers twice.
They said Transformers.
They said ML.
They said machine learning.
Machine learning.
They don't think they said AI once.
I don't think they ever will.
They avoided saying AI at all.
But there are still features that would qualify as AI in iOS in the software we're talking
about.
So that's one.
And the other is ecosystem takes the lead here.
They did a lot of ecosystem tie-in features.
And they're useful features, but they're like really useful if you have friends with iPhones
or if you have more than one Apple device.
Absolutely.
Those are the two like themes out of everything I noticed.
So, okay. First, let's get into out of everything I noticed. So, okay.
First, let's get into the phone app is better.
New contact cards.
Actually, they're called posters.
The phone app.
Just like making calls.
Yeah.
There are live transcribed voicemails now, which is literally if you miss a call or send
someone to voicemail, just like on the Pixel when you screen a call, you'll get the voicemail
transcription happening live on your screen and you can choose to pick it up in the middle
that's really interesting i just want to say because i thought that carriers like as they're
leaving a voicemail you can read the transcription and decide to pick it up while they're leaving a
voicemail which i didn't know was possible i thought that carriers like decided on whether
you could do that or not it is funny like i think nila mentioned this when we joined their podcast on how it like it's an old
answering machine like that's what you used to do on an answering machine at your house to be like
i don't feel like answering this and be like oh that was my mom and she's actually calling about
something important just like pick them up in the middle of their leaving the voicemail that's
actually a great point yeah i never thought about that it's literally just that some people but it's
a really good idea i've never had an answering machine well i do vaguely remember
those it didn't live transcribe you just heard it yeah and then it recorded it and you played it
later but anyways i do think that's really cool because a lot of people are going to say like oh
androids have had live transcription voicemails for a while but like real time being able to
interrupt it yeah it's really so you can on Pixel, it's just not called a voicemail.
But can you pick up while they're leaving a voicemail?
And it's real time transcribing it?
Yes.
Why am I missing that?
On call screen on the Pixel, when you hit screen call,
it does give a little like,
this person is using a Google whatever,
and then they can start talking
and I get a transcription as they're talking
of what they're saying and I can pick up.
I think that's different.
I feel like there's a difference between you just made it to voicemail and like i got
sent a robot to answer this call and now i mean if you take away the intro with google talking
it's the same thing but do you think that google is like shoving a robot in between the call and
the actual voicemail part and so it's just doing its own function there? Yes, so what Google does is it introduces itself as a robot,
and then you start talking,
and there's a couple of buttons you can press on the screen
to ask for more.
So if you want to go like, who is this, or why are you calling,
you hit the button, and then the robot asks them,
and then you continue to get a transcription of what they say.
And if you want to pick up at any time,
you hit the green button and pick up.
This one is just like, they're not picking up your call.
Feel free to start talking now. It's a voicemail. And then you can pick up at any time you hit the green button and pick up this one is just like they're not picking up your call feel free to start talking now it's a voicemail and then i would argue that's better i feel like the if i'm the one leaving the voicemail or i think people leaving me a voicemail
will feel much more like free-flowing and personal if they're just leaving a voicemail and i yeah
versus like no one wants to talk to a robot yeah the robot just changes the vibe completely it's
just what is even the point
it's kind of just like
Google just added
a bunch of features
to screen calls
and it's like
if I get like a
like a spam thing
and a spam
spammer starts talking
I just hit the red button
and it's gone
yeah but the thing is
if you were able to
screen calls already
like if Apple can
just be like
okay we're interrupting
the voicemail feature
and we're allowing you
to pick up during that call.
Why does Google even have to do the thing where it's like, I'm a robot, please talk.
I always felt like.
I think it's to introduce the rest of the prompts later.
I also always felt like that made it feel like a personal assistant kind of thing.
It almost feels way more businessy than like personal, which is like cool for businesses.
Like if I'm really busy during my work day and
it's i'm screening voice calls it's cool it feels like i have a personal assistant i can just do
that while i'm still working but when it's like my mom calling me like i don't want to send her
a robot to be like yeah i think it was also like overly cautious with these kind of things where
anytime they're doing anything with a robot they're like let's make sure that people know
it's a robot yeah this feels like a let's make sure that people know it's a robot. Yeah. This feels like a simpler version, a simpler, more like personal.
Easier.
Yeah.
Everyday kind of thing.
Same thing with FaceTime.
Yes.
You can leave a FaceTime video voicemail.
I love this.
Which is like, if you FaceTime someone and they miss it,
you've already got your camera open
and you were gonna do a video call in some way,
you just leave a video message.
Yeah.
I think the point of FaceTiming someone usually is,
especially if you're FaceTiming them
when they don't know you're about to FaceTime them,
is that you want to demonstrate something.
So being able to have a video call,
demonstrate something,
and it's just like a voicemail,
I think is a really cool feature.
Unless you're calling from a Vision Pro headset.
But we'll get to that.
We'll get to that.
That is a cool thing.
I want to FaceTime someone
because my kid just took their first steps or something.
And then you can be like,
look what's happening right now.
Like, you missed this, but look, you can still see it.
Yeah, I love that.
I think that's really cool, yeah.
I love that.
They also have personalized contact posters,
which is, again, a very ecosystem.
Your friends have an iPhone thing.
This is so ecosystem.
Yeah.
They changed the way that the contact, yeah.
It's cool.
They changed the way contacts look content yeah it's cool they change
the way contacts look uh it's way prettier now um and it basically like does the cut out of your
body and then you can use your own photos it's the ios 16 lock screen for a poster absolutely
absolutely which is awesome the ios 16 lock screen was sick and now you can airdrop it to someone by
putting your phone right next to theirs okay just your Just your iPhones, though. So this is probably one of the coolest features in iOS 17, if your friends have iPhones.
They added a bunch of functions to tapping your phones together, which I think is a very
futuristic, very like we always assumed you could just kind of like, bing.
That's how it works.
So this one's called NameDrop, which I think is a great name.
They name everything, don't they?
Yeah.
You just bring your iPhones together,
and all of a sudden,
I don't know if the animation
is actually the way it looked on in the video,
but it's like this rippling thing
where all of a sudden your contact posters
just ripple into each other's phones.
I think that's really cool.
I think the neat touch is you get to choose
exactly which contact information you share
with each person.
So if I'm seeing you and I'm like, oh, do you have my phone number?
No.
And I do that.
I can go, yeah, phone number.
Just share the phone number.
And we beam phones and you get my phone number.
Or if I'm at a conference and I'm like, hmm, work email.
I'll adjust the work email when we beam phones.
Oh, harassment?
Fake number.
I'll give you a fake number and beam it.
Oh, yeah, here's my number.
And it's fake and you just walk away. You can make a bunch of different contact posters and you can just
make one that has fake information so if you don't actually want that person to contact you
you just give them fake information and you're like i beamed you i beamed you you got it all
right see you later bye yeah yeah yeah so that's that's very ecosystem that's uh oh you have an
android sorry i guess yeah i'll give you my phone number it's like david pops up like popping out
of the screen on his iphone and then i call and it's just like a green am on the screen i have like a whole punch
in a card that'll that'll if you just dial that number that'll be it uh no yeah airdrop for names
yeah name drop uh other stuff there are actually speaking of airdrop there are a lot of airdrop
updates that i think are cool because i never thought of airdrop as something that needed to be updated besides stability yeah um but now if you're airdropping
some something to someone but you really have to go when you get out of range it'll continue
airdropping over the internet super useful which is interesting i um they showed using apple photos
like airdropping photos and i do wonder if for that feature to work you
have to already have what you're airdropping them like in the cloud because then it just kind of
like like handshake shares it over your accounts and continues to download it i'm not sure if
that's the case we're gonna have to test that yeah when we looked at the images and stuff it
had the little like apple photos logo remember we were trying to figure this out so not over
mobile data it's because it's already in the to figure this out. So not over mobile data.
It's because it's already in the cloud on the internet.
We'll be over mobile data.
It will be cellular.
Well, at that point, you wouldn't be cellular to their other phone.
It would be like cellular to pull it from some cloud source instead of straight from
there.
Oh, I was assuming it's like sending something to the cloud source and then the cloud source
is sending it back.
I think it's like you're sending it locally over the wi-fi direct handshake that you have with
with airdrop but then if you get out of range because that file is theoretically also in the
cloud it can finish downloading it it already knows what bytes it's downloaded so it downloads
the rest i don't know if that that's how it works definitively but that's how i would understand it
disclaimer that's an assumption yeah Yeah. We gonna test it.
We're gonna test that.
Yeah.
Also, AirDrop now works with Apple Watch.
I'm gonna beam you so many videos on Apple Watch.
Yeah, you can...
Well, you can do the NameDrop thing with Apple Watch too,
which is very cool.
Oh, true, true, true.
You can bring your watch to someone's phone
and it'll beam their information.
Can you go watch to watch?
I don't know.
That would be kind of sick.
Someone's gonna do it.
Yeah, someone's going to do it.
You now know who I am.
Cool.
Yeah.
You can also start share plays now
by bringing your devices together,
just like Name Drop.
Very cool.
Start shared activities.
Yeah.
And then messages.
Messages has a ton of things in there.
Lots of updates to messages.
Which I don't use messages so
i'm just kind of watching the the sticker thing i think was probably the like biggest thing they
showed um i think the search features well the search feature is really cool so search feature
with filters right yes and then so you can basically search one thing and then after you've
searched that then you can also keep searching further and further. There's that. There's also the benefit that before you would have to search messages wide for a word.
You couldn't search within somebody's message, which was stupid.
Right.
Like if I wanted to search for a very specific thing that I talked to Adam about, I would just have to search in messages.
And everybody else that said that word would also pop up.
Yeah.
So you have to search their name.
Wait, really?
Yes.
Yeah. There's no individual search thread. Sometimes I'm just really surprised. Yeah. So you have to search their name. Wait, really? Yes. Yeah, there's no individual search thread.
Sometimes I'm just really surprised.
Yeah, Android is not.
Android is not.
It's one of those things where there's a lot of things they add
which you're like, you couldn't do that before?
But yeah, this is the iMessage experience.
And I always breeze through these, and every time I say them,
there's a bunch of people going, finally!
And you're like, oh yeah, people use iMessage a lot.
Yeah.
So search filters is one.
Transcribed inline audio messages is another.
So if I sent someone an audio message,
they would just have a little play button
and it would be a waveform that they played
and it would disappear.
And if you don't have time for that waveform,
you can see the transcription now.
This is on Slack for videos.
It's so funny.
I think it's the best thing ever.
So having that in there is actually really cool.
Google Messages has it.
Telegram has it.
I think pretty much every single messaging app
has been adding it in the last year and a half.
Something about live captions recently
has just made me very happy.
Me too.
I think it's really awesome.
And I used to complain about people
sending me voice notes all the time
because it's like, bro, I'm on the subway.
I have to put my headphones on
just to listen to your voice note
and then take them off. So that's really nice to see um the sticker experience
you were talking about yeah it's like rather than reactions you can just straight up put stickers
onto messages now and my main question there is like it kind of looks like they could put them
wherever but they always put them on the right side of the screen but like if you're a bad faith
sticker actor like are you going to just start putting stickers
all over your messages so you can't read things anymore?
Oh my gosh.
Probably.
And then your Android friend just gets like,
Andrew moved sticker to 300,458.
Like, what is happening?
And the cool, yeah.
I can't.
Maybe, did they only do this
because RCS made reactions a little nicer for it?
Honestly, it feels like it.
And they want to screw over and they want to make our lives miserable again.
I think that there is probably going to be like no way for an SMS message to interpolate this.
We need to test this.
Yeah, it's a really funny point.
This was 100% like Apple watching the Google presentation being like, oh, you want us to support RCS?
We'll show you.
And then Hiroshi was watching this presentation like, come on, RCS, RCS.
And they were like, you can put stickers anywhere.
And they're like, how are we going to fix this?
There's no way you have an Android person in the group chat
if you're trying to do sticker chaos.
I have a feeling that this is just not going to work at all.
Because previous...
For Android, right?
Yeah, if you add an Android person to the group chat,
this feature will stop working. And previously, if you had add an android person to the group chat this feature
will stop working and previously if you had a single android user in the group chat you couldn't
use any imessage features except for the like reactions and stuff and then it would do that
weird interpolation stuff one of the good updates well it's actually you can interpret this in
various ways you could say it's a good update or a worse update but now if you have an android user
in the group chat
you can still use a lot of iMessage functions and i'm assuming that they're doing some weird like
in between hacky thing because it's still same way google did i guess uh well that was with that
was with like stickers i'm not stickers they were actually they would catch an sms from a reaction
and turn it into a reaction inline in Google's app.
Yeah.
But now you're still able to do iMessage features
with other iPhone users in the group chat,
even if there's an Android user
where previously you couldn't besides reactions.
So they're adding specific ones.
It's not like every iMessage feature.
I think this helps in a lot of ways
because it makes it so having
one Android user in the group chat will
not make everyone bully the Android user to get
out of the group chat which you can't even do
by the way because it's an SMS
chat and you can't leave and enter
you have to start a new one
it's a whole mess I think that that's good
but we'll see how that plays
out one other thing
I just realized we missed it
but i did think it was kind of cool no oh no stickers was there anything else on sticker well
you can make animated animated ones because you can do the you can do the tap and hold thing um
where you like cut out a a person from a photo and you can use that as a sticker system-wide
on any app you can also do it with uh with videos now i think it was live photos
oh live photos yeah so i think it would pick out live photos it felt could do it correctly or look
good and then in the live photos it would do exactly that and you can apparently use those
stickers in like a lot of apps which is very cool yeah it just adds to your like emoji section as
your own stickers which is i think really cool anyway what were you gonna say uh the check-in feature i thought was actually kind of cool um just like you know we all you tell
a loved one like oh i'm about like yesterday told claire oh i'm getting on the plane now and she'll
be like oh let me know when you land or like if you're saying i'm gonna drive back an hour let me
know when you get there it can tell you said that in the send in the messages
and then a little thing will pop up that says like you made it there and tell them you're safe
or just like if you start going off track and don't quite make it there it sends an alert to
the person you're talking about i'm worried about well i don't use this but if i had this i'd be
worried then claire knows i spent an extra 30 minutes going to taco bell on my way home or
whatever and like gonna get narred out on that. Otherwise I think it's actually kind of a cool thing.
Especially I'm sure for parents that have kids.
I think it's a great idea for women too.
For sure. It's a huge safety feature.
When she used to go on like first dates
she would share her location
with me for the night.
And it's like this is that basically.
I think it's a really good low-key safety
feature for sure.
It's one of the things where Apple looks at the way people use the phone and they were like we can make that
better yep and they just did it yeah yeah yeah very cool um autocorrect transformer based autocorrect
thank god you can now uh it'll basically learn how you text so if multiple times you you say
like a word that is like slang or is the worst part of the iPhone.
Yeah.
Hot take.
The keyboard is the worst part of the iPhone.
By far.
Every time I type a word and I'm like, oh, that's not the word.
Delete it.
Type it again.
It fixes it.
I delete it.
You should know that when I deleted it twice, I didn't want to say it.
And then I type it again and it just keeps going.
It's so frustrating.
This is the worst keyboard ever.
Ducking sucks.
Yeah.
I did like they made that reference. I did like they made that reference.
I like that they made that reference.
They did make that reference.
Because that's the most classic one.
Like you type it, it fixes it, you delete it.
You type it again, it fixes it again.
You're like, in what world would I ever say ducking?
I've never said that word before.
So now, number one, it will learn from words
that you actually use.
Thank God.
And it will actually autocorrect and help you
pick your next word
based on the way you usually say strings of words uh there's inline typing predictions kind of like
you have in like google docs where if you're typing something it'll predict the next word
and you can just hit space and it fills it in finally yeah uh there's sentence level auto
correction which is really useful and that's something that you need transformers for because
these are all things google Keyboard has been doing
for a while
yes indeed
we should make a short
of this
have you ever seen
the people who
they sing songs
based on like
the Google Keyboard
next prediction
so they just keep
pressing
no no they just
keep pressing
yeah next word
and then they have
to sing this
but then it usually
just gets in a loop
it eventually gets
in a loop
we should do
Apple Keyboard Song
versus Google Keyboard Song.
Yeah, after you use it for a month and it really knows you very well,
just see what it says. See what it thinks you would
say. Yeah.
So yeah, the autocorrect and the updates to the
keyboard, really, really useful.
I'm very excited about that. So anyone can get,
in case you guys didn't know, anyone can get the developer
beta now. It used to be that you had to
pay $99, sign up specifically
as a developer i'm not
actually sure if i checked a checkbox that said i understand and i agree and i'm a developer now
yeah i'd never read conditions i just got the credit card charge for 99 to renew my developer
account but i don't need it to have i don't need to pay the 100 bucks to have the ios beta but yeah
if you want to try it it's super not stable actually don't recommend it yet i don't need to pay the $100 to have the iOS beta. But yeah, if you want to try it. It's super not stable.
I actually don't recommend it yet.
I don't recommend it either.
It's a developer beta for a reason.
Maybe the public betas, maybe hop on those.
But that's where we're at.
Can I talk about standby mode really quick?
Oh, yeah.
Of course.
Okay, and last thing in iOS,
which is I don't know why I'm excited about these things and I don't even use an iPhone.
It's not even called standby mode.
I think it's just called standby.
Oh, yeah, standby. It's called mode. I think it's just called standby. Oh yeah.
Standby.
It's called standby.
I think this was pretty sick.
Pretty much.
And the reason I think this is cool is just because of compatibility with MagSafe on all
these things where just like you have a MagSafe stand or I think, does it have to be on a
MagSafe stand or it can be kind of whenever.
I think it does have to be on a MagSafe stand because there's a microprocessor handshake.
I think it's better with a MagSafe stand. I think that's what it will automatically do it on a MagSafe stand because there's a microprocessor handshake. I think it's better
with a MagSafe stand.
Yeah, I think that's what it is.
It will automatically do it
on a MagSafe stand.
It pushes it into standby mode.
But I think on stage they said
as long as your phone
is charging and horizontal,
which would sort of require
a magnet to do that.
But yeah, it's not always.
Sort of.
I actually do have a
horizontal wireless charger at home.
It just has a little lip
on the bottom.
So I think, yeah,
the Cybertruck one,
it would be...
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. But anyways, the MagSafe stands are cool because you can put them kind of wherever and
essentially what it is is a mode that just allows like a bunch of different widgets or just like
your alarm clock and stuff like that and it's yeah it's just like it's basically a smart home display
yeah but i think the coolest thing about it is depending on where in your house you are
and you put it on those mag safes it'll like change whatever like you want those widgets to be there so like at your bed it'll
be an alarm clock if you do it in the kitchen maybe it's a timer widget or or a to do like a
grocery list widget or maybe sports scores in your like living room i i don't know it looked
really nice and even when you turn the lights off, like, in your bedroom, it'll, like, change the colors of everything to, like, glow down.
It's like the Apple Watch Ultra, like, diving mode red where it's, like, it's super low light.
It doesn't affect your eyes as much.
Stop blaring in your face.
It feels like the HomePod team was like, can we make one with a screen?
Apple was like, no.
And they were like, but we made all this cool software and all these tricks.
And they were like, do we have any other screens we can use?
And we were like, there's a lot of people with iphones so we built this for the iphone i
want them to add magsafe to the um ipad mini and then also allow you to do this like in your
kitchen because that's basically a home display someone's gonna build a stand to hold the ipad
mini sideways and charge it and then apple will will have that feature. I feel like it needs the official bag safe to do that, though,
so then it does that handshake.
That'd be nice.
But yeah, just like at-home Wi-Fi iPad Mini,
that can do that on all those stands.
Epic.
You can also say, hey, see.
You don't have to say hey anymore.
But you don't have to say hey anymore.
So you can just yell her name from across the room.
You can also interrupt her in the middle of her speaking now.
And like a new command?
Or just say stop?
You can just say stop while she's talking.
I'm saying it.
Eddie, hey, scary.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
We got to bleep that out.
This is a family.
We can't use profanity on this podcast.
That groan happened at the event
when Craig just yelled it out loud.
Everyone was like, oh.
No, my pocket.
Everyone was ready for their notes
to get all messed up or whatever.
But yeah, he did it like four times.
Google does it at their presentations too.
They'd say it like three or four times on stage.
I wonder if they have some sort of localized way
I was going to say it's like a geo game.
Oh, it turned off Siri?
It triggered a lot of things.
It did?
It did.
That's funny.
Yeah, I think the standby mode is really cool.
There's a bunch of rumors that they're going to have a home.
What is it?
What is their speaker called?
A HomePod?
Yeah, a HomePod with a display at some point.
It would be nice.
How about a HomePod with a little cutout where you magnetize your iPhone?
That could work. Like the Pixel tablet has a stand? Yes. You magnetize your iPhone. That could work.
Like the Pixel tablet has a stand.
Yes. You just pop your iPhone
into the home pod. Or your iPad. And then your music
connects to the home pod. This is a free product
idea, I just realized. Whoops.
But then you magnetize it in.
And then it's got this smart display with
the smart home controls and everything, but it's also a better
speaker and a long-form mic. They call it
iHome, and they have the little 32 pin you know the little dock i think that's a
great idea magsafe is the new 30 pin yeah dang yeah uh also randomly uh there's a journal app
now but it's not out yet uh yeah it'll probably come only on ios yeah it's not an ipad yet not
an ipad which seems weird because if you're journaling, a lot of people would want to use the pencil.
One more thing the phone does that's not on the tablet.
Yeah, they kind of always do that.
And then they wait like four years and they're like,
aha, we brought this to the iPad now.
We know you've been waiting for this.
Except the calculator.
We're never doing that.
Yeah.
But no, we did get iPadOS 17.
My favorite feature specifically is that widgets
are now interactable meaning that if you have let's say you have a to-do list app
with a check box you can check the box without opening the app i know this is mind-blowing
information i know this is something that a lot of Android users thought you could always do on the giant iPad.
I cannot believe that that was not something you could do.
You can never do it.
How is that a widget?
I don't know.
It's just a shortcut to open the app.
It's got glanceable information, which is cool.
So if you have like a weather app, you can't scroll,
but at least you can look at the weather.
That's so stupid.
But like there's so many instances
where I want to interact with it and you can't.
It just opens the app.
50% of the engagement in this video,
this episode is going to be like,
I've had this on Android for 10 years.
There's a lot of things we've had.
So my number one question,
which I don't think we've seen an answer to yet is,
but wait, can you scroll?
And I don't think you can scroll.
There were no examples on stage of scrolling,
which sounds silly,
but like imagine a four day weather forecast
and you scroll over to the next four days imagine a to-do list app with more than five items and you
need to scroll down to find the thing you just did imagine a calendar widget with more than five days
and you want to scroll to the next five days imagine a contacts list where you want to like
contact the sixth person but you only have the first five showing so you scroll to the next five
imagine uh aren't there like photo widgets also like can you not imagine all the people living for today
there's a lot of versions of wanting to scroll in a widget so hey apple as long as i'm on the
free suggestions bandwagon scrolling widgets remember when i cut marquez off about i about
widgets before this is why this is just like no no you go now you're in it was your time yeah
it's cool that i can check the box apple i appreciate that uh and you can you can also
add those widgets to the side of your lock screen so you can sort of redesign your lock screen now
with some widgets over to the side cool check those boxes in the widgets nice uh just let me
scroll go off king yeah i want to scroll oh you you mentioned the weather app
really quickly this is very dumb and very stupid i just want to note that now on the weather app
they didn't ask us on stage but it's just an update um you can now look at yesterday's weather
which you couldn't do before anyway we can move on nice uh other ipad yeah talk about pdfs andrew pdfs you can do them there next no yeah i don't
know there's like autofill stuff and like replacing your signature and uh wasn't it also i do think
the one cool thing was you could real time chat with someone else working on the same pdf and add
notes that wouldn't it's in the notes app so you can bring pdfs into the notes app and it has a
bunch of different features that pdfs can do now like if you can scan a pdf with your phone
document and turns into a pdf it automatically knows where the like fields are that you want
to write on and it makes those typable fields and can auto fill them and can auto fill them
and then you can like draw on top of
it and then if you're sharing your note with another person they can like see those changes
in real time and also draw on top of it yeah and i think you can even like you can add something to
it like a photo and then still draw on top of that and yeah i know it's just a bunch of layers and
all these things sound kind of dumb but like pdfs are kind of a pain in the neck sometimes so like
yeah i do actually think it's useful it's just not very like one of the oldest file formats i know but
that everyone requires all all the time and maybe pr people will stop sending me docx when they
require for the love of god version of it they always require signatures and they always send
me docx and then i have to convert them to pdf every time it and then send it back yeah this is
such an in the weeds-weeds thing.
But if you're a PR manager sending out doc exes for signatures,
just take the extra minute, make it a PDF, and then send it to us.
We'll sign it.
I think that's an evergreen PR statement.
It's like, PR guys, just take an extra minute.
We'll all appreciate it way more.
I know nobody watching this understands what we're talking about right now,
but we have to sign a lot of NDAs and documents,
and it's always a docx, and nobody wants to print it out.
Anyway, I want to talk about AirPods.
Adaptive audio is a new mode.
Very cool.
And I thought this was interesting.
So there's transparency mode, which is now adaptive transparency.
It's pretty cool.
It's mostly transparent unless a loud sound comes through,
then it protects your hearing.
Then there's noise cancellation, which is just reduce everything and listen to your music
but now the new default is called adaptive audio and i had to get some clarification on this but
it's basically a constantly adapting level of noise cancellation based on your environment
which is cool and it will be transparent when it detects you start talking yeah because you're now
in conversation mode so if you are walking down the street and a car passes by it'll turn that
up so you don't hear the car passing yeah or maybe there's a siren and you do need to hear it i don't
know i don't know exactly how this works i need to test it but it seems like it's supposed to be
smart about this stuff you're ordering a coffee and you don't start talking to turn it to transparency
mode i think they just want to make it so you have to touch the stems as little as possible yeah it just automatically that and also
just like safetyness so you can still walk down the street while being able to like really hear
your music but like if that siren happens or if that like really important safety issue is like
making noise that can alert you like this seems like basically it's for the wear airpods everywhere
people yeah are we at that maybe you guys know because you're maybe wearing airpods
are we at that stage of society where that happens where we like i don't know even transparency mode
on like my link buds if someone talks to me i just take both of them out because i feel rude
there is a generation of people we're getting there right no there's a generation of people
who just wears them all the time.
They wear pods for sure.
Actually, Miles wore them non-stop for like
the first couple weeks he worked here. That's because he's 22.
Yeah, I'm a boom. I'm old, man.
Oh my god, I'm old.
You take them out of your ears when you talk to me, Sonny.
No, that's a great point, actually.
I always take my earbuds out when someone stops me
on the street, but I would bet you that there are a lot
of younger people that just like.
And they're not wrong.
They just understand it.
And like, I think there's so many people when I'm talking to them,
I don't know that they understand that I can hear them.
And it just feels.
The gray area for me is on a flight because I have the AirPods on
and a lot of other people do,
but I still like take an ear cup off to talk to the flight attendant.
Yeah.
But also like flight attendants see this all the time.
They must know that we can hear them through the headphones.
So maybe I don't have to do that. I don't know.
I don't know. Note, this
feature is not coming to AirPods Max.
It's only coming to AirPods Pro 2.
Not even AirPods Pro, just AirPods Pro 2.
So it's truly for the wear them
everywhere people. Yeah. I'm actually not
a huge fan of this feature.
The more I thought about it, because the Sonys
have a very similar thing, the over-ear WH m3s slash slash four or five whatever it is um where if
you start talking it'll like pause the music or enter transparency mode or something which sounds
great i hate it yeah but if you're home it would happen to be singing it just like i always turn
that feature off when i use it wants you to know that you're
singing and that it doesn't sound great so listen to yourself i think the m4s added the automatic
feature on the m3s you would hold the ear cup and it would turn on transparency but i have to always
download the app turn that feature off and then use the headphones you don't like the sony app
next topic it's a bad app um i feel like by the time we get to the point where we're all
comfortable wearing earphones to talk to people all the time people will start having things on
your face and then we're gonna get into the weird stage of do i take my goggles ahead of their time
quick things uh tv os now supports facetime so you can put your screen up who is going to do this
well there see this is the thing.
This is the third theme.
It's like Apple looks at what people are mostly doing with their phones and they're going,
oh, that's a lot of people doing that.
We can make that better.
There's a lot of people who are on FaceTime
who want to put it on the TV.
And I've witnessed this with families.
They're like, oh, there's nine people in the room.
We all want to see grandma.
And they put it on the TV.
But then the phone, the camera's here.
So now they have like a dock.
They put it up next to the TV
so everyone can see everyone.
You need a dock in front of your TV
and nobody has a dock for their TV.
It's a small niche thing
that some families do
that it'll be better for them.
Also, how am I going to like text
when my family's boring?
That's fair.
It's at the TV now.
Yeah, but they already narc you out
because if you're on FaceTime and you like multitask while you're on a FaceTime, it makes your camera black.
No, not with the newest FaceTime.
Wait, really?
Yeah, the newest.
I think iOS 16, it continues your camera feed.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Okay, good.
So you can multitask and it doesn't smoke you out.
Yeah, it'd be like, this person's not paying attention to you.
Like, this person's peacing out, bro.
It's not listening at all.
poke you out. Yeah, it'd be like,
this person's not
making a decision to you.
Like, this person's
peacing out, bro.
It's not listening at all.
But yeah, I just feel like
if you need to buy
an additional hardware dock
for this one niche circumstance
that you don't use that often.
I don't know if you need a dock.
I just know that
you can...
Well, you need something
to hold your phone.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I was gonna say rest it on the TV,
but a lot of people mount TVs.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Anyway.
It's a thing.
Yeah.
Is that the only thing
for TVOS?
And then there's the TV
share play in hotels, right?
Well, that's a...
Is that TV?
Yeah, it's tvOS.
Or AirPlay.
I don't know when they'll add that. It'll take a while.
One thing that they're adding is
you can use your own photos for your
Apple TV wallpaper now.
And it's basically Chromecast from literally 15 years ago.
The original Chromecast that just would use your Google Photos albums and kind of rotate through.
You can now do that.
So Apple's looking at what their own users are doing and they're looking at what everyone else's users are doing.
We could do that too.
Yeah.
Okay, watch OS.
10.
10.
They had a sick as crap. Can i say crap you can say duck yeah they had a sick as duck animation for watch os that was that one right
the intro video i think david and i looked at each other and were like that was pretty sick i feel
like they ditched a lot of just the drone shots for this um and they did all these animations in
between everything they were really good I do miss the drone stuff,
but the animation for this was...
It was pretty epic.
It was really good, yeah.
Yeah.
I don't like the logo for WatchOS 10.
I think it's kind of boring.
I think all of their logos are boring.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Wait, I just remembered something.
Sorry, that also is WatchOS 10,
but we'll talk about that in a second.
I thought some of these were pretty cool,
but I'm the only one who doesn't use an Apple Watch, everyone else i don't he says this looks nice oh yeah i guess
yeah tell us what i'm gonna enjoy i did is the smart stack widgets not like a pretty cool idea
i thought that seemed really neat to just like be able to be like okay i have a bunch of widgets
that's basically taking account for what i'm doing in a day and then when i scroll
up like it's going to show me the widget that's most likely to be the next thing that i have to
do yeah yeah it didn't have to be a whole new os version but yeah it's a cool feature well they
were always gonna they're always gonna push a new os version yeah of course yeah i mean it's
definitely not the big redesign that we thought that was rumored to happen. Yeah. There's some cool things like they
make things. There's more stuff that
happens in the corners of different apps
and the health. I did like the full screen
health app. I don't know.
That's mixed because so
now you used to be able to see your
steps, your move time
and your stand
time all in like
one screen and now they're full screen.
Is that still not there
and now just when you go into each individual one
it's like a more detailed version?
It might be behind a click.
I think you have to look at them
on each individual page.
And it does give you more information
about that metric
but you have to like scroll to a new page every time.
I mean I guess ultimately the
rings are that information yes and you see them all together and then you go into more individual
definitely okay that's true that's a good point yeah um there's also snoopy face you guys aren't
pumped about that i actually thought that was cool it looks nice it's a watch face that has
snoopy and the bird they sit on your clock and they play things and they do shit.
And like, anyway, when it rains, it adapts to the weather.
So when it's raining, he has a little umbrella.
That is true.
Is this the new watch face or is this the new OS version?
What are we doing?
This is an entire new operating system?
Yeah. I guess. For Snoopy,
baby. There's a couple cool activity
changes. One that I really, really
like. There's a bunch of cycling stuff, but I don't understand
anything about cycling. So if you like cycling,
it's probably pretty cool. And they're like, your max power level.
I think you can connect it to a stationary bike
and actually get cadence and stuff
out of it, which is pretty cool. Or connect it to a monitor
on a bike, where if you're actually cycling yeah of it we're connected to a monitor on a bike where
if you're actually cycling it'll show the information that that monitor would is knowing
on your apple i think it also goes vice versa where it's gauging how like your potential power
output is based on your watch and the metrics from your heart rate and everything and then it
displays it on a phone that's mounted on your bike yeah so there are a lot of people bike with like a separate meter that shows them things like
power and cadence.
Okay.
And that stuff will pair to your watch and show it in line with your heart rate and everything
else.
Oh, which is pretty cool.
I was just completely confused about that.
But yeah, cool.
I liked the hiking updates.
Yeah.
Mostly one specific one that was essentially it will auto generate a waypoint in the hiking
app that shows the last place that you had reception
or the last place that you also just had an somewhat of reception that you can send sos
signals so basically when you're hiking if you're losing reception and know you need to
call somebody or or are in a dangerous position where you need to send an sos
you can know the last place where that is and it'll track you back to it i think that's
that's stupidly cool.
I think that's so handy.
And that's a great safety feature.
So handy.
The other thing I just remembered, though,
wasn't there something with golf swings
where it can tell the angle of your wrist?
Call me a skeptic.
Call me a skeptic.
So I think we need to test this,
because my golf swing,
I have enough power to drive the ball,
but I shank.
Is that going away from me?
You probably are slicing the ball.
Slicing is away from me.
Where it starts off straight and turns to the right.
For me as a righty.
Yes.
Yes, I do that.
So let's see if it can fix that.
So they showed a demo where you swing,
and then because it's on your wrist,
it shows it knows your angle of impact at the ball.
I mean, I guess they're pretty precise sensors.
Man, golf swings are complicated and that
that I am very skeptical about so we'll see I would like to test it because I think I have
enough power to where it would be noticeably different because when I do actually hit the
ball correctly I feel like I have a decent it's a decent hit but 99% of the time I'm just hitting
the right net at top golf yeah it's like swaying it into there. They showed like
at impact, your hands were open
and that's like, on its
face is really cool, but like people have
weak or strong grips, so they won't be open
at impact, even though the club face is open, so
do they line up their hand with the club face or not?
You don't know, you just have it on the wrist, you don't
know a lot of things about the golf swing, so
we'll see. So this is what people
feel like when I start talking about basketball? Yes, I mean I don't know much, that's why I can't wait to see things about the golf swing so we'll see i can't wait this is what people feel like when i start talking about basketball yes i mean i don't know much that's why i can't help
my mini golf game that's my question honestly yes it's this is better for mini golf because it can
tell easily like when you're putting and you just do the simple backswing and forward swing like oh
okay i know if i went open or closed because it's a very obvious movement but the golf swing all
kinds of other movements happen
I'm just imagining the driving range of people like
fix my swing
just screaming at the garage
it can only tell you what's wrong with your swing it can't fix you
it can just tell you what you did wrong
not how to fix it
just go to therapy people
men will literally analyze
their golf swing before going to therapy
okay
on that note we'll probably take a quick break wait wait wait there's more Men will literally analyze their golf swing before going to therapy. Factual.
On that note, we'll probably take a quick break.
Wait, wait, wait.
There's more what?
There's the hiking stuff.
Oh, yeah.
We said that.
Well, the topographic map.
There's a topographic map.
Cool.
Seems cool.
All right.
Now we'll go to break.
Now we'll go to break.
We got a lot of headsets to talk about because Apple didn't make a new first gen product.
There's one more thing.
What's the one more thing?
Okay.
Okay.
There is actually one more thing.
There is now a mindfulness app where you can like log your mood.
You can describe how you're feeling, which I think like journaling your mood is probably
a good thing.
This feels more like the journaling app than the journaling app.
It does.
But the thing that was kind of weird to me is that you can also they can pull up a test where you can like take this test and depending on what you say, it'll like suggest you go talk to someone.
And that's I think that's good in general.
It just it's very interesting to see how into the health stuff Apple is willing to push.
Right. Because Amazon, you know, recently bought a medical company.
And I could foresee Apple also becoming like,
we have more health data on you than like almost any other company.
So...
Okay, spoiler alert.
This is sort of a preview into a really interesting conversation
we're going to have on the podcast soon with a doctor
because there is a ton of Apple Watch versus health questions
and then the mindfulness and then how do you diagnose versus use what the watch tells you.
So that's going to be a whole episode.
So stay tuned for that.
Subscribe if you haven't already to see that.
But I think the funny ironic part to end on is there is a data point which tells you,
hey, you've been really close to a screen a lot lately.
Maybe back off a little bit and be further from a screen.
And then we immediately
got into the next product which is strapping screen to your face yeah so on that note we'll
take a break and we'll come back and we'll talk about vision pro
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All right, welcome back.
We got one more thing to talk about,
just like Apple had one more thing to talk about.
And it was the first generation of a new product category.
Ba-ba-bam.
A watch.
No, just kidding.
It's a headset.
It's an AR VR headset.
And this, again, completes the theme of Apple not wanting to use words that other companies use. At no point did they want to say this is an AR VR. But the point is, it's a headset that you put on your face that costs $3,500.
Will come out early next year.
And, well, they gave a bunch of demos of it.
I got to try it.
It has a bunch of really interesting tech.
Let's talk about it.
Yeah.
So on the XR extended uh spatial computing idea front i actually
i was thinking about this all night last night i was like writing about my feelings about this
headset last night just to get my feelings out about it i actually think that the journal app
no it's not journal i actually think that the extended reality like spatial computing phrasing is really good for this headset because it is not really supposed to be a VR headset.
Like it is.
So for those listening and also watching, there's like this digital there's a digital crown on it that you can turn.
And as you turn it, it takes you from the real world into a more digital world and
you can just on the fly whenever you feel like it put yourself more in a digital world or more in a
real world and i think that that is a really good idea because virtual reality headsets you only are
able to be in vr and for so many people that means that the only use case for using a VR
headset is basically like playing games or that kind of stuff, right? Whatever is in a virtual
world. Yeah, yeah. But that means that you're gonna only be in that virtual world and you have
no other options. And most people don't want to be immersed in this virtual world for a long period
of time. Because one just just evolutionarily people don't like
not being able to see or feel what's around them like there are predators that could attack you
right um and so i think that apple wants this to feel just like an extension of what you're already
doing which is what ar was originally sort of intended for and the reason i think that google
glass was like one of the best inventions ever
but it just got completely destroyed because of privacy concerns um but i think their point with
this is that they want you to mostly just like be in real life but then be able to like use those
experiences when you want to interesting um yeah yeah do you want to talk more about like what the
headset is yeah i'll give you so i'll give you the breakdown basically of controls versus other
headsets.
So if you've ever seen an AR VR headset, typically a VR headset is this plastic shell you strap
to your face and then you get a set of controllers or you can do stuff with your hands.
This is a metal and glass headset that you strap to your face.
There are no controllers being made for it.
It isn't controlled entirely by your hands,
your eyes,
and your voice.
The eyes is the craziest part.
This to me is like the big difference
really with like an Apple product.
Obviously there's a lot more to talk about,
but really it feels like the innovation here
was UI again.
Like it reminds me a lot of the first iPhone
where you have this like pinch to zoom moment on stage
and everyone goes, whoa, you can just pinch the screen
and make it bigger and it seems so obvious now.
But the same thing happens in that headset
where instead of like the normal experience
which is I have the controller, I point out in space
and I hold a trigger and I like drag something.
In this one, I just look at what I to touch and then i just touch my fingertips together
and it clicks it and your fingertips can be anywhere they can be in your lap they can be
off to the side almost anywhere almost anywhere as long as you're in the front somewhere but
honestly i try so i did my demo like i did it by accident like on the couch next to me my fingers
connected and i clicked something by accident i should say you have to try to be out of range
sure of course.
Yeah, you can't do it like this.
Yeah, I heard people talking about how they were like testing it and like it does get
to a point or if like I guess something is like in the way of your hands.
Right, yeah.
So there are cameras, two on the front, two on the side, two facing down.
So generally think about that.
That's where it's sensing things.
It's a 180 degree field of view basically.
Yeah, it's got a super high resolution display for each eye,
well over 4K.
It's the sharpest VR headset I've ever seen.
It has a lot of cameras and the two on the front
are for stereoscopic 3D
and it does full color pass-through.
It's the best pass-through in any headset I've ever seen.
And then the eye tracking is borderline telepathic so what happens is with
the headset you start with a calibration thing so it shows some dots on the screen like a dot
appears and it shrinks down and you look at it and another dot appears and you look at it and so it's
looking at your irises there's a bunch of sensors on the inside to see what your eyes are looking at
and then once it's done with that it opens up you get to the home screen and the ui is there you hit
the digital crown the app show up and you just look at the icon and it highlights like me and then
others are still and you look at another icon it's like oh me and it's this really interesting
like telepathic dance where like i look all over the screen and as soon as my eye stops it it
highlights exactly what i'm looking at there's a home screen bar at the bottom there's a little
icon to like drag to make windows bigger. God,
there's so much to talk about. I look at a window, I select it and I push it back in space. And with
incredible precision and responsiveness, it moves it around the room exactly where I want in any UI
direction. There are shadows cast under the windows in the room. So I'm moving a window back
and I see it cast a shadow. I have Safari going.
I'm scrolling up and down.
You know with like the physics
of like an iPhone scrolling,
you can like scroll it up
and catch it
and like toss it around.
You can do all of that
in the air in real time.
Unbelievably responsive.
More so than any I've ever seen.
I mean, I tried the Quest Pro
and the Quest Pro
is as close as I've seen to that.
There's a PSVR 2.
Just this one is, it's the highest quality UI of any as I've seen to that. There's a PSVR 2. Just this one, it's the highest quality UI
of any headset I've ever seen,
with the pass-through and the eye control
and the hands and everything.
A lot of other interesting features.
There's the iris scanning unlocking.
It's called, what, iris?
No, what is it called?
Optic ID.
Optic, thank you.
Optic ID, yeah.
Optic ID, just because your eye is as unique
as your fingerprint, so that's cool.
Borderline creepy.
Borderline creepy, but at least it's just like IR cameras
and it's fine.
It makes a lot of sense for sure
on like how to unlock something like that.
And then I think the most iconic piece of this whole thing
is this headset appears to be transparent, but it is not.
What you're seeing when you're looking at the headset
and there are eyes
looking back at you
it's actually just a
sort of a
it's an OLED screen
flipped around
showing what your eyes
are computed to look like
on the inside
but really
it only shows up
when you're in
some sort of a
pass-through mode
and you can see
other things in the room.
As soon as you're
not in a pass-through mode
if you're watching a movie
or you can't see anything
it shuts it down you can't see anything,
it shuts it down, you don't see the eyes,
and it's just like an animation.
And this is one of those things that is,
it's fascinating.
It's one, I don't think we're gonna see any other headset do this.
I think it adds a lot of cost,
it adds a lot of weight,
and it adds no benefit to the person
actually wearing the headset.
It's mainly just so that you can wear it without looking like a meme.
The eye thing?
Yeah.
I think the eye thing makes you look like a meme.
Well, it does, but I think they were specifically thinking about
how do we make this acceptable to wear out in public.
But no, don't do it.
Also, I do think they would argue that the part that is benefiting the person wearing it
is in that situation someone comes into
your field of view and you're trying to communicate with them is you don't have to take it off now
or that's what they want you they don't want you to take it off and like that taking it on and off
is is benefit but i'm just you this is their argument not mine it's beneficial to the person
wearing it because you're not taking it off i think the weird thing about the eyes is like
i think it shows one of the coolest things that i think they did really well and then everyone's only focusing
on the eyes which is kind of the weird part it's really cool that you can have windows open and
someone comes close enough to you where it assumes you want to like but they want to talk to you like
you're not stuck in this this so our world it has a feature for that part is really cool where it
comes forward and it pushes them
through the screen
and that's when it activates
the eyes
because then you're
communicating with them.
That is really cool.
And it's only when you make
eye contact with each other.
So they can be like in here
but only when you like
look at them
they sort of like fade
into your virtual reality.
Yeah.
Well they need to be able to
they fade in
if they just get close enough.
I don't think so.
Well you can make eye contact with someone if there's a window okay so you can because you can
you can look over it in that direction it's not yeah but if they come behind you if they come
from behind a screen you can't make eye contact with them they're always gonna make it into those
spaces if they come from behind a screen it it goes like 10 more transparent than usual and you
can see that there is a face there and then if you choose to look at the face,
then they sort of like fog away.
It's still like finds a way to fade someone in
when it thinks there's someone in close enough to you
rather than just being completely oblivious
to the outside world.
Yeah.
Which is a feature I have not seen on other headsets yet.
It's an incredible feature.
Incredible.
Like the way that it does it is so amazing.
Like just the fluency of them like slowly fading in It's an incredible feature. Incredible. Like the way that it does it is so amazing.
Like just the fluency of them like slowly fading in and then you kind of look at them
and they fade in a lot more.
And then even if you're in full virtual mode,
if you're looking at them,
suddenly you've just got this person that's there as well.
It's freaking amazing.
That sounds kind of creepy,
but also is way less creepy
than somebody just
standing outside if you don't know they're there so like i think that is an awesome feature but
then that feature everyone's just thinking about the stupid eyes that come in front of it which is
like it's so cool and so memeable at the same time like the whole crowd was laughing when they kept
showing eyes coming through it was really interesting so just disclosure david and I have tried the headset and we've gotten our demos of
it and there was like a 30 minute full demo of a bunch of different features.
I want to hit on a couple other features and things we got to try.
One is you can do FaceTimes in the headset.
It's its own computer with an M2 chip and an R1 chip, which is doing all the real time
processing of the sensors.
And you can jump on a FaceTime and you don't have to have a pair to an iPhone or anything.
It's connected to Wi-Fi and you pick up the FaceTime and there's like a
window or two windows or however many people are on and you can see everyone's FaceTimes and their
video feeds. But what do they see? Oh, funny you ask. They will see a 3D reconstructed version of
you that is sort of animated in real time to match the way
you look and you actually have to scan yourself in
by turning a headset around and scanning yourself
as a registration process
and so then there's this like
high res cartoon version of you and I actually got
to chat with one of them which I assume you did too
it's kind of like Google Starline
ish a little bit worse quality
I would say
so that was interesting to see.
The demos made it look like, and you guys can confirm this,
like the quality of your face in Starline was better,
but the like cutout of Starline was really rough.
And that looked like the actual image of it was better,
just like lower quality.
Well, so there's no background or anything.
Yeah.
It's just kind of like a floating.
But Starline had like that weird like squiggly cutout. Yeah, because they tried to put you on like a fake background or anything. Yeah. It's just kind of like a floating. But Starline had like that weird like squiggly cutout.
Yeah, because they tried to put you on like a fake background.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, Starline was a million times more immersive because it's a 16-inch real screen.
But this was more just like a little floating window in front of you.
Yeah.
And like a Wii Sports avatar.
Yeah.
It was sort of this weird like, you know how meta announced the the really high
resolution because there's that meme of of zuck like standing in front of the eiffel tower like
looking like worse than a wii graphic and then they're like no no this is what it's actually
gonna look like in the future and they have like this way higher resolution you're gonna be able
to scan yourself in yeah it basically is like that and it's this weird like you know it's digital because it's got this weird texture to it yeah that's what i was
trying to explain like it looks from the things and like you looking at it was probably almost
looks like do you know when they like blend a bunch of faces together to show you like the like
what the average person would look like or like if we were all together it's got it's like an uncanny valley
thing and i i don't know if people are going to respond well to this they might get used to it um
but it's just strange like previously apple you know in facetime allowed you to be a memoji
and yeah i think that's so far away from uncanny valley that people were just like used to that
just a funny thing but this feels like what a sci-fi representation
of people are in holograms.
This one, I feel like,
is why you have to look forward into the future
because this is the first-gen version of it.
But let's say, theoretically, in the future,
this gets much better, much smaller,
and much higher quality.
Then maybe it's acceptable to jump on a FaceTime
with a high-res animated version of you and there's hand tracking and face tracking
And stuff. Yeah, I guess it's got like it's got good
Mapping of your face though, because it's it's got those downwards facing cameras that are seeing your facial expressions
So it's not just guessing what your facial expressions are
The one thing that was pulling me out of it was like the movements around your eye, right?
Like it knows the direction you're
looking because it has the iris scanners and stuff there's a lot more happening there's a lot more
happening that you're not even really noticing actively like in your cheekbones and your eyebrows
and stuff that those were pretty static and that's why it felt you also have a thing pressing up
against your face at that point so those things can't really exactly right situation exactly so
yeah that was strange this this feels like a kind of weird like when you're gonna facetime
your friends or your family and you're the only person with this are they gonna be like i don't
know how i feel about this probably a bunch of people in 2d and you're just like well it just
feels really impersonal right i said this in the video like when i'm facetiming friends and family
i'm trying to see my friends and family like actually see them right and at this particular moment this 2023 version of it it does not feel
like i'm actually seeing the person maybe in the future it's so high res and accurate and it's a
recent scan because this is the thing i could scan myself a month ago and i'm using that old scan
it's like that's not what i look like right now but maybe it eventually gets really good and it
feels like i'm talking to a person but right now it feels worse than a facetime this is like a better version of an audio call but worse than
a video call i was gonna say this looks like a better version of the like meta like ar vr business
stuff this feels like a business thing not a person yeah like i wouldn't care if i'm just
doing a meeting with it's like you guys like and we're doing like oh let's go over an edit or doing
something in 3d like i don't care quite as much as like what we feel like we're doing in the moment but facetime feels way more personal and
this feels a little weird for that this to me feels like a perfect feature that will make sense
in 10 years like the digital crown right now when you rotate it it'll go from vr to ar right yeah
the goal is to always have it rotated so that you're just in ar is that not the case well in
10 years they want you to always be in AR.
Not necessarily.
They already want you to mostly be in AR.
But you can switch it to VR.
But you can switch it to VR.
Because sometimes being in-
That's only because that's what we're capable of right now.
I don't think if this was just an AR machine, that would be weird.
They have to add the VR things.
No one's going to wear this for the functionality of what's currently available with AR.
It seems like there's a lot there's a lot of potential
use case in each.
Yeah.
Like with AR
with having like
your computer monitors up
but being able to see
your co-workers around you
just like that
feels like a kind of
useful AR thing.
But if I'm watching a movie
I don't want to see anything else.
Yeah.
So like VR I want
if I want to watch a sports game
or a movie or something
I want full VR.
But I feel like they're only adding those features because they have to because the headset is so big.
Adding the VR features?
Like if they could have made the glasses yesterday or two days ago whenever they announced this, they would have just done that.
And then we wouldn't have VR features.
We're so far away from that.
I think that removes the ability to do most of the best stuff in VR, which is like we have cool games.
We have cool experiences.
I want to really immerse myself in this virtual world.
That was a lot of the interesting stuff too.
They showed a bunch of content that was shot for it,
and it was really, really immersive and good.
It was.
And I think if you don't have the ability
to shut out the outside environment,
you don't fully appreciate that.
I want to specifically like first of all yeah
like the the immersive stuff um watching movies was really interesting i've watched i've used so
many vr headsets where like you basically have a 200 inch display and it actually felt like i was
in a movie theater like they put it far enough back and there's like this kind of like this
depth that you get even in full vr that i've never had from a different headset before but specifically the like xr mixed reality feature that kind of blew me away the most was how good
it is at understanding spatial reasoning so so first of all when we were doing the demo you're
sitting in a couch and the display pops up in front of you and you can pin windows and stuff
when i say pin windows like
with other ar stuff that sort of understands your space the the windows will kind of like
kind of glitch around they'll jiggle because they're trying to understand like where are you
again like but no it's like you can walk around the room and if this is here it is there it is
not moving at all if you put a window on the ceiling it'll then like spin around and walk around the room and look back up there it's exactly where you put it well that was one of my
questions because andrew and i didn't get to try it so like when you walk in for this demo is there
like furniture in the room yeah just like a blank there's furniture they did a decent job it was
like a normal looking room there's some photos if you look at the good morning america interview
there's stuff maybe not as cluttered as an average yeah there's a couch there's a table in front of
you i actually think the more stuff you have the more tracking points it has to latch on to which is probably
fine but yeah it was a pretty normal room was the goal i think the demo that really showed that off
to me the most and that blew me away the most is first of all every single vr headset that you will
ever use has or ar headset has a t-rex dinosaur demo for some reason to make it just so you get
that like oh i'm scared of this large thing but there was a that exact dinosaur demo for some reason to make it just so you get that like oh i'm scared of this large
thing but there was a that exact dinosaur demo i think they showed it in the keynote but basically
this this gate portal thing opens up in the wall and it it feels like it's the wall is opening up
because the spatial pinning is so good but the thing that was interesting about this demo is
they're like so get up walk over to the wall you know they
actually have you walk around and the cool thing is like the the refresh rate or whatever and it's
and the cameras are so good that i didn't feel like i needed to like be careful about where i
was walking i felt like i could just walk freely through it yeah this is the transparency was good
enough like i walked right around the table if i can cut you off really quick i don't think people
understand how important that is like we've tried every single pass-through you can probably think of and they're not great so
like this is one thing specifically looking at that that i'm glad you guys got to experience was
like pass-through is not very easy because there's you have to have different cameras and the 3d
space is like not remember that one i forget what that headset was but when you went into pass-through
mode things further away and things closer to you
would start wobbling off axis of each
other because like those cameras aren't
like
computing them together well and that just
immediately is like I'm in this
weird space and I do not feel comfortable moving
totally so that's like
that's really really impressive
it's hard to tell how impressive it is
here's a really niche way of understanding that that only us will understand
you know we've tried to play ping pong in other headsets
you could do it in this one
yeah
you could actually play ping pong with the headsets
totally
it's so good
I felt no oh god I'm gonna trip
oh god maybe I don't see this thing
oh god maybe the refresh rate's not high enough
especially because depth is usually a problem
I feel like if I toss something up in front of me,
I would maybe be almost able to catch it,
but it would hit me in the wrist or something.
I'm throwing a Frisbee at you when we get this.
I think we can do it.
I'm hucking it.
I think we could do it.
Well, we're playing guts.
I don't know about that,
but I do think if I wanted to play ping pong
virtually with someone in AR,
I could stand in front of a table
and play like a real fun game of multiplayer ping pong virtually with someone in ar and i could stand in front of a table you could have a score up yeah like a real like fun game of multiplayer ping pong like the apps are gonna be fun but yeah
so the the spatial reasoning thing with this with this t-rex demo specifically that was like oh my
god was they they get you to stand up from the couch you walk over like to the wall with the
gate open and everything and the t-rex is like coming out and he like comes out of the
wall and it doesn't matter like usually with these demos you have to stand straight in front of the
wall and if you kind of like get off axis a little bit it kind of messes up kind of like the starline
thing but with this you can like go over to the other side of the room and kind of look at the
wall from over there and the the space is exactly the t-rex is exactly rendered perfectly quality and it knows
where you are so it like comes out of the wall a little bit and it kind of gets up to your face
and it's snarling and because these this headset also has spatial audio so not only is there like
the spatial rendering of your vision but there's's also the spatial noise. And it makes it so immersive because you're like here and the T-Rex is staring directly at you. You feel it right in
your ear. If you turn like to your right, you feel it like snarling in your ear. It's it's it's crazy.
It's really hard to explain because I know that a lot of people have tried these kind of demos.
And it's like, like the first time I ever tried vr was trying a vive in a microsoft store and i played this game where you're underwater and there's like a whale that goes
over you i think it's called like the blue and i felt my heart start racing because i felt the
scale of the whale it was kind of the same thing with this yeah i actually there was also some
footage that was like because i think with the t-ex, I kind of could not really fully suspend disbelief
because it's a T-Rex.
Yeah.
And we like held our hand out
and like a butterfly landed on our finger and stuff
and that was cool.
But there was also footage where like a baby rhino
would like walk right up to you.
I was like, I now know exactly what it would look like
if a baby rhino was right in front of me.
Apple's got the money.
That could have been real.
It was, I didn't smell it, but I saw it.
So it was good.
Speaking of that Rhino demo,
they had a few of these like XR videos, right?
And another feature they added to this headset
that everyone was memeing, because you should,
is that because they have all these cameras on it
and they're all at sort of different angles,
you can take 3D videos, right?
And so they have content that is like spatial
video content which all the demos they had on the headset were really freaking cool for the
spatial video content except they suspect apparently that people are you can also take
your own 3d depth videos right and they had this moment in the keynote where there's this like
child's birthday party
and it's this little girl with all her friends
and there's a cake and she's blowing out the candles
and the smoke is like going right into your face
and it's kind of like
half faded out, half
faded into reality so it kind of feels like
a portal into a memory.
Yeah, which is exactly how
the idea of a portal into a memory would look
in like most sci-fi stuff i thought you dripped water into like a sorry i don't know that's a
different genre oh um and it was it was fine it was cool i i think the thing about this is that
first of all making something 3d does not inherently make it better um we learned
this with 3d tvs with 3d movies like in some cases how many times do we have to teach you this lesson
old man sometimes it like takes you out of the immersion and it was like kind of cool but the
thing that makes this truly terrible is that if you're the dad at the birthday party dad why
why do you look like this you've got this giant headset on your face
and you've just got your stick in your head
like right into the birthday cake.
Let me get the angle.
Let me get the angle.
Imagine the eyes also are like,
oh, the eyes are on.
As good as this memory could be
and now like you as a parent
get to look back at this later,
imagine that child's memory
of now like wanting to blow out their candles
but their dad's just
like hovering over them with these bulgy eyes come on do it hold on i'm not recording i just
feel like with photos and video there is a point of diminishing returns where like adding extra
like immersion features to the photos and video really just makes it worse i i can see 3d like
photos or like like memories like that being something kind of cool in the future,
but you have to not diminish the experience
in the process of capturing it.
Correct.
This is doing right now.
This is another look 10 years into the future type thing
where theoretically the tech gets nice and small
and it looks like a pair of glasses and it's not too bad
and you can record this ultra high resolution memory
and relive the memory without looking like an insane person.
Maybe that's fine. I don that's fine take away from being 90 and being able to like oh this was my kid when they were 10 blowing out of birthday that that in general sounds cool yeah but you're messing up
that entire experience you're messing up your you're messing up your child just put that technology
on a gopro on a stick sometime in the future they'll figure that out i don't think this is it
i just want to say
how Black Mirror this is
by the way.
It's like, you know,
your wife dies way too early
and then you're just like,
you're sitting in your headset
just like watching her
on the couch
doing her,
like, you know,
in every like sad movie
they're running on the-
you replay the memory
like six times in a row
like, I wish I was here again.
Yeah.
It's like, holy crap.
Yeah.
Yeah, it got dark. Yeah this because i think a lot of the discourse around this was like
this feels really dystopian because and i think a core problem potentially with this headset or with
any xr headset is that this is such a you and only you device. Every video that they
showed, they didn't have multiple
people in the room except for
playing that video of the child's birthday party.
It was always one person sitting
alone in their $5 million apartment.
And that was it.
In the workplace, they had a bunch of examples
of the workplace and having people handing you
things. But I do agree, it's never
two people using the headset. It's not social. It's always one person in the headset and having people handing you things. But I do agree, it's never two people using the headset.
It's not social.
It's always one person in the headset
and the other person not in the headset.
I think while we're on the topic,
let's go over the couple of negatives,
the downsides that I was immediately able to pinpoint
just to get them out the way.
So one of them is it's $3,500
and that's obviously gonna limit
how many people are gonna try it.
I think that's intentional though.
Yes, that is definitely intentional. And it's got pro in the name and obviously you can
see a version in the future with not pro in the name.
Number two, so this is interesting.
There's no haptics because there's no controllers and I think that's fine, but it was interesting
that it could sort of take me out of the full immersion.
Maybe you can add gloves in the future.
I don't know.
You say there's no
haptics but this is something i talked to with shen before asking him why all hand gestures in
vr seem to be tapping and he said because that is a haptic yourself that part is people like i guess
there's still the flicking thing which if you flick i guess there is still some sort but he said
the reason they do hand gestures like that and not just pointing is because you're making some
sort of contact
and that represents it better.
Yeah, but all the rest of the stuff, like scrolling in Safari
and hitting the bottom of the page, everything is virtual.
Like when I wanted to pet the dinosaur or the butterfly landed on my hand.
And you feel nothing.
And you feel nothing.
Like we did the haptic gloves demo, and that's so far from solving the problem.
But that's just something I noticed.
It's intentional, obviously.
They don't want you to have to have a controller.
Number three is it's heavy.
It's glass and aluminum,
and it's got a separate battery pack to save weight,
but even that, it's heavy even without that battery pack.
How big is the battery pack?
It's hard for me to get scale.
You just don't understand scale, Adam.
I don't. It's smaller than a phone, but. You just don't understand scale, Adam. I don't.
It's smaller than a phone, but thicker than a phone.
Two phones.
It's got a USB-C port on it,
so you can plug it into the wall for all-day battery,
which is a hilarious spec.
Or plug it into another battery pack.
I did not like the non-replaceable USB-C battery pack.
Just have that.
I understand that it needs to have the locking and mechanism
and the nice wire. Just put a USB-C cord at the end of it. Think of it as a power brick. like have that have that i understand that it needs to have the like locking and mechanism and
the nice wire just put a usbc cord at the end of it think of it as a power brick think of it like
a laptop with a power brick well it's a laptop with no battery inside and a power brick where
the battery is in the brick like a desktop so like if you ever want to unplug from the wall
a desktop nothing just the battery but if i ever want to unplug if i ever want to unplug from a wall i have two hours to find a plug basically that's how it goes i two
hour battery life yeah i don't know i think they're reasoning andrew for the reason that
it looks nice and it's apple no it's you can't put that much weight also on the headset well
no no no the reason it's not removable yeah okay the reason i think it's not removable is because
they don't want the the usbc cable to
like just come off and then all of a sudden it just goes to black and dies in the middle of a
like apple is so intentional about we don't want this to feel we want it to feel like such an
extension of your reality we don't want you to suddenly be like oh what happened and then you
have this like weird shock value to your point they do have this pin
hole in the battery that you that i assume is a way to remove the cable if the cable breaks
so you can replace the cable and not replace the battery itself the cynic in me says that
they'll sell this for 200 in the apple store the battery well it should come with one battery
i think they should sell a bigger battery or additional batteries. Yeah.
But yeah.
I just think it's weird having to plug two battery packs in at the same time.
I agree, for sure.
No, you only plug one in.
But you can plug that battery.
Yeah, but if you want that to have more, then you plug another battery pack into it.
And be mobile if you don't want to plug into the wall.
But like, come on, this whole thing is not to be connected to the wall.
It should not really be in that scenario very often.
It's interesting.
Yeah, I kind of wonder.
I don't know yet,
but I wonder how much of this will be used plugged in versus not.
I kind of suspect it'll be plugged in a lot.
I don't know.
I feel like that takes away
from a lot of the things you guys are describing
that are really good about it.
Watching a movie on the couch.
Watching a movie, sure.
Using it as a computer at your desk.
It can be plugged in in a lot of these situations.
Yeah, but even at your desk,
then the wire's getting tangled up
in the chair
because you're like,
I don't know.
I don't think that, yeah.
I think a lot of people
will be double battery packing.
Just make a backpack.
Well, you shouldn't double.
EcoFlow on your back.
Just plug right in.
Yeah, so you can disconnect it
from the headset.
It's like a quarter turn
locking thing,
so I assume you can just unplug that
and theoretically buy a bigger
battery pack or whatever. So you should never have to have
two battery packs. From them? No, some
third party is going to make a bigger battery.
With that connector? I don't know.
I hope so. I'm assuming that's a weird connector.
They'll have to license it. MFI? MFV?
Made for vision.
But the locking mechanism
I would bet you that they
patented that and made it proprietary it's just like no one makes magsafe stuff now yeah
interesting yeah i would bet you that because they probably don't trust like third parties to
have a battery that actually doesn't take you out of the immersion randomly i think it's out
it's a weird spot i'm sure i understand that also, something I didn't hear either of you guys talk about,
or just really anyone,
is there's also another strap that you can have
that goes over the top of your head.
Yeah, yeah.
They didn't mention that in the keynote or anywhere.
I think that's also intentional.
And I get it.
It is an optional accessory that's probably in the box
that I think everyone should use
because it's so heavy that you're going to want to use it.
I completely agree.
I heard it's so heavy that it're going to want to use it. I completely agree. I heard it's so heavy that
it sounds like almost everyone will be using
it, but I guess it just doesn't look as nice
when you're presenting it. It doesn't look as nice, for sure.
I will say the materials are
insanely nice.
The strap is really crazy nice.
One thing that really kind of blew me away
is when you put it on, when you're
tightening it, a lot of other headsets
you have to just kind of pull it and tighten like tighten it around your head this one it's got
like this kind of crown that you like you twist and it's got a clicking mechanism ratchets it's
got ratchets and you you hear it and feel like and it's it just feels so smooth and seamless but you
feel it slowly tightening around your head yeah i think it's really good those are for like minute
adjustments right like i think there was they said there was some sort or that's for the main way to model to
your no the strap is not modeled to your head the light seals around it are they mentioned something
in the keynote that was like there it was adjustable and then that was just for like
minuscule adjustments when like and like on the fly for like oh this is not feeling too tight i'm
gonna loosen it up that's true but you also have to use it to put it on like you have to like loosen
it to be able to take it off there are other vr headsets that do that but the the quality and the
mechanism is so good the material is pretty great again it's heavy yeah but it is really high also
the head strap that you were talking about the the way that you tighten that is also very seamless yeah and everything about it is uh it's like modular so every single part you can take off
and almost every single part of it is also machine washable which i think is awesome
nice so you can like clean it and wash it really easily and the main actual headset is that is not
huge it's just the mechanisms to keep it on your head or add a lot of volume um yeah did you have any other like questions about
the demo or anything i don't think so yeah i think the main two things like from not just you guys
but everyone that i talked to that tried it it was the main things they said was that worked way
better than i expected because everyone saw no controllers and thought i've tried every other
vr headset and that's not gonna work and they were very surprised by it worked and then it immediately
went to and that was heavy and the battery pack's kind of weird but then like I don't care I loved
using it and that was wild oh and then it's really expensive think about it like a first generation
of a new iPhone it almost feels hard to think about as first generation because it sounds like
it's working so well it's just priced like first generation
and maybe there's not as many things available for it.
It just has so many parallels to me to the first iPhone
where number one right now, it just has Apple apps.
And of course it's going to launch next year
and we should have a bunch more apps,
but it has Apple apps right now.
And those are the ones that sort of demonstrate
how you're going to use it and what it does best.
And then the UI and the way you interact with it is the revolutionary part of it.
Just like how pinch to zoom was incredibly responsive and worked so well on the first iPhone compared to any other phone.
This one, the eye tracking and the hand tracking and the way you move those windows around and interact with things and scroll has the same vibe.
It's like I've never seen a headset do it this well.
And if it gets better
at all i'll be very happy i do think that's something that i asked you guys after which was
like this worked so flawlessly and was so amazing is part of the reason we're so impressed by this
because of all the ones we've tried before it that i've tried to do it's a similar thing and
they just are not good yeah it's the iphone of headsets yeah that's i think that's like
kind of the crazy part.
When you look at $3,500,
I still don't know if I was like,
this stuff works, is that worth that?
But it's just like, that stuff didn't work, this does.
I still don't know if it's worth it,
but it's really cool to see how good it's doing.
Yeah, other versions of it worked pretty well,
but it wouldn't have all of those things at once.
Sony has good eye tracking but not
the most incredible hand tracking yeah like the oculus the quest pro the meta quest pro had
decent pass through and like is lighter and could do some of these things but you needed controllers
it wasn't good enough though there wasn't good across the board there's a point of no return where like i could
not if i used anything worse than this now i would just be like this sucks if this is 60 as good as
you guys are saying it is it blows the meta quest out it does and i think it's way more than that
like i believe everything you guys are saying and this feels like the meta quest pro is horrible
and that's exactly why i don't think this you can't really compare the
price to anything else because it's like everything else is garbage and then this is really the reason
you can compare the prices like am i spending thirty five hundred dollars to do these things
in here for sure like the usability for sure absolutely if we're just comparing like if you
100 want these ar vr goggles yeah then the. I'm not saying people should buy this necessarily.
If you want to reduce it to just a checklist,
it looks insane.
It's like, can you watch a movie in the regular quest?
Yes.
Can you watch a movie in this?
Yes.
Okay, can you use hand controls in one?
Yes.
Can you do it in hand controls in this one?
Yes.
So they both like check most of the boxes.
Pass-through?
Yeah, pass-through.
Tracking?
Yeah, tracking.
Apps?
Yeah, apps.
Games?
Of course, games.
But the difference is so much
more oh yeah i think i think if you want a headset i would spend the extra money on this i just don't
know if you you're not sure if you want a headset if you're not sure if you want a headset don't buy
any of the existing headsets including this one also um something that's interesting to me is that
when oculus announced the or metaa announced the MetaQuest 3
like last week right
I watched that intro for that video
and they were like we have
500 apps and I was like
that is not very many
considering like
considering how long the MetaQuest
ecosystem has been around
500 apps is not very much
and also I would bet you that 75 of
those are garbage yeah they're probably only people like android flexing how many apps there
are on the app store it's like well how many good apps are there right where the interesting thing
with like the iphone for example and the android app store um is that you it's a multi-tool that
does literally everything if i never use this one thing,
but then at this one moment,
I'm like, oh, I really need a light meter.
I can look up light meter
and they're just a bunch of light meter apps
on the App Store, right?
And I think the interesting thing
that the Apple ecosystem has,
if Apple's actually able to get so many developers
to port their apps to this,
to make new apps for it,
is that they're just gonna blow
every other headset
out of the water in terms of what can you do with this?
That's the Apple superpower.
I think that's a good place to end it,
which is like it is early.
It doesn't come out until next year.
We've only got to try it for 30 minutes.
There's not a lot we know.
But what we do know is this is going to slot
into the world of VR headsets
where the advantage to any one headset
typically has been quality or features. where the advantage to any one headset typically has been
quality or features. And the advantage to this Apple one is going to be now there's an entire
giant developer community that's like feasting over like, oh, this is it. I'm going to make the
best app I can and blow up in VR. And this is their chance to make the best apps possible.
And those are all going to really showcase what this thing is capable of and the technology will back it up and there'll be quality experiences it will ride or die on if there are good apps for
it so it's kind of like a chicken or the egg thing yeah and i think they had to make the good hardware
to entice those developers and they did that and because they've nailed that i can't wait to see
what apps show up and we just have to wait and we don't even know what they're going to make yet
we'll just wait and see there could we don't even know what they're going to make yet. We'll just wait and see. There could be an incredible calculator app
for all we know.
I have like one more point that I want to make.
And it's that this is
like the only product that Apple makes
that isn't an accessory for the iPhone.
Right? Like the
AirPods are its own entire industry
and they're an accessory for the iPhone. The Apple
Watch, accessory for the iPhone.
MacBook. The MacBook came out before the iPhone.
True.
But you could argue that so many of the things
that make the MacBook useful
is that it works with your iPhone.
I think that's true about the headset too.
But what do you do, besides having an Apple ID
and like doing FaceTime and stuff,
what necessarily makes this an iPhone accessory?
Well, not an iPhone accessory,
but it's an ecosystem plug.
Where like, if I look at a MacBook,
my MacBook screen levitates out the top
and suddenly I'm doing like final cut editing
with a trackpad and all this stuff.
If I have messages on it, FaceTime,
it's like the ecosystem plug part is real,
even though it's not an iPhone accessory.
But you could just have a MacBook
and an Android phone like Alex does
and use this headset and you don't really need
an iPhone. Apple ecosystem in general
is that everything works better
when you have everything together. But some things
kind of only work if you have an iPhone like the
Apple Watch.
I think this is
kind of like a Mac in that it's a standalone
computer but it will definitely
plug into the ecosystem really well
by design. And that's why I think the $3,500
price tag, yes, it's stupidly expensive
for sure, but you're also buying
basically a whole computer. It has an M2
in it, whereas like an Oculus Quest, it can
play some games, but you can't do what you would do
with an XR1
or something. But you can't
do on an Oculus Quest what
you can do on a MacBook
I don't think we should well Quest Pro is the only
thing we should compare to this
an Oculus Quest is just it's not the same
thing but a Quest Pro doesn't really have like a
desktop kind of like
format right you could pair it to
a Mac you could pair it to computers
but you don't have to pair this to anything
no yeah it's it's own standalone
it has an M2 chip if you think about it as a computer, $3,500 isn't that expensive.
Exactly.
But chances are you're not replacing a computer quite yet.
For sure.
Somebody's got to do a, I can't wait for a benchmark of like, can we just run Geekbench
on all these headsets of like the M2 gets a trillion points and then the Snapdragon
XR gets like whatever it gets.
It's just absurd.
It doesn't actually matter.
So before we go, I know we said no trivia,
but I do have a fun trivia thing for you guys if you want it.
Okay, yeah.
When was the last time Apple did the whole one more thing on stage
before this headset?
A long time ago.
Was it the Mac Pro at DubDub?
I was going to say Mac Pro.
Mac Pro, David.
One more thing.
You're saying the cheese grater mac
no it was the
iPhone 10
iPhone 10
oh yeah
oh yeah
because they released
the
because they did the
8 and 8 plus
and they were like
wait okay
one more thing
you guys know
it was iPhone 10
2017 iPhone 10
dang
wow
okay
well that's good to know
we got a lot more
upcoming
a lot more coverage
obviously stay tuned
the studio channel has a video we got episode, a bonus episode on the podcast
channel. We've got the main hands-on on the MKBHD channel. Autofocus dropped a Prius review. We're
popping out all kinds of great videos. So watch those. And no trivia, of course, we'll be right
back next week with a bunch of cool stuff. Thanks for watching and listening. We'll catch you guys
in the next one. Peace.
Waveformer is produced by Adam Molina and Ellis Rovan.
We're partnered with Vox Media Podcast Network
and our interruption music was created by Vain Still.