Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast - Tim Cooked and Now it's John's Ternus!
Episode Date: April 24, 2026This week, Marques and David are steering the ship while Andrew is out. So much happened including Tim Cook stepping down as CEO of Apple, Pixel laptop rumors, and Steph Curry kind of leaking the new ...Fitbit wearable. Of course, we wrap it all up with trivia. It's a fun one! Links: Verge - YouTube turning off Shorts Android Authority - Nothing statement about Warp Apple Newsroom Tim Cook steps down Verge - Huawei Pura X Max 9to5Mac - New iPhone colors rumor 9to5Mac - Pixel laptop and Pixel glow 9to5Google - Nothing deleted AirDrop competitor TechCrunch - Motorola sues creators This episode brought to you by: Framer: https://www.framer.com/waveform Hostinger: https://www.hostinger.com/waveform Shopify: https://www.shopify.com/waveform Follow us on socials: Marques: https://www.threads.net/@mkbhd Andrew: https://www.threads.net/@andrew_manganelli David: https://www.threads.net/@davidimel Adam: https://www.threads.net/@parmesanpapi17 Ellis: https://twitter.com/EllisRovin Waveform Threads: https://www.threads.net/@waveformpodcast Waveform Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/waveformpodcast/?hl=en Waveform TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@waveformpodcast Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/mkbhd Intro/Outro 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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I was watching a scale of the universe video recently.
That's all I'll say.
I wonder what Marquez is doing right now.
I could take a guess.
I close my weather app and open YouTube.
Watch the scale of the university.
Left-ear scale of the universe video, right-year weather podcast.
Yo, what is up? People of the Internet.
Welcome back to another episode of the Wayform podcast.
We're your host. I'm Marquez.
I'm Andrew.
And oh, never mind.
I'm not.
No, you're definitely not Andrew.
Yeah, he had another child.
Yeah.
Sorry, did I bury the lead there?
Yeah, just definitely jumped straight to the top story.
So, yeah, if you're watching on a video, you probably already noticed.
Andrew is not here with us this week.
And that's because he is having another baby.
And actually, we were in the middle of recording a bonus podcast episode when he got the call that he had to go leave and have that baby.
Yeah.
So get subscribed to see that.
I don't know how we're going to cut that into the video, but it's going to be in there.
I'm currently editing.
You just like just like, just like zoom in on Andrew's face like, like, yeah, yeah, no, I got to go have a baby now.
And he just leaves.
It's great.
So shout out to him.
Baby's healthy.
Everything's going super well.
But we also have a ton to talk about this week because for whatever reason, all of the companies decided to do all the things.
And it's not even Wednesday yet.
It's Tuesday.
It's crazy.
We're recording on Tuesday.
I appreciate it, guys.
So we've got to talk about Google potentially bringing RGB light bar back to pixel devices.
which would be sick.
Yep.
Motorola suing some influencers in India.
Uh-oh.
That's a story.
That's bad.
And then Apple new CEO, a couple other things like that.
So, yeah, small stories.
I think make sure you get subscribed.
Make sure you're rating us highly or however you think of us on your podcast player of choice.
Because that does a lot for us and helps us get the news out and talk about stuff to a bigger audience.
So we can be big.
In your country.
Yeah.
On your podcast player of choice.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Well, we do this, you know, did they even test this thing every single?
single week. I had two last week, so I saved one for this week. And I think that this is probably
present in many different apps. You've probably experienced this. But I was noticing I was making a
partyful event because no one in history has yet used the Apple Invites app. So I was using a party,
I was doing the party full event. And at the very last stage of making your partyful event,
when you're just about to send it out, it has a little like default text message that it sends
to everybody that, hey, David's inviting you into this thing. But it's like, do you want to modify it?
and make it custom.
And I was like, obviously, yes.
I don't want to be, you know, like everybody else.
So you write your stuff in it.
But when you write your stuff, your keyboard comes up, there's no way to get rid of the keyboard.
There's no back button.
And there's no, like the next button, the publish button, is underneath your keyboard.
This is an iOS bug, huh?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've tried it on multiple iPhones.
It persists.
And I've had this happen in multiple different apps, but I just think it's funny that there's not even a back button and you can't swipe
back to get to the last page.
You have to fully close the app,
reopen it, and then modify it again.
And eventually I just gave up and I was like,
I guess the default text, it's just going out.
Is that why everyone sounds the default?
I guess so.
It's weird.
I feel like I want to half blame this on Partifle,
but also half on iOS,
because on Android, there's just a button
to close your keyboard on the keyboard.
Which is smart.
But also most iOS apps don't have this problem.
So it's half an iOS problem,
but also half the developer,
not just making it above the keyboard.
Yeah.
So both of you.
Yeah, fix that.
Make the next button in the top right so that you don't have to worry about this.
And also make a back button in the top left.
You know who has a lot of free time in his hands now to fix little things like this?
Adam Molina.
No.
Tim Cook.
Tim Cook.
Tim Cook doesn't use this stuff.
Yeah.
We'll talk about more.
Actually, you know, let's just talk about it now.
Apple CEO.
Tim Cook.
Tim Cook.
Tim Cook.
He cook.
He has announced that he is stepping down in September and he will be moving to
board, chairman of the board. He'll be succeeded as CEO by John Turnus. This is, we all kind of
have been reading that this is going to happen at some point. Everyone keeps asking,
Tim Cook, what's your legacy going to be when you leave? And he's like, I ain't going anywhere.
And then boom, it's now announced an official. Even a month ago, he said, I have no plans
on retiring anytime soon. They do the Apple thing where they're like, I cannot speak about future
products or events. Boom. And then it just happens. And we're like, yeah, you knew the whole time.
Yeah.
So many thoughts.
I do plan on putting together a video, but this is a good sounding board.
I want to fire some thoughts at you guys and see what you think.
So first of all, Tim Cook's career at Apple, pretty goaded as a company.
Pretty insane.
Like just as far as, like, people invest in Apple, they went from a sub-half billion,
or sub-half trillion-dollar company to a $1 trillion to a $2 trillion, to a $3 to a $4 trillion.
That's crazy.
This guy is good at steering that ship.
supply chain wizard, shipping tons of products, creating tons of revenue, lots of services.
So if you want to analyze Apple post Steve Jobs era as a company, they were a very successful
company under Tim Cook. Very hard to succeed Steve Jobs, but he did that. But people are excited
for John Turnus as CEO of Apple because John Turneris was the senior VP of hardware engineering.
And I've talked to him about hardware many times. He is a product guy. He's into making good
hardware, which is really exciting. You might have also watched the Tim Cook interview where I asked
him about products, and it became very clear that he is not thinking about that stuff as often.
The magic mouse. Yeah. You can see the gears turning in his head, trying to remember,
first of all, what is a magic mouse? And then second of all, what do I say about a mouse? Yeah.
And the word he came up with was ergonomics. Nothing against Tim Cook.
The last possible thing. Yeah. Like, that's not it. Like, it was kind of a
meme. But so nothing against him cook. Like he has his leadership style. It was very successful. But
you could also kind of see the influence of, you know, Johnny Ive leaving and like the sort of
new design language of Apple products. I think the MacBook Pro is a really good example. Yes.
Of the design language at Apple changing. Yeah. Going from being super thin and sleek,
too thin for its own good and thermal throttling and keyboard issues because of the butterflies,
which is all this stuff, and now being like thicker, having real ports, being super powerful,
and Apple Silicon, you know, coming up and being super important.
So a lot of good stuff happened under Tim Cook, but now I think it's even more exciting for
product focus.
For sure.
Yeah, we haven't really had a product CEO at Apple since Steve Jobs, which, I mean, it was only
Tim Cook in between.
So there's that.
But it, you know, Steve Jobs made a lot of interesting, weird stuff.
And I think it would be cool to have more interesting weird stuff.
We had Vision Pro.
They possibly committed a little too hard division pro because Apple doesn't like to ship anything that it doesn't think is going to be a hit.
I've been thinking about this a lot.
And like the companies that we cover, we talk about Google a lot.
We talk about, you know, Samsung a lot here in the U.S.
There's a lot of companies who ship a lot of products and famously kill them.
Like the Google graveyard is immense.
And these companies kill products for various reasons.
Maybe they're just not scaling well.
Maybe they're a total failure.
No one used them.
Maybe they're a negative impact on the company, whatever.
But they kill products all the time.
When Apple kills a product once in a while, it's like this huge deal.
Even when they only kill like a wireless charging pad they're going to make.
Yeah.
It becomes kind of lower.
Which they don't acknowledge until like years later.
Yeah, they're like ashamed of any little failure that they've had where they announced something and it didn't work.
Apple intelligence is the latest massive, embarrassing failure.
Yeah.
So Apple doesn't really make that many stuff things.
And I was thinking about this analogy.
I'm going to throw it off a few guys.
see how it hits your ear.
Samsung and Google are like YouTubers that upload every day.
They're like daily vloggers.
They'll throw out a new thing.
If it works, great.
They'll throw out another thing next day and another thing
and another thing next day and another thing.
And you can never really get too hung up on
if one of the things fails.
And if something scales and does super well, great.
We might do a follow-up of that.
You might do it again the next year.
But they're kind of just uploading all the time.
Apple is like the YouTuber that uploads every six months.
Michael Reeves.
Or every four months, right?
Yeah.
Just like every couple months and just straight bangers.
And it's fine.
It's usually bangers.
They clearly spend a lot and like really commit a lot of the company and a lot of the future to it.
And they have future plans and they're like, this is a huge commitment, blah, blah.
And they use that language too.
This is revolutionary for us.
This is a massive deal.
And so when one of them doesn't quite hit, you can't hide because the next thing is months away.
And you did just talk pretty grandly about it.
And so it's kind of like a little bit embarrassed.
because you so that's why I think they don't they don't try as many different things that I want them to I wish Apple made camera a printer a whole bunch of other random stuff that they don't make a home pod with a screen like there's tons of stuff that I would like them to try but they're not the daily uploader they're like behind the scenes scheming for months on the big upload yeah it's for sure yeah it's like the weight of your expectations I kind of I think Christopher Nolan could maybe be a good analogy for Apple because it takes a real long time for them to come out with a new thing when they do
They try really hard to have some revolutionary, innovative thing.
They're almost always bangers, but there's always a movie like Tenet that you're like,
what is this for?
Who is this for?
Shut the fuck up.
I haven't seen it, but I've been.
Tarring rules if you know it.
I haven't actually seen it.
But that's the Vision Pro.
But it's not Interstellar.
It's just not.
No, I mean, Interstellar is like the iPhone.
Tenet is the Vision Pro.
Most people don't understand it.
Yeah, that's good.
And some people, yeah, some people will never.
or try it and have just heard bad things about it and they're like, wow, do I spend the money?
Like me.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I don't know.
I mean, it's interesting because I don't necessarily foresee Apple shifting to trying a lot of
new stuff again.
It's like, again, it's the weight of your expectations.
And because Apple has only shipped bangers generally, you know, there have been some weird
things here and there.
People scrutinized the hell out of them when they don't ship good stuff.
And there are like a million iPhones now.
Like, I was kind of thinking about this.
They didn't necessarily expand into a ton of new product categories,
but the products that they do have,
they have sort of decided to fill that every price point thing.
Oh, yeah.
Like Samsung does.
It's so safe.
Yeah, it's very safe.
Yeah.
Instead of making a folding phone and a flat folding phone and then a skinny phone
and then a flipping phone like Samsung,
they're just like, here's the iPhone and here's the other iPhone.
Yeah.
And the other iPhone and the other iPhone.
Yeah.
And that's Tim Cook's version of a variety of products.
And one could argue that they're almost,
too many skews of all of these devices
at this point. I think that's a fair argument.
I kind of think we have too many.
I don't think that the iPhone,
what is the cheap one now? What is it called?
Well, there's the 17E, and then there's the
base iPhone, and then there's the Air now,
and then there's the Pro, and then there's the Pro Max,
and then there's the iPad, and then there's the iPad Air,
and then there's the iPad Pro,
and then there's the MacBooks that kind of like start...
The price ladder is real, and they do make a lot of money
selling a lot of stuff, but it doesn't feel like a real variety.
Yeah, there was like a real variety.
There was a really good SNASIQ video a few weeks ago about how the Neo kind of destroyed the MacBook Air.
I like that, yeah.
Because, you know, the air when I originally launched was that Manila folder, like it was breaking barriers, like thing.
And now it's, you know, it's, it's thinish, but it's not insanely thin.
And it's good and it's got a bigger screen, but it's like more expensive in a weird way.
And at this point, they, I think they need to, they need to lean into Ternis's hardware engineering background to actually like,
If they're not going to expand a new product categories again,
I would like to see them reinvent their current product categories they have.
Make the air like insane again.
You know what I mean?
And it's surprising that when the M-CHIP revolution happened,
they didn't actually take that opportunity to, you know,
make the Johnny Ive era of everything being omega-thin,
just like, oh, a normal computer, but it's omega-thin.
Yeah.
I'm glad that they went the thick-boy MacBook Pro route
because we're power users and we like to have.
that extra headroom, but, you know, they kind of, I mean, they have an opportunity now to make
the MacBook Air super, super, super thin and still faster than the Neo. Yeah. Yeah. The,
there are so many, and this is as a product reviewer, you see a lot of this. There are so many
products from Apple that shipped in the last couple, like 10 years that are simply the same product
with a new chip or like, or like shuffling parts around the same couple of things. So you'd
review, uh, I, and you see a lot of this language from Apple because they,
kind of also in press land, like pretend other companies don't exist a lot of times.
So they'll say, this is our new product. It has this from our other product and this other thing
from our other product. And now it's the new thing, even though it's using old things.
Right. You're like, okay. iPhone 17E, they'll just go, it's the screen from this old iPhone,
and the chip from this other iPhone and the camera from this other iPhone. And now it's a new phone.
Parts Ben phone. And that's Tim Cook genius at work.
Yeah, that's supply chain maxing right now.
That is what they do.
So, yeah, now they're a $4 trillion company.
A little bit uninspiring, I think.
They do have big swings every once in a while,
but I'm excited for a little bit more variety potentially.
Yeah, yeah, some people were also saying,
like, now that Tim Cook is just sort of the chairman of the board,
he can go do all the political things, right?
Because it was always kind of weird to have him being the CEO
and also having to deal with, like, the administration,
all the stuff like that.
now the CEO of Apple can just focus on running Apple
and Tim Cook because he's still sort of affiliated with the company
can go deal with all the politics.
Yeah, that's what I'm curious about what the job actually is
because I didn't really get to ask Tim that,
but I kind of just want to ask like what is running Apple like?
Is John Turnus's job going to become way less input
on new hardware and ideas and way more running Apple?
Because that is part of the job.
You've got to do a lot of that sort of stuff.
So I'm curious about that.
Yeah, Johnny Serugi is taking over his head of hardware.
He was the guy that he's always in the labs in the video talking about the M chip.
Surrounded by MacPro's.
Yeah.
And Pro Display XDRs?
Yeah, which the Mac Pros are.
What are they going to do now with the Mac Pros gone?
It's just going to be Mac Studios.
If they look so much more impressive.
I know.
It really do.
They're great background video props.
Yes, they are because they look really cool.
But he's taking over his head of hardware, which is really interesting because he's great at making chips, obviously.
That's his thing.
But the question is, like,
like do his hardware chops match up, you know? Yeah, that's going to be really interesting to see.
Other products that you wished Apple would make that maybe they have a better chance of making
now that it's someone who's in charge of hardware? I mean, I would love a camera. Same.
They're not going to do it probably because I think that the camera market, like I think
Canon makes most of its money on their super, super cheap cameras, right? Like the pro-sumer market
for cameras is not that big. Interesting. And Apple, I believe,
leave still uses Sony for its sensors.
Yeah.
Apple has the, you know, they seem like the company that could start making their own
sensors.
That would be sick.
Yeah.
That would be sick.
I mean, putting their DRAM directly on the chip and making it go straight to the camera
and being more heavily.
Doing computational photography on a large sensor sale size.
That could be interesting.
An A18 might have enough juice to be like a pretty sick image processing engine.
Oh, it already is.
Yeah.
It already is.
But, you know, add the way more pixels.
and win more lines.
But could it do, do you think it's powerful enough to function on a lot, like an APSC sized sensor?
Probably, yes.
If you dedicated the entire chip to image processing, yeah.
That's what I'm saying.
They definitely got enough A18s line around.
But even just to make the iPhone camera better, you know what I mean?
I mean, they probably have like a relatively deep level of integration based on, you know,
how early they get the chips from Sony and what they talk to them about and what they want them
to build it on.
But I would like to see deeper integration of that.
And then maybe, yes, maybe they could make another camera.
Because remember, they did make a camera that was made by Fuji film.
The quick take?
Yeah, it was a Fuji film camera that was Apple branded.
I was going to say they're never going to make a camera because they would just tell you that they make a camera already.
Yeah, that's true.
Well, okay, yeah, I was...
It's not a big enough market either.
I was watching the AirPods Max 2 came out and there's reviews out there now.
And it's basically like, yeah, they're the same.
And I'm like, this is such a Tim Cook thing.
Like, they're just reusing.
They have all these, okay, H2 chips, ship them.
Like, it's the same.
product over and over. And I'm like, why, like, what would convince Apple to actually spend
interesting money developing new, like, what would convince Apple to make good AirPods Max?
Competition.
Competition feels like, it's out there now. Like, it's not necessarily all in the same
buckets. Like, they are the only ones doing this metal build, weird case thing. But their battery
life's not competitive. But they're sort of.
sound quality is decently competitive,
but the integration with the iPhone
has always been the thing that's not,
you can't really compete with it.
It's weird.
Their Wald Garden allows them to not really have competition.
Even if there are other headphones that are sound just as good,
have just as good connectivity,
you know, battery life lasts just as long.
The integration is always going to be them only,
and so you can't really compete with that.
Yeah.
At the end of the day.
I just feel like if I worked at Apple hardware
and I was like, you know,
biting at the,
chomping at the bid or whatever,
it's called to like make real improvements to AirPods Max and then the order comes down from
Tim Cook and he's like same design same case same everything just throw the H2 chip in there and
call it a day we're going to ship millions of things and you're like dang I really want to do
something interesting I feel like maybe that's the door that can be opened by this could be maybe
it's safe to keep shipping the same thing over and over again yeah I mean there's some crazy
statistic about like AirPods Pro and how they would be like one of the top 15 companies in the world or
something if they were just a company. Yeah. So yeah, I don't know. I personally think that we're
over indexing a little bit on his decision making when it comes to hardware design and stuff like that.
I think Apple is probably a complex enough organization that these decisions mostly get made by
like the middle managers and he just approves things. Yeah. He just signs things. You know what I mean.
Yeah. Some of my earliest to CEO interviews when I actually got answers from them, I would ask them like
what that's like being a CEO.
And it's like, honestly, most of the decisions don't get to you.
And if they do, they are the hardest decisions that had to be passed up the chain.
Yeah.
Where it's like, you know, decisions about the future of the company or like really difficult, technical and moral decisions about what products they should do.
Yeah.
Where if it's just, hey, you know, there's a simple update for AirPods Macs out there, we can just like take that market share and keep going.
Should we do it?
That doesn't even really make it to him.
No.
And that's how you end up with him going, we make a magic mouse?
Yeah. What is that?
What is that?
Am I the only one thinking not a lot is going to change?
No, that's what I mean, yeah.
There's very much, like, as a $4 trillion company,
you are a thousand percent like a huge boat with many small oars,
and no one person is going to steer the whole boat in a totally new direction.
It's very fair to assume that this is going to be a smooth handover
with minimal risk to investors and minimal changes in almost everything.
We're not talking about all birds over here, okay?
Yeah, it's the opposite.
company. That's the opposite.
Yeah.
So I think, you know, I don't even know what the stock price is doing, but I'm sure investors are like,
oh, how is this going to go?
I'm sure Tim Cook is also going to give a ton of guidance about supply chain stuff.
Like, he's still going to be involved.
He's still got to do Tim Cook things.
Speaking of Tim Cook things, I pulled some quotes from their PR release that I just found
interesting.
Mainly, Apple Services has been a major force.
We didn't even talk about services.
Yeah. Apple Services has been a major focus area of cooks.
And during his tenure, the category has grown to.
to become a more than $100 billion business,
the equivalent of a Fortune 40 company.
Yeah.
Just the services.
That's insane.
That's Tim Cook.
That's 30% of every tap you do on the iPhone.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, it makes sense.
Yeah, we didn't even talk about the services.
He really did grow all of those monthly ecosystem services.
Yeah.
I wonder, I think Fitness Plus might get reduced soon,
to be honest, because they put a lot of money into that,
and that seems to be one of their weakest services.
Yeah. Apple TV Plus also spends way too much money, but I think that they like kind of being the new HBO. So that's probably fine.
You know what I also think about a lot randomly? There's a lot of companies they could acquire.
Yeah. To just like a Peloton or like a random like fitness related company that could really boost their quality of product, but they never seem to do it.
Yeah. And that's another thing. I don't know if that's going to change at all.
I feel like they don't want to do that because they don't want to dilute their own brand, you know?
it's kind of risky to do that when Apple already has such a like really really good identity.
And if Peloton gets in trouble for doing something Pelotony because they always have,
then Apple gets the flag for it.
And doing that to Beats was like the last time they did something like that, which a long time ago.
Yeah, that was a long time ago.
I guess I just mean like if they have a really weak product offering, like people are talking about this with AI,
but just if they have a weak product and there's a company that's way smaller but that's doing a lot of really good stuff that they're not doing,
they can copy some of it
they can make their own version of it
that ties into the iPhone or whatever
but I always think of them as the iPhone company
and if they ever wanted to
quickly expand and make a whole bunch
of way better things maybe that's a route
but yeah they never seem to do it
they never seem to do it
I mean because when you think about it
it's like what could they really expand
like you ask me the question
what product would they make
if I could wave a magic wand
what would you want to make
because I just I don't really know
of a lot of product
alarm clock
like just a dedicated
Alarm clock.
Yeah, I want...
They'd say your phone's an alarm clock.
I know, but I think the idea that like, instead of expanding into more services,
they expand into more hardware peripherals is like...
You think they do that?
No.
That's kind of what I'm trained.
That's what I want.
Yeah.
And it's what I think someone like Ternus would be positioned to do.
But I don't think...
I think you're right that like anything they do dilutes the power of the iPhone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Totally.
It's the everything device.
Well, it's funny to think of them as the iPhone company because I think there's an
argument to be made that Apple is actually an earbud company that just happens to make watches as
well. Well, both of those companies are just accessories to the iPhone. I know, but like, you could
make the argument that like while the iPhone is like a game changing thing, it still is not like
global market share, whereas the best selling audio product and the best selling watch of all
time are both Apple products. True. But both of those markets combined are like a fraction of
the size of the smartphone market. Yeah. And the Apple Watch only works on the iPhone. So,
you'd need to also sell an iPhone to sell an Apple Watch.
Yeah.
So. Yeah, it's like they, they obviously had a ton of success with the iPhone, and they will
never ship something that steps on the feet of the iPhone.
Yeah.
But every time they do ship something new, their first move is to make it the one that
works best with the iPhone.
Yeah.
So that if you have an iPhone, you are more likely to get this one than any competition.
That's true about their headphones.
That's true about their, you know, the way the Macs and the iPads talk to the iPhone and
the ICloud and all this stuff.
Everything is a part of this ecosystem, and that's their strategy number one.
I want to see a return of the home pod and more form factors for the home pod.
I want to see them properly compete with Sonos.
We can wire that all over your house.
I feel like that's the next step for them.
Yeah.
A TV.
Everyone thought they were going to make a TV for a while.
They never did that.
And then they just made the Apple TV, which is a TV, you know.
Yeah.
But what if, I mean, they make the Apple TV, Apple TV.
And Apple TV.
And Apple TV.
No, not Plus anymore.
They killed the Plus.
Oh, just Apple TV.
It's all Apple TV.
So you can watch, yo dog.
I heard you like Apple TV?
So you can watch Apple TV on your Apple TV.
Oh, you Apple TV.
I think I got that trivia question from a tweet that was like, Apple makes three products called Apple TV.
None of them are TVs.
Steve Jobs would lose his mind.
Yeah.
So they, you know, there's lots of things that I'm curious if they're going to start to jump into or like dip their feet into and we'll see.
Yeah, well, I hope that John Turnus says, good morning very loudly.
That's the only.
He's got to have a new entry.
There's no way you can...
That's like a rapper's signature line.
That's true.
He can't take his bar.
What is up?
He needed a new bar.
Yeah.
He did, he did, I forgot what he said when he did the MacBook Neo event.
Did you say, what do you say?
I don't remember.
That wasn't streamed, so I don't actually remember what he said because I didn't take
video of it.
Do you say, hi everyone?
Probably.
Probably.
That sounds like, it sounds like what he said.
One of the odds he gets on stage and goes,
was I.
I need it.
Not zero.
There's definitely a polymarket link somewhere.
Yeah.
So he takes over in September.
So I...
Good thing Apple does nothing in September.
Yeah.
I'm curious what happens at Dub-Dub.
Is it going to be Tim that comes on stage again?
Probably.
I don't think Tim has he come on stage at the time?
Yeah. Oh, really?
He comes before the video starts.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, he comes...
So it happens...
Yeah, in real life.
I thought they always...
Dub-dub the video thing always starts with Tim on the roof or something.
Yes, it does.
but also he comes out in person.
Yeah.
So what happens is when you go to the, to WWDC in person,
they start, everyone's sitting in the same space and looking at the same screen,
and they actually have someone come out on stage, usually Tim Cook or Craig Federi,
because it's Dubdub.
And they come up, sometimes both.
And they come out and they say, welcome to WWDC.
So happy to have you all here.
They'll say like one or two generic lines.
And then they'll walk off stage into the front row and then they'll start playing the video that everyone sees on the stream.
And then it's Tim Cook and him again on the screen.
Yeah.
So lately, so the MacBook Neo event, they had, you know, the announcement videos and everything.
But that, no Tim Cook to be found anywhere.
It was just John Ternis on stage.
And I think one or two executives with him.
But he was clearly like the welcome everyone to the thing that I'm showing you person.
Testbed.
So, yeah, that happened once.
That'll probably happen again in September.
I believe Dub-dub.
Well, yeah, I don't know.
I think there would be a lot of hype if he came out.
If John, I think that's probably what they'll do.
I think that's probably what they'll do.
Yeah.
Yeah, I might as well get him started.
But Doug is like a software thing.
It is, but you're kind of like the, he kind of sets the tone of like welcome to the thing and then passes it to the software people.
Yeah.
So you're saying John Turnus will come out or Tim Cook will come out?
I think John Turner's will come out as the I'm about to be the CEO.
Yeah.
And I think Tim Cook has done his last keynote.
Really?
That's what I was going to ask.
So you think like we're not going to get one more Tim Cook good morning?
I think we're going to get some sort of like cheeky little thing.
Like Tim Cook is going to come out and like air drop the scene.
CEO position to John Turner.
I can see that.
That's probably.
That'd be funny.
Yeah.
So maybe Dubdub is the last Tim Cook and the first John Turner.
He's going to send him an Apple event's invite to become CEO.
He's going to be a meeting with HR on his calendar.
I wonder if they'll put that in the Dubdub intro video this year because you know that everyone's going to like some Easter.
People are going to be so excited about the whole thing.
It's kind of great.
This is a cult.
You know what's funny?
the amount of people who are like, what about Craig?
Why isn't he the CEO?
Because he's the one who's like the most charismatic on camera.
He's still in charge of all the software.
Yeah.
So that's not.
He's got a falcon here.
We just got to pick somebody.
Yeah, I'm glad.
I mean, hopefully he reverses course with Liquidass.
Well, you know, Tim Cook might have had his events that he was going to keynote set to zero.
But you know what else you can now set to zero.
What?
YouTube shorts on your phone.
What?
I still watch shorts.
On your phone?
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
Okay.
This is what confused me about this, because shorts are made for the phone, right?
Yeah.
Vertical video, TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube shorts.
All of this stuff is vertical because it's on your phone.
Yep.
They won't give us this feature on TVs or desktop.
Yeah.
So shorts is still available on YouTube desktop, right?
Like if you're on a computer, you go to YouTube, you'll still get shorts there.
For sure.
But I have the option on my phone, which is what it was made for.
Yeah.
To turn it to zero.
Does it not percolate across all your devices?
Oh.
I imagine the settings on the phone and then it, but I updated my app this morning and I still
didn't have the option to set it to zero.
Oh, I have the option to set it to zero.
So maybe I'll do that and see if it populates across.
See if it populates on your device on your laptop.
But yeah, so previously, you know, there was a shorts time limit and I'm guessing this is
sort of like a parental thing where parents could make sure that their kids were not
just like brain dumping on shorts all day.
Yeah.
And the options were in 15 minute increments.
And it could be 15 minutes, 30 minutes, 45 minutes an hour.
That's the verb for it, by the way.
Brain dumping.
Brain dumping.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Brain maxing.
And now, apparently, you can set it zero.
Again, I still didn't have this option.
But I really wish that more social media apps would give you this option.
Because, like I've said, sometimes Instagram really sucks me in for 45 minutes.
Never going to.
Well, Instagram leans on reels.
And TikTok, obviously, is TikTok.
Yeah.
I feel like this something.
TikTok, too.
This feels like how it should be, though.
Like, I don't mind having shorts and reels on my phone, whatever.
If you have the option.
If I have the option to go to it.
I don't like being served it.
But it affects their bottom line.
Yeah, I don't give a shit.
I guess it's too big of a bottom line.
Yeah.
For YouTube, it's a fraction of their bottom line.
For Instagram and for TikTok, it's too much of their bottom line to give you that option.
It's surprising to me that YouTube is even allowing this in the first place.
Well, flex.
Yeah.
Kind of.
I like it.
We're healthier.
Yeah.
You know?
So, yeah, kind of weird.
And then you get sucked in a long form.
Yeah.
Speaking of something disappearing.
Nice.
Good shorts disappeared for some people if you want.
Nothing.
We kind of missed the story last week because it happened like during the podcast episode last week while we're recording.
Yeah, but it also didn't happen.
Yeah, it's Schrodinger's AirDrop clone.
Nothing last week released an AirDrop competitor called Warp for a few hours.
it was gone
like three hours after they released it
they deleted all traces of it from social media
Andrew Authority got a statement from them
asking why they deleted it
and nothing said our product team has temporarily removed
the nothing warp file sharing application
to make necessary improvements based on early user feedback
and technical evaluations
that was quick
this is not a permanent removal but rather a strategic pause
to enhance a product's performance
and ensure it meets our high quality standards
So normally that's just a software update.
So there is more reasons why they had to remove it.
I hear this is a security nightmare.
So we pulled it.
Either legal or security or both.
Legal or security.
The site cyber news was speculating that it was extremely close to an open source tool that was already available and it looked almost identical.
That's funny.
So it's possible that they just kind of took the open source tool and released it as their own thing and then they got blowback from it.
I'm guessing it's more of a security thing.
Apparently the way that this worked was that it would upload the file to Google Drive, send it to the other person, auto download it, and then when it finished downloading it would delete it off the Google Drive.
That's crazy.
Which is really weird.
It's really funny, actually.
It's possible Google just didn't, like, this violates their terms of service or something for Google Drive.
I'm not sure.
I'm thinking wouldn't that mean that there has to be some sort of automation to automatically delete something from a user's Google Drive?
Yeah.
Which doesn't sound like Google would be okay with them.
No.
No, I think, I think.
No, because you can delete stuff off of your Google Drive with the Google Drive API.
Like, I've built tools that do that.
I think it's more like, I don't think you can build this.
I don't think you can build a commercial service that piggybacks Google Drive.
I think that's the.
Yeah.
Maybe that's why.
I mean, it's interesting that they even gave the statement and that they said it is a temporary pause,
but, you know, could be an indefinite pause.
Could come back, could not.
Yeah.
TBD.
TBD.
I like how this is now a thing.
like it seems like everyone has an airdrop
oh 100% kind of thing
there is a phone that will
okay embargo will be out by the time we talk about this
uh opo's phone but this is also not just this phone
where there's like a seven or eight page section
of their review guide which is just clones of apple features
where they'll be like install this opo app on your mac
and then you'll be able to use air drop on your opo phone
and install this Oppo app on your Mac,
and you'll be able to mirror your Appo phone on your Mac.
Like they are selectively going in and picking Apple ecosystem features,
and then making a companion app that lets you have a version of that
so that if you are in Apple's ecosystem,
you can still use Oppos phone.
Didn't they make some sort of workaround
where you can also use your Apple Watch on the iPhone?
Yes, that's another one.
Yeah.
So you have a specific app on your phone.
And then I don't even think you need an iPhone.
I think you get the Apple Watch,
and then it can work with the opo phone.
Yeah.
And AirPods.
The iPhone when you set it up, right?
And then...
Yeah, you need an iPhone to set it up.
That wouldn't shock me.
Yeah.
But still, yeah.
It's so deliberate.
It's like, wow.
I can't really switch to the opo phone
because I use an iPhone and all these accessories.
Oh.
Hold on.
Hold on.
We got an answer.
Oh, but you can.
We went so long without any of these.
And now it seems like there's a million of them.
Why is it all happening now?
It is strange.
It is strange.
Europe.
Europe.
Possibly Europe.
Possibly. We love it.
All right.
Well, we got a lot more stories coming up.
We clearly don't want to save the best for the beginning.
I guess blow through the best of the beginning.
So we're going to do something that lasts longer than Tim Cook's tenure, which is trivia.
Is that we have to do 15 years of trivia?
I kind of, yeah.
Lock in.
I hope waveform is still going in 15 years.
Same.
Yeah, when I'm 45.
All right, guys, Tim Cook is stepping down like we just covered.
And this, I thought, would be the perfect excuse to ask a question about the most random fact I've ever learned about Tim Cook,
which I got from a Wall Street journal article came out a little bit ago.
It's called Tim Cook on why Apple's huge bets will pay off by Ben Cohen.
Big article when it came out.
And the thing that I learned from this article that shook me.
to my core.
M1.
What is Tim Cook's
favorite soda?
Hint,
while it is a very common soda
throughout the U.S., it is not sold
in Apple vending machines.
Like on-campus vending machines?
That is correct.
So does he just get deliveries
directly to his office?
He said in this interview,
he does not get to drink it as much as he wants.
Interesting.
I do know he grew up in the Midwest,
So this is probably going to be a soda I've never heard of.
He did not grow up in the Midwest.
Oh, but he's from the Midwest.
Right, am I wrong with that?
Right, you're wrong with it.
Because that's mine.
He's from the Midwest.
He's not from the Midwest either.
What?
Guys.
He has an accent.
I thought he was...
Not a Midwestern accent.
Are you serious?
Wait, don't look it up.
I thought it was...
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Think about Tim Cook's accent.
And now think about cartoon characters.
Yeah, okay, I get it.
Is he really?
Yeah, I guess he was.
That makes sense.
That makes a lot of sense, actually.
All right.
Well, answers will be at the end, like usual.
We'll be right back.
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Welcome back, everybody.
We all know that Google could really do some stuff
to make its pixels more appealing,
and specifically they could bring back features
from the old Nexus days
that would make it even more appealing.
I can think of so many.
What's your number one feature?
Glowing trackball.
Track ball.
Oh, Nexus 1.
That would be cool, but they're not doing that.
Oh, darn.
Can I keep guessing?
You can keep guessing.
Boom sound from the HTC1 play edition.
That'd be cool.
It's not that?
No, sorry.
Damn.
Physical keyboard from the G1.
You really want that?
No, really.
No, I don't.
You're right.
No moving parts.
Yeah.
Okay, hold on.
Think about something that costs one cent.
Half stage, like two-stage shutter button from the Motorola droid.
That'd be sick, but they're not doing that.
Damn.
Yeah.
Not even like, what about an accent power button?
Maybe.
That'd be nice.
I'm not sure.
Okay.
They've done a lot.
Remember the panda pixel and then there was like a little orange power button?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
God, I want that. Pixel 4.
They could bring that bad.
Squeezing the sides, that was bad.
That was bad.
It was fun.
It was fun.
It never worked.
But it didn't work as well as I was hoping.
There's a video of Adam and I in Central Park
shooting my pixel 4 review and just doing this and it's not working.
It's so bad.
That was an era, truly.
The best part of that video is that the only way for some reason that it worked was
if you leaned over it specifically in this way that made you look like a mermaid.
So there's a shot where you're just like leaning on a rock like a mermaid.
Oh, that's true.
at the phone.
That was one of those, like, you see, there's so many tech demos of, like, where they try
to, like, gracefully show you the feature, and they're like, boom, and it doesn't work
the first time.
They're like, oh, sorry, I just got to, like, do it a certain way.
That was one where they would try it, like, six times, and it would work once maybe, and
you'd go, I can tell this is going to suck.
It was so bad.
Well, okay, what is it then?
Okay, it's LEDs.
Multicolor LEDs?
Yes.
For notifications?
Yes.
Customizable?
Yes.
Well, maybe customizable.
I'm in?
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm super in.
So, so there was an APIC.
APK tear down of the latest Android 17 Beta 4.
And there's a section in it with a whole page that specifically mentions pixel glow lights,
which will alert you of important notifications when your device is face down.
Pixel glow.
Oh, when it's face down.
Yes.
Okay.
So it's on the back.
Yes, on the back.
There should be a light bar.
A bar would be nice.
Oh, I was picturing because there's a couple that have had like pin lights.
Or like the glowing trackball is an example, but like a little dot.
So it would just be like the yellow lightnings this.
Oh, no.
A bar.
It's a bar.
That's what it's supposed to be.
So it's going to be RGB.
They said that you can have it for notifications, for different types of notifications, like phone calls from different favorites, as well as it should animate while you're interacting with Gemini.
Oh, yeah, of course.
So it should be all wavy, you know, do the thing.
Wow.
And I just think that that's a pretty sick feature.
Tim Cook can never.
This is crazy.
I know.
I really like this idea.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a long time where I was customizing Android ROMs or just had like, you know,
know software settings where I could decide certain apps would glow my notification light a
certain color. Yeah. So they'd be like a light blue and a dark blue and a yellow and a green.
Yeah. And so I could know what the flashing color of the light meant and I can decide to check it
or not. Yeah. So this is like a bring that back. If this is user customizable and maybe
there'll be a ROM that allows it to be user customizable, which might bring back ROMs. Who knows?
That'd be very cool. That'd be sick. I think it would really help differentiate pixel devices.
they're kind of like, at that point,
they're more customizable than nothing fonts.
Yeah.
So it's like what's nothing got on them, you know?
Yeah, I mean, the nothing phone has the screen on the back
with like a bunch of, yeah, like, it's this mini display
and you have these apps that you know you get essential notifications from.
It's interesting.
Yeah.
I think that's at least interesting.
Yeah.
Most phones don't have anything on the back that you can tell, like, what notification you got.
Yeah.
So I'd like another version of that.
Yeah.
You might be devil's advocate here.
Sure.
Try.
So.
So, I'll defend it.
I'll be devil's devil's advocate.
The double double.
Yeah.
Okay.
So for the record, great idea.
Bring this back.
I love this.
But is this just Google preying on our nostalgia?
Because we have always on displays that gives us way more information.
It's not the phone upside down.
Yeah.
But just putting the phone up, you can see everything now.
Like we have Amelid.
This is like a solved problem.
That's valid.
I would say there's a couple things.
One, I don't love always on displays.
I started turning them off on a lot of phones that it kind of got annoying.
Either I would like tap the display as I'm putting it in my pocket,
and because it was always on, it would light up as I'm putting it away,
and I get annoyed, so I just turn it off.
And I started, like, leaving my phone face down.
These are face-up sitting here,
but they're not telling me anything because I turned always on display off.
I would like to have them face down and just be able to know,
because I'm waiting for the Slack notification for Wawa orders.
And I'm like, oh, it's the pink notification.
I know I should check this one.
So, yeah.
Are they playing on my nostalgia?
Probably a little bit.
Probably a little bit, yeah.
When I'm, like, out with a friend at dinner or something,
I pretty much always flip my phone upside down
because I don't like that, you know,
I can get a notification and it shows up.
And then I think that the reason that this is a little bit better
is because being able to glance and just be like,
oh, it's an email, that's it.
Oh, it's a text.
Maybe I should check it.
But not moving your attention to exactly what the text says
on the always on display.
You get very distracted when you're, like,
looking at that.
Yeah.
You can just be, like, ambiently,
aware that you got a text.
Yeah.
And it also helps you if you're interacting with Gemini, you know that it heard you
because it's kind of waving around, you know?
Yeah.
And also just we like cool pretty colors.
And that's pretty standard.
You know, the back of the phone is a historically underutilized spot.
Yeah.
Sometimes there's a fingerprint reader back there.
Sometimes it's a little display back there like the Xiaomi 17 Pro.
Sometimes it's not.
Yeah.
So I like something back on the back.
It'll be interesting to see how they, you know, keep it waterproof and everything while also
adding LEDs.
I guess it'll have to be under glass or something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Where do you think it's going to be on the phone?
I was picturing a bar across the bottom.
That'd be cool. Like a thin stripe type of thing.
That'd be super cool.
I like that.
I think it's going to be above the pixel bar.
Like right at the top.
Right at the top.
That little sliver there on the pixel.
I'm kind of on team bottom.
Okay.
Careful.
There's nothing wrong with that, Marcus.
Just saying, careful.
So apparently the APK turned on also.
Another one for the Supercut.
Also.
Another one for the David's free on the pod supercut.
we watch that by the way if you're out there we watch that and we laugh i don't think most people know
what that is uh okay so the apiccate teardown also indicated a pixel laptop that is going to be
released um they try this every six years and i buy it immediately every six years yeah um but
what's more exciting about this is one it's also supposed to have the pixel glow thing which i'm
not really sure how they're going to do that because computers are just very different with
notifications. Well, okay. So remember the last pixel laptop? Yeah, the cheap one. That had the
pixel book go? No, so the pixel, God, the names, hold on, I want to find the name of it, but it had an
RGB stripe on the back, but after the CR 48. Yeah, like the pixel, yeah, laptop. Yeah.
So just that again. Yeah. But have it light up. That one didn't actually glow, right? I thought it did.
The Chromebook pixel? Yes, that one.
Chromebook pixel. Did that one light up? The no glow Chromebook pixel is a,
pixel book glow pixel book go with pixel glow oh my god it let yeah it glowed that's great
like that oh and it had what did it glow for i don't know but it's doing stuff it is doing stuff i got to
rewatch my review this is old this is 13 years old so old yeah but yeah it lit up it turned off
when the laptop is off or it would light up with notifications or something on the back so that's
that's the thing i would like them to bring back i mean the big question here is like when i have my
laptop closed i'm like done with it you know what i mean i don't need to like see notifications on my
laptop. I already have my phone for that. But
this is potentially
going to be their big Android Chrome OS
merger. OS.
Which means that maybe
it will have a lot more direct
compatibility with your phone.
Yes. Have you
ever had this moment where
you pull out your laptop to use it
and you open it
and it's got 2% battery and it's about to die?
You're like, dang, I wish I knew it was about to die.
Oh. Well, you know how you'd know?
Yeah. Is it at 10%
it just subtly, softly glowed red, just sitting there closed.
You go, ah, I like that.
Appreciate that communication laptop.
Okay.
Am I crazy?
Yes.
You used to be able to do that on MacBooks.
What would glow?
No, no, no.
There was a button on the bottom of the MacBook that you could hit, and then it was sort of like the battery tester.
Am I crazy?
That's true.
When you say bottom, you mean the bottom?
Under it?
I got to research this.
I'm having like a...
Nothing around what the bottom.
That doesn't sound like a Mac.
I don't remember a button on the bottom.
There was a glowing Apple logo on the back
Yeah
Just a glowing white logo
Yeah, just a glowing white logo
Yeah, we didn't never had any
You know, functionality other than just think so
That's exactly what I want from my Chromebook
When the battery's about to die
Use more electricity
Well, that's such a tiny tiny amount
I know, I'm joking
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, I'm just like
What other use cases?
I guess you maybe you could use it
To invoke Gemini
Like if it's
Because at the end of the day
They just want all of your devices
To be endpoints for Google Assistant
for Gemini, you know.
So if you have your laptop sitting on your desk and it's your most nearby device and it has like
always listening or something.
Yeah.
If you can control your home.
Is that a crazy thing?
So like what if, you know how a lot of laptops sometimes have like slightly thicker displays and
they've put like compute in the top section of it sometimes?
Like they'll be like a.
I'm not crazy.
This existed.
Oh, I do remember that.
What computer?
The battery indicator.
Unlike the pre-2012 MacBooks, there was a button on the left side of the computer that if
you hit, it would do these like LEDs would light up until your battery percentage.
I'm not crazy.
That's cool.
Where were the LEDs though?
Yeah, where is that?
Where were the LEDs?
The LEDs were also on the side.
Oh, oh, that's the, okay, the metal ones that, yeah, it's like a sort of a flush
button with like five dots that would all light up.
That's cool.
Wow, that's a good callback.
I didn't remember that at all.
That is cool.
They should bring that back.
So, yeah, the idea of like a Gemini thing, what if there's a little bit of compute that
stays on even when you close a laptop?
Always listening.
So it is like a little always listening.
little tiny computer SOC or phone
SSC or something and you can still
ask it, hey G, and the speakers are still in there.
They're going to be muffled, but they could still
respond. Totally. They could be a thing. I think that'd be
sick. Or it could be side firing speakers or bottom firing
speakers so you could still hear it. Yeah. Yeah, I mean
Apple has been quietly adding thread radios to all their devices.
I feel like Google could
also start adding all of these multifunctional
multi-functional radios and
stuff to their devices. Yeah. And they
want you to have as many access points for Gemini as possible because they want you to use it
in as many places as possible.
Yeah, they want us to use it all the time.
Yeah.
Was it Nest that had a thread radio in like a thermostat or something that they just turned on
after X amount of years?
It was the home pod as well.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, the home pod was silently carrying a thread radio for a long time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was an Apple product that did that too, but not with thread.
It was that released.
No, an Apple product released with a radio that they didn't turn on until a year or so
later with a firmware update.
Wasn't that the, I thought I made a video about the, it was the second generation iPod
touch that shipped with a Bluetooth radio that they didn't announce or turn on until like a year
into that.
That's crazy.
Wow.
That's, I really hope I remember.
I'm like, my brain is filled with these like 2010 Apple Facts right now.
I have to go double check all of them.
That's really funny.
Oh, iPod touch though.
Okay.
Yeah, I guess it makes sense.
I picture my first iPod, which was like the tall nano.
Yeah.
That one with Bluetooth would be crazy.
It would be wild.
You'd probably do it now.
So yeah, I mean, that's exciting.
It doesn't take a lot to please tech reviewers.
You just need to give us the RGB lights and that's it.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, I am easy to please in that way.
Indeed.
Indeed.
All right, what is this headline about...
Yeah, speaking of people who are not easy to please.
Yeah.
Motorola in India is suing social media platforms and dozens of content creators over things.
that were said about the company.
Not a good look, but what
are the details? Because maybe I'm
missing something. Yeah, so it's
seeking takedown of content and broader restraint
for what it deems false or defamatory
material related to their devices.
It specifically called out that it didn't like
that people had been publishing videos of their phones
catching fire, which
it said were fake. It was saying that
these things were fake. But
it wants to restrain people from
suing and publishing this content
including reviews, videos,
comments, and boycott campaigns.
So this is the prime example of the Mandela effect, right?
No, no, no, no.
What's the, if you hide something?
Streisand effect.
Yeah, stris and effect.
I had not heard about any Motorola phones
catching on fire.
Yeah.
And now I'm curious if they're real or not.
Yeah.
Seems like they're insisting that they are not,
but here we are.
There was someone that quoted, like, last week,
it was like there's two ways to respond to criticism.
one is to make your product better
and one is to make it worse
by, you know,
getting aggressive.
So, yeah, it alleges that there are
hundreds of posts across social media
that show Motorola
products in a false and defamatory way.
And it says that it did this lawsuit
in the interest of public safety,
which doesn't make a lot of sense.
India is Motorola's second biggest market,
which makes up about 20% of its global market share.
And, you know, like,
Obviously, people on social media, especially big phone fans, can be pretty over the top sometimes.
But stopping people from publishing negative reviews is not a good look.
It's a very bad look.
Yeah.
And it sort of tracks that they're suing them in India because I think that there are probably looser, like, freedom of speech laws there.
Just hope that this does not happen because, you know, I don't know.
It's bad.
It's bad to repress speech.
When I read this, it kind of reminded me of all the different ways that like CEOs just respond to things.
So like this reminded me a lot of Carl Pay with nothing because that's a company that has turned negative feedback into content in an interesting way.
Like we will occasionally talk bad about nothing products.
And there are three things I know to be true in life, which is death taxes and that Carl Pay will turn that into a YouTube video and just make a bunch of views.
They turn it into content in a way that allows him a platform to respond without suing creators into oblivion.
Yeah.
So I think like that's an interesting way of going about it.
And Motorola should pay attention.
Yeah.
They're owned by Lenovo, as you remember.
True.
Yeah.
I did not remember that.
Oh.
I completely forgot.
I will remind you.
And yeah, it's just, it's just not a good look.
You shouldn't repress people's speech.
And that's bad.
So we'll have to follow that lawsuit and see if anything actually comes from it.
There's one other big story here.
Speaking of following something, I'm going to talk about basketball.
So I hope you're proud of me.
Steph Curry, you know, the king, as we in the basketball industry call him.
Oh, boy.
The king is LeBron.
Is that really good?
There is another player.
I'll stop you when you say something.
I'll stop you if you say anything crazy, but you're on the right track so far.
Okay, well, he, you know, plays for the Golden State Warriors.
You know, he's been playing for them for a while.
He's so good with his accuracy.
When he shoots the ball, it usually goes in the circle.
the hoop. It's kind of crazy
how many times he can get it in there.
Yep. Yep. So
also was an investor in
Palm. I met
him. Also correct. During my
Palm briefing. And he was
wearing it as a necklace.
Yeah. Anyway, the MBA is
very deeply rooted in
Google sponsorship.
They do a lot of pixel stuff.
Famously, a couple of the NBA stars
like use pixels every day. And they say
they actually like it, even though people don't think
they do. They really do. They really
maybe do.
They really say that they do.
Yeah. And we have been hearing these rumors of a new
Fitbit coming out that's supposed to compete with
whoop because remember here on the waveform podcast, we
f***ing hate whoop.
Down with that company.
We are whoop haters. We are whoop hater, certified.
Andrew's not here to defend himself.
And so...
Andrew famously loves Woo. Loves. I mean, he...
Andrew's obsessed with this guy.
We always dunk on whoop and he's like sticking up
for them. But yeah, he's not here for that. So if you don't know what a whoop is, it's imagine a
smartwatch without the watch. It's the watch band, but it's thicker. And the idea is like you don't
want to wear a smart watch, but it gives you deeper analytics about your body. It's got all these
different data points and they're suing like a smaller app company because they think that they
stole a lot of their data points. It's very stupid. But it's like if you wanted all the benefits of
an aura ring, but you needed people to know you were wearing an owing. Yeah. It's kind of a status thing.
Well, you can wear a whoop under your sleeve or, like, hide it if you want to.
Yeah, you got to get, like, an accessory for that, I think, to wear, like, on your chest.
I'm going to do a weird pivot here because over the weekend, Man City beat Arsenal.
So it was a very hard day for me as an Arsenal fan.
But at the end of it, Holland, who's one of the great players in Man City,
ripped off his shirt, ran onto the field, wearing a whoop band.
And I was like, he's a lot to play with that?
How?
Well, is that my...
Are they not allowed to play with those things?
I don't know.
I guess so.
It's under...
If it's under your shirt, yeah, no.
That's fine.
But they can't play it if it's over your shirt.
Guys, I don't know if you know this.
You play soccer with your feet.
So I think I think you're going to be okay.
I play a sport where before every game, they line all the players up, they do the national anthem.
And then they go down, the roughs go down the line.
And if any player has on any wristband or jewelry or necklace or anything that could get caught on a finger and like pull, they tell you to take it off.
Okay.
So you can wear it under your sleeve.
You can wear it somewhere where it's not going to get caught.
But then if it is out, you got to take it off.
I have a question about that.
Yeah.
I currently have a bracelet that I cannot take off.
Yep.
What happens in this case?
They will take tape and tape it to your wrist fully.
So I can't get caught with like a finger.
Like you take it off.
Because it was one of those things where they like zap it in place and it's there forever.
Yeah.
It's one of those.
You did that?
Yeah.
There's other people that have that.
Yeah.
Or they just refuse to take it off or whatever it is.
So they just get it taped on.
Whoa.
Yeah.
You did that to yourself?
Never taking it off.
It's just a bracelet.
It's like being chained to something for your whole life.
Kind of.
To what?
To the chain.
I guess.
Anyway, that's like a tattoo, bro.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well.
Yeah, I have none of those.
Okay.
Fair point.
Fair point.
Anyway, back to Steph Curry.
You know, the king, as we like to call him in the basketball world.
I don't want to stop you.
I'm going to keep, yeah, it's fine.
You know, he shoots a lot of hoops.
So he's got, he's been wearing this unidentified Fitbit device for many months.
Yep.
You know, there have been articles that have been coming out that's just like little glimpses of him wearing it.
But then Kellyn at DroidLife, shout out to Kellan, one of the most OG phone YouTubers there are.
In 2012, I had push bullet notifications for every article that Kellen wrote.
It's pretty sick.
He's still going strong.
He decided to get a little bit obsessed with this because he's a huge basketball fan.
And, you know, as we all are here in the Whiteboard podcast.
He's specifically a Trailblazers fan because he's in Portland.
That's tough.
Okay, yeah.
That's been tough.
Well, he analyzed a ton of Instagram videos, YouTube videos, and I think there was even one other thing.
Just a lot of videos on the internet.
And getty images.
Getty images of Steph Curry over the last, like, since February, effectively.
And he was able to catch multiple, multiple, multiple glimpses of Steph Curry wearing this unannounced Fitbit band that is supposed to compete with whoop.
It is much thinner than a whoop.
It kind of just looks like a Pixelwatch band, but it's.
slightly thicker at the top.
And Steph Curry never wears it during the games.
I'm guessing for the same reason that you can't wear bracelets and stuff.
He never wears it visibly during the games, but there could be a chest strap or some random
accessory.
Maybe.
Yeah.
But there are multiple screenshots of him wearing it out and about.
There is even an image that Kellyn caught where he has an app open on his phone that
appears to be sort of like a new redesign.
Oh, I watched that video.
I didn't even catch that.
Damn.
That's crazy.
That's good.
hiding in plain sight.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I imagine that, you know, it's been months since this has been kind of being leaked.
And I feel like Google's leaking this on purpose at this point.
Yeah.
Honestly, this to me is the best case scenario.
I imagine he's invested in Fitbit or some, like a lot of Golden State Warriors players,
California team, are connected with a lot of California companies.
So there's a lot of tech connections.
So I wouldn't be shocked if he's invested in this company or something like that.
But if it's just Google.
There's so much.
Yeah, for sure.
Or they have some partnership.
whatever it is.
And so Steph organically deciding to wear this for weeks and weeks before it comes out
is the best possible endorsement of the product.
Right.
To me, it's probably in his contract.
Elite athlete chooses to use this product before it comes out.
Before he's probably going to get paid to do a commercial or whatever about it,
he's going to be able to actually say he's been using it.
Yeah.
And probably actually like really uses it and cares.
Yeah.
So I, yeah, it's just free promo for them.
Google stuff leaks already.
anyway all the time so here we are yeah um but it looks good i personally i would love something like
this that gives you all the analytics but that you can put on any watch because it looks like it's
just a watch band size with a slightly thicker top well the puck that's where it's measuring everything
yeah yeah but if they were able to put that in the bottom part and then you could just wear a regular
watch on the top i think that would be sick or maybe even like clip a watch to it i don't know how that
would work but i guess you maybe could maybe you just sew a watch
My problem with putting it on the bottom of a watch band is that not all watches are meant for like sports and stuff.
Yeah.
So if you're like wearing a watch that you don't want to smash into a wall, you know, I wouldn't want to have my tracker on the bottom of that.
Yeah.
Having an option would be nice.
Yeah.
Well, it looks very Googly.
It kind of is just like this.
I don't even have, do you know how to describe this?
It's like a.
So it looks like the, what's that Apple Watch band called?
It's like the trail loop.
Trail loop.
It looks like a trail loop band.
but without the Apple Watch
and instead it just has this small puck under it.
If you've seen Meta's wristband for their glasses,
it kind of has roughly that amount
and it's on the back of your wrist
where the watch would be.
So no screen, no time.
Again, it seems weird to people who don't use it,
but a lot of people don't want to screen on their wrists,
so it just has long battery
and it just sits there and measures your stuff
and you check the app
when you want to see the info.
And yeah, they're finally going to compete in that space.
It's funny how out in the open he has been with this, though.
Like there's an image of him giving an interview.
Yeah, press,
conference press conference and he just got it on love that crazy yeah have you guys used the new
phippit coach thing no but you've been using it right i've been using it i really like it really
but to this product's credit uh it pretty much only works with fitbit devices and or my pixel
watch yeah and i don't wear my pixel watch every day because it's a pixel watch yeah it's like it's
fine but it's not the one that i'm like i'm usually wearing like a real watch so this is like i'm actually
interested in something like this because Fitbit back in a day to me was this. It was just a random
little tracker that pretty much everyone were walking to Best Buy and Buy. You can swap out the
bands and everything like that. Then they started getting like a little bit more smarter and
smarter and all this stuff. But like the core of what Fitbit always was to me was just this little
tracker. So if I can just have the little tracker with these in-depth analytics that you get from
something like the Pixel Watch, I think that would be pretty interesting. I have a longer
battery life too. Yeah, when I, when I worked at Intel, like they, they were only like 30 bucks at the time to get the like little pedometer fitbits that you could literally put in your shoe. And then people would be able to and then we had like walking competitions, which is so funny because it's like who can get the least worked done. Which nobody Intel gets worked in anyway.
Allegedly this is going to be called Fitbit Air. That's what I think 9 to 5 Google found that. Interesting. Can we come up with different names? That's my other. Yeah. I think this is there's airs. Air means light pro. Pro
She should call it Foop.
Fitbit.
See, the thing about Fitbit, Fitbit's a good name for a product, but it's their company name now.
Google Fitbit.
So you can't call it the Fitbit.
That would be a good thing to call this.
Yeah.
You got to call it Fitbit something.
Fitbit loop, maybe?
That could, yeah.
Fitbit band.
They'll think of something.
They'll think.
This Steph Curry.
Also, the king is LeBron, so that's just the one correctional have.
So what do we call him?
We can call him the chef.
The chef?
I thought he was the goat.
What's a chef?
That's, I mean, he's some people's goat.
He is frequently referred to as chef curry.
Why?
Because his full name is chef on.
And he'd be cooking out there because he's cooking.
Yeah.
Chef Curry with the pot.
Is that real?
Is that a real thing we will say?
Trust me.
Yes.
Yeah.
No, that's great.
All right.
Last thing I want to do before we take a quick break is I want to show you guys something.
And I just want to make sure I'm not crazy before I crash out about this.
So check Slack.
Okay.
Check the Wayform Slack channel
And I want you to open this Dropbox link
And just watch this quick minute long video
And once you're done watching it
Just let me know
Is there sound?
You don't need the sound.
Okay.
You can see this is the Apofind X9 Ultra
Dave, do you want to describe what you're seeing?
All right, so this is the Opo X9 Ultra
Find X9 Ultra case
Mm-hmm
Whoa.
Okay, so it's the phone
and then it's like a giant accessory case
looks like it's for photography stuff
the case that is next to it
is like insanely rugged looking
they slap the case on the phone
it makes it basically an otter box
it looks like a small rig
had a baby with an otter box
they put oh there's like a front attachment
that locks in so it's like fully encased in this case
this is like an outdoor
crazy outdoor setup
okay now he's got basically
what looks like a gimbal attachment
or something oh no
It's a shooting grip attachment that plugs into the phone.
It looks very ROG, to be honest.
And then they attach a filter attachment to it.
So they can put like an ND filter, a variable ND on there.
That's kind of cool.
Yeah, it's variable ND.
They're spinning it around.
Okay, now they...
I can't wait to hear what Marquez is going to say.
Now they touch a cooling fan.
Oh, now they attach a left-hand grip for some reason.
Oh.
Now they attach a cold shoe.
Oh, okay.
Now they're attaching a quick release for a...
Okay.
It was for a tripod.
And now it's...
Oh, my God.
What is this?
Oh, there's a giant Hossa Blod box.
Oh, no.
Does this get crazier?
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
Okay.
There's a really, really big
hossablod lens attachment that comes with, like, a tripod mount.
Do you have to put a lens adapter on in order to...
Oh, my.
my god oh my god this looks so insane what is this the final render at the end doesn't have the
lens tripod mount on yeah it comes off at the collar it comes off so this just looks like a
terminator situation okay tell me they sent this to you you have all of this in the other room okay so
what in the world so i watched this and my first thought is what are we doing though for real for real
I don't have a price tag on this, but I'm assuming if you are willing to buy this flagship phone, $8,000, $1,000 phone, whatever,
and you're also going to buy the lens and the battery grip and the cold shoe and the cooling fan and the lens adapter and the lens and the tripod and all this stuff to go shoot with your phone.
You clearly really care about the quality of the work that you're making.
So why are you using your phone still?
spend all of that on a cheap camera
that will do better than whatever you're about to shoot on your phone
this is not a diss on the camera on the phone it's a really good phone camera
but physics is still real and you can still get much better footage
out of a dedicated camera plus better audio plus better codex etc
so I think there's a Goldilocks zone to how much it's acceptable to improve your phone
camera yeah before you're just going too far
and you should just use a camera.
You know?
Is that valid?
I think that's,
this is too far.
I think that the only acceptable use
of like really,
really trying to improve your phone camera
as much as possible
is if you are going to make phone native content,
right?
Because the biggest annoyance
of using a dedicated camera
to shoot content
that is going to be on phones
is that you have to move
all of the data to your phone eventually.
So the one plus for this,
the oppo for this,
is that,
I guess they're the same company.
is that, you know, if you're going to shoot like a reel or something, all the footage is right there.
If you're editing on your phone, it's right there.
But then at that point, it's like this is clearly doesn't look like it's for real.
This looks like it's for like a feature film.
They've got it sideways.
This is going to be so hard to, like, you have to take all of this off your phone to be in editing.
This is, unless you do it on your phone, you edit.
This is like a 90 second process to like.
I'm saying to even hold your phone in a way that's comfortable to edit.
Oh, yeah.
You would need to disassemble this whole package.
And so they're just blipping the phone.
the photos to yourself.
This is like, yeah, it's like you decide you want to get this shot or however many
shots or this whole shoot you're about to do.
You have to go through this like two-minute process of like assembling your phone rig,
which valid you have a rig, you're going to get pretty footage, but you could spend two
seconds turning on a regular camera and just start getting footage.
Yeah.
And I just think, yeah, this is, this isn't the valley between like good phone footage
and regular camera footage.
You know how you have that analogy of like VR heads?
sets and like glasses and how they're both trying to move towards each other.
Yeah.
This is like smartphone and camera.
Yeah.
They're all trying to move towards each other except the smartphone went way too far over the line.
Yeah. They really have.
They are now cameras that are just all in one.
They have really good mic, like pickup mics.
They have really good quality.
Stabilization.
They're small.
They have really good stabilization.
Good codex.
It's just all in one, like really quick short form content or YouTube video content
cameras.
Yeah.
And that's moved towards the smartphone line.
But this just went way over the line.
I think it's way over.
Yeah.
This is crazy.
It's insane.
Other problem is if you spend like, you're going to spend like $800 on the accessories alone on like it's probably a $1,000 phone.
And you spend $800 on the accessories and then you can never upgrade your phone.
Yeah.
Once you move phones, you're like, well, I guess I don't use any of this stuff anymore.
It's useless now.
Like it's at least with a dedicated camera like the glass is always going to be relevant because they always use the same amount.
Most of the accessories can be used on any camera because it's all universal.
No, this can only be used with the Apo FindX-9 Ultra.
Yeah.
Which, by the way, weird small rig cage aside, the phone is beautiful.
The phone is really good without all the stuff on it.
Yeah, when you take all the other stuff off, the phone itself is like aesthetically gorgeous.
Yeah.
By the time you watch this, our video one, it is up.
It's called So This is Peak smartphone.
Because smartphones are just, we've gotten to the point where they're so good that they're good at everything already.
and any differentiating factor is really just preference.
Yeah.
I think that's my take basically on this.
And so when you look at like, what do we want from a good smartphone screen?
Well, I don't know.
I just want it to be bright enough and good looking enough that I can see it all the time
and it just looks good all the time.
Okay, well, it is.
It's a high refresh rate, super bright OLED that gets to 144 hertz
and we'll go down to 1 hertz and has high frequency PWM dimming
and it just looks awesome all the time.
So success.
Yeah.
What about battery?
Oh, I don't know.
I just hope it never dies on me.
Okay.
7,000 million-a-h-hours and silicon carbon,
and it's like it'll charge it 100 watts if it ever dies.
All right, mission accomplished.
You kind of go down the line.
We've done everything.
Cameras are the last thing.
They're trying this stuff.
They're putting huge 200-machshel sensors in there.
They take good smartphone photos all the time,
but they're never going to take good, you know, high-level camera photos.
So it's just like, this is good smartphone photography, and there it is.
Yeah.
It's a great phone.
I have a question for you.
Yeah.
If the accessories and the lens and everything was able to be adjusted to
fit future phones, would that change your opinion on it? That would improve it, but it would still
feel like you're kind of spending too much time on, because the thing about a smartphone camera
is it's so convenient to just pull out the camera, open the app, and get the shot or just get the
videos. That's the strength is versatility. So if you're throwing away all the versatility to get
this super good quality, then why not just get the super good quality? You know what I mean? Yeah.
Like, just get the camera.
And it's actually more versatile again
because it takes two seconds to boot it up
and just start shooting.
So you're taking the strength of the smartphone,
which is versatility.
You're throwing it all away to, like, clip this case on,
clip the lens mount on, clip the lens on,
get the collar on the lens, do all this stuff.
And by that point, you're getting better footage,
but, like, you could just get a camera.
But it probably cost the same amount
as like an $800 all-in-one Sony vlogging camera.
Which is going to beat this.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's pretty insane.
Right.
I'm glad. I'm not alone in this.
That's pretty insane.
Anyway, go watch that video.
It's the Alpha Find X-N-U-Ultra,
really good phone.
Obviously, great cameras,
but people are going too far.
Yeah.
All right.
We'll take a quick break.
And before we do that, one more time,
trivia.
Something that's universal
across every waveform episode.
That's good.
Nice.
That's good.
Where in the world is Tim Cook from?
Dang.
Do you need the city?
City and state, please.
Okay.
I think I might know.
I think I know.
I know.
I know.
But you guys said,
stuff before. I think I'm wrong now.
I have a good, a good hint if you need
it later. I'll take a hint.
I'll wait. I'll wait to
the, uh, I think the hint has something
to do with someone in the studio here. I don't think
we need it. No? All right. Then I'm not
going to be right. Chicago.
All right, well, we'll either be right or
we'll learn something. That's it.
We'll be right back.
This week on Net Worth and Chill, I'm
breaking down the institution everyone's
talking about right now, but nobody actually
understands the Federal Reserve.
With all the drama happening between Trump and Fed Chair Jerome Powell, you're probably seeing headlines and wondering what any of this has to do with your money.
Spoiler alert, it's everything.
I'll explain what the Fed actually is, why it exists, and how this one institution controls the interest rates on your mortgage, credit cards, student loans, and more.
We're diving into why raising or cutting rates isn't just boring policy talk.
It's the difference between affording a house or watching prices spiral out of control.
Plus, I'm breaking down the current controversy over firing Fed Board members and why both Republicans and Democrats are freaking out about it because this fight isn't just political theater.
It could mean real chaos for your wallet.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts or watch on YouTube.com slash you are rich BFF.
Welcome back, everybody. Welcome back.
Welcome back.
I like that.
Because has to get on a plane in an hour and a half.
I'll be on the plane an hour and a half.
Okay.
It would be great.
Well, yeah, I guess so.
Okay.
We're going to speed through these because Marquez has to get on a plane in an hour and a half.
a half.
You're a nerd.
So there's,
we talked about
the GoPro cameras last week.
It was pretty crazy.
They have new cameras out.
The Mission One,
there's a Mission One Pro,
and there's a Mission One Pro,
and there's a Mission One ILS,
Interiminal Lens system.
We now have prices for these GoPro.
Ellis is very excited about using them for,
uh,
Jihon.
He's yihon over there.
So now we got the prices.
The Mission 1,
599.
Okay.
The Mission 1 Pro 699.
Okay.
And the Mission 1 Pro iOS,
699.
But these are all discounted by $100.
If you have a,
a GoPro subscription, which I didn't know what that meant.
And what does that subscription get you, David?
I had to look it up.
It is cloud storage.
It kind of makes automated little videos for you based on your footage.
A GoPro subscription?
Yeah, it's kind of crazy.
It's a warranty program, too.
It's also a warranty program.
Yeah, insurance.
Insurance type program.
You know how there's like the beastification of YouTube?
Is this the Appleification of tech companies?
A GoPro subscription?
Everyone needs recurring revenue.
It's basically like you're a hardware company, but you need more recurring revenue.
So you just bundled together some things that would work well with your hardware.
I'm not saying this is a bad idea, but wow, a GoPro subscription.
I think it's a bad idea.
There's no money in selling something once.
You got to sell it a hundred times.
I don't know how the subscription works,
but if the camera is able to auto upload to this cloud storage thing.
Yeah, no, I'm sure it's very clever.
Go pros find themselves in situations where they become former GoPros often, you know.
And so being able to know that footage is in the cloud, not bad.
Yeah.
A GoPro subscription.
Yeah, I guess.
Uh, yeah.
So, wait, what's so far?
There's a mission one and a mission one pro.
Pro.
What is the $100 difference between those cameras?
It's mostly based around the types of, like the frame rates that they can record.
Okay.
So, like, 4K 240 FPS versus 4K 120.
You get 8K60 on the pro versus 8K30 on the regular one.
So the pro has more processing power.
It can handle higher frame rates.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
So that's the main difference.
I still really want to shoot with them.
I just got to see how good the footage is.
Because we just showed you that insane rig with the phone with the appo and, like,
This is going to be that you could get one of these and probably get really good footage from it and it'll just be like a one button click.
Yeah, I would rather have this than the phone.
So yeah, we'll have to get some and shoot with them and see.
Much smaller.
Okay.
We got some iPhone colorful phone pro rumors.
So instead of just the-
Oh, I love this.
Yeah.
So the rumors are that the iPhone pro is going to come in this light blue.
Don't care.
Pantone 2-21.
Mm-hmm.
Dark Cherry.
Kind of don't care either.
What is wrong with you, Mark?
This is crazy.
Keep going.
Silver, don't care.
Dark gray.
Hell yeah.
Hell yeah.
That looks, and you saw the renders.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes, please.
Give me a dark neutral.
You're like a Staten Island mom
picking out the color of her car.
Like, you, any semblance of saturation,
get it out of you.
It's just the best-looking one.
And you know what's funny?
These are actually very popular the car colors.
Silver, light blue, dark.
dark cherry, which is kind of like the burgundy car you see everywhere, and then black.
The only other popular colors I've seen are like white and beige.
Yeah, no, this is gonna look good.
I think the silver actually looks sick.
The thing is, Ellis, I shoot a lot of car videos for autofocus on the phone.
I get it.
And the color of the iPhone reflects in every screen in the car every time.
Yeah.
And I've had an orange iPhone for many of these videos, and I pointed at that car play screen,
and there is just orange hitting me back in the camera lens, and I can't take it anymore.
I need.
And the blue one, it's close, but I just give me,
black. That dark cherry purple is pretty fire.
I'm not going to lie. It's it's it's
look I had two questions here. Yeah.
One, does this mean orange is dead?
Yep. Yeah, forever. Like that's it. It'll come back
in like five years or something. Purple is a new orange.
So this is, nice. So this is like a
that was a celebrity color. Wait,
no, literally. Oh no, it doesn't worry. I always say orange is the new black,
but black is the new orange. Black is the new orange. That's even better.
Well, I don't think it's black. I think purple is there.
Second, is the space gray name dead? Is that still available? For iPhone? You can buy it
I think so.
The MacBook is still space gray.
Macbook is still space black now.
Oh,
might be space black.
No,
I thought space black is a different color, though.
Yeah,
you're right.
Space gray is.
I have the space black MacBook Pro.
Space black, right?
Yeah, same.
I think it's called space black now.
But they do they not also?
Because space is, you know what's funny?
We talked about this in an earlier episode.
Space is gray.
No, space is.
Moka.
Cosmic latte.
It's not fully black at the point.
Cosmic latte.
We talked about this.
The average color of the universe.
What is this?
What is this Mac iPhone Air color?
Is it just, it's not black?
It's probably just black.
No, they would never call something black.
I don't know, they might.
They would call it ambient stillness.
I don't know.
That was bad.
Okay, so the MacBook Pro is space black.
So is the iPhone Air.
iPhone Air is Space Black?
Yeah.
That's it, right?
Yeah.
That's what I saw the leak and I was like, oh, okay, space gray's back.
And then I read it and I was like, wait.
Well, they could still call it space gray.
I mean, it could.
But what is this supposed to be?
Dark gray?
Yeah, it's just dark gray.
Like, it's black, dark gray, whatever.
But like I like, I don't know, maybe I've been like Apple Pilled, but I liked Space Gray as a name.
I was like that, that's cool.
I feel like it's too reminiscent of the Johnny Ive era for me.
I feel like we need to move past it, you know.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Okay.
So now that Marquez has to board in one hour and 20 minutes, we got to talk about this.
Huawei Pura X Max, the Foldie boy that they just launched.
Hawaii.
Hawaii?
Why?
Because they want to get ahead of Apple.
They want to get a...
Nope, that doesn't work.
They want to get way,
while way ahead of Apple.
Yes, we first saw rumors and links of this last week,
but now we have specs and pricing.
It is a short boy.
It's a short king, 5.4 inches cover display
with 3,500-knit brightness.
So very short phone.
It's definitely the passport style.
Short king.
7.7-inch internal display,
3,300 nits,
bolt support 120 hertz L-TPO.
It's got that homegrown,
Kieran 9030 Pro Chip
5,300 million amp hour
battery, wish that was bigger.
66 watt wire charging and 50 watt wireless
charging.
50 megapixel main, 50 megapixel teli,
12.5 megapixel ultraide.
I just love that there are triple cameras.
The iPhone's not going to do that
and that's really sad because I really wish they would.
Supports, Walway's M-Pen3 mini-stylus.
So you can use it as a little notebook thing.
$1,600 for the
12-gabyte, 250-gigabyte version, $256-gibibibib version, $1,000 for the $512-gigabyte
version, and $2,000 for 16 gigs of RAM and one terabyte of storage.
Really expensive phone, for sure.
As will the rest of these be?
As will the rest of these be?
So, you know, yeah, it looks just like kind of the iPhone is going to look at probably,
but it's got more cameras.
You left one thing out about this exciting new announcement from Huawei.
The colors?
No.
that unlike most Huawei products,
the Verge article, I think, that reported,
whichever article was linked in the show doc said that it is unclear
whether it'll come out outside of China.
So we might actually be able to get a global,
quote unquote, global minus United States version.
If it comes to, yeah, yeah, yeah, it could come to European.
Or it could not.
Or it could not.
Unclear.
That's true.
I hope it does.
You know it is clear?
What?
The thing that we do at the end of every trivia,
I mean, at the end of every podcast episode.
I guess, yeah, there's not much more.
we can really say about this at the moment.
No.
No.
Unless there's been breaking news.
There hasn't been.
I don't think.
But I do need to address something real quick.
Because certain video viewers may have been wondering why I'm literally decked out head to toe in Philadelphia 76 is cure.
Head to toe is not an exaggeration.
I've got the socks.
They're on your toes.
Oh, they're on your head and on your toes.
This man is committed.
Literally head to toe.
And that is because, oh my God, my leg is cramping from that move.
Wow, I need to stretch more.
Tonight, the Philadelphia 76ers play game two against the Boston Celtics.
Last game, we lost by 30 points.
And I realized that is my fault.
I did not do enough to cheer on this team.
So for the next 15 seconds or so, this is a Philadelphia 76ers podcast.
Tyrese Maxie is a dog.
Kelly Ubre is a dog.
V.J. Edgecombe, dog.
These boys are going to take us all the way to the NBA finals, maybe.
And if you don't believe you're not a friend of mine, go Sixers forever.
Really, I'm really sorry about that.
What are we going to do when they get swept?
You know, honestly, like, I thought about it.
I was like, how will I emotionally recover from a sweep?
Because I have been through Philadelphia 76ers fans, I will make the same bit,
have been through more than any other fan base in the NBA.
Especially in the last 10 years.
The amount of like insane stats that are just emotionally punishing.
Every sports fans believes this about their own team, by the way.
I know.
But have you, our star player has gotten sick for four out of the last seven.
Like not injured.
Sick.
That's a bummer.
You know what I mean?
For the four.
Like, like the fact that we continually have to play the Boston Celtics,
both of whom star players, we had the ability to draft and didn't.
You could be a, you could be a Knicks fan.
Okay.
But the Knicks owner isn't literally in the Epstein files.
There's just like so many things that it's just like this fanbiz.
And then I realized, Rockets fan.
This is what being a Sixers fan is all about.
Any of us could jump ship at any point, but we want the chaotic ride, baby.
We want Kelly Ubre getting hit by a car two weeks after joining the team.
Okay.
We want Joel and Bid showing up.
No, Kelly Ubrey, please don't hit by another car.
But it's like, I love you, Kelly Ubray, man.
Your eyes are so beautiful.
Tsunami Poppy.
you're like literally my favorite guy please just stay off the bicycle in center city for a little bit
um what's tim cook's favorite soda pop oh yeah wait wasn't this the second question this was the first
question oh i don't even know sodas you know you're my soda pop yeah yeah i feel i think you'd know that
intrinsically marquez you love kbop d hunters yeah but that doesn't mean i name sodas i don't know
anything about sodas here we go i thought of one
Who wants to read first?
I'll read mine.
Orange Crush.
Yeah.
That's a real soda, right?
Yeah.
I wrote Pepsi.
It is a Pepsi product, though.
Oh, really?
Because according to the Wall Street Journal,
Tim Cook's favorite soda is Diet Mountain Dew.
The least Tim Cook soda imaginable.
I didn't even know they made Diet Mountain Dew.
And of course, like, Andrew is not here today.
That's crazy.
All right.
Follow-up question.
Where is Tim Cook from?
This is a Tim Cook podcast today for obvious reasons.
My hint is that it is arguably the most hilarious city in America for a phone executive to be from.
Good hint.
Really?
Good hint.
I'm wrong.
I can't even think of an answer for that.
I feel like that would be weed California.
That would be pretty funny.
But this, specifically for a smartphone executive.
Yeah.
The way funnier.
Flip him and read.
What do we got?
I don't know.
Paris, Texas.
I wrote Dallas, Texas.
Is it Houston?
No.
So before I tell you how wrong you guys are, quick update on to score.
Marquez with 21.
Andrew with 22.
I'd like to stay at 21.
David in the lead with 26.
The answer, Mobile, Alabama.
I thought I said it was the south, and you guys said it
wasn't. No, you said the Midwest. Oh, what's the difference? Where's the bar? How far south you are.
The bars in both places, actually, famously. Mobile, oh, I get it. Mobile, like, because it's spelled
mobile. Mobile. Mobile. That's pretty funny. Alabama. That's good, right? That's good. Good hint.
Good hint from Ellis. I, you know, that's it. Well, we learned two new things about Tim Cook.
Maybe next time we'll learn some new things about John Turnus or even some other CEOs, who knows,
could get really fun. Definitely stay tuned.
for your regularly scheduled programming
and that bonus episode
that Andrew is in exactly half of
and yeah
go watch the Apple Sign X-9.
This is actually a technology jersey
too. Okay.
Just got the threads in it or something?
Because it's an AI jersey.
An AI.
No more puns else.
Is that Alan Iverson?
That's AI baby. All right, we'll be right back
seeing next week.
Wait.
I just want, real quick.
Subscribe so you can turn us
into one of the top podcasts in the world.
Sorry.
I had to do it.
I'm sorry.
Bingo!
Wayform is produced by Adam Molina and Ellis Reven.
We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network.
And our intro, outro music is by Vainzill.
And go, Sixers!
Let's go, bingo.
Sick.
All right.
Get on your fucking flame, Marcus.
All right.
Streeley just announced the album will be up before June 12th.
What about GT?
86? I don't know about that.
