MacBreak Weekly 425 (Transcript)
Leo Laporte: It's time for MacBreak Weekly, we have a lot to talk about. New
iPads, Apple Pay, Yosemite. Fortunately we've got the experts for you.
Rene Ritchie and Andy Inhatko, MacBreak Weekly is next.
Announcers: Netcasts you love, from people you trust. This is TWiT! Bandwidth for MacBreak Weekly is provided by CacheFly. That's
C-A-C-H-E-F-L-Y dot com.
Leo: This is MacBreak Weekly episode 425 recorded October
21st, 2014.
Area Man Uses Apple Pay
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Shutterstock.com and use the offer code MacBreak1014. It's time for MacBreak Weekly the show where we cover all the Apple news
and there's a lot of it today. Rene Ritchie joins us from iMore.com and his
office in Montreal. Quebec, Canada. Hello, Rene!
Rene Ritchie: Hey Leo! I've made it back, your side of the
world is much warmer than my side of the world.
Leo: It's not snowing in Montreal yet is it?
Rene: No but it's cold, and you have such lovely weather.
Leo: Actually we've got the cold weather starting to come. It's 60 degrees now, it's freezing.
Rene: I must have left it behind, I apologize.
Leo: Also here from Boston or the Environs, somewhere in New England in his secret
lair is Andy Inhatko. Yup.
Andy Inhatko: Greetings from the great white Northeast.
Leo: From the Chicago Sun Times. What's the picture behind you there?
Andy: This is from New York Comic Con a few weeks ago. A whole group of people that
decided to dress up as the entire Scooby Doo cast plus the old caretaker
dressed up as a ghoul.
Leo: He's not a ghoul, he's the old caretaker!
Andy: Notice the lady dressed up as Scooby which I did not even notice when I took
the picture.
Leo: I like the girl though, she's got it.
Andy: I feel like she's changed the relationship between Scooby and Shaggy.
Leo: (laughing) You're a girl! It does look like Simon Pegg on the right, that's not Simon Pegg on the right is it?
Andy: That is not Simon Pegg on the right.
Leo: It does look like it though.
Andy: One of the things I enjoy about Cons is taking pictures of people in costume,
and I always just in the back of my mind am playing a game called “Do you know
who you should cosplay as?” Yes, he should be cosplaying as a Shaun of the Dead
character. I passed by someone who I almost wanted to just stop and interrupt
what they're doing and say “I know that you're not in costume, but you could so
totally be David Bowie in the 1970s. You could be Ziggy Stardust, you could be the Thin White Duke, you could
be that freaky guy in the clown makeup. You should totally go with David Bowie
next time! I don't even want to be paid for my consultancy fee in telling you
what to do, but please!
Leo: Please! Is that on your flickr stream, that picture?
Andy: Yeah.
Leo: AndyI on flickr.
Andy: AndyI on flickr.
Leo: Oh yeah, there it is.
Andy: Usually instead of waiting a couple weeks and posting an album of like 100
pictures, I've seemed to be now just posting one a day. Because
now people have the patience to see one photo a day.
Leo: I like this.
Andy: Now people have the patience to see like one photo a day when.. here's a half hour of your life to get through all
this stuff and everything I've written about it.
Leo: This really stands out. And Velma is hot, you're right chatroom. And that
doesn't look so much like Simon Pegg once you see the
blood on his face. Alright, let us move on ladies and gentlemen because we have
a lot to talk about. Apple released its quarterly end fiscal year results
yesterday, and you know I think it's a walk off home run in the bottom of the 9th frankly. It looks pretty good, I'll be doing baseball
theme metaphors throughout the day today. Looks pretty good, Apple market share
its highest since 1995!
Rene: Yep.
Leo: Still single figures, I mean it's not like they have 20% market share. But
still the max surged.
Andy: Yeah.
Leo: Really good performance for the Mac. Fourth quarter surge of
21% year over year, revenue growth up 18% year over year. Luca Maestri, the new CFO, says we saw great demand in the back
to school season for both desktops and portables, especially strong growth for Macbook Pro and Macbook Air.
Double digit Mac growth across most markets around the world. That's important,
with particular impressive performance in emerging markets where Mac sales were
up, get this, 46%. Is this the halo effect? Are they using iPhones now and
they're going “Hey I should see what else Apple offers.”
Andy: I don't know about merging markets, but have to pay attention to the fact that
I think there was a lot of pent up demand for the Mac Pro and so they sold lots
and lots of those to people who weren't routinely buying Macs. These are people
that had been deferring that purchase for about a year and a half.
Leo: Did they break it down by model? The Mac Pro?
Rene: No.
Andy: No, but I'm guessing that if there's a reason it's certainly possible for there
to be a halo effect but I believe that must have contributed because I can't
think of another Mac release that has been so eagerly anticipated as that one.
When we had people who were saying “I'm done waiting for you, I'm going to now
build a compatible Macintosh tower out of available components and hack the
operating system to run on it. That's how long I've been waiting for you to
release an update to the Mac Pro.”
Leo: Adrian Kingsley-Hughes, says the momentum may just be
starting. Because remember the iMac, the new 5k iMac is no in this.
Rene: One thing that I think also is that while the point bombs weren't that
impressive this year, they price cut many of the Macs. They dropped them by
$100. And even though it's only $100, over the price of a Mac
that's pretty good incentive.
Leo: Yeah. I do think that, especially in emerging markets that Mac or Apple
awareness is driven by iPhone and iPad, don't you think?
Rene: Yeah there's a halo and there's a continuum now where people are introduced to
those devices and people thought that we'd be going from the trucks to the cars
but there's still a lot of things that trucks are better for, and even the new
Mac mini that was introduced, it's gone back to its original price, $499. $100
cheaper again, when you combine those two things I think that gets people
moving.
Leo: By the way that price point is probably the more important bullet point when
you talk about the Mac mini than the fact that you can't update the RAM, that
it's basically a Macbook Air in a different
enclosure. A lot of the geeks were disappointed, they wanted a better Mac Mini
but the price point is where Apple was headed, right?
Andy: Yeah, absolutely. That's something that really stands out to you when you look
at the Mac Mini lineup. There is such a huge disparity between the entry level
model and the very next step up. The middle model and then the best model, they
look like sister and brother. This one looks like a cousin in terms of its
relative power, the processor it uses, the amount of
resources that are available to it. And I stifled my reflex to say oh, of
course. It's a woefully under-powered machine. But no, it's not under-powered
it will run everything just perfectly fine and if this is a sign of what Apple
had to do to get the price down below $500 I'm all for it, because the next
level up is a big jump, it's like 50% more expensive. A
little less than 50% expensive. So that's going to be a very important
$200 for a lot of people, so if it lets people choose a Mac instead of a better
configured Windows machine that's a desktop box, even though they wanted a Mac,
that's a great move.
Leo: It's interesting because it's at the same price point as the entry level iPad.
Rene: Yep.
Leo: Which is kind of interesting.
Andy: And you don't get the screen.
Rene: No screen.
Leo: Yeah. Let's talk iPhones, so iPhone 6 was out for less than two weeks in this
fourth quarter, so I don't know how much the iPhone 6, well we could actually
do the math because they said how low.
Rene: It was launch quarter though, I mean it was the launch
weeks which are always high.
Leo: That makes a big deal, even if it's just the first couple of weeks of the
launch. It was the iPhone's third best quarter ever. They sold 39.3 million
phones in three months, that's up 12% compared to the previous quarter, 16%
year over year.
Rene: It's a license to mint money, Leo.
Leo: It really is!
Andy: Yeah. It really just puts you in the mind of why Apple really wants to move
into consumer goods like the watch, because how many desktops can they--
(signal interrupted) –people will have $100 and they'll have a few hundred
bucks just to blow on cool stuff so it's .. (laughs.)
I think this time next year we could be looking at some numbers that are like
“Now we must fear Apple and beg for its forgiveness for past things we might
have said about it.”
Leo: Yeah, I'm starting to worry. Cumulative iPhone sales, which is kind of a silly
figure, but they did put out a graph so I'm going to show it. They now have
sold close to, this is wrong. 600,000,000 iPhones?
Andy: Yeah, I know.
Rene: It's not as many as Android phones but wow are those profitable.
Leo: Whaaa!
Andy: And all sold by one company. I encountered that figure at 400 million a while ago,
and I had to double check it because it doesn't make sense that this company
could sell anything in a number that could be expressed as a fraction of a
billion dollars. Now it's over half a billion, not half a
billion dollars, half a billion items.
Leo: Half a billion phones!
Andy: Times how much money they're making on every phone and it's like, we praise our
new Apple overlords as a host on a popular podcast, I can do much to sway
public opinion and to get law enforcement in line for your new directives. I
can be quite useful to you Apple. Please don't crush me like the ant that I am.
Leo: Apple's margins are up too. There was some concern in the market and among
users, analysts. That the margins seemed to be tumbling but they were up for
the first time in some quarters, and revenues for the iPhone were up 20%
compared to last quarter, 21% year over year. Profits up even
more.
Rene: They're selling more of the higher margin products now. Which
is good for them.
Leo: Right. Wow. Of course, beats analyst expectations, you always want to do that.
Apple's very good at damping down the expectations and then over-performing
which is good for the stock price. Usually the stock market buys on the rumor,
there's been plenty of those, and sells on the news. The news was of course
yesterday. But the stock price was going up up up, it's up another 2% today.
Rene: And once again, they could not make enough to sell, I think Tim Cook said it
was on the same planet, the supply they could make to reach the demand. How
many could they have sold if they were in balance? It's ludicrous numbers.
Leo: In a way they should be punished a little bit for that. They make such a great
product and they can't make enough of them to sell them all.
Andy: I would quit any boss who said I know, I know. You sold 40 million but you
could have sold 42 million. We've only filled that swimming pool up to an inch
overflowing with gold doubloons. I want your resignation letter on my desk by
2pm. I bet you'll screw that one up too.
Leo: Of course the iPad, mixed in with all this wonderful news I think it was not
only a record quarter but it was a record year. Fiscal year. Is that right? I should look up the actual numbers.
Rene: Yeah. I don't recall..
Leo: I think they said this is the best year ever.
Rene: You kind of want that every year.
Leo: Yeah, well yeah. I guess, yeah.
Rene: The iPhone by itself is capable of driving them to that, which again is scary.
They have such a successful business but for that to be your most successful
business..
Leo: Record profits for the fourth quarter. And I think record revenue. We didn't
give you the bottom line, which is.. sales, total sales of 42.1 billion and a profit on that of
8.5 billion.
Rene: In one quarter.
Leo: Yeah. Improved profit.
Rene: They just can't empty those vaults fast enough.
Leo: Gross margin 38% compared to 37% year over year. International
sales, 60% of the quarter's revenue. Good news for Ireland and the
Cayman Islands. A lot of cash could be flowing in.
Andy: A lot of good for truck drivers on the money delivery route from the air ports
to the Apple post office box where all the checks go.
Leo: (making truck noises) I've got all the franklins in the back!.. iPhone sales up
16.2%. iMac sales up 20%. iPod sales, let's save iPod sales. iTunes sales up 8%,
accessories up 12%. Now.
Rene: iTunes and app store is getting really interesting.
Leo: Yeah, what did they say 85 billion apps have been sold?
Rene: And the money they're making off of it now. Because for a while you had the
feeling the app store was being neglected, that the iTunes store was being
neglected, that the technology there wasn't being as improved as devices and
operating system technology. But if it keeps making money like this, it will be
hard for people even inside Apple to say no no no,
we need somebody to take this in his loving hands and propel it forward.
Leo: So of course, iPod sales down. 25%. By the way, we'll stall this, we're no
longer in a break, this is the last time you're ever going to hear the word
iPod sales. We're no longer going to break that out. We are not going to break
out retail sales, I don't know why I think retail sales are very positive, and
we're not going to break out watch sales when the watch comes out. Luca Maestri said “No no, nu uh.” You
know, of course the iPod's tumbling. They only sold 2.62 million of them.
Rene: Yep. The iPod touch hasn't been updated in three years now?
Leo: And they're still selling.. I mean even that is like.. but you're still selling millions
of them! And the iPad, down for the quarter in the most of course, of all 12.5%
but remember they didn't have a new iPad, everybody knew there would be a new
iPad this month. They still sold 12 million. That's more than a million a week.
Andy: Yeah.
Leo: So they're selling them, and Tim Cook said, and I think one of the analysts at
the end of the call said “Well what's going on Tim with the iPad, are you
worried?” and Tim Cook was very clear, and I think said exactly the right
thing, that he's still very bullish on the iPad. He actually gave a very long answer, I'll quote a little bit of it. He said “I take a
step back on iPad, I know there's a lot of negative commentary on the market
but I have a different perspective. We have sold 247 million over the first
four years, that's more than the first four years of the iPhone.” So, that's a
good point. He says “To me, I view it as a speed bump and the lack of growth
year after year, and not a huge issue. That said, we do want to grow, we don't
like negative numbers on these things.” He said, “I know some of you think the
market is saturated, but from the data he sees he says no, our market data says
the top 6 countries in terms of revenue generation all had more than 50% iPads
sold to new buyers. The worst was 50%, in some countries 70% sold to new
buyers. That means more new people are coming in to buy iPads. That, to me,
confirms the saturation but okay. Because that's the point that people who were
still buying don't yet have them. He says “Well we're not saturated, we think
there are a lot of potential new buyers for..” Okay,
so not everybody has an iPad but those who have iPads I think are maybe not
upgrading as fast as one would hope. He says “Yeah, we don't know yet. This is
a new product.” He said “It's hard to say what the upgrade cycle will be. We
know what it is for a phone, we know what it is for a computer, but we've only
had four years of iPad sales.” He says in response to suggestions that products
are cannibalizing iPad sales, maybe people are buying macs or iPhones instead
of an iPad, but hey I don't have a problem with that. They're still buying
something. Which is good, I think Apple has been very good about that.
Rene: Just a lot more products.
Leo: Yeah, Apple's been willing to cannibalize one for the other. But he did finally
say “I'm very bullish on where we can take the iPad over time.”
Rene: They'd rather cannibalize themselves than have another company do it.
Leo: Mhm. We're going to continue to invest in the product
pipeline, we're continuing to invest in distribution and of course we won't see
the impact of the new iPads until next quarter.
Andy: Yeah. I do feel like the iPad Air is poised maybe even in 2015 to become
something very different from what it is right now. Which is
the larger version of the iPad mini. I think that Apple with some
software updates and also some making a larger device can really emphatically
start talking about this as a productivity tool. The thing that really spoke
out to me at the event last live stream, the event last week, was that the apps
that they showed off for the iPad, the third party apps, they weren't the soft
focused “What will your verse be today? And look, kids are drawing pictures!
Isn't that adorable?” No, here's an art app that's about as powerful as
Photoshop for photo editing, for image creation. And another app that's kind of
similar to that. So I don't know if this is a prediction of something, but it
made me think that this would be how Apple would do it if they wanted to next year,
have a larger sized iPad, have a new version of iOS that really did allow you
to run apps side by side or even in a tile configuration because as you pointed
out the cheapest iPad they make is the same amount of money as the cheapest Mac
that they make. And I think if there's a reason why sales were a little bit
flat, it's because the glorification, halo around the iPad has kind of dimmed
right now. It's no longer the new cool thing that people have never seen before
and they've got to try out. Now it is a $500 computer that people now have to
justify the expense of a $500 computer. And that's how they say “Yeah it would
be nice to have this big cool big tablet for games and stuff like that, but I
only have about $600 total to spend to upgrade my system so I think I'll get a
Windows laptop instead of something like that. But if they were able to make
that change, simply say here is a 12” version of the iPad air, and here's why
you'd want to have this instead of the notebook that you thought you were going
to be buying sometime this year. I think that would really be the shot in the
arm. It would be a greater distinction between the iPad Air and the iPad Mini.
And it would also maybe even reverse the trend to, I think a lot of people,
once they were presented with an option of we can either give you a 9.7”
tablet, the size of a sheet of paper or a smaller tablet that is small enough
that you could probably get inside some of the pockets you own, if not it's
easy to find a pouch to put it in. Once presented with that option, the smaller
tablets run the market. People seem to be voting very strongly for smaller
tablets. So I think that's a way to sort of smooth out the bump in the road
that Tim's been talking about.
Leo: Anything else we could say about the..?
Rene: It's really interesting...
Leo: Go ahead.
Rene: I think there's a couple of things that are
interesting. One is that when Steve Jobs made the original case for the iPad,
he said that it had to earn its right to exist between the iPhone and the Mac.
And back then the iPhone was very small and there still wasn't as much you
could do with it, and the Mac was still more expensive and didn't have very
long battery life, but now you have iPhone 6 Plus which turn it sideways it's
almost a tiny iPad, and you have the Macbook Air
which gets phenomenal battery life and the price is lower than ever, and that
squeezes the iPads in the middle. It squeezes the iPad Mini which had become
the most popular iPad, and even though it's got like 100% customer satisfaction
rating, people are looking at I don't need to maybe carry both, I can just
carry the iPhone. And I think that also sort of liberates the iPad a little
bit, you know. To Andy's point where Apple can do more interesting things with
it. And showing off Pixelmator, they did the content
aware fill.
Leo: Wasn't that interesting?
Rene: They just removed I think it was a cow, right from the
field. It's amazing! I mean that's the sort of power that you want when people
are looking at a sort of mainstream productivity, where I can't strap a Mac to
my back and take it on a bicycle ride with me. I can't take it onto the
football field, I can't take it onto the beach but I certainly can take an iPad
and I can still get done, all the productivity things I want to do. I can run
my company, I can start a company. I can do all these things. I think as we go
into next year with things like the iPad Air 2 and if there is an iPad Pro,
instead of being stuck in the middle of the iPhone and the Mac it's going to
really create its own identity.
Leo: Well you know, I've always said the iPad was very interesting, I think the
thing that nobody predicted was how big the phones would get and how ubiquitous
the phones would be and the lasting question that...
Rene: It's also an acceleration problem.
Leo: What do you mean? Our Skype is just dying..
Rene: If they were going to sell half a billion iPads, they sold so many so quickly
it got to that level pretty fast.
Leo: Right.
Leo: The iPhone, the hockey stick wasn't nearly as big as that. They had more time.
So if the speed limit for the iPad right now is half a billion they just got
there super quick and that's why it's leveled off. But if they can find some of
their angle for that, they can jump start it and kick it off again.
Leo: I agree.
Andy: Yeah. I also think the people haven't really figured out where a tablet exists
in their lives yet. Despite the fact that this thing has now been out for four,
five, as soon as can be at least on the public map, five years. The fact that
even Microsoft has had problems selling. Here is a computer that will run
Windows, it is a Windows computer, it attaches-- hard attaches to a keyboard so
you can make it into a laptop but you can also detach it and use it like a
tablet, even those are not really setting the world on fire. I think that
everybody's trying to figure out what do people really want a tablet to do?
What role does it play? And there's going to be a whole lot of guessing until
they figure out what that is.
Leo: Yeah. Well, look. The bottom line is great quarter.
Andy: Money money money.
Leo: Money money money. Ca-ching. You can't deny that, and
the stock price may not fully reflect that, it also reflects the fact that
Apple is very aggressively buying back stock, what did they say another $20
billion in the stock buyback and the market loves that. That bolsters the price
up, keeps it up above 100. So a very good, very good news for
Apple. Did they mention Beats in the.. I'm
sorry. I hate to bring this up.
Andy: (laughing) No, it's getting even more relevant. Every time they have another
event in which they let themselves do a little Beats in-joke but not talking about why they spent $3 billion on the company. It's
becoming increasingly more troubling and interesting.
Leo: Well it's not like they don't have the money.
Andy: Exactly.
Leo: It's like a guy who says.. you know..
Andy: Maybe they spent the money just because you know what? We've no place to put
our pinball machines because of all these bags of money, if we can get this
conference room cleared out of money we can finally have that tournament we've
been wanting to do.
Leo: It's just like, it's fun money. It is, it's like
buying a pool table for the break room. It's just like “Eh, we've got it, why
not? Just do it, let's see what happens.” By the way an
update on Colin Kaepernik, 49er's quarterback. He is now taping over the beats logo on his headphones.
Even though everybody clearly knows those are not Bose. But I don't know if
he's going to get a fine for that. Let's take a break, when I come back there's
so much more to talk about. There is a little Beats news, Apple wants to get
the price down to $5 a month apparently, that's according to Recode. And that
is in response to Spotify offering $5 a month family
plans for up to five people. $5 per person. I think $5
might be the new $10 when it comes to streaming music. The truth is no artist
makes any money at all, anything worth talking about from Spotify or any of the
other streaming solutions. And so it's nice, because artists never made money,
the labels always took it. Now the labels aren't making money either so there
is a little karma in that. I do wonder what's going to happen to music.
Andy: I was having a conversation with people about this just the other day, that
between apps and music and things and services, we have to start training
people to expect to pay for things that they value. Because
this is not a curve that ends well for anybody.
Leo: I had that very same conversation with, okay a little name drop, Paul Simon. A couple weeks ago.
Andy: The Republican candidate or the musician?
Leo: The musician.
Andy: Even better.
Leo: Both he and Steve Martin were saying “We don't make any money on any of the
streaming services, pennies.”
Andy: I love how casual.. (laughing)
Leo: Steve and Paul..
Andy: You put the spotlight on the Paul Simon reference so that we would skip over
the Steve Martin reference.
Leo: It's a terrible namedrop, and I apologize.
Andy: No, no. If I had a personal interaction with Steve Martin you'd be sick of
hearing me Steve here about it by now. I admire your restraint.
Leo: I only bring it up because it's germane because they're working musicians, Steve is too, by the way, now. I think that's
what he considers his profession. Certainly Paul is. And both of them said
“We're not going to make any money on streaming music.” And Paul said, and I
think this is really relevant. He's made his load, he doesn't need any money.
But his kids, both of his kids are musicians. So he says “I care about this
because I worry about the next generation of musicians and how they're going to
make a living.” and there is no easy answer to this, and boy when you see
Spotify $5 a month, Beats wants to be $5 a month, it's even less money. Not
that the money mattered at this point, I think everybody agreed it wasn't
significant. So I don't know what the solution is. I'm sorry, not only is Skype
crapping out, but Yosemite is dying.
Andy: (laughing)
Leo: You know, this might be a good time to take a little
break. We'll get everybody dialed back in and I'll reboot my computer while we
talk a little bit.. you have forced com.apple.webkit.webcontent to quit, you bad man. And it's still beachballing on
me.
Andy: But doesn't that error dialogue look beautiful in that new flattened interface.
Leo: (laughs) Did you notice, by the way, that if you continue, maybe you don't.. maybe you use safari. But if you
start using Chrome, I get a little pop up saying “Have you tried Safari? It's
really great!” What do you care, Apple? Maybe they do.
Rene: I didn't get that, that's weird.
Leo: I've got it now on all my systems and then I just use Safari and then it crashed, so...
Andy: (laughing)
Leo: You have your answer. But I have a beautiful, beautiful desktop. You know, just
sit on about this Mac. That's all you need. Gorgeous, just
gorgeous. Stare at that for a while. Actually this is a whole two year
old laptop so maybe that's the problem. Our show brought to you by the very
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really good idea. I love this. Personalcapital.com/macbreak. Try it today. And we thank them so much
for being a part of the MacBreak Weekly family. Okay,
let me go back to Chrome for a moment, let's see if that works. What is the
take on Yosemite right now Rene? Are people pretty happy with it?
Rene: I mean, it's got the same sort of bugs that you find in any just released
product, the same you'd find in Maverick or Mountain Lion or anything like
that, but I think most people most of the time are having a really good
experience. It fixes a lot of things, it adds really good features like
extensibility and continuity and it's got people interested because as we've
pointed out, people don't actually like change. They like the perception of
change, and when you change the visual design, while they're a little bit
adverse to it, it's also not boring any more so it feels very fresh and new,
and that gives you sort of a honeymoon period.
Leo: I agree with that, and you know, somebody pointed out, you think it's buggier now? Remember OS9? Remember System 7?
Rene: Remember Gmail on Mavericks?
Leo: Yeah, I mean these things happen. We'll work the bugs out, I'm sure. I have to
say I've been very happy with it. One of the things I love, continuity, I love handoff, I love using messages on my desktop and my iPhone.
You have to kind of delegate an iPhone to be your phone and your message app
for your desktop. You do that in the messages settings on your iPhone, you can
actually flip a switch that says iMessage. iMessages can be sent between
iPhone and iPad, iPod Touch and Mac. Once you flip that switch you'll get a
number pop up on your screen which you enter into the iPhone, validating that
in fact you do have that. Now, I also have text message forwarding and it says
one device active. I presume that means I can have multiple devices, is that
right?
Rene: Yeah.
Leo: Let me try it here on my Macbook.
Rene: It's terrific though, I mean I have a bunch of old iPhones scattered around my
house to use as extensions now because they all just ring when a call comes in.
Leo: (laughing) Okay, that's an unusual situation. Maybe not, I
don't know. So if you turn it on, you get a little.. so these are all the Macs associated with my iCloud
account. And I have.. this is
the one at home, the Mac Pro, but I could take one of these other ones and
associate it over to iMessages, and then that means
they all work. Is that right? They all would answer the phone, all send messages, all of that stuff.
Rene:(feed is lagging) I'm on a Macbook Pro and a Macbook Air right now and it works great.
Leo: We are having such trouble with Rene. Andy you're okay, right?
Andy: I'm fine, yeah. I don't want to talk over what Rene is certainly going to say
because I know it's going to be interesting and helpful.
Leo: But you did call him back, right Chad? I wonder if it's us or if it's you.
Chad: I've been trying to do
speed tests to Toronto to see if there's some sort of hub issue.
Leo: Look at that. He looks like Scooby Doo. Ru-roh!
Andy: But Rene has a good point, I have had some difficulty adjusting to the new interface
of Yosemite. I'm starting to be leaning towards the conclusion that I don't
like it.
Leo: Really?
Andy: My difficulty is that after a few months of using it now, my eye still
doesn't... I think it does a poor job of queuing me as to where I'm supposed to
be looking at any given moment. Like if I leave my desk for a minute to go get
a drink and come back, it takes me a few seconds to realize what's the front
most window, what's the task in the front most window, how is the front most
window layed out. It really feels like just a plane
of light gray to me with very very little
differentiation among it. But the continuity feature of things ringing
elsewhere in your house when you get a phone call is a good example. It's a
great feature, and I think like Rene, I think a lot of people are going to be
asking their kids for their old iPhone 5s back because mommy and daddy need
that as a living room phone extension now, you can't be using that to play
games any more. But I got so many responses from people, questions from people
asking “I upgraded yesterday and now like my iPad keeps ringing and this keeps
ringing, how do I turn that feature off?” and I point them towards the solution
page to tell them how to turn off that feature on that device but it's still
saying “Why don't you wait a few days, you might find that you actually like
the convenience of being able to answer the phone pretty much wherever you go.
So that's a risk that Apple was willing to take. You can't really make a
radical change in any way without getting a lot of people honked off. Some of
them honked off for good reasons, but some of them honked off because they're
not lovers of computers, they're not lovers of technology. They want a car in
the driveway where they get in, they put the key where it's supposed to go, it
starts up and they drive it. When you change the shape, the steering wheel,
when you change the key in the ignition to a start button, they're saying “I'm
not here to learn how to drive a brand new car, I'm
here to get to the store.” So I think that's where a lot of the push back is
coming from.
Leo: Rene has a really good Yosemite hub on iMore.com, in
fact he has a good 6 minute video, “Everything You Need to Know About Yosemite”
on that hub. One thing I should point out, that the messages hand off that I
just showed requires 8.1. So you have to update iOS to 8.1 and then you're
going to get even more of this handoff and continuity stuff from Yosemite.
Rene: And people are a little bit confused because the handoff, the actual handoff
functionality where you move apps back and forth requires Bluetooth 4.0. The
SMS relay requires you to be on the same active network, and the call
forwarding requires you to be on the same LAN or WAN, so there's
sort of different parameters for each one, but if you have Bluetooth 4.0
and you're on the same network, you should be good for all of them.
Leo: That's a really important point. So for instance, Google Hangouts which also
does SMS and data based messaging, does it over the network so you don't have
to be on the same Wi-Fi. But in this case, you have to be at home or work on
the same Wi-Fi network for both your iPhone and your Mac for you to be able to,
for instance send text messages, or to receive a phone call, that kind of
thing. Is that correct?
Rene: Yeah, and part of that is security.
Leo: Right.
Rene: Yeah the Bluetooth is for proximity, because then it's a security feature as
well. It wants to make sure that you're in physical possession or at least
within eye shot of your device so no one else is getting your web pages or
apps. And the SMSing, again this is all part of their
security system where they're fairly certain you're the one getting those
messages if you're on the same network and logged in. You also have to be
logged in with the sa- (connection lost for a few
seconds) -enough to put in that security code. And that's just to make sure
your stuff doesn't leave, your devices.
Leo: No, and I appreciate Apple for doing that.
Rene: It doesn't work on older devices- (connection lost again) -it doesn't work on
older devices because some of the very old devices, it wasn't a great
experience so in typical Apple fashion they just turned it off rather than
shipping it on spotty or older devices.
Leo: You can't, according imore.com, I've heard of them,
you can't just add a Bluetooth interface to an older device either. Handoff
won't just work because you have figured out Bluetooth. You do have some
information but it's basically, you've got to have the hardware, the right hardware
and the right software in basically a late model Mac, late model iPhone and the
right software on both, most up to date software on both, is that right?
Rene: Yeah. And again it's just because turning it off is easier for them than
leaving it on in a state where it would be problematic to people with older
hardware and more support costs and more frustration.
Leo: And of course that raises the forced obsolescence cry, but this is how you move
ahead.
Andy: Yeah. Your old phone works just fine with your old features.
Rene: Yeah, and they would never do that because they, I think Gruber said this too,
they have family members using these machines, the engineers there care deeply
about the quality of their software and they just want to make a good experience
on as many devices as they can.
Leo: I've been using Air Drop, it now works cross iOS to
Yosemite, right? No.
Rene: Yep.
Leo: Oh, good.
Rene: Yep, iOS 8.
Leo: Either that or I was hallucinating last night. (laughing)
Andy: (laughs)
Leo: Which, it could happen. You get tired enough sometimes. So that's cool, so now
I can share files, that seems to be working much
better. It never was cross hardware platforms but now it is. I think this is a
luxury. It's nice, it's not enough reason to say “Oh I
have to get all new hardware,” though.
Andy: Right. At some point things break down and you buy a new whatsit, which means
that you finally get to see what people have been using for the past year. I
think that the problem with a lot of tech journalism, and I certainly take
responsibility for whatever role I might play in this, is that we get so
excited about these things that we kind of make people want things. And without
encouraging them to think, yes but do you need to get this right now? Or the fact that you have a perfectly good iPad Mini. Having
Touch ID would be great, but your iPad Mini is working just great for now, and
at some point you're going to drop it. Your kids are going to clamoring so hard
for an iPad of their own that you're just going to hand it to them, and at that
point you will finally have Touch ID. You don't need to be in a rush to get
these things.
Leo: We also got 8.1 yesterday, and besides the SMS relay, which is great, there's
some other features obviously Apple Pay, we'll cover that in a second.. let's get to Apple Pay last
because we have actual video of somebody using it. Did you love Jason Snell's
article? I love Jason Snell's article in which he says.. what does he say.. “Local man uses Apple Pay to buy
groceries.”
Andy: I replied to him “The real coup is getting area man to use Apple Pay.” That's
when you know it's really caught on.
Leo: (laughing) Area man! Jason ran over to his Whole Foods, bought a sandwich. He
tells a very funny story of his checkout guy, Tyler. Who said “Oh, you're going
to try that?” I guess Tyler hadn't seen it yet. Jason says, “Uh yeah I'm one of
those people.” and habitually placed my thumb on the phone as if I was going to
unlock it, which was what I was going to do, but instead of doing that, boom. I payed for the groceries. The
terminal actually noticed before he even tapped it or got close to it, noticed
him and talked to the iPhone, and he saw on the iPhone screen “Pay with Touch
ID” and all he had to do was touch that, and then Tyler his checkout guy said
“Whoa. I don't know what just happened.”
Andy: “Security! Security!”
Leo: Whoaaa! (laughing) “What did
you do man?? Dude!”
Andy: “Matthew Broderick has just wargamed himself into my
terminal!”
Leo: (laughing) Paper receipt popped out of the printer's register, and Jason went
home and he noticed it had also stopped raining. What a great article. Alright,
we're doing Apple Pay we might as well keep doing it. We have a video, we sent
our own Jason Snell. Jeff Needles by name, out to Whole Foods to buy chicken
fingers and, I think we can show this video, of him buying chicken fingers with
his iPhone 6. There it is. Wait a minute. Stop, pause that for a moment,
because it shows other stuff. Go back, it shows American Express. It shows Visa,
Discover, MasterCard's Pay Pass and it has a little Apple logo, Apple Pay.
Andy: All you really need to see is that logo in the middle, because that is the
universal sign for the technology that Apple Pay uses. So supposedly, if you
don't see the Apple Pay logo but you do see the little Wi-Fi with the finger
next to it, you're good.
Leo: It kind of looks like, I don't know. A fish skeleton and a
guy picking at it on a plate. But anyway, you know what we're talking
about. Alright so go ahead and play this. Did you have to tap it, Jeff?
Jeff (in video): Let's see,
what do we do. Oh, see and it comes up.
Leo: It sees it, pops up your credit card. At this point you could choose a credit
card, but Jeff always wants those Starwood points so he had the credit card,
and there you go and the receipt comes out and you're done! Approved. And you get pumpkin pictures.
Rene: Apple magic.
Leo: Apple magic. That's exactly what you want. It couldn't be much easier. You feel
secure, because you need a finger print to do it, although if you had other
devices you might have to enter a PIN instead.
Andy: Before the show I was talking about how this is the best, some of the best ever
ties that Apple could possibly get are all these data breaches and on the same
day that I downloaded iOS 8.1 and got the iPhone 6 setup for Apple Pay I also
got a phone call from my bank that issues my credit cards that said “Hi, by
virtue the fact that we don't know that your card has been compromised but we
do know you shopped at Home Depot at any point in the last year so we're just
going to give you a brand new card with a brand new number.” So, yeah that
underscores the need for a system like this.
Leo: That's a pain, too. Because now you need a new number which
you won't with Apple Pay.
Andy: Yeah and of course I already finished configuring the phone for my old credit
card.
Leo: Yeah.
Andy: So it's like I haven't activated the new card yet but it's going to have to
happen, I'm going to have to do that tonight.
Leo: Let's talk a little bit about that. When you go to your pass book, you have to
launch your pass book app and you have to have 8.1, there's a little plus
button on it and you can add passes as you've always been able to do for
tickets and so forth, or and this is new, credit and debit cards. Pay with
Touch ID using Apple Pay, add a card. Now you could enter the data by hand and
as Apple pointed out, you can also take a picture, there's a little camera
there. Now I've found some of my cards it can't read, the letters are too
glossy or something. But most of the cards it was able to. It's not taking a
picture, you actually hold it there and it scans the number. Scans
the expiration date and your name. You still have to manually enter the
security cards on most cards, in fact all cards I've tried because it's on the
back, or for whatever reason it doesn't try to read it. But it isn't hard to
add a card. In some cases you'll need an authentication app I'm told.
Andy: Yeah. Well sometimes an app, when I set up mine, I just happened to take the
path of least resistance. It said “Oh well you have a credit card attached to
your iTunes account, do you want to use that?”
Leo: That's the first thing you can do right away.
Andy: Tap one button and I'm told..
Leo: I think you had to enter in the security code.
Andy: Exactly. You try to use the new device with a credit card that's attached to
iTunes and then a second later it's like “Okay, you're good.”
Leo: Now, and this is kind of nice, this is the interface. It shows you the cards
you've added, not all cards can be added. Bank of America, and USAA, two of the
banks I use, their cards hadn't yet been approved.
Rene: Yeah the corporate cards I tried to enter wouldn't work either.
Leo: Yeah, I can use my American Express business card. In fact both my American
Express cards no problem. And Chase cards work so I have a chase Visa card I
think in there. But yeah, so not all your cards will work but you know if you
have one or two and if you have a card already on file with iTunes that will
work.
Andy: Yeah.
Leo: So that's actually the best way to start.
Rene: One thing I'm curious about, because we have the pay wave on our credit cards
and bank cards here and you can just go and tap and it works really easily but
every store seems to have a different limit in what they'll allow the NFC to
pay for. Some at 60 some at 70 some at 100, and the icon is always there no
matter what. They don't have the good sense to hide it if you can't use it so
you end up tapping and then being frustrated, and I'm hoping because of the
Touch ID it's more authentic, more reliable, and maybe those limits won't be as
frustrating.
Leo: Somebody in the chatroom says that he just got an email from Bank of America
saying it does now work. They're signing up these banks fast and I have to
imagine this is one of those things where there's calls pouring into Cupertino
saying “Hey, we want to sign up!”
Andy: It's interesting, I talk to people who are like ex banking people, ex credit
card people, they've ranged like four or five years old, stress on the word ex
banking/credit card people. And they've said the major issuers have done the
math on how much will it cost for us to make credit card fraud a lot harder
versus how much are we paying out for credit card fraud, because frankly most
people they catch it, they get it invalidated, get their money back, and they'd
much rather eat the cost of a $300 Xbox that someone charged but wasn't
authorized to pay than have to do all this stuff with re-issuing cards, putting
in new technology, training people up, training support staff. And so it's nice
to see that with the proliferation and professionalism of these rings of credit card
fraudsters, it's now become less expensive for them to finally upgrade their
infrastructure to finally make this sort of stuff harder and these crimes
harder to do.
Leo: Right.
Andy: I did notice that my new card is now a chip card, so maybe part of this was
okay here's an excuse to get everybody upgraded to more secure cards now. I
think we're definitely seeing some things, there's something that's happening
behind the scenes where some number on some spreadsheet just went from black to
red and that's why we're seeing such an embracing of these technologies.
Leo: Maybe it was because I have a B of A business card that doesn't work, because
Bank of America does have a big page saying “Shop on the go with Apple Pay!
It's easy to add your credit card and debit card!” So I'll have to try it. I
have another B of A card I can try. No money in that account though, at least I
can try it.
Rene: The future, Leo!
Leo: How is it in Canada?
Rene: Well we don't have Apple Pay yet. We don't have iTunes Radio yet, but we have
NFC everywhere. I use my credit card which is the same functionality that payed for everything. Sear's takes it, gas station takes
it. So we're just waiting. Just waiting on our banks and on Apple, please do
it.
Leo: This technology is called EMV. Steve Gibson talked about it on Security Now
last week, it stands for Euro Card MasterCard Visa, and it's been around for a
decade. Apparently President Obama just yesterday or the day before signed the
bill, the buy secure initiative to speed up adoption of this EMV system in the
US, so it all is kind of coming together here. The Europay MasterCard and Visa system is the same system Apple Pay uses. So we're, I think
we're finally entering the 21st century here in the US. And Apple
Pay isn't the only way to do it, but what's great is it put it over the top.
It's no coincidence that President Obama signs that bill like two weeks after
Apple announces Apple Pay.
Rene: Tens of millions of phones on the market that immediately they can use it.
Leo: Right. Well and I have tap and pay on most of my Android phones, and I'm just
going to have to try and see how they work.
Andy: Isn't it great though, that Apple's finally making it, there's a certain amount
of credibility that they add to this whole concept. It's not as though we
shouldn't have trusted tap and pay before, it's just that well we have a card
that has worked for this transaction as long as we've had credit cards. Like we
were talking about earlier, why would we have to learn something brand new,
even if learning something brand new is in our best interest as long as the old
thing is continuing to work. So it's great that Apple
is even for people who don't own iPhones, making them think about alternative
payment systems and maybe even causing them to ask themselves and then their
bank's website, can my Android phone do that? Well yes, we have this thing
called Google Wallet. Great, how do I set that up? Here you go, and now you're
set for tap and pay yourself.
Leo: So what you're saying Andy is basically the United States is like your uncle
Bob who said “I don't need a new credit card system! This one works fine!”
Andy: My uncle Bob says “Have another beer, you're a good boy, here you go. Don't tell your mom I gave you this.”
Leo: What else is new in 8.1? The iCloud, the photo.. the Camera Roll is back, can you explain to me, is this just
semantics or was there actually some functionality that disappeared in iOS 8.
Rene: People were upset because the Camera Roll was a giant repository for every
photo you'd ever taken, every image you'd ever saved, it was basically a poor
name for what it was. They called it Camera Roll but it had stuff in there that
didn't come from your camera, so they tried to make something that to them was
more rational, that you would have recent photos in there and then they'd move
on to moments and collections in years over time. People just looked at it and
said “All my stuff isn't here!” and they freaked out.
Leo: Right.
Rene: So now you have your familiar Camera Roll back. I don't know if it's going to
go on forever any more because all my stuff was moved
out of there to begin with so I'll have to wait and see, but at least the name
is the same so people no longer think someone has gone into their house and
taken their stuff.
Leo: It's just like Microsoft putting the start menu back, right? It's something that
you don't need but everybody wanted so Apple actually, to their credit turned
it around a lot faster than Microsoft did it. Microsoft took a couple of years
to bring back the start menu.
Andy: But wasn't it incredible, that can you imagine three or four years ago Apple
were not only versing themselves on a decision but from the stage with a world wide audience saying “We had a lot of customer
feedback, we've decided to put back something we took away because people
didn't like what we did.” And this is not designed as a slam against Apple
whatsoever, it's just an indication of how much Apple has changed in recent
years. Either they would have stuck to their guns and just waited out this
problem or they would have made the change in iOS 8.1.2 and just not told
anybody about it, and of course we would have picked up on it and we would have
said it, but they would have admitted nothing. It's like the car company that
just spontaneously decides that they're going to change to a different model of
relay that triggers the airbags on the front of that car that's been on 60
Minutes three times in the past year. No admission of guilt, we're not
saying there was a problem with it, but we just spontaneously decided to use a
more expensive component for that.
Leo: Yeah.
Rene: Well they put the Camera Roll back the same time they took the orientation lock
button off the iPad. So you get something, you lose something.
Leo: What is this iCloud photo library we're talking about here? Where does it live?
Rene: iCloud settings.
Leo: Okay. And it's in beta so use it with caution. What do it do?
Rene: It's sort of nearline storage for your photos. So
it's using Apple's cloud kit, and it takes your photos and it keeps the most
recent and frequently accessed ones on your device locally and the rest of them
it stores on Apple's cloud. It shows you thumbnails and then when you tap one,
it will download it and show it to you. Instead of having your entire phone
taken up by photos, which happened to a lot of people you just get the most
recently accessed and frequent photos on your device and the rest is all stored
up with however much iCloud storage you decide to purchase.
Leo: See that's good. I don't need that, because I have Google Plus, Facebook,
Dropbox and my transporter, they're all backing up my photos automatically from
all my phones. But for a lot of people, normal people. First of all, normal people have one phone. And then they fill the phone up
with pictures, and they never take them off. They never back them up, they lose the phone and they
go “Uhhh” so turning this on is backing up the
photos, but even more it's freeing up space on your phone which is great.
Rene: Yeah.
Leo: I know so many people who have no space on their phone because they just have
thousands of pictures on there, right? Yeah I'm looking at one right now. So
what we should do is go to photos and cameras in the settings, at the top
there, if you have 8.1, iCloud photo library beta. So if I switch that on,
automatically upload and store your entire library in iCloud to access photos
and videos. So it's uploading all the pictures on this iPhone and it's going to
take off the big photo and put the thumbnail there. Do I lose quality when I
tap it?
Rene: It will store the original file including raw files if that's what you have.
But it will put a device sized optimized image on your phone.
Leo: Perfect, that's just what you want. And then there's some more settings here..
Rene: I would caution people though.
Leo: Uh oh.
Rene: You should have Yosemite and iOS 8 on all of your devices because you can only
access it with devices running Yosemite or iOS 8.
Andy: Yeah, that's kind of the gotcha for me. I really wish they had found a way, I
know it's a basic infrastructure it's not just an app they've updated, but you
really have to go all in across all your devices and that's what's keeping me
from upgrading to this feature right now, because I still for instance, I have
one left over Mac that's even still running Mountain Lion, not because refuse to
upgrade it to Maverick but because it's working fine, it's a low use machine,
I've got apps that I've been installing on that for the past three or four
years and I don't' want to have to find out what is not compatible with the
latest operating system and this is a bit of an inconvenience because it's
going to force me to not just simply flip a switch and enjoy photo syncing but
now go through every single device I own and make that decision about either
locking this thing out of access to photos or having to walk through an
administration problem of trying to make sure it will still do the things I
need it to do after I make that upgrade.
Leo: Can I log into iCloud and see them?
Rene: Yes.
Andy: Yeah.
Rene: I'm not sure if it's still beta or not but you can go to iCloud.com and there
is a photo library there. It might be the beta iCloud though.
Andy: That is one of the nicer features of this compared to what the pictures
probably used to be. That it really does make it that much easier to simply say
“I've been taking photos and now they're available to multiple devices,” I
think it's even exposed to the Windows version of iCloud Drive if I'm not
mistaken.
Leo: It is not in the beta, it's in the regular iCloud drive. There is a beta symbol
on that icon, so if you log into iCloud.com you'll see this new photos icon and
it says beta in the corner. By the way they've also added an iCloud Drive icon
which is good, and we'll talk about that in a second. And then my library is
empty because it's not yet added somehow. Even though these are uploading, it's
still uploading so it hasn't added them yet.
Rene: And it'll work on photos for Mac when that ships in the spring.
Leo: Neat. Okay so underneath this there's a check box now that I've turned it on
that says optimized phone storage. That's the thing where it deletes the
pictures off.
Rene: So there's two. Yeah, one is that it doesn't store any
of them locally but you can also have the option of screen size optimized
pictures because you might not need the 8 mega pixel version to look at on your
phone so it will scale it down on the cloud and give you that version.
Leo: That's what it says. This phone is storing device optimizing versions, turn on,
download and keep originals to keep full resolution photos on your iPhone. So
you do have some granularity. You can say “Don't delete them. Let's keep them.
In fact, let's keep all of them even from other iPhones or other sources.” And
then upload to my photo stream, that's the traditional photo stream right?
Rene: Well there's two, and it's poorly named. You have the
photo stream which is a traditional photo stream and then you have the shared
photo stream which is Apple's little social network where you can like and
comment on each other’s photos.
Leo: Right, okay. Yeah I turn off photo stream. I don't want, I don't know what devices it's going to so I don't want to take the chance.
Rene: Better safe than sorry.
Andy: Yeah.
Leo: Okay cool.
Andy: I really can't think of another parallel set of upgrades between iOS 8 and
Yosemite. I don't think there's a lot of danger involved, it's not difficult
but it's like swapping out the doorbell on your front door where it's a simple
thing but you have to really take steps to make sure that you're not screwing
things up as you go. You cut part of the house just in case this will screw up.
Leo: Right.
Andy: I really have set aside, when I'm telling people I haven't upgraded to Yosemite
yet on my real computers yet, it's not so much a vote against the stability of
the operating system which is fairly stable, there are problems but first month
there are going to be problems. That's not unusual. It's more like... I'm
sorry, a better comparison is .. you know the cutoff valve for your wash machine? It's an easy thing to replace but
I went without a wash machine for about two or three weeks because I felt as
though I needed to book an entire day of my time because if everything goes
well this will take me 20 minutes to do, if anything goes wrong in any of these
steps I'm going to need the rest of the day available to fix it and leave the
water to the house turned off until I go get that part and brace a new
component in someplace else. These upgrades are pretty much the same way. If
nothing goes wrong, it's easy, 20 minutes painless, you'll have a really great
time, you'll enjoy these new features. But if you screw
things up you may wonder, oh wait where are the pictures of my newborn kid?
It's not on my phone anymore... You pretty much have to walk yourself through
that process so that you're sure that you're in control of everything and that
any disaster that might happen is either going to be totally mitigated or be
something that you're willing to accept for the virtuous application of iOS 8
and Yosemite.
Rene: One thing that's
really cool about all of this stuff that didn't happen in the past is
previously you'd have iOS updates and you'd have MAC updates. But for things
like extensibility and congeniailty, there is one
manager who was in charge of both features across iOS and MAC and they shipped
them for both iOS and the MAC. And if you go to the developer page and watch
some of the sessions- Like I think Ian Bearden and Aki, I forget his last name.
-Did a session on extensibility, you see how they did it the same on the iOS
and the MAC even though it was probably easier to do it one way on one system
and another way on the other so that, not only developers develop the same
extensions and make their apps do congeniality together, but everyone has the
same way of using it. A widget is a widget on iOS and it's on iOS10. That's the
same Halo effect we were talking about earlier where it's not exactly the same
but it feels familiar and comfortable, and I think that is one of the strengths
of doing the updates the way they did them this year.
Leo: Do you
recommend- It sounds like Andy is saying don't rush...
Rene: My take would be, there is probably no reason to make sure you get it done
this weekend. I think there is always a good reason to wait one calendar month
- 30 days. -After any major operating release MAC, Windows, anything; Just to
make sure that when you do your Google search 3 weeks in and you see what all
of the major show-stoppers are and you realize, this one app that I really
desperately need is not compatible so I had better hold off longer. And when
you do end up doing this, make sure it's not the situation where you're like,
I've got 30 minutes to do this before I need to grab my phone and my MacBook
and head to the airport for my week in Hawaii because it's possible that, at
the end of 20 minutes you will not have working stuff and now for your
week-long trip, you will not have a phone. So make sure that you're doing it on
a day where you're able to sit and troubleshoot for a couple of hours or make a
trip to the Apple store if need be. Again, this is not an emergency situation
and this is not the sort of thing that will hinder the flow of oxygen to your
aunt in the hospital. So you don't need to do this right away just pick a day
and make sure you can get this done the way you'd like it to be done.
Andy: If you're a
developer, you need to update because you're making apps for these systems and
if not you're doing it because you want to and then, it depends on your pain
tolerance and your 'nerd level' and all of the other factors.
Leo: Alright we're
going to take a break. When we come back, there's lots more to talk about. We'll do a big Speed Round with some of the big stories
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MACBREAK when you decide to buy for 10% off. So Apple has finally acknowledged
something that has been going on for a couple of days... When the iPhone
started being sold in China- We're not sure who did this but it seems to be the
Chinese Government, according to greatfire.org, which is a non-profit
monitoring group that monitors China's great Fire Wall. It looks like Chinese
authorities were using a man-in-the-middle attack to harvest Apple iCloud ID's
from Chinese users. When you went to iCloud.com in China, in many cases but not
all, you'd get a site that looked exactly like iCloud.com but it wasn't. You'd
be handing your iCloud credentials over to whomever was doing this- Presumably Chinese Authorities. -And then getting into iCloud.
Most browsers would say, there's a certificate error
if using Safari or Chrome or Firefox. In China, unfortunately, the most popular
browser called, Chi-Hoon and it does not have that
warning. So most Chinese users probably wouldn't know that their credentials
were being harvested. Apple finally has made a comment in a Support Document.
They have confirmed that they are aware of, "The intermittent organized
network attacks" on iCloud users. They're very cautious, they don't want to say it's China. We can't really be sure it's China, although
the documentation provided at greatfire.org seems pretty conclusive. Here's the
quote: "Apple is deeply committed to protecting our customer's privacy and
security. We are aware of intermittent organized network attacks using insecure
certificates to obtain information. We take this very seriously, these attacks don't compromise iCloud servers and do not impact iCloud sign-in
on iOS devices or MAC's Yosemite using Safari." But, make sure you're
using browsers that monitor and will warn you if it's an invalid certificate.
And if you see that certificate, you shouldn't proceed. They do have a way you
can verify if you're using the Chi-Hoon browser.
Nobody's saying it's the Chinese Government, but I think it's pretty clear that
it is. And Apple doesn't really want to piss off China at this point so they're
just saying, we notice this is happening.
Rene: And if you want
to look at this in a positive light, that's good news for anybody who is using
iCloud on any service because if there's a vulnerability in China, it's likely that there's a vulnerability everywhere.
Leo: Well in fact,
they're attacking Microsoft as well.
Andy: Yeah, Gmail,
Google...
Leo: Yep.
Rene: Exactly.
Although it is an interesting question, I don't ever think Apple would
compromise the safety of its users to protect a business relationship with a
government. But they would certainly need to put a lot of effort into figuring
out what goal they want to achieve in responding to this and what is the best
solution that protects our users, gets the message out there, and yet doesn't
unnecessarily set fires where we don't need fires to be set right now.
Leo: I mean, you can
pretty much assume- I mean, I am going to read between the lines. -But it makes
sense that the iPhone is out, Chinese Authorities note that it's very hard to
get into the material on the iPhone, so what better way to do it, than to
compromise somebody's iCloud log-in information and then always have access to
their iCloud back-ups and you can read those.
Andy: Well, you
remember with Blackberry's they wanted to put up Squid Servers to intercept the
traffic because they couldn't get into the Knock system.
Leo: Yeah, not a
surprise.
Andy: Yeah.
Leo: The real problem
is if you're a non-sophisticated user. Sophisticated users will immediately
recognize what's going on and fix it. And you're right Andy, this applies to
everybody. If you see that error, you should bail. I'm getting a 5K iMac Friday
so we'll have a review next Tuesday.
Rene: Mine's taking
longer to get here.
Leo: Did you see it
when you were at the event?
Rene: Yes I did.
Leo: Tell me. Do,
tell me.
Rene: Leo, I just
wanted to dive inside and live there. It was ridiculously beautiful, the blacks
are so black, the colors are beautiful. They're doing
this Wizardry because if you don't externalize the connector, you don't have to
follow the standard and you're free to break the rules. So they're taking two
of the display 1.2's and putting them together in their custom time controller.
So that lets them push all of those 5K pixels and you know I didn't see any
stuttering, didn't see any slow down, they went all
the way through iPhone then went through Final Cut Pro and it was just
glorious. They had great angles of view and I just, I wanted one immediately.
Leo: Ah, and you
ordered one?
Rene: Yeah, I bumped
up the graphics card because I do worry about the retina tax whenever there's a
new retina machine so I got the faster graphics.
Leo: I was buying it
for my sweetheart, not myself so I bumped it up all the way. I turned all of
the knobs to 11.
Rene: So the one thing
about this is a lot of people bought MacBook Pro's hoping to get an Apple 5K
display-
Leo: Yeah, I'm kind
of pissed.
Rene: -Apple can't
make a 5K display because not only has Broadwell not
shipped yet, but Broadwell is not going to support
it, you'd have to wait until Skylink I think, which
is going to have the Thunderbolt 3 on it. And by the time that comes out, the
Mac Pro that you have still won't have Thunderbolt 3 on it. So it's not a great
situation for that.
Leo: Yeah, Marco Arment wrote a great piece on his marco.org site, which
kind of depressed me because basically he's saying, and I'm thinking, I should
sell my Mac Pro and buy the Retina iMac.
Rene: Guy English
called it his Cylinder of Shame.
Andy: I'm hearing that
form a lot of folks. The reason that many people bought a Mac
Pro are easily covered and in many ways are exceeded by Retina iMac.
Given that, if you have a Mac Pro that doesn't have drive bays in it, then you start asking, well what do I need it for?
Rene: You know, Leo if
you wanted to do video editing you're still better off with-
Leo: I'm not doing
video editing, I just wanted a 4k display. I have
three monitors, two 27's, and a 4k display.
Rene: The new iMac can
only drive one 4k display.
Leo: What's really
disappointing is I can't even buy the new iMac and hook it up to my MacBook Pro
and get a 5K display.
Rene: No because
there's no Thunderbolt 3 out yet.
Leo: Also, as Marco
points out, it has the fastest single core processor available. It's a 4 GHz if
you get the i7 compared to that crappy E5 in my Mac Pro.
Andy: Can we do an
edit in which in late 2014 Leo talks about how he's thrilled with the Mac Pro
it's the best thing ever. And of course, we shouldn't be belittling the Mac Pro
because the other unique feature with the Mac Pro is that the sky is the limit
pretty much on cores. I mean, you can basically take a copy of the Yellow
Pages, put it through a cross-cut shredder, spread it on your driveway, take
100 pictures of it, throw it to your Mac Pro and you've got enough processing
power to basically do image capture and put it all back together again. The
thing is though, a lot of people don't actually need that level of power, which
is why I think that most of the people buying a Mac Pro, their needs are well
served by the new iMac.
Leo: Not me, because
I bought it for the wrong reasons.
Andy: Okay, well would
you be happy having that 5K display behind your
60" HD TV if you're using it as a living room server? No you won't.
Rene: You can have
both, Leo. You can have the Mac Pro and the iMac, you don't have to choose.
Andy: You're in the
industry, you should. You owe it to your- I'm sure everybody in the chatroom is
going to back me up on this, they're demanding that you have this.
Rene: And if not, I
think Syracuse has a standing offer for $5 for anyone's Mac Pro that wants to
sell.
Leo: It's depressing
when your girlfriend has a better Mac than you that's all I'm saying.
Andy: You know what
Leo? I'll double that.
Leo: I'm very happy
with the Mac Pro but the thing that kind of bugs me a little bit is in order to
get that beautiful Asus 4K display on there, it uses MLC where it basically
splits it into two 1920 displays so they tear. Even on Yosemite, I was hoping
they'd have- But there's no way to fix that because it's the nature of the
hardware because there's so much bandwidth being pushed out there.
Andy: I think there
are going to be the same problems with these first generation Retina iMac's too
because there is so much stuff that Apple has never done before with this.
Leo: You're just
saying that to make me feel better, Andy I know.
Andy: I'm hoping to
make you feel better but more importantly, I'm saying this to convince myself
not to buy one which is almost just as important.
Leo: Well we are
going to review it, I'll benchmark it, I'll bang on it, I'll definitely be trying to prove that it's not as good as my Mac Pro.
Rene: You'll just
stare at it Leo, you'll just be sitting there staring at it.
Leo: It's that good,
isn't it? Because it was a demo you couldn't really test how fast it was.
Rene: No they were
moving the mouse around though, they were moving the pictures around and the
mouse around, they were fine.
Rene: It's the OrDot Apple...
Leo: Can I just tell
you, I turned up all of the knobs, right so I've got the fastest i7 and this is
crazy but she insisted, a terabyte SSD. I didn't put 32 gigs of RAM I put 16.
Okay, 16 gigs of RAM is enough for anybody. Humans only need 16.
Andy: I went with 16
as well.
Leo: But turned
everything else up and it was 4 grand.
Rene: That's a lot of
computer.
Andy: So less than a
dollar per K.
Leo: Yeah but $2500
is a remarkable deal, that basically makes the computer free.
Andy: Yeah, but is
that going to make people happy?
Leo: Had I really
been smart, that's what I should have bought for review purposes to see well
what is the base model?
Andy: The Mac Pro,
they managed to get the price down to where they could say it was that
inexpensive but it's also possible to buy a Tesla S for like $61,000 but nobody
spends $61,000 on a Tesla S.
Rene: People have been
waiting for Retina Mac since- I forget who said this but whenever you're
waiting for a long time you just buy the maxed out version.
Leo: Yeah why not.
Andy: Never go grocery
shopping when you're hungry.
Leo: But Marco's
bottom line, who is the Mac Pro for? Bottom line, at this point, not a lot of
people he says. People who use open CL apps, that's video and 3D graphics
professionals, people needing as much parallel CPU power as possible for
rendering and video editors, and who can afford 8 or 12 cores- Because I only
got the 6 core. -Anyone using a lot of Thunderbolt devices because there are
like 4 or 6 Thunderbolt ports on them.
Rene: Yeah and two
buses I think, which is important because you want the full bandwidth.
Leo: Right, anyone
who needs a lot of monitors- Well maybe I qualify. -An HDMI output or two
built-in network interfaces- I don't need that. -People who need the quietest
computer possible under any load. And I'll agree, the Mac Pro, I can't believe
how quiet it is. It's so quiet that the external hard drive I have attached to
it is making a ruckus. I have to turn it off so I can just, aaahhh. Roles in which a Kernel Panic or other slight hardware glitch
might be costly. What he's saying is because it's a new device and it's
not using the top of the line ECC memory and all of that, it may be less
robust. Maybe once a year you'll have a Kernel Panic.
Rene: You have
enterprise chips and enterprise RAM with the Mac Pro.
Leo: The list keeps
getting shorter over time so I think I finally fell off of it. So Marco, who
has a little bit of money I think, but also is a developer not a videographer.
He's writing a new podcast app right now. I think he's kind of right, if you're
going to be a leader, you've got to take some arrows in the back. Why are the
people behind me shooting at me?
Andy: It's also fun to
watch how we all have to make transitions when it comes to what we all expect
from a top of the line really powerful computer. It took me a stupid long time
before I switched to my MacBook as my primary computer because I had programmed
myself to believe that a computer is a desktop box that has a stack of other
boxes on top of it and the power book is the thing I just use to go out and do
field excursions with. And after 3 or 4 years I realize that my laptop is way
more powerful than my desktop and I should actually be moving everything onto
this. It really was just that little bit of mental twist I had to do. I think a
lot of people are having that same thing where, I don't rely on an iMac the
iMac is the family computer and I am a professional.
Leo: By the way, on
Yosemite in iOS 8 there was some concern that the Spotlight suggestions
feature- I stopped using Quicksilver, Alfred, any of those... Just Command +, I
love the new Spotlight search, I just start typing and it will not only launch a program or a document but it will search for movie showtimes, locations nearby, it will search my iTunes, the
app store and it's just great. But there is some concern that some of that
information is being sent back to the home office. So Rene you've written an
article on imore.com that came out yesterday. Tell us, is there a privacy
concern and what should we know is going on here.
Rene: Okay well it's
easiest to make an analogy so if you're using Siri, it's providing convenience. Convenience, like Steve Gibson says, is the opposite of
security and privacy so in order to get answers from Siri you have to give it
information and the new Spotlight is not identical to it but is similar to a
type-written form of Siri. You're inputting things there and it's trying to do
all of these helpful things. Part of that is based on your location, part of
that is based on the sequential inference Siri does where if you type in- I
think the example they used is 'cafe' and then 'phone number' it's going to be
predisposed to help you find phone numbers for a cafe because that was your
recent pattern. And to do all of that, it has to do similar things to Siri and
that is to go to the network and try to do some intelligence to try to parse it
back down. Apple explains this fully. If you go to the settings in iOS or if
you go to the System Preferences on the Mac and you type in, "What is
Spotlight suggestions?" It tells you exactly what it is. The security
document covers how it does this. For example, it has a unique ID for 15
minutes and then it destroys it, it doesn't save anything in between these
sessions, it does a ton of stuff to try to maintain as much privacy- It blurs
location, which is more effective if you're in a sparsely populated area then a
densely populated area, but it's basically things like this. You're gaining all
of this functionality but the expense of Apple having to do a little bit of
processing on the server. Some people would have preferred for it to be opt in
instead of opt out, but there's some concern from Apple and everywhere that
we're getting pop-up fatigue. When you setup there are far too many windows
already, when you launch something, there are far too many pop-ups already and-
I'm not speaking for Apple because I don't know but my thinking is that Maps
knows your location because it's giving you location. We're all used to Siri
now. So they're assuming that if you know you're getting these services that
it's a two-way street and you can go and turn it off if you want to.
Leo: So when you
first hit Command space, you'll get the Spotlight search but you'll also get
the information you're looking for in a link to this document which explains
exactly what's going on and it says if you don't want your search queries and
Spotlight suggestions usage data sent to Apple you can turn it off and then
they have a link right there. So I don't think Apple could do this any better
frankly. And I think it's not unreasonable to assume that if you're asking for
movie times, your computer doesn't know that, it has to go query somebody.
Rene: It has to find
out where you are to provide movie times near you and not Nova Scotia or
something like that.
Leo: Yeah. So I think
you can assume that users are not going to be completely, what?!
Andy: And I think
Spotlight is one of the best features there. We keep talking about it and I
keep coming back to it, for exactly the reasons we've been talking about. I've
always been a little bit bummed out that the finder is still pretty much the
finder I've been using since 1984, and I do so much of my life- My interface
with the Mac is just through launching things from Spotlight and now that it
can actually be that one box that will figure out what I want to do and figure
out how to do that, I want to see them build and build and build upon it until
it far exceeds what Siri can do.
Leo: Good, yeah. I
completely agree with you.
Rene: It was just
unfortunate to see an article on it that sort of made it sound all panicky and
scary.
Leo: Yeah you know, it's link bait as far as I'm concerned, even the Post should
know better. Of course, who owns the Washington Post now? But it's link bait, Jeff Jarvis calls it moral panic. Oh the new
technology, children and women watch out!
Rene: Yeah they scare
you instead of educate you.
Leo: Yeah and the
Journal does it, New York Times has been doing it. The journals that should
know better need to do a better job of educating and not doing this scare
tactic. But it sells papers or clicks or whatever.
Andy: We transact in a
currency that is far more valuable and that is the listeners trust. We care,
yes we do. We might drive cars with 170,000 miles on them but we have
integrity. Windows that don't really roll up so we have to
tape them but still, we have integrity.
Leo: I have a couple
of articles I'm going to recommend that you read ladies and gentlemen, I already told you about local man uses Apple pay. That's at Jason Snell's new
home, sixcolors.com, excellent article on the Business Insider, I mentioned it
on TWiT, Dave Smith tells the story of how Seth
Weintraub founded 9to5 Mac while he was stranded in Paris and how he found Mark Gurman and how he pays them and we quote 9to5 Mac all
of the time now because it's just really good, and by the way, they quote you
in this story.
Rene: Yeah. I don't
think I came off as neutral I get along really well with Mark and Seth so I'm
decidedly happier than neutral.
Leo: Yeah, you don't
mind how effective 9to5 Mac is. You're in competition with them but you have-
Rene: Even competition
is strong, I mean I am more than happy for Mark to do
all of that stuff. It totally benefits me I mean, I do other stuff.
Leo: We had Steve
Kovach, who is the Executive or Senior Editor at the Business Insider, what he
said was one of the reasons people like Gurman can do
all they do is they have no fear, they're 20 and they don't care- He said, Mark Gurman will never get invited to an Apple event and
he doesn't car. So there's a certain advantage when you're say, 15 or 16 years
old as Gurman was when he started, you don't mind
biting the establishment's hand because you're a kid.
Andy: Well I wouldn't
put it that way. I think everyone who wants to have a good year career-wise, the great thing about this line of work is we decide
what kind of job we want to do. And my job does not require me to be able to
tell a month in advance exactly what Apple's going to be announcing in October,
so I never bothered cultivating those kinds of resources. If I tripped and fell
ass-backward into hard information like that, I might even be more prone to
simply hand it to someone else who has more experience in confirming and
exploiting stuff like that. Mark is really great at that and he obviously has a
great interest in it so he gets to define the job that he wants to do and how
best he can serve his readers. And he is obviously serving his readers very very well.
Leo: Yeah, we're very
happy to repeat his scoops. He is often accurate. But like you, Andy-
Andy: Let's circle
back for just one second, that's exactly the point. It's not just the fact that
he has these scoops, it's that he has these scoops and
has consistently shown to be correct. I was joking about how, oh we've got
integrity but really that's the thing that you want to build - A relationship
with an audience that over the years, people know well if he said this then I
believe this about that information and for them to believe that this is good
information to have because of this person's track record.
Leo: Yeah. And I
don't get invited to Apple events either but like you, it's not my beat. I like
to talk about what you can get today and how it's going to impact your life and
how you use it and stuff like that. But God Bless Mark Gurman and the others who are so good at accurately getting these scoops because it's
fun to know ahead of time. Think about it and speculate on it and our audience
certainly cares. So great article, recommended. And the other one that was
mentioned Sunday but I'd like to bring up again, Judith Newman's article in the
New York Times, "To Siri, With Love" how one
boy with Autism became BFF with Apple's Siri. It's a really pretty and sweet
story by Gus' mother. He talks to Siri and says things like, "You're a
really nice computer." Siri says, "It's nice to be appreciated."
"You're always asking me if you can help me, is there anything
you want?"
"Thank you, but I have very few wants." You have got to pat
the Siri programmers on the back for this stuff.
Rene: My Godson, when
he was 3 years old would use Siri to send and receive iMessages.
He couldn't read or write but he could totally engage in dialogue. It's
phenomenal, and is incredibly inclusive and accessible.
Leo: Wow, amazing.
Gus goes, "Okay well, goodnight."
Siri goes, "Uh, it's 5:06 pm."
Gus says, "Oh sorry, I meant goodbye, see you later." I
mean, I know that this is written and hard coded and all of that but it's
pretty cool.
Andy: But that's
always been the goal, that none of us are under any impression that Siri is a
real person inside our phones but it is designed so that we may maintain that
emotional connection to it. And because of that you feel as though this is a
piece of information that I need to get and I trust this voice and this
personality to give it to me, I will also enjoy the process of figuring out an
answer to my inquiry.
Leo: Right. She
writes, "Out of all the worries a parent with an Autistic child has, the
uppermost is will he find love or even companionship somewhere along the line?
I am learning that what gives my guy happiness is not necessarily the same as
what gives me happiness. Right now, at his age, a time when humans can be a
little overwhelming even for the average teenager, Siri makes Gus happy. She is
his sidekick." I think that was just so sweet. So if you haven't read
that, it was in New York Times' Sunday paper and you can read it online as
well.
Rene: That's terrific.
Leo: Yeah, it really
is.
Rene: All the
accessibility technologies they're doing are amazing in many different ways.
Leo: It really is.
Alright, let's take a break then we can get your picks and then Security Now is
coming up in just a few minutes so I need to get to that. Shutterstock.com,
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in your blog, your podcast, your movie- I see movies all of the time, now that
I'm aware of it, where the credits' pictures are thanks to Shutterstock.
Pretty amazing... I want you to visit shutterstock.com you don't have to have a
credit card to sign up for an account. I would recommend you do sign up for
that free account because you'll get free content every week plus you'll have
the ability to save images to the Lightbox, share the Lightbox with other people. Try out those amazing
search tools that let you search by subject, by color, by pallet so you can
match it to your pallet of your blog or your magazine, your file type, gender,
emotion. Yeah, emotion. I love Shutterstock,
and they have a beautiful iPad app, Webby award winning and they now have an
Android app as well. So what I'd like you to do is sign up for the free
account, no credit card needed for that but if you do decide to buy, I've got a
great deal for you. If you're looking at one of the image subscription
packages, we have the 25 images a day package and that's suitable for a
publication. But if you want to buy a subscription package, you can get 20% off
if you use our offer code: MACBREAK1014. That's shutterstock.com, 20% off of
any image subscription package on a new account when you use the offer code:
MACBREAK1014. Browse around and have some fun, shutterstock.com. Time for our
pick of the week let's start with Rene Ritchie.
Rene: I have two small
ones, I say small only because the new extensibility in widget features make it
seem like they're little applications but they can still do big things. The
first one is Flare Effects and it's an app that has been updated by the Icon
Factory.
Leo: I love them.
Rene: They're terrific
and do so many great apps. Previously you had to actually leave Photos go open
up another app, work on it, save it, go back... It was
arduous but now extensibility means that all of the filters go straight into
the Photos app and you can, on iOS at least, basically you download the app, it
tells you a little bit about it, but then all of the functionality lives in the
Photos app. On the Mac it's still an app but basically let's you do things sort of like other filter apps but with typical icon factory
awesome interface and very tasteful filters. So it's just a really nice way to
take advantage of all of the new photo functionality that has come to iOS 8 and
to some extent, to Yosemite. It's excellent if you want to make your photos
look really good and both Craig Hockenberry and Gedeon Maheux and everybody at the
Icon Factory has been posting images using this and they look really good.
Leo: The neat thing
about this, I know it's kind of cheating, but you get addicted to the praise
you get from people giving you feedback.
Rene: And it saves
images, you can use the effects to make an image that's not exactly what you
wanted it to be but you wouldn't have posted. You can just save it enough that
you're willing to put it up there and that's a memory you can't get back.
Leo: Right. I mean,
I'm not kidding you can take a crap photo and make it good and go oh wow. I
like the tilt shift, that's really fun to play with.
Rene: And especially
if you're going to post to Instagram or a social network where it's on the
screen.
Leo: Now this is a
desktop app, $15.
Rene: It's both.
Leo: Oh it's both, so
you can get Flare as well on iOS.
Rene: Yeah and again,
on iOS 8 it just lives inside the photo app. Once you download it, it tells you
how to use it but then you go to the Photos app, press the button, and the extensions just come up. So convenient. The
other one is also really small, I've been a long time fan of iStat which is
the thing that lets you know all about your computer. And I'm a friend of Marc
Edwards but I was buying his software long before I met him and now he's got iStat mini, which is a version of the iStat menu system but it just lives in the notification center today view on
Yosemite. So instead of having to go in and look at all of the different dials
you can just see the three most common ones right there. You're processor mode
and available disk space. All you do is swipe the notification center, today
view comes out, take a quick glance at it, you get the information you need and
then you close it again. It really is that sort of glanceable thing. The thing I like about how iOS is doing it is it's not on a home screen,
or a dashboard, or a separate page and you don't have to leave what you're doing to go and find
it, you just swipe and the notification center either comes down on iOS or
across on Yosemite and it's right where you are. You look then go back. I think glanceability will be the same thing on the watch.
But it's all about pushing interface to where we are so we don't have to go
hunting anymore, and I think we're going to see a lot of really exciting stuff
because of that.\\
Leo: By the way it's
Flare Effects, by the Icon Factory if you're searching for it on iOS. There's
another thing called Flare. It seems like it's free on iOS...
Rene: Yeah I believe
so, I've been using the free version, although if I
knew I could give that money I would certainly have done so.
Leo: Yeah that's
awesome. Andy Ihnatko, you're picks of the week.
Andy: Two things, one
is that NASA in the past week, opened a Sound Cloud page and they're loading it
with just like, clips of missions, mission dialogue and rocket sounds,
historical speeches, chatter between the ground and Apollo and space shuttle. I
found the link, opened it, listened to one just to
hear it and then I found myself just listening to the entire load from start to
finish.
Leo: There's
President Kennedy, there's Apollo, this is a great
one. What is it about the way these sound, I tear up. I love these.
Andy: Thousands of
people helped 3 people get a quarter of a million miles away and helped
accomplish something that we, as animals, are not supposed to be able to do.
Leo: Yeah, so it's
free. It's soundcloud.com/nasa and if you have a SoundCloud account you can add them and follow in order to
get notified when they put new stuff up.
Andy: It's just
amazing I mean, I spotted Lisa Leven ringtones. Because the music is boring. So for non-inspirational
non-story things, Amazon is now taking orders on the Kindle Voyage and
pre-orders are starting to ship right now and it is the best eReader that Amazon has ever made and in my opinion, it's
the best eReader that exists.
Leo: Thank you Andy Ihnatko, Chicago Sun Times, always a pleasure. Andy was
with us during the launch of the new iPads and you can see his commentary on
our special feed at twit.tv/specials. And of course, he joins us every week at
this time for MacBreak Weekly. Always
a pleasure.
Andy: Don't you go changin'.
Leo: Andy is also on
the 5by5 Network, Ihnatko's Almanac. He reads old
columns there too which is fun. Rene Ritchie is at imore.com, follow the debug podcast there if you want to keep up on everything Macintosh,
everything Apple. And he writes like crazy, they've got a Yosemite hub there
and iOS 8.1 hub there, both I recommend. Before you upgrade and after you
upgrade they've really done a great job up there in the frozen North. Thank
you- Is he unfrozen? He's unfrozen.
Rene: Thank you Leo.
Leo: Thank you, great
to have you. We do MacBreak Weekly every Tuesday 11
am Pacific 2 pm Eastern time, 1800 UTC on twit.tv please stop by and say hi.
You can watch us live here or come to the studio. But you can also watch on
demand audio and video after the fact at twit.tv/mbw but also on all of the different podcast apps for all of the platforms. Thanks
for joining us, get back to work! Break time is over!