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The WAN Show

Every Friday, top Tech YouTuber Linus Sebastian and Luke Lafreniere meet to discuss current events in the tech world, a subject from which they do not stray. Hardly ever. Every Friday, top Tech YouTuber Linus Sebastian and Luke Lafreniere meet to discuss current events in the tech world, a subject from which they do not stray. Hardly ever.

Transcribed podcasts: 410
Time transcribed: 31d 6h 22m 24s

This graph shows how many times the word ______ has been mentioned throughout the history of the program.

All right guys, it is WAN show time.
We had a couple people, we've got people complaining
that we're an hour late, we are not an hour late.
Daylight savings time is a thing here in the Canada,
well not in all of Canada, but we've been through this,
we've been through this last week,
so I'm not gonna spend too much time on it.
I actually just realized that I don't have my headphones
on me, so I'm not monitoring the audio,
so for all I know, they're not hearing any of this.
Rock on, so anyway, here we go, I'm gonna go ahead
and make sure that we actually have audio.
It looks like we do, so, got people being like,
no sound, no sound, I love you guys, I love you so much.
Hey Brandon, speaking of no sound,
can you center the camera for us?
I think it like fell.
Thanks man.
I don't know how this happens all the time.
I don't even get it.
Ghost phantom camera movers.
I actually, I know exactly how it happens,
I'm usually the one who moves it by accident.
Wow.
No, because the tripod is not actually secured very well.
Here, Brandon, just look over here.
But what are you doing in here all the time?
Well, I'm borrowing the lens or stuff like that, so.
Or like turning off the camera, because you guys,
we're in a really small room.
Like actually really small.
Like really small, so the camera is on a tripod
where like the back legs are like vertical
and the front legs like out like this.
So the camera is like right against the wall.
I can barely reach the power button.
All right, so we got a great show for you guys today.
Actually, fantastic show.
Google has begun talking about their smartwatch OS,
Android Wear.
So this is a type of Android that when it bites
other Androids, they become infected.
And not Wear Android?
Nope.
No, Android Wear, not Wear.
I got it.
It was a joke.
Yeah.
It was a rather clever one.
So Android Wear is gonna be an OS
that is specifically optimized for wearables.
And one of the first products we're gonna see
is the Moto 360, which has people internally
here at Linus Media Group anyway, extremely excited,
because it's round.
Well, that brings in my, okay, I was, I tried to keep this.
Hold on, we're not getting into this topic yet.
Oh.
You have to do your introductory topics in the intro.
I got so excited, I was ready to go.
I know we gotta tease the audience.
Don't just, you know. My teasing articles.
Put out entirely right up front.
Is that there's something called Project Morpheus
coming from Sony, which has to do with VR.
And there's something more direct called Developer Kit 2
coming from Oculus, which is about VR.
And we'll talk about both those things
in their hopefully entirety later.
And there's also a documentary released by Valve,
which some people are either on either side of a fence for.
And that fence seems to be completely hating it
or completely loving it.
So we'll talk about that later as well.
All right.
Bam.
["
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and Dollar Shave Club.
Squarespace is the easy way to create a beautiful website
for your business or store or blog or portfolio
without as much effort as other solutions
and keep it super functional on multiple platforms,
whether it's mobile or desktop or whatever else.
So you can visit squarespace.com slash Linus
for more details on that, as well as Dollar Shave Club,
the service that allows you to shave time and shave money.
And they've got a great commercial
where they basically explain with many expletive deleted,
well, at least one expletive deleted.
At least one.
The value add of having razors shipped to your door
every month for less than what you'd pay
if you went to a store and did it.
And with much less hassle
because you don't have to wait for them to unlock Fort Knox
to get out your razor blades,
because that's freaking ridiculous.
You know.
That is kind of ridiculous.
Okay.
This is unrelated to my Dollar Shave Club
like sponsorship spot here.
So thanks to Squarespace and Dollar Shave Club
for sponsoring the episode today.
But do you remember when they started doing that?
Yeah. I thought it was really weird.
Yeah. It was like, it must've been about five years ago.
They started doing it at the stores here.
And I was actually like,
I started shaving before they did that.
And then like, like it happened while I was shaving.
And I was just like, one day I went to the store
and I was like,
uh, uh, uh.
And then I was like, I was at London Drugs.
There wasn't a single person anywhere
that could possibly help me with anything.
Like when's the last time, other than cosmetics.
Yeah.
When's the last time you saw someone to help you.
Yeah.
I mean, we had this problem at Home Depot yesterday
or the other day too.
That was actually pretty brutal.
That was ridiculous.
I told you what I do for razors.
Right.
I just like grinded against my face.
Okay.
We got to get you hooked up with Dollar Shave Club.
You know what?
Okay.
Okay.
If our Dollar Shave Club guy is watching,
we need to get him hooked up with Dollar Shave Club
because it's actually pretty terrifying.
I actually grow a beard pretty quick.
I've been using the same razors for like a year.
Shave in the shower and just go over it
a whole bunch of times.
That is horrible.
That's like horrible for you.
Like it really is.
I'm not even, okay.
Like sponsor message aside, that's bad for you dude.
I know.
But it's just like, I'm way too lazy to go by
because every single time I get there,
I'm just like, oh, I'm done.
I just leave.
I hate finding people in stores.
And even if I can find someone,
I hate talking to salespeople.
Well, they're just opening a cabinet for you.
It's not like you're buying them at a car dealership.
I know, but it just sucks.
Speaking of car dealerships, we're super mad at them.
Should we just jump into that right now?
We should just jump right into that right now.
Cause I'm like super mad.
I get the feeling that we're going to be talking about this
like every week for the next, I don't know how long.
Where the hell is this link?
Remember we can use the notes.
Where was it?
Ohio, there we go.
Ohio auto dealers support an anti Tesla direct sales bill.
Really?
Really?
They support the anti Tesla bill.
And now my screen sharing isn't working
because that's how angry I am right now.
That's like the level of anger that's going on.
Is that even plugged into the right thing?
Your anger just like flowed?
Is that, yeah, flowed into the, flowed, flowed?
Too much anger.
I think it's going into the AverMedia thing.
So anyway, here, do you want to like walk them through this?
Okay, so Ohio, like obviously,
I don't know why anyone would think otherwise.
Oh, you just moved the camera.
Oh my God.
Ohio auto dealers are trying to push the bill
that will stop Tesla from opening stores
outside of its only two locations in Ohio.
So you don't let them sell directly to the customer.
You're not letting them sell like, oh man.
They're taking legal action against them,
but it didn't fall in their favor, blah, blah, blah.
But it might because they're in big pockets
and they have tons of money and they're probably
gonna push it even more.
They're in big pockets?
Yeah.
Do you even listen to yourself?
Yes.
That wasn't as bad as coming with a brick.
Come with a brick.
That's fantastic.
All right, I'm gonna, I just plugged it
into a different capture card
because that is how baller we are now.
So a lot of the auto dealers don't want to sell
Tesla vehicles, but they don't also don't want Tesla
to be able to sell their own vehicles,
which is kind of ridiculous.
I can fully understand the auto dealers
not wanting to sell Tesla vehicles because they're stupid,
but I can't fully understand them.
Not Tesla vehicles are stupid.
Auto dealers are stupid and we hate them.
But I can't understand they're like,
yeah, we don't want to sell them,
but you can't sell them either.
I get where they're coming from, but that's way worse
and should never be allowed to be a thing.
So basically this just comes down to who's got
the deep existing relationship
and not what's actually best for the consumer
or best for a free and open market.
I mean, okay, so here, there's some big problems here.
So we have another article on this
that's actually from jalopnik.com
where Patrick George, the writer there,
I'm just gonna go ahead and bring this up on the screen,
figures, and this was, so his early estimate
when he was just digging into the public record
figures that the Ohio Senator behind the new bill,
who was the same one who tried to sneak this
into some stupid traffic legislation
at some point earlier, the same guy who's behind it
has taken, so he figured $7,500 since 2009
from the Ohio Automobile Dealers Association
investment group.
Then there's an update to the article and it's like,
okay, well it turns out that he got way more
from car dealers than I was able to find.
Media Trackers reports between 2002 and 2013,
Patton received $42,825 from state and national
auto dealership owners, employees,
and political action committees.
Honestly, I would fully expect it to be more than that too.
It may very well be more than that.
That's what they know of, like come on.
But this is a big fundamental problem.
How can we expect the world to move forward
if we just take these existing incumbents
who just have deep pockets to just buy whatever they want
and allow them to do this?
Last week we talked about it and you went slightly
on the fence of when saying about how it takes people
a long time to adapt to different things.
Yes.
Like the selling directly from the retailer
and all that kind of stuff.
And that kind of makes-
I propose to compromise.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not a banning of it.
I'm not saying that.
I'm just saying like that was brought up
and that's actually kind of interesting
and kind of makes sense.
But when people are taking this kind of a stance,
that's not really okay.
Okay, so here's a quote from this Patton yahoo.
The state legislature years ago recognized having distinct
roles for auto manufacturers and dealers
fosters competition in the marketplace
and provides consumers with a system of checks and balances
to ensure that warranty and service issues
are administered fairly, he said in an email.
Senate Bill 260 simply reinforces a standard set of rules
for all manufacturers and dealers to follow
which benefits both the industry and consumers.
When was the last time anyone anywhere had a good experience
with a car warranty issue at a dealership?
I would love to hear from you guys.
Hit us up on Twitter if you have had a good
at Linus Tech on Twitter right there.
If your manufacturer warranty experience
at a dealership was fantastic,
all Tesla is asking for is A, to cut out the middleman
and they're not blameless here.
They really are just trying to reduce overhead
which isn't necessarily bad.
But the other thing that they're asking for
is to control the customer's experience
because they don't feel like dealerships deliver a great one
and I forget where the link was last year
but I think it was something like 9% satisfaction polls.
Did I tell you but when I was shopping for my car?
Car salesman or something like that.
When I was shopping for my car,
I knew the exact model I wanted
and we spent the entire day
just going to dealership to dealership to dealership
and I'd like walk around for a little bit
and then just leave.
I was like, I just hate these guys.
I'm just like, I can't do it.
I'd get hounded and then I'd talk to them for a little bit
and then I'd just be like, oh, sorry, I'll just leave.
There's a great episode of Dexter
where he kills a car salesman
and the guy just like is amazing.
Like the actor did a really great job
of being a car salesman
but the scary part of watching it was the car salesman
was exactly like every car salesman I've ever encountered.
It's like, oh, you've got a two year old son, so do I.
And I'd be looking at them like, yeah, you're like 65.
No, you don't, just ridiculous.
Anything to like build the relationship with the customer
and make them feel comfortable giving them thousands of dollars.
We went with the angle I paid for my car
but we went with the angle
so that they thought it was my parents.
I could easily be the one actually managing everything
but they were targeting my parents.
So he heard our last name
and then asked my dad where he's from.
Oh, they ended up going to the same school
and like all this crap and I was like, probably not.
Luckily, all that junk is focused at my dad
even though I'm the one
actually making the purchasing decision.
That was one of the smartest things I've ever had my mom do.
Was like, let's make them think we're buying it.
That was so smart because it made it so much easier.
Anyways.
Anyway, so I guess that's about it.
Luckily, we don't have to talk about it for very long
because we're probably gonna have to talk
about it every single week.
Yeah, I know, right?
As new states and new things come into play.
All right.
One thing that you said earlier
that I thought was hilarious.
This was a few days ago about this thing.
Yeah.
It was like, you were like, I thought this was America.
Yeah, I thought this was America.
You know what's funny about that
is direct sales already exists in Canada.
It's like America.
You're falling behind like Canada in your Americanness.
Come on freedom train.
We're actually like rooting for you over here.
You guys can do it.
I believe in you.
We want everyone to have the right
to buy the vehicle they want the way they want
without dealing with greasy used car salesmen
or new car salesmen.
I don't think the new ones are better than the used ones.
They're not like condoms that way.
Oh.
All right.
So let's head back over to my screen here.
Google is officially getting into wearables
is the first line of this article,
which Dante, I mean, come on.
Is that really the headline here?
I mean, Google Glass.
I mean, it goes on your face.
If anything, it's more wearable than a smartwatch,
but it's okay, it's okay, it's okay.
I still like the article.
So smartwatch is coming soon
from some of the partners that they've announced,
including Motorola, Samsung, LG, and more.
The one that you're looking right there is the Moto 360,
which has a round display
and with a very, very classic styling,
looks a lot more like what we would expect
a watch to look like as opposed to just being a smartwatch.
Now I've seen some smart smartwatch designs.
Haven't had my hands on too many of them yet.
I have a Pebble Steel coming.
I'm definitely gonna ping Motorola
about getting my hands on one of these.
And I've had some people requesting
that I look at the Sony smartwatch too.
I reached out to my contact there,
but it's like a Canadian contact,
so they often don't have access to stuff.
But if I can't get one from them, I'll just buy one.
And I definitely want to talk more about these wearables.
But I've seen some really smart ones
that include things like a classic analog watch
under a transparent screen.
And I think something like that is-
I told you about that.
That's the thing that I didn't wanna put in the show yet.
But I told you about that months ago,
about how that should have been a thing,
how they have a normal watch with a screen on top of it
so that it can be a smartwatch or a classic watch.
That makes so much sense.
That makes a ton of sense to me,
but for someone like me who doesn't really care
about the classic watch look,
I would probably still go with something
more like the Moto 360.
So basically it's gonna be running
a very, very lightweight OS.
You're gonna have the ability to obviously pair it
with your other Android devices.
You'll be able to use things like voice control.
Google Now, something that doesn't come up
in everyday conversation that much.
Unlike Xbox.
My buddy Nick and I were hanging out last night
working on something and I had my phone up
and he had his phone up and he decided
to set a calendar event.
He's like, okay Google, and they're like, boop, boop.
I was like, stop, no, I don't want this on my phone.
Anyways, sorry, keep going.
Google's also working with fashion brands
as opposed to just pure IT brands.
I mean, the great thing about IT brands,
we love them dearly and they deliver fantastic
technology to us.
The not so great thing about them is that sometimes
they don't really have great fashion sense.
And Apple, well, I did pick the orange one.
The bad fashion sense was sort of my bad here.
So you're the IT brand in the.
I'm the IT guy.
So when you compare that to Apple
and their just beautiful fashion sense,
Google doesn't want their mobile, their wearable OS
to be stuck as like for IT dorks like me.
They want it to be something that will be accepted
by the general consumer.
So they will be working very closely with their partners
to ensure that we get beautiful designs.
Although the Moto 360 from a more traditional company,
although we don't know how much influence Google had
on the project because of the very brief ownership
that they had of Motorola.
So all of those things looks absolutely beautiful.
And that's a big thing with watches
because watches are huge about style.
Yes.
So like it does make a ton of sense.
If we really cared about the functionality of watches,
everyone would still be wearing a calculator watch.
Hey, I had one that did everything.
It had a backlight, it could do alarms.
I could write boobies on it.
Yeah, I'm sure you could.
Did absolutely everything.
So did I miss anything there?
I don't think so.
We're just kind of waiting to get one
so we can do a video about it.
Yeah, there'll be more information
in sort of the beginning of the summer,
sort of like late June sort of timeframe.
There's lots of rumors flying around about Apple smartwatch.
I'm really excited to see what comes from both of them
and I will definitely get my hands on them
at my soonest possible opportunity.
One thing I don't like about the Moto 360,
which I guess let's get into now,
is that they seem to be using
just kind of a traditional LCD-based screen.
And for me, with a phone, I can almost,
like here, here, this is actually great
because I have my phone plugged into a battery bank
right now.
Because it died when I tried to call them.
Right.
With a phone, I can kind of accept one-day battery
because it's something that I already,
like I don't know, like I already accept it
even though I don't know if I should.
Our new guy, Taren, was using some ancient,
hey Taren, do you have your phone here?
Your old one?
Yeah, he does.
Does he?
Yeah.
Taren, do you have your old phone here?
Can I borrow it?
You guys are gonna love this.
So he's got an old phone that he figures gets
about a month of battery life.
But I saw this thing and I was like,
dude, you gotta get with the time.
So I was just like, here's a One Mini.
I know it's not the greatest phone in the world,
but geez, man.
When I first saw it, I thought it was a Blackberry.
Yeah, if a Blackberry was made by Fisher-Price.
So this is like, look at the screen size.
It actually doesn't even weigh anything either.
It does have a keyboard on it.
Wait, let's compare the screen size to my thumb.
Yeah, here.
Thank you.
We can make fun of it because we gave him something else.
But one of the things he complained about immediately,
switching to a modern smartphone is that,
hey, the battery life sucks on this thing.
I have to charge it every day.
And I have been doing it for so long
that I've kind of forgotten.
But with watches, we're not talking about going
from a week of battery on my old Nokia brick phone
versus a couple days of battery at best on a smartphone.
We're talking about going from months-long batteries
or even solar-powered to a day on the gear.
No, no, no.
So we need to see Mirasol displays.
We need to see advances in that technology.
We need to see whatever it takes to keep them
low power enough to run for at least four to five days
would be my benchmark.
If I can remember to charge it a couple times a week,
then I'm okay with that.
I found when I was testing G2 that it had
actually a pretty acceptable amount
because you could go with pretty heavy use
for two days and be totally fine.
And that was pretty good because if you forgot one night,
you probably wouldn't forget the next.
So that was okay when I was testing it.
So right now we don't have too many details about the 360.
It's gonna launch in the summer.
They aren't mentioning any specs whatsoever.
And I think that's gonna be a common theme
with smartwatches.
Samsung did release some of the specifications of the gear.
So they were like, yeah, we're using kind of this processor.
We're using a cut-down Android.
We're doing this, we're doing that.
But you look at what Qualcomm did with the talk.
They didn't give us any specs.
I don't think anyone really,
I don't think Pebble talks about what they're using
in their watches at all.
I think for these kinds of devices,
the space race, the gigahertz race
is gonna be pretty much over.
And I'm okay with that.
And I had someone criticize me pretty harshly
on my talk review when I said,
I don't know what's in here and I don't care.
They said, well, you're a tech head.
You're supposed to care.
But the reality of it is that beyond the display
and the aesthetic and the software
of something like a smartwatch, why would I care?
All the processing is done here.
All the connectivity besides like-
And hopefully that will happen even more.
That's right.
We've talked about this in the past
where we were talking about having
a more centralized compute
and then your other things just connecting to it.
So hopefully that will matter even less than it does now.
If anything, the smartwatch should be as dumb as possible
so that we can extend its battery life
because that'll be a better overall experience.
If you can have your wireless ear pods
and your smartwatch and all this stuff
that just uses super low power connectivity
to have something else do all the work
and act as a hub, then that's gonna deliver
a much better experience for people
who actually need to gear all this stuff up every day
before they leave the house.
So it'll probably feature wireless charging.
We'll launch first in the US,
but we'll find a way to get our hands on it.
No camera on board.
There are some pictures and renders
on the Daily Tech article here.
So I'm just gonna pop that. It looks really nice.
It looks absolutely beautiful, doesn't it?
Yeah.
There you go.
The classic watch fronts look really good.
Yeah.
I'm actually pretty stoked for this too
and I haven't been super stoked
for too many smartwatches yet.
So you'll be able to do all the usual stuff,
check your emails, preview your text messages,
all that kind of nonsense.
But I'm not gonna get too hyped about it this time
because I got really amped on the Qualcomm Talk.
Yep, I remember that.
I was like.
It did look a lot better.
And it's not bad.
Yeah.
It isn't a bad product.
There's just a few things like the cutting the thing.
It's just not a finished product.
Yeah.
That was my issue with it.
And it was too expensive.
Although they dropped the price $100
like two days after my review went up.
So I single-handedly take responsibility
for that price drop.
No, I don't.
But I would have probably adjusted my conclusion
about the device a little bit based on the price drop.
But I would have also needed to see them
going in the right direction
in terms of software dev as well.
I mean, one thing that I really...
You know, this isn't in our agenda today.
But...
Go for it.
We do that a lot anyways.
Yeah, I know.
Fitness wearables.
Yep.
FAD or long-term?
I think eventually they'll just be integrated
into everything else.
But I think fitness is not a fad.
Okay.
So I think it'll be something
maybe considering your smartwatch
will have skin contact anyways.
Okay.
That way maybe other things can do everything
that fitness wearables are currently doing
so you don't need them.
Maybe your freaking running headphones that you wear
can now do everything that the fitness wearable does.
Yeah, I saw one that's...
I actually kick-started it last night, I think.
I didn't even know that existed.
So like, I think the idea of fitness
integrated with technology that you can go on a run
is only going to get bigger.
But I don't know if it's gonna be dedicated devices.
Are we just selling the dream to people
who are out of shape?
Not necessarily because the main people I know
that are buying these things are actually fairly in shape.
Okay.
I know someone that goes for like 10 to 15K runs
at least twice a week and he's the one
that always has the new fitness wearable.
Okay.
Okay.
But of course you're dealing with fitness,
some amount of it is gonna be selling the dream.
Because Wii Fit sold like billio.
Some amount of it is selling the dream.
Out of the 3,130 people watching right now,
I guarantee not one of you has touched a Wii Fit
in like a year.
Like that's the issue with these fitness wearables
is that I look at them right now in their current form
and I go, well that's stupid.
Because it does like one thing
and it's an entire other device to carry around.
Something that I've been waiting for is a more,
and like I know I'm taking this course,
so of course I'm trying to apply it, everything.
But I kind of always do because I think it's fantastic.
But a more gamified system of fitness wearables.
Like my biggest complaint with the Zombies Run 2 app
is that it's not tracked enough
and there's not enough like goals and progress loops
and engagement loops and stuff like that.
Like there's nothing pushing me to go for my run
other than myself.
Once I get out there, I get the voice track,
I get all that kind of stuff.
But like the build your own base part of it
is really not very well developed
and it's kind of really boring and has no real meaning.
And the social integration is there
but it's kind of janky, it doesn't matter.
The problem with social integration for fitness apps
in my mind is that it helps the people
who are already really active.
Maybe it keeps the ball rolling,
but I don't think if you're not in a group
of physically engaged people,
like so the only real thing that I do to work out
is I play badminton.
So unless my whole group all are like using that app
or something and like we play all of our games
with like this badminton app or something
that tracks how far you moved on the court
and we can compare stats
and there's some kind of thing there.
Like unless it's really deeply integrated
and really personalized, it's not that meaningful to me
and I don't think it's gonna help a couch potato
get off the couch.
I think it's more like for your buddy
who already runs anyway.
Yeah, and that's true, but then it has to be voluntary.
Like that part of the app has to be voluntary.
You have to look for it and you have to enable it yourself.
If it's forced upon you, it's just gonna hurt.
That's not a good idea.
But like having those things
where maybe playing zombies run.
If I go for a run four or five times in one week,
it can be like, you're really getting on it.
It can be some sort of badge or award or something
and then maybe I can get something in the game.
Maybe they'll talk to me different or something like that.
Like some type of, so I can have some sort of a goal
within the system, within the game.
I think that's a good idea
and could push a lot of people off the couch
because the main reason why I'm going for these runs lately
is because it's fun.
Right.
I hate going for runs.
It is mind numbingly boring.
But if I can listen to this audio tape essentially,
which is just giving me a storyline,
which I really have no integration with,
which is another thing that's terrible about that game,
is there's no actual plotted points on a map.
So I just run in a circle the whole time
and they're like, yeah, let's run down Main Street.
And I'm like, I'm running through the park.
This is not a thing.
I think when you'll convince me,
because that again is the problem
with this fitness thing for me.
And I think what's out there now is kind of fatty.
Yeah, but it'll get there.
When we see it more tightly integrated,
like that laser tag system that we saw
with the augmented reality,
when you integrate that with a fitness element,
you build a fitness app for that
so that it's designed to move your battlefield around
and your objectives around so that you have to move.
Like if they mixed like a ingress with a zombies run.
So you have to like run to a point and like take it over
and then keep running.
Yeah, yeah, that totally makes sense.
Something like that is a whole other ball game.
You know, I've got a lot of people,
I don't normally respond to these kinds of comments,
but I've got a lot of people that are giving me a hard time
about badminton being a workout here on the stream.
So-
Oh God, really?
So you know what?
Okay, here we go.
Right there.
That's right.
This is awkward.
Right there.
I'm not a part of this.
Badminton is a workout.
I wasn't on the stream.
It's the only thing I do.
I wasn't on the stream.
Damn.
All right.
I'm just putting that out there.
So let's move on to our next topic
because badminton is a thing.
This is awkward.
Amazon Smartphone, the original article is from bgr.com.
Oh, you know what?
No, before we move into that,
let's have a look at people's comments
on the whole dealership thing.
Ryan says, nope.
Hermes says Audi has good car salesman.
Tommy says I work at a,
and we don't have razors and cages there,
they're alarmed it's in front of the counter.
Okay, that's not, that's better
if you're willing to give up that near the car salesman.
Or that near the car, that near the counter space.
Cameron Martin is probably the point.
Hated that car salesman, yeah.
Chevy wanted me to pay 2K to fix one wire
in the harness of my car.
That was a known defect that Kills Audio
did it myself for $12.
Oh my God.
Ashley says I had a good experience
but they didn't struggle.
Was your garage sale successful?
Yes, it was.
We're gonna have another garage sale today.
Never have.
Many issues with recurring transmission problem
even went to multiple dealerships.
You know, my parents SUV.
That's stupid, you know how the hatch doesn't open.
That's been there since like six months after they got it.
They've never managed to actually fix it.
Okay, Mr. Jimmy Penguin says I have.
Okay, that was good.
Fully supported the, okay,
Infiniti dealer at Richmond Auto Mall
is apparently pretty good.
They always fix it up but the coffee's lousy.
70 bucks for my 30K maintenance for free one day.
Yeah, okay, no dealerships would kill a rising up
with bad experiences.
I'm a kid so this doesn't matter.
Haven't bought a car yet.
Are good for getting service done.
I've gone to private garages for diagnostics
and they were way off.
Okay.
I think that's gonna vary a lot.
Well, there you go.
I think a lot of it too is gonna vary
between vendors as well too.
But that's, I mean, this is good for us to know.
It is, yeah.
So just because our experience have been what they are.
Well, we have a very small.
Yeah, I don't buy new vehicles.
I've been shopping for new vehicles
but I've never actually.
That's another thing.
Bought one for myself.
Have you actually dealt
with the new vehicle salesman though?
Yeah, oh yeah, I was.
I've only dealt with used car salesmen.
When I was shopping for my wife's car,
we were going to buy new
and then we ended up not.
So we shopped everywhere.
I dealt with dealers that sold new cars and used cars.
They weren't just used cars dealerships.
They were like everything dealerships.
Right.
So I don't know if that makes any difference
but yeah, I also don't have a huge amount of experience.
I've bought one car that was from a dealership.
The car that I bought before that was from like
just a family friend.
I apologize to whoever I made throw up.
You made someone throw up?
With my tummy.
Have you like not ever watched TV
or gone to a pool or something?
Yeah, apparently threw up.
Guy's stomachs are like not really a censored thing.
Just putting that out there.
You must throw up a lot.
That's great.
All right, yeah, let's move on.
Okay.
Should we have another like
this is on almost every week thing?
No, let's do the Amazon Smartphone Rumor.
So this isn't confirmed anyway.
I'll let you handle this one.
The Amazon Smartphone thing?
Yeah.
I didn't really look over this a ton
because I didn't really care
because it's A, not confirmed
and like what are they doing?
I don't know.
It doesn't make a ton of sense to me.
The camera things for gestures.
Okay, so there's like six cameras or something.
Yeah, there's six cameras.
There's a front and back and there's four for gestures.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
That's definitely interesting.
But personally, I'm not super interested
in gestures on my phone.
I like gestures on monitors.
We saw that at CES.
Yeah.
We thought that was interesting.
Gesture control built into monitors.
I thought that was kind of cool
especially for touch desktop experiences.
I could see it helping Windows 8.1
or maybe Windows 9 rumors.
A lot because of like modern UI or whatever
because at a desktop, I'm not necessarily that close
and I don't want to be like touching things all the time.
So I think that's kind of cool.
But for my phone, it's always right there
and I don't really mind touching the screen.
I like the tactile feedback, so I'm not really sure.
I'm not super interested in that.
It doesn't have the highest end screen.
The battery seems like super lame.
I don't know why they're getting
into the smartphone market now
when it seems like all the hype is going down.
But maybe that is a good time
because maybe the shelf life for a phone is becoming longer
because the market isn't being as pushed as hard.
Yeah, and I mean if their whole model
is that they're just gonna sell you a device
and then not really care at all
if they make any money on it
and then instead bundle in their services
or sell you ebooks or audiobooks down the line,
then ultimately what do they care?
As long as it's a reasonably competitive device
at a reasonably competitive price,
if you're someone who's deeply entrenched
in the Amazon ecosystem,
which is getting easier and easier to do.
Yep, not for Canadians.
Might make a ton of sense.
Yeah, not so much for Canadians.
All the news we get is so US-centric anyway.
We had someone in the Twitch chat
saying that some of what we were saying was offensive.
He's a car salesman and sorry.
It might not be you.
Maybe you're the good one.
But there's always gotta be an exception to prove the rule.
Yep.
And like all I can go on is my own experience.
Yeah, my personal experience has not been super great,
but then I have very low amount of personal experience.
All right, so moving on to smartphones
that may actually be reasonably exciting.
The iPhone 6.
So there are renders, there are maybe leaks.
We're looking at an ultra-retina screen
with a 379 pixels per inch density.
Totally unnecessary.
Did I say 379?
Because I meant 389.
That 10 extra pixels is gonna make all the difference.
Definitely.
We could be looking at Apple's fastest processor yet,
a 2.6 gigahertz A8 processor.
This little render right here
may not actually be factual at all,
but the rumors are that it might be as thin
as five and a half millimeters,
which is kind of berserk.
So more like an iPad Air shrunk down
as opposed to more bricky like the previous iPhones.
We could be looking at two different display sizes,
4.7 and 5.7 inches,
which is a real departure and kind of surprising to me.
I would have expected them to do something
more like the traditional iPhone size
and then maybe a 4.7 large iPhone.
I wouldn't have expected them to do a larger iPhone
and like almost a phablet.
Jobs has passed, man.
But the thing is, okay,
like if we think about who's using...
I know what you mean.
Like make an option so that all the current users
that want the same size phone can have that option.
And like I'm not trying to generalize based on sex.
I'm not gonna say that women use iPhones
and men use Android phones.
But I will...
Well, Gay Ben apparently uses an iPhone.
Who?
Gay Ben.
Gay Ben?
Yeah, well, okay, we'll talk about that later.
But what I will say is that for people with smaller hands
and women would fall into that category, I also would.
So I'm not like down on them or anything.
The iPhone is a great option because it is smaller,
but it is still very high end,
very high spec and very feature rich.
But you've used a bigger phone now.
Yeah.
And you were totally fine with it.
I'm totally fine with it,
but I went back to using my iPhone 4 not that long ago
and I was like, oh yeah, it's really easy to use.
Okay.
And, oh, this is actually something that isn't on the dock
and I didn't talk about last week.
Apple fixed it.
The iPhone 4 on iOS 7.1.
Snappy.
It's not a new high end device or anything.
Yeah.
But it's way better.
Like you saw it before.
Yep.
As responsible as my cluttered up HTC One at this point
for basic stuff.
I mean, it hitches more.
For basic stuff.
Maybe more like a Moto G.
Okay.
Yeah, more like a Moto G.
And that was one of the things that I had mocked Apple
openly about before was that they were positioning
iPhone 4 in markets like India as a competitor for Moto G
and it was more expensive.
Well now, at least it has higher build quality
and it's delivering a responsive experience.
Yeah, because it was kind of a problem.
Oh, it was terrible.
Terrible for a while there.
Kind of a really big problem.
So kudos to Apple for continuing to support.
I mean, this is something that I always have to contrast
against the Android experience.
Yep, yep.
Is I got my iPhone 4 the same time my wife
got a Galaxy S Vibrant.
How supported is a Galaxy S Vibrant versus an iPhone 4?
And that's why I always leaned on Nexus devices pretty hard.
Yeah.
Because at least with my Nexus S,
I had updates for a really long time.
Did Nexus S ever get Kit Kat?
I don't think so.
I think I stopped using it before that would have happened.
So I'm not sure.
Apparently there are ROMs if nothing else.
Kit Kat Android 4.4, that's through CyanogenMod.
Maybe someone in the Twitch chat can let us know.
I can't remember.
I don't follow phones as closely
as I do lots of other things.
All right, so let's see if there are any more iPhone 6.
Oh yeah, there's a couple really cool leaks.
So two things.
The rumor is that Apple may be using,
so they put in five patents for liquid metal
and the rumor is that it may be used to encase the phone.
So there's a link to the patent here.
I'm just gonna go ahead and fire this up for you guys.
Mine is this screen.
Okay, that's probably not that helpful.
So there you go.
Basically, that's what at least one of them looks like.
But let's talk a little bit about liquid metal
because a lot of people are under the impression
that liquid metal is actually liquid, but it isn't at all.
What liquid metal is is more of,
it's okay, it's strong and it's light
and it's more to do with the ease of working with it
and the fact that it's difficult to scratch
than it being liquid, a doorway that you approach
and it dissolves as you walk through it.
It's not like that.
The main difference between liquid metal and normal metal
is that rather than having a clear melting point
where we go from solid to liquid,
liquid metal becomes more softer and softer
and easier and easier to mold and more liquid-like
very gradually as you increase the temperature.
So this means that you can work with it
in a number of different ways.
It also maintains its strength
even if you heat it up and cool it down.
So what happens is you can make it super liquid
to the point where you can cast it,
which with traditional metals is not nearly as strong
as if you were to forge it
or work on it in some other way.
So you can cast it
and then if you're at a different temperature,
you can actually mold it.
So you can create very complex shapes.
Another characteristic of liquid metal
is that it doesn't expand and contract
to nearly the same degree
as more traditional normal metals do.
So when you heat it up and do something with it,
it's not gonna just contract and deform
and do something stupid.
So we could be looking at some extremely beautiful,
innovative designs with liquid metal,
but beyond it being a little bit more difficult to scratch
and lightweight, it probably isn't gonna make
that much of a day-to-day difference.
And they're probably not gonna go
way off the wall with it either.
I don't expect Apple to come with some like crazy,
weird liquid metal design
that can only be achieved by using liquid metal.
Yeah, they'll probably,
because Apple's design first, implementation second.
So they'll figure out what they wanna make
and then if liquid metal is the easiest way to do it,
then they'll do it.
I mean, they've been experimenting with it for a while.
Back in the iPhone 3G days,
some of the SIM removal trays were liquid metal
and probably people never even thought about it
or noticed or knew.
And all they were doing was kinda trying it.
Yeah, yeah.
You gotta wonder how often crap like that goes on.
You just have no idea what you actually,
yeah, that's probably true.
Because we heard so many rumors about it back then.
It was such a big deal for like a little while
that it just never really became a thing.
So it faded away.
This is really cool.
I'm gonna highlight it.
Yes.
So the rumor is that we could be looking
at a sapphire glass screen.
So just explain what sapphire,
or sapphire crystal glass screen,
whatever you wanna call it,
sapphire crystal screen.
So to be clear,
a sapphire crystal screen is going to be
more difficult to scratch
than the current weapon of choice,
Gorilla Glass 3 from Corning.
But Corning actually had a conference call
earlier this month.
It was about two and a half weeks ago
where, I mean,
analysts were trying to kinda picket them.
Basically they were trying to figure out
what the upcoming iPhone will use
because Corning would obviously be privy
to what kind of glass Apple is ordering.
And if they saw a sudden dramatic decline
in shipments compared to what they normally get
when there's an upcoming iPhone,
then they'd kinda figure out,
okay, I guess they're not using Gorilla Glass 3
this time around.
So what Corning had to say about sapphire glass
is that it's about 10 times the price.
And yes, it is more expensive right now.
It's a lot more expensive
and less environmentally friendly to produce
due to the energy involved
and the amount of time it takes
to build the large panes of it.
And it is, while more scratch resistant,
not necessarily able to take more pressure.
Although, one of the things that,
I didn't actually read the entire transcript of the call,
but one of the things the summary didn't mention
was impact resistance.
And that's something I think most people
would actually be more concerned about.
What do you-
The pressure?
I would be way more concerned about impact than pressure.
What about impact versus scratching?
Probably be more,
looking at the things I've seen happen to iPhones.
Or any other phone, I mean.
Or any other phone, probably impact.
Right.
Because you can kind of deal with scratching,
but when the entire face of your phone
becomes not usable because you dropped it from a foot
and it just landed at a really weird angle,
I don't know, not very cool.
Well, at any rate, Corning,
obviously is gonna be defensive of Gorilla Glass.
They did say they have a new Gorilla Glass coming
sometime in 2014, Gorilla Glass 4.
So that'll probably have their antimicrobial
agent integrated.
You saw that at CES, right?
Yeah, very cool.
So that'll probably have that.
Maybe it'll be even stronger and thinner.
Oh, they also said that Gorilla Glass is lighter.
I think it's something like 60% lighter
or something like that.
So-
Although with how much lighter phones have been getting,
I don't think that's gonna be a huge deal.
Here's what Corning said.
We don't know what kind of glass Apple's using,
but our forecast is still 30% growth,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So whatever they're using won't have any impact
on our volumes.
So whatever that means.
That's weird.
Yeah.
The camera on the iPhone 6 is rumored to be up to
13 megapixels, although the actual megapixels
are not nearly as important as some of the other
innovations we've seen in cameras over the last
little while, like the dual LED flashes
for a more balanced skin tone and stuff like that.
Okay.
Ha, I called this.
What, yep, I know what you're going to be into now.
I'm not even at the right article, but it's, yep.
I called this so hard.
The iPhone is, or the iPhone, the iHome is coming.
Apple just patented a system that could put Siri
in charge of your home.
We should have seen this coming.
I did.
No, but like this level of it.
This looks absolutely fantastic, actually.
To the point where, like if some, like,
it is not going to come down to Moto 360 versus Pebble.
And it's not gonna come down to iPhone versus HTC One.
It is going to come down to whoever can build
the best ecosystem that makes it so that your life
is augmented in meaningful ways.
And then that watch will go along with it.
And then that, you'll buy whatever watch goes with it.
If the watch that when I'm sitting on my couch
being a potato for too long says, hey,
you're at like a super low resting heart rate.
Have you even done anything in the last three days?
Get your ass up, go for a run, and then when I get
in my car, it's like, yo dog, I said go for a run,
not go for a drive.
When we get something that's that intelligent, I mean.
I haven't seen it yet.
Have you seen Her?
Who?
Her.
Her?
The movie.
Yes.
You have?
Yes, I have.
That's fantastic.
I haven't seen it yet, but like that,
because I've seen trailers.
Is that what you're kind of talking about?
Where it can like converse with you?
Because that's essentially what you're just doing.
Even without the conversation,
even without the conversational aspect,
something that really looks for patterns in your behavior,
and if you give it a set of goals,
like look, I want to be more active.
I want to be more active.
I want to lose 10 pounds.
But some people aren't going to want you.
Some people won't want that,
and some people will be absolutely terrified by this,
and if I was smart, I would be too,
because this level of being aware of what you're doing,
and where you are, and what you're saying at any given time
is just absolutely scary,
but in terms of an enjoyable lifestyle,
if I were to just block it from my mind,
and not worry about the fact that someone else
is watching what I'm doing,
I think it could seriously enhance my life anyway.
I'm excited for this type of stuff.
I'm jumping ideas again,
but like what with Google just did,
where they're encrypting your email all over the place.
Yeah, I was going to jump into that topic next, for sure.
So they're encrypting your email all over the freaking place.
I'm excited for more personalized style cloud,
more personalized style services,
and something like this,
where maybe you get like the Siri box,
which sits in the closet in your house,
and just has storage, and compute,
and connectivity, and everything,
and then it's all your own stuff,
and it's encrypted everywhere like crazy,
because then the NSA's probably still
going to find a way to get it.
I don't think either Apple or Google,
with the way that they value your information,
is ever going to offer that to you.
Yeah, but then they'll take it, but then no one else.
Okay, so let's-
And then you're going to have to figure out
which one you're okay with having all of your data.
Apple's got a reasonably okay history
of privacy protection, actually.
Yeah.
Like, neither of them are super scary.
Google's becoming more scary.
Yeah, I was just going to say,
Google's getting kind of scary lately.
I was on the Google train pretty hard,
probably about a year ago, maybe a little bit more,
and I've dropped off pretty heavily,
because A, a lot of their services
are just kind of becoming junk.
Just putting that out there.
They're getting worse, not better.
You know what's really funny?
I've noticed that half of my calendar notifications
don't pop up anymore.
And I'm just like-
Things just seem to be getting, that's weird.
Things just seem to be getting worse.
I haven't seen something from them in so long.
I know, right?
Oh, Major Geeks.
All right, so let's move into our next topic.
This is a positive thing about Google, though,
so the article's on majorgeeks.com,
Geek into the Megahertz.
This is definitely, oh man, I used to love this website.
I know, I used to be on here all the time,
downloading my future marks.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, man!
Like any game patches are always on here.
Yeah, dog!
All right.
Sorry, yeah, so this is definitely improvement.
I know I just said everything's getting worse,
but this is definitely getting better.
Okay, so let's talk about what's going on here.
So Google, Gmail has announced that they are,
quote unquote, staying at the forefront
of email security and reliability
by using an encrypted HTTPS connection
when you check or send email.
The fact that the option to turn off HTTPS
will no longer be available will help users
thwart the prying eyes of any number of would-be snoopers.
So is this the transition to the future,
where everyone starts to hate government
and government kind of seems to go away
and then it's just like, what corporate team are you on?
Because like in every video game
and a lot of future-style movies,
it's always these giant mega-corps,
like by and large, that actually run everything
and then governments either just don't exist
or just don't matter.
Well, you look at how little apparently
the government matters in Ohio
because the car dealerships
are running automotive legislation.
So is this the future or was it yesterday?
Dun, dun, dun!
Yeah, I don't know.
Which would be funnier if it wasn't actually
something that's deeply concerning.
Yeah, seriously, and something that we just talked about,
which is how we were talking about
how we might be more happy with Google or Apple
having our data than the NSA.
Truthfully, yep.
Yeah, I'm just saying.
Particularly Apple, I would gladly hand over the keys
to my life to Apple compared to...
If you had to.
The government, yeah, if I had to choose.
If it was like one idea.
If it was like gun to your head, you pick one.
I'll hand it to Apple versus someone else
because Apple has my best interest at heart
because they need my money.
Yeah, all of your money.
But that's the difference between a government
and a company is that I have to voluntarily
give Apple my money.
Which is, yeah, it's a big deal.
And that's what drives this corruption in the government
is that I have to give them my money
whether I'm happy with what they're doing or not.
If I actually had to give them my money
because I was pleased with what they were doing,
that would be a completely...
I suspect we'd see them behave
in a much more consumer, much more populist friendly manner.
So while I'm not, while I don't think
that mega corporations are necessarily perfect
because they're not.
No, no, no.
Would we rather have a mega corporation
that calls itself the government?
I mean, did you see that recent scandal over the...
Shoot, what was it?
Canadian medals, millions wasted.
I'm gonna see if I can find it.
But the Canadian government wasted
some ludicrous amount of money awarding medals
to members of the government for whatever they were doing.
Some guy won three and refused them all
because he was looking at this program going,
this is absolutely obscene.
How many millions of dollars of taxpayer money
did you spend on patting ourselves on the back
for doing a good job?
Are you insane?
Wish I could find it right now.
I've never heard of this actually, but that's super...
Yeah, I was on the news a little while ago
and I just kind of remember watching it
and I was just like, really?
Oh, holy crap.
It's kind of depressing, I don't know.
Like I can't imagine a company that actually
has to make its own money doing something that stupid.
Yeah, it's not gonna work.
Or they're gonna do, you know what, okay, I've seen that.
Challenge coins, have you heard of challenge coins?
Do you know what challenge coins are?
Like military challenge coins and stuff?
Like if you're in a military division,
it's possible that they will have
what's called a challenge coin.
Challenge coins are a very old thing
that go really far back.
When I was in Korea, when Edzal and I
were doing our like changing of the guard thing,
did you hear about that or see those pictures?
I heard it, but you guys told me about it.
Yeah, yeah, when we were doing the changing of the guard thing
there was a challenge coin ceremony.
Okay.
We had to connect the coin or whatever,
but like more modern challenge coins,
like say you're a part of the 501 era.
You better explain what the hell a challenge coin is.
I'm probably not the only one who has no idea
what you're talking about.
You get some sort of coin,
you can probably Google it really easily.
You get a coin and then it's very specific
and if someone asks you for it, you have to produce it
and then it has to match theirs.
So you know you're a part of the same crew.
Okay.
Obviously there's inherent issues
where you could like kill someone and take theirs
and then be like, hey, I'm a part of your group.
But this is like a very old system.
And challenge coins now are just kind of like really cool.
And I know like there's a corporation on Eve
that got a whole bunch of funding together
and got their own challenge coins
because they just look amazing.
I wonder if I can find that article.
Challenge coin Eve.
Yep, if you just Google challenge coin Eve,
the like first thing on there will show the guy.
And then if you find it somewhere in the comments,
he has a picture of his and it just looks like super cool.
Right.
I can't remember where I was going with this,
what we were talking about with challenge coins.
Right, okay, so and I've heard of some corporations
that are giving like, okay,
all of the executives get challenge coins.
But this is like, you buy the mold, which is like 500 bucks
and then each coin is like $6.
Right.
Does not cost a whole bunch of money.
They're not giving like trophies and medals
and all this kind of stuff.
And even if they do,
there's probably some sort of actually really good reason
behind it and they'll probably do it
in a somewhat reasonable and financially responsible way.
I like Citrix, I like Crixus skills.
Challenge coins, please, I got doge coins.
Oh.
Oh, snap.
Did you even find pictures of challenge coins?
No, I was looking for the stupid award medals
that were ridiculous, I couldn't find them.
But like there's reasons to give people awards,
but you're not supposed to spend all of your money on it.
That's the whole point of giving someone an award.
Yeah.
Because it's not a monetary award.
Yeah, like you got a Christmas bonus.
Yeah.
But it wasn't the entire profit of the company for 2013.
Yeah, and it's supposed to like make you happy
and drive you to work harder.
Like that's the idea of rewards,
not like here, we just spent all of our money.
I just wanted you to think of me when you're not working.
Every time you make food, you have to think of me.
And every time I play Wii U.
Yep.
Isn't that depressing?
Well, I work all the time.
Posted by...
So it's gotta have to, yeah, I don't know.
So basically it hasn't changed anything.
So even when I'm on lunch.
So Ashley posted on the forum,
in-home streaming beta update, March 17th.
This was posted by Slukin.
And actually I got an opportunity to chat with him
for about an hour on Steam chat earlier this week,
which was really cool.
And I found out that he's like the main guy
who's working on Steam in-home streaming.
We chatted and I actually had a really cool experience
where he was talking to me about something like,
blah, blah, blah, you know, a year ago,
I was kind of, you know, thinking about this.
This was percolating in my mind.
And I was like, you know what, it's funny.
Cause it must've been about a year ago,
my co-host and I were sitting in my garage
talking about Nvidia Grid and how we wanted
like a centralized streaming device within our homes
that would turn anything from a computer,
like a normal desktop computer to a Raspberry Pi
into a full fledged gaming system.
And I went looking for the article and it had been,
it was one year exactly prior because Nvidia
had announced it at GDC the previous year.
And like, I sent him the link to the timestamp
within what was before called live stream,
but is now WAN show.
And as he's watching it, he's like, yeah, man,
you were like right on, like way ahead of your time.
But like, imagine this, blah, blah, blah,
like Raspberry Pi.
And then like 30 seconds later,
he gets to the point in the video where I'm like,
blah, blah, blah, Raspberry Pi.
Imagine, you know, you could have a land
just by everyone bringing over like, you know,
their favorite peripherals and like Raspberry Pis
and like, boom, you're set up.
And like with stuff like Oculus,
which I wasn't even talking about at the time,
all of a sudden your displays here,
all you need is like a game controller and a Raspberry Pi
and everyone could be running like seriously HD plus
graphics on their heads.
I mean, sitting, okay, tell me this.
Is VR gaming with a group of people socializing?
Okay, hold on.
That might be a whole separate topic.
But anyway, they added a bunch of really cool stuff.
So that was a really cool conversation with him.
Super cool guy.
He talked a little bit about what it's like working
for the almighty Lord and savior Gabe in and how, you know,
he like came in like right when he first started,
he's only been there about a year, which is really cool.
He went from like not working there to like creating
one of the headline features of Steam OS in my mind
in like a year.
Welcome to being a Valve employee.
Exactly.
So he walked into Gabe ends off and he was like, yeah,
this would be really cool.
And Gabe ends like, go build it.
And he's just like, oh no, I don't feel ready yet.
So we went and worked on TF two for a couple months
and then did some work on Steam OS.
And then like had another conversation with Gabe
and who he calls Gabe, but I feel not worthy.
So he had another conversation.
He's like, yeah, I really want to try this.
And he's like, make it so.
And so he started trying, he started out trying to prove
that in-home streaming wasn't possible.
And it kept not.
He kept on like fixing it.
Kept not working or kept working.
Yeah.
The disproving kept not working to the point
where now we have this very usable service
and this latest batch of improvements
looks pretty darn impressive.
Hardware accelerated encoding via quick sync.
Quick sync isn't the best quality encoding in the world.
Nope.
But what it is, is extremely fast.
Which is what you need.
You want pretty much any Intel processor
in the last couple of generations,
as long as you're on a mainstream platform.
They also added mouse emulation mode for controllers
toggled with guide A.
There were, oh, see, oh, see now.
Okay, I'm just going to go through this list.
Cause I talked to him about a bunch of other crap
that like is not on this list.
So maybe shouldn't go.
I don't want to accidentally talk about anything
that's like going to be a problem for him.
Don't want to burn that bridge before we get to go to Valve.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, something I did talk to him about is like,
could we maybe like get an invite down there at some point?
And he didn't promise anything,
but like he really liked our video about it on streaming.
So seriously, I think it like made his month.
That's good.
To have us make that video and like get it.
And we want to do an update, just not now necessarily.
I'll probably wait till it's out of beta.
The other really cool stuff that they added
is a 30 megabit bandwidth option,
which was before the maximum,
with an unlimited bandwidth option
that's been increased to 100 megabit.
So we could be seeing better image quality.
We wanted that.
That's something we noticed when we were testing.
Settings to enable traffic quality of service priority
in the advanced host options.
Honestly, it's getting better like almost daily.
That was one of the challenges when I was benchmarking.
It was the, and I told him this.
I was like, dude, the bloody thing was changing
while I was trying to test it.
I managed to find like two days
where you didn't do an update and I got my video done
and then it updated the next day.
He was just like, like, colon D.
Thank you.
For some reason I signed out of my Google Doc.
Anyway, and now I'm streaming, got an update.
So that was the point of all that.
We can stay on the Valve idea.
Yeah, let's ride the Valve train
to like gaming enlightenment station.
I'm so free to play.
I'm finally almost done Portal 2, finally.
I thought you said you were finally done Portal 2.
I thought I was.
I have played like another two and a half hours.
I thought I was close to the end, but I wasn't.
Portal's like that though.
Portal makes you think you're like done
and then it's just like, oh, nope.
By the way, duh.
So yeah, I'm still really enjoying it though.
It's fantastic, but I can't start Bravely Default
till I'm done Portal 2.
I'm determined to finish it first.
So what Valve news do you wanna do?
There's actually a bunch.
Yeah, I know.
It's like, how much ass can we kiss?
You know what?
Okay, let's not kiss up.
Let's do like brutal Valve news first.
No, okay.
Look who doesn't hate Apple.
The one and only GabeN.
I don't know why this was, okay.
Holding an iPhone and an iPad.
We don't know who this guy is,
but I just thought this was funny.
Some dude on Reddit.
I don't know, like.
I just think it's funny.
Steam works on Mac.
I know.
They like push Mac support games.
Yeah, GabeN openly is hating on Windows lately,
not OS X and not Linux.
That's why I was like, why is everyone so surprised?
Oh, I just.
Well, okay.
It's kinda like, it's kinda funny.
It's probably not a matter of them being surprised
as more a matter of the internet has like a culture.
Like, and it's like, there's like the internet culture
and then there's like the internet counterculture, you know?
And so the internet culture went on this like Apple thing
and then like Android became the counterculture.
And then when Android goes mainstream,
everyone will probably want,
like the cool kids on the internet
will probably shift to something else.
And so the cool kids on the internet right now,
ourselves included, are all running Android
and expect that anyone who's a tweaker
or like an enthusiast is gonna be doing the same thing.
But he's an enthusiast about other stuff.
He's not really a mobile platform guy.
I know, and a lot of game developers use Apple.
Just throwing that out there.
Like, that's a thing.
And, but yeah, but that's,
I think why people found it so surprising
was because they would have expected him
to be on whatever sort of the internet bandwagon is.
I just, I just personally don't care.
As long as his desktop that he's doing all of his,
like work for Steam on is,
actually it's not even probably.
He probably has a Mac,
so that he can work on stuff for Steam on Mac.
He probably has both, it's Gaben.
I fully expect him to have both.
I don't know, I didn't think this was that.
Yeah, he's worth like over a billion dollars or something.
So I think if he felt like.
Probably has multiple of both.
If he felt like having a Mac Pro,
I think it's a non-issue.
Yeah.
Okay, let's get into the new Steam Controller,
which is no longer interesting.
Still kind of interesting.
Oh, come on now.
We knew exactly what these buttons were though,
which was kind of cool.
Remember we called it out.
We were like, the ones on the right are gonna be ABXY
and the ones on the left are gonna be arrow buttons.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's gonna be essentially a D-pad.
We said that and when they were unlabeled
and now they're like, boop.
Arrow buttons make for a terrible D-pad
and Valve should know better.
That's all I'll say about the design.
I'll let you launch into what you think about it.
I hate that, but no one other than Nintendo
has seemingly been able to figure out D-pads
in the last little while.
Even Nintendo.
Oh, yeah, actually the one on the Wii was okay.
The one on the Wiimote is actually not bad.
So, like, I don't know what's going on there.
Maybe people just suck at making D-pads nowadays,
but I don't know if maybe that has something to do with it.
They don't like the D.
But I would still rather a D-pad,
even if it was kind of a crappy D-pad,
than buttons, because it's just weird and I want a D-pad.
It's still different because it has the touchscreen areas.
And it's still gonna enable you to play.
Still not sold on those.
I'm not either, but it's still different.
You know, I think I would actually rather
some totally janky solution like a Couchmaster
versus being stuck gaming with touchpads,
even if I was playing Civ V.
When's the last time you had an opportunity
to game on your notebook and you didn't just
go to the extra effort to go find a mouse?
Gaming on a touchpad is terrible.
Yeah, but then like, I don't know.
It's terrible.
Yeah, it is.
It's terrible.
The only reason why I always use the Civ V one
is like, I could also say XCOM, the new XCOM game.
You could probably do it fairly easily with a touchpad.
But you know what, I guarantee you it works great
with anything that is in a touchpad as well,
because that's just how that game is set up.
Right.
So Civ is really the champion for this controller,
but yeah, I don't know.
I don't care.
I'm gonna play Civ on my desktop
because I'm gonna be playing with other people,
and then it's gonna go so slow
that I'm gonna tab out in between turns anyways.
So like, so I can do other things.
So I don't really see it being that big of a deal.
Given Valve's openness, what I would like to see,
because I've held the controller ergonomically.
I don't have, you know, a ton of complaints about it.
I would like to see someone just adopt their design
and get rid of the touchpads
and throw like joysticks in there.
Because if you were to do that
and put a proper D-pad on it,
then all of a sudden now we've got some buttons on the back.
Everything except for the buttons on the back,
the thing that goes in your palm,
and the ABXY buttons.
Or we could all just go back to using SNES controllers
because they're clearly superior to everything else.
Xbox 360.
Xbox 360's okay, but the D-pad is terrible.
Yeah, but you've got thumbsticks.
You've got thumbsticks,
but that's not great for platforming.
For platforming.
That's all you want to do.
You know what?
Screw you.
I like platforming.
No, I play platformers all the time.
I'm just saying, that's all you want to do.
That's literally the only reason why you can't.
I also still use a D-pad for other stuff.
And okay.
And like, you know what?
Okay, the shield I just traded you
has kind of a crappy A button.
Like it kind of sticks a bit.
Did you notice already?
Yeah, a little bit.
But it's like.
It's not that bad.
Yeah, I know.
But it has a better D-pad than mine.
It's, I like the D-pad.
The D-pad's okay.
Mine's very clicky.
I haven't played with it a lot yet.
I only played one game and for not very long.
Have you tried using Game Stream on it yet?
Yes.
Oh, but your wireless is terrible in your place, isn't it?
Yes, but I did it upstairs.
There's a D-Link router in my car.
I did it like.
It's an AC dual band router.
I did it close to the router.
Right.
When I was doing actual Game Stream.
And then I ended up just watching a movie on it off my NAS.
Right.
Makes sense.
Yep.
You know what's funny?
The funny thing about Shield is I think people
didn't understand what it was.
And I think that's a lot of the hate.
People were like, it's a game console.
And that's what Nvidia's pushing.
But I actually disagree.
And then people were like, oh, I'd rather game on my phone.
And I went, well, no, this isn't a phone.
It's a tablet.
That's what it is.
It's a small tablet.
And what makes it a tablet is not the size of the screen.
What makes it a tablet is the way that it comes
with a stand in it.
That's the funny thing to me about it.
The reason I completely stopped using my iPad
and started using my Shield for everything.
I used to use my iPad all the time, almost every day.
Now I use my Shield almost every day.
Is because it sits on this controller thing.
Yep.
That I can put it next to the bath.
Or if I'm cooking, it's always got a stand on it.
And how you can integrate,
I haven't been a huge push of Shield before.
But now I've actually had some extended use with it,
which is really nice.
How they actually integrated using like D-pad
and ABXY buttons in the OS is freakishly good.
Yeah, it's really good.
Like I assumed it was gonna be terrible
and I was just gonna be touching everything.
And I started that way.
And then I just like instinctively pressed B
and was like, what, that works?
The UI is really good.
To me, it's a tablet.
It has great speakers.
So it's great for content watching.
And you're not gonna use it for like phone stuff.
You're not gonna phone someone on it.
Yeah, exactly.
So it's not perfect.
Now I'm really stoked for Shield 2.
Like it needs hardware volume buttons
for everything in video.
What is up with that?
That's true, but that's not the worst thing.
No, it's not the worst thing.
It was manageable.
It needs to be lighter.
It needs to be lots of things.
I'm not a huge fan of how it sits in your hands.
You know what's funny is I wasn't at first.
And now that I use it more often
than I use an Xbox 360 controller,
the Xbox 360 controller feels kind of cheap
and crappy to me.
The Shield has a really solid feel.
Okay, I like the weight.
That's not what I don't like about it.
And the rubber grip is fine, but it's like,
it's the weird, it's just how my fingers
naturally sit on it is very odd.
Give it some more time.
I'm going to.
And then we'll talk again.
I very recently started using it.
So I'm going to.
I should have given that to you like months ago to use
just because I talk about it so much.
It'd be great if you had.
I know, I know.
I just kept not getting around to getting all the data off.
I'm basically a terrible person.
But yeah, so far I've been enjoying it.
Wait, before we, before we get into this,
we have a, we have a couple of sponsor messages.
Woo, yeah.
So first Squarespace, visit squarespace.com
slash Linus for a free trial and 10% off
the software that lets you make a beautiful website.
And you know, what's really funny about the whole
Squarespace integration is at, okay.
It went through phases at the beginning of us talking
about Squarespace and how it's, I'm going to work
in the sponsor messages here, how it's like fast
and easy way to build a beautiful website.
And you can do it really quickly.
They have a free trial that lasts for two weeks.
So you can set everything up the way you'd like
super simple to use web-based UI.
It's all cloud-based dynamic server hosting.
So if you get a ton of traffic that can scale automatically
with all that stuff, that's really good about Squarespace.
And it's funny because when we first started doing
these integrations, we had a whole bunch of people
sign up right away.
And then there was like a lull where people were like,
woo, I don't want to hear about Squarespace anymore.
I don't know what it is.
Now, you know, what's funny is like, I'm seeing more
and more people like thanking me on Twitter
for drawing their attention to Squarespace.
Cause they're just like, yeah, I was like doing something
else before and it's like super stupid.
And Squarespace is not super stupid.
So like, thank you for the 10% off code
because it's kind of awesome.
And regardless of whether you decide to give us credit
for your Squarespace account, if you sign up
for a full year, you get a free domain.
They will throw that in for you.
So guys, there you go.
Squarespace, beautiful websites that work on mobile,
desktop, laptops.
I went ahead and went to the wrong thing.
I wanted to go to my screen here so you can see
our Squarespace website, which I can like, I can touch
and I can use a mouse and keyboard if I want.
It's nice and snappy.
It's lensmediagroup.com.
You guys can all hit it as hard as you want
and it will not care at all.
You know what's really funny is I don't know
if we actually have Squarespace listed
as one of our sponsors on our site.
Yes, we do.
There they are.
All right, so moving on to a sponsor that we don't
actually have listed on the site because we compiled
that list a long time ago.
This is Dollar Shave Club.
And we've gotten a lot of really positive feedback
about this one already.
I've had a ton of people message me telling me that,
okay, yup, I switched to Dollar Shave Club
and it's amazing, it's awesome.
I think most of them probably haven't even gotten
their initial orders yet.
Well, we did the first integration like a couple weeks ago,
right?
Yeah, they could have definitely got it by now.
Yeah, they probably have.
Yeah, they probably have.
Especially the US guys.
I had some people saying like, yeah,
the razors are blanking great.
Now, I'll do, okay, like their whole ad,
I'm gonna switch over to my screen here for a moment.
This is a fantastic ad and aside from what I'm saying
during the show here, you guys should definitely watch it
because their CEO is kind of a marketing genius here.
So he basically walks through their warehouse,
talks about how they're creating American jobs.
They were able to bleep out the swear words
that go with their r blades are blanking great slogan.
Talk about sort of the money that you can save
by switching to Dollar Shave Club versus going
and buying razors at the store.
We talked about this at the beginning of the show,
but just the fact that there's like, you know,
an armed guard next to the replacement razor blades
is just, it creates extra hassle when already,
I know both of the people sitting in this room
are just plain too lazy to go to the store
to buy new razors.
Like, okay, what I would do is not as bad as you.
What would you do?
I would, like in my first integration for Dollar Shave Club
I made a joke where like I was using a hobbit replica sting
and I was like, maybe I can get one more shave
out of this elven blade, but I would do that.
So instead of having a razor blade.
I've gone out of work for like 500 more shaves.
Like instead of using it for a week,
which is what Dollar Shave Club says, look,
use it for a week, get a really nice clean shave
and next month, four more are gonna show up,
use them each for a week.
That is the way it should be done.
The way that I would do it is I would use them
for like three weeks.
And then you were saying before the show started.
I literally don't think I've bought razors for a year.
And I think it was like, I don't even think I,
no, I didn't buy them.
My mom got them for me, not this Christmas,
but the one before.
So it's been more than a year.
It's been like a year and what, like three months?
Almost four months.
It's been about a year and four months
since I bought new razors.
That's disgusting.
And I just grind them against my face
because there's some amount of metal there
and it has some amount of an edge.
So it's just gonna eventually pull off all the hair.
All right, so the service is available in Canada,
the US and Australia.
I'm gonna kind of go ahead and fire up my screen here.
So for less than $10 a month for even the executive,
which is their premium six blade razor
that's like made in outer space or something like that.
I mean, their marketing's really silly.
I kind of like these guys
because they're just, they're not too serious about it.
They're like, yeah, we have a service
and like, you know what?
It's razor blades, man.
Like there's only so much we can say about it,
but look, they're really good.
They're really cheap.
They're really convenient
because for me, the big obstacle was just,
I didn't feel like going and dealing with it.
So I would have my wife buy them after like the three weeks.
Some guy just said, looks, it's like,
I never knew he didn't use razors.
It's like, I do, man.
I do actually have to all the time.
There's a reason why this sits here.
It's because it's way too much to deal with
if I don't let it sit there.
So aside from their razors,
they have Dr. Carver's easy shave butter,
which I actually did try and it works.
Unlike shaving foam.
Is there an option so you can get like a cheaper set
that doesn't have the butter?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, the butter's an optional item.
Because I know some people don't use it
because some people are like me
and they just shave in the shower.
Yeah, but it's actually kind of nice
because unlike shaving cream, it's not opaque.
So it's clear.
So you can kind of see what you're doing.
Okay, that's actually pretty awesome.
And it softens up the hair.
It's just like kind of you'd expect
and it smells really nice.
I don't know if you smelled it.
You smell it?
Yeah, it smells nice.
And it's not like awkward to smell that?
Like the, oh.
Okay, because I got to bring these up to One Wipe Charlies.
The ad for this one actually was like,
it was like awkward to the point where he's like,
yeah, he gets off a toilet.
He's like, sometimes, you know,
you don't have time to jump in the shower
and rinse off your butt.
So we made these peppermint scented butt wipes for men,
One Wipe Charlies.
And I really just, talking about these
makes me feel a little uncomfortable.
But there you go, guys,
Dollar Shave Club bathroom supplies
direct to your door once a month.
We've actually had, there's someone walking by outside
who's listening to me talk about butt wipes for men.
And that's a little bit awkward.
But the point is we've had over a hundred
of our viewers already sign up for Dollar Shave Club.
It's so chicken or dog.
And she was just staring out the window
and he said, butt wipes for men.
Okay.
Okay, I'm sorry.
Yeah, we got a bunch of, we got a bunch of people.
Did I even tell you that?
Yeah, like we've had over a hundred people sign up
and everything I've seen from people
has been super positive so far.
So guys, I would love for you to drop me a line on Twitter
and let me know any one of our sponsors
that you decide to use, whether it's Hotspot Shield.
Oh, Hotspot Shield has a design our new slogan contest.
They're running on Facebook right now.
You guys should probably check that out.
Facebook Hotspot Shield design slogan
or something like that.
Or come up with our new slogan
is the thing that they're running right now.
So whoever it is, we'd love to hear from you guys
that you're using it and that it's great.
And we'd also love to hear from you
that you're using it and it sucks.
Because we have the inside track with these companies
and if they're doing something that's making you unhappy,
A, we don't want sponsors
that are making our viewers unhappy
and we will cut them off if there is a problem.
Seriously, we will cut them off.
And number two is because we're able to bring your problem
to their attention, we can get it resolved for you
pretty quickly most of the time.
So we'd love to hear from you guys about that.
All right.
We had such a good rapport with people around here.
I know.
And now they're gonna be like,
they talk about butt wipes in their house.
What are you doing in there?
Well wiping our butts.
Do you not wipe your butt?
That's not gonna help things.
That should be our retort.
Do you think wiping your butt's gross?
Oh God.
What's our next topic?
We can do, do we wanna finish off the valve stuff?
Yeah, let's finish off the valve stuff.
We don't have much longer on the show here.
Nope, and there's still a few things.
I kinda went tangential today.
Yeah, but that's all right.
Yeah, I guess that's all right.
As long as we do it, okay, then it's all right.
All right, Valve's new film, Free to Play,
is a bid to legitimize professional gamers.
Post on the Washington Post.
You watched it, right?
I did watch it and while I think the angle from the...
Hold on, I'm gonna stop you.
Who should watch it?
Honestly, I'm gonna send it to my mom and dad.
Okay.
I did a lot of boats with this when I was younger
and I think my mom can relate to certain things
that happened.
Okay.
So I think my mom will appreciate the movie.
I think my dad will just kinda find it interesting
because he's always come to packs with us and stuff.
Sure.
Even though he's not a huge gamer,
he likes being with the group.
Gaming culture.
And he likes playing games anyways.
And he's kind of, he can enjoy it
and he can appreciate it.
But, gamers.
Now, it's about Dota.
Right.
Very specifically, it's about Dota.
Go figure.
I don't really play Dota.
Yeah, go figure.
They don't try to hide that.
That's one thing that I found in the Washington Post thing
was that they're like, oh my god, it's about Dota.
And I'm like, it's a documentary about Dota.
Figure it out.
By Valve.
Yeah, good job.
Anyways, sorry, I'm gonna rant more about that later.
But it's like, you don't have to necessarily
appreciate or like Dota to appreciate
and like this documentary.
I don't really play Dota much or ever at all.
And I don't really watch it too much either.
And I really enjoy it.
Really, really enjoyed it and I'm not a huge Dota fan.
Now, that being said, I used to be really big
into League of Legends and I was a bit into Dota 1
and stuff like that and I've kind of dropped off.
I don't play any MOBAs anymore.
That's just a personal thing.
I burn myself out.
I play them way too much.
I have like hundreds and hundreds of hours in a few of them.
So I'm just like, okay, I'm pulling off a little bit
and playing other things.
Like, I might jump back in the future.
I'm just not that into it now.
Pulling off or pulling out?
Oh man, I knew you were gonna go there.
But it's still really interesting
and it covers some really interesting stuff.
And one thing that I really appreciated was
while it is a documentary about Valve, about Dota,
they didn't just thump the hammer the whole time.
They actually went into like, these are problems.
Thump the hammer?
What does that even mean?
I was gonna say drum, but then I said hammer
and it just didn't work.
Thump the hammer.
Because it would be like pound the drum, you know?
That was the whole point.
Thump the drum wouldn't even be right.
It's close.
Comb it with a brick.
Yeah, anyways.
So it was interesting to see like, okay,
these are all the problems that these players
have actually gone through.
And these are the issues that they're having
trying to be professional gamers.
It's not easy.
They're not making much money.
Like it brought up all these problems.
Like despite it being a million dollar tournament,
a lot of them really didn't make enough money.
Make a million dollars.
Yeah, no.
And that was a really interesting angle
that they came around.
And it seemed more like a push
to legitimize gaming in general,
instead of being an advertisement
while still being a documentary by Valve about Dota.
Which I found really interesting.
And coming from an angle where I'm not super interested
in Dota, much more interested currently in Counter-Strike,
another Valve title,
but there was nothing in here about Counter-Strike.
Still super interesting.
Okay.
So I appreciate if you're into gaming
on a professional level at all,
like if you like watching professional gaming,
if you like any of that kind of stuff,
or even if you're just a gamer,
I could see this being very interesting.
And you don't have to be very well versed
to appreciate the film.
They explain everything.
I wouldn't worry about that either.
I can show this to my mom,
and she'll get it, and it'll be fine.
One Man Pizza says if you liked free-to-play,
go Google the Smash Brothers.
Or the Smash Bros.
Apparently it's a really good gaming documentary as well.
Yeah, Indie Game the Movie is really good.
I watched that.
That was really good.
Yeah, Indie Game the Movie's great.
So those are all really interesting things to check out.
The Washington Post bring up a few things.
Andrea Peterson was saying that it's an extended commercial,
an effective extended commercial,
but definitely an extended commercial.
And they go through the thing
talking about how they followed cliche characters.
And I'm like, it's a documentary, man.
They followed captains of teams.
Where do you think cliches come from?
And it's one thing too,
because growing up with friends that were trying to do it,
and myself trying to do it,
and people that were wildly more successful than I was,
and all this kind of stuff,
we all went through this stuff.
So you're wrong, people from Washington Post.
It's really good that they covered that,
because this legitimately happens.
Your parents will be against you.
That being said, at the very beginning my parents were,
and then once they started to see how into it I was,
they were totally welcoming and happy about it.
But definitely not everyone's are.
And they covered that in this movie,
which was really interesting.
If my son was like, yeah, I'm gonna be a pro gamer, Dad,
I'd be like, no, you're not.
And these are things that should be covered
and were covered and were really interesting.
And they show the one guy's mom being like,
this is really dumb, to his face, in the documentary.
And I'm like, that's good.
That should have been in this documentary.
And they're like, oh, we didn't necessarily see that.
It's just really cliche characters and stuff.
And I'm like, shut up.
That totally exists.
It's a documentary.
They should cover that stuff.
And they're like, yeah, they spent so much time
looking at the different players,
and I'm like, thank you.
That's what I wanted to see.
They showed little snippets from the matches,
and a lot of the time,
sometimes it was an actual clip from the match,
and sometimes it was just super heavily animated,
and not actually the stuff from the match,
which I think actually helped it be watchable
by people that aren't super interested in Dota 2.
I would have been able to follow it just fine
if there was more footage from the matches,
because I understand Dota 2, but not everyone can.
And being able to show it to my mom, that helps a lot.
And having one-on-one interviews with relatives
was really interesting of the players,
and stuff like that,
and going heavily into their backstories,
because it's a really difficult thing to get into.
It's incredibly difficult to get into.
And they bring up the thing where you're not gonna be
a pro gamer beyond 29.
Right.
Because your reaction time is gonna be too low.
And the main thing people usually think about that in
is stuff like Counter-Strike,
but that applies to pretty much everything.
And of course, there's exceptions to the rule,
but there's not very many.
Right, well just like Timo Salani is still playing hockey.
Yeah.
The guy's like 42.
There's exceptions.
But one guy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's it.
So it's interesting, the stuff they bring up,
and honestly, it's a great documentary.
I've got a few people upset that I would tell my son,
no, you're not gonna be a pro gamer.
Well, I would also tell my son,
no, you're not gonna be a professional football player.
Because in the real world, you're probably not.
If he's willing to fight through the adversity
of me telling him he's an idiot for trying,
then he stands a chance.
If he's gonna be his son,
he's gonna have to fight through that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
Honestly, is that a correct parenting tactic?
Oh, I don't know, probably not.
I don't care.
The reality of it is, if you're not willing to,
if you're not willing to fight for something
that you believe in and you're not passionate about,
passionate enough about to get past
your parents not caring about it,
you will not succeed anyway, I'm sorry.
No, it's true.
That's very true, and they cover that in the documentary.
They show how much crap these guys have to go through,
and trust me, even the people that they didn't cover
were going through that stuff.
No one's parents are gonna go,
this is a very good career move.
Don't go to school, play games all day,
you'll be successful.
I don't see anyone's parents really doing that.
I can see parents going my mom and dad's route,
which was, pursue other things.
Yeah.
But if you wanna do this as much as you want
in your free time, go ahead,
and they'll support me with that.
That was fantastic.
My parents did, in my opinion, a very good job.
Right.
I appreciate that a lot.
But they also were kind of pushing,
like make sure, and this is something
I really appreciated too, and I still apply,
is don't necessarily lock yourself in with one thing.
You need to have an exit strategy.
Always have an exit strategy.
That's incredibly important.
Yeah.
I had someone else ask,
well Linus, would you tell your kid
not to be a tech YouTuber?
Absolutely.
What are the odds?
Like, what are the odds of success?
If anything, the odds of success,
being a professional tech YouTuber,
are probably lower than the odds
of being a pro gamer at some level.
Who is actually making a full time job
out of being a tech YouTuber?
There's not very many.
Like, I can count them on one hand, probably.
Like, who is actually full time?
Logan?
Me?
Marcus?
Austin?
Elric?
You're not counting the team component, though.
I'm not counting, okay,
I'm not counting the team component.
Okay, okay, so fine.
I could probably count like the lead guys
that are like running tech YouTuber companies,
maybe on both hands.
Because there's Detroit Borg,
I don't know if he does it full time,
and there's like some other guys.
But even looking at,
Lou from Unbox Therapy is another one,
so even looking at like a collab that he's planning,
a lot of the guys participating
are like still students and stuff.
Like, they're not actually trying to turn this
into a viable business yet, even.
I mean, even Marcus is still a student.
Yeah.
And like, he's making enough money
that he could go full time if he felt like it,
but he's not even,
he's one of the most successful ones out there.
But he's doing-
And he's not even banking on it.
And he's doing the backup strategy thing,
the Azure strategy thing. That's right.
Where if it fails, there's an option.
That's right.
And I think that's a really good point.
And I mean, people would ask me this all the time,
before I went independent,
and people would say,
oh, I wanna be a tech YouTuber just like you.
And I'd say, I'm not a tech YouTuber.
I have a real job.
I'm a product manager.
That's an actual job.
I do this tech YouTube thing
because it's like super fun and it's exciting,
and I really enjoy it, and I'm passionate about it.
And that is my point.
My parents don't have a bloody idea what I do.
They have no idea.
They have never once bought a video game
or a piece of, oh, okay, no, no.
They did upgrade our 386 to a 486,
but that wasn't for like gaming
or hardware passion or anything.
They've never actually bought me
a piece of computer hardware.
Wanna be real clear about that.
My parents have.
My parents did.
The closest I got was my uncle upgraded his computer
and I built his new computer for him,
and he gave me his old computer as like an attaboy,
and this was a Pentium 1 166 megahertz
when Pentium 4s were on the market, to be clear.
When I pieced out my first computer,
I paid for it all, but when I pieced it out,
my dad and I went to go pick it up,
and the sales guy was like, do you have a monitor?
And I was just like, uh, no.
Chrome Monkey is bringing up some people
who are not entirely YouTubers.
Ryan Schrout is not a YouTuber.
Like, he does YouTube videos,
and you can tell him I said that.
Quote Linus out of context.
Ryan Schrout is not a YouTuber.
But he runs PCper.
PCper.com is his bread and butter.
That's like a website.
That's web journalism as opposed to
dad, I wanna be a tech YouTuber.
It's more than two hands, but he's using a.
What?
There's more than two hands.
Okay, yeah, okay, fine.
There's more than however many hands worth.
But the ones doing it strictly on YouTube?
I don't know.
Well, if you include, like,
are you talking about just PC hardware?
Because tech YouTubers.
Okay, tech YouTubers, yeah, there's probably tons of them.
Even then, the odds are slim,
and I wouldn't be a big fan of it
if he was like, yeah, that's my master plan.
I'm gonna be like a tech YouTuber.
I'd be like, you gotta have a real plan first.
Like, have a plan for a nine to five,
and then if you make it,
it's kind of like professional athletes.
You know what?
The vast majority of them go to school
and participate in school athletics and then make it.
That's something too.
My brother does StarCraft casting locally, right?
So I've talked to some of the guys locally
that are really good.
One of them who's like an awesome dude, Firezerg.
I follow him around a little bit.
He's actually really good,
and like a few of the other guys
that they hang out with and stuff,
they go to this UBC StarCraft Club.
Right.
UBC, University of British Columbia, StarCraft Club.
They're all kids that are going to UBC
and also enjoy playing StarCraft,
and some of them are really good
and could probably make it professionally,
but are also going to UBC.
Yeah, so have a backup plan,
I guess is the main point of this.
But then watch that. Holy crap.
We could almost do, we got sidetracked today.
We could almost do a whole other show
on some of this stuff in here.
Yeah, we went from not enough topics every week
to like way too many.
Yeah.
New CPUs from Intel.
Okay, we're gonna have to like blitz this stuff, you guys.
So Intel's looking at doing an unlock.
Oh my God, we haven't done any VR yet.
I know, we have done none of the VR
and none of the improvements to DirectX 12 and OpenGL.
Like we're screwed.
Okay, guys, we're gonna have to just blitz this stuff.
Unlocked Pentium 20th Anniversary Edition.
We're gonna be getting an eight core Core i7 Extreme,
and Intel is talking about fixing
the thermal interface material issue
that they've had with some of their processors,
giving you better temperatures
and hopefully improved overclocking.
Personally, I'm not expecting it to make a big difference.
But the fact that Intel is listening
to the enthusiast community
and addressing it is a really good sign.
Cause they've basically come out and acknowledged like,
hey, we've done some kind of crappy stuff
and have not acknowledged it at all.
So now we're getting a proper enthusiast grade SSD.
We're getting an eight core Extreme edition.
We're getting fixed thermal interface material.
It's like they're listening to us
and that's extremely exciting.
Yay, Intel, thumbs up.
All right, source here, DirectX 12.
That needs to start working, there we go.
All right, DirectX 12, this is from Nvidia's blog
where the main notes here,
and I'm just going to cut you guys off my screen
so I can cheat and go back to my notes,
will be delivered sometime this year
with enough time to see shipping titles, holiday 2015.
Forza 5 was already poded, poded, poded.
It was ported from the Xbox One to the PC
with DirectX 12 in four man months.
That's not bad.
You could have four dudes working on it for a month,
four dudes or women, whatever.
I meant like dudes, like people.
Not trying to, I try not to be sexist.
So four.
Women computers is becoming a bigger and bigger thing.
I know, I know.
And like that's good, that's like great.
And I don't want to seem like, you know,
male chauvinist women can't, you know, code
because they can.
Better than me.
Definitely can.
One of my tutors when I was going to school
was a female and she was the best tutor I ever had.
That's like saying something racially insensitive
and being like one of my friends is a black guy though.
Not really.
Okay, it's not the same thing at all.
No.
Okay, that would be like me saying the insensitive thing
and being like, but I know like one female coder
so it's okay.
But I know a whole bunch.
Like I know a ton.
Okay, anyway, the point is,
Forza 5 was ported from Xbox One to PC with DirectX 12
in four people months with big performance improvements.
DirectX 11 relied predominantly on one CPU core
to do the bulk of the work
and it was able to distribute things a little bit.
But we've had multi CPU, multi-core CPUs for years,
Microsoft, I'm glad that you're doing this now,
but I wish the sleeping bear had woken up
a little bit earlier and not waited for AMD
to put all this work into Mantle,
which is basically in my mind,
a wasted effort at this point.
Oh, okay, not wasted effort.
Mantle looks like a dead project to me,
but the fact that we're able to get this improvement
in the industry with Microsoft improving DirectX,
giving the developers more bare to metal
sort of ability to program for the GPUs,
giving the developers the ability
to dramatically scale the number of draw calls,
reducing the driver overhead significantly
and spreading it out over multiple CPU cores.
This is all in my mind,
either a result of Mantle or a result of Microsoft
kind of looking at what AMD was planning to do
and going, oh crap, if the API isn't like DirectX anymore,
then like, why would people game on Windows, uh-oh.
And I'm glad that they're finally waking up.
And they completed a goal.
AMD said for a long time, if they ran away from this
and made it so that Mantle doesn't have to exist, it's okay.
Yep, and they did say that.
I wasn't sure if they were truthful about that,
but they said it.
That's true, but they, yeah.
Regardless, they said it, so that's cool.
So DirectX 12 could be leveraged on the Xbox One,
Windows Mobile, but Microsoft has neither confirmed
nor denied whether it will come to Windows 7.
Yeah.
I really want it to, please.
I don't wanna move up.
I'm completely happy with my green.
Because we could be looking at orders of magnitude
better performance in some ways.
Yeah, we'd have to change over every system.
Like draw calls would be 10 to 100 times
improvements in performance.
And this is really exciting.
Hardware-wise, it's coming to any GCN AMD card.
However, we've noticed that just because something
comes to every GCN card, 7000 series all the way up
to the newer stuff, doesn't mean it actually works
that well on it.
Yeah.
So just throwing that out there.
And there's actually a fairly noticeable difference
between GCN 1 and GCN 1.1.
So there you go.
And it's coming to every DirectX capable Nvidia GPU.
So that's Fermi, Kepler, and Maxwell.
AMD hasn't said anything about 5000 series or 6000 series,
but I would expect that's not gonna be coming.
All right, OpenGL improvements.
Here we go, boom.
From the Nvidia blog, if you wanna get
a developer's attention, all you need to do
is start dropping whole numbers.
Great point, Adrian.
Oh, shoot, sorry, how did I read Adrian?
Wow, I gotta get my eyes checked.
I have no idea.
I just read the A and then just made up the rest.
That's all I need.
That's like skim reading to a completely new level.
All right, so an unlikely team of presenters
got together at GDC.
This, I got a kick out of this.
But Intel, AMD, and Nvidia.
Really weird.
I know, right?
Hosted a session on OpenGL and how OpenGL,
modern OpenGL could be used to reduce
driver overhead to near zero.
Improving performance 1.3 times easily
and then up to seven to 15 times with some optimization.
That is extremely exciting.
And unlike DirectX, which was like,
yeah, I could work on Windows Phone,
OpenGL can work on whatever you want.
So we're talking any mobile platform pretty much,
any desktop platform, any, I don't know,
you could probably run it on a toaster
if you really felt like it.
So OpenGL is extremely exciting.
And while on the desktop, the performance,
I know, the performance improvements
are going to be really important on mobile,
the improvements in battery life,
because it's much more efficient to build multi-core CPUs
than high-performing single-threaded CPUs,
the improvements in battery life on mobile
that we can achieve by leveraging OpenGL
as a way to reduce overhead
and as a way to utilize more cores is extremely exciting.
All right, let's move on to the Snowdrop engine.
Holy balls.
This thing looks outstanding.
So there's a video,
which basically everyone should just go watch.
This is on hexis.net.
But this thing looks amazing.
And the main points here to take away
are that they've created a way of working with the engine
that like, obviously it's not this simple,
but in the demo,
they're just like dragging and dropping things
and like drawing lines to connect different elements,
like actions as well as objects and events.
And basically the idea is,
aside from looking absolutely amazing,
let's see if I can find the part with the burning buildings,
because it just looks so good.
Like look at the cityscape.
Where's the burning building?
I want the burning building.
I don't have enough time for this crap.
Literally, we're already over time.
I know.
People gotta go home and get to their families.
They might already be home.
Whatever, there's a car with lights on it.
That's kind of like a burning building.
Good enough. Good enough.
We'll settle for that.
All right, so what do we got going on here?
I go back to my notes,
because there's a lot of stuff
I don't remember. Node-based scripting system.
So the, yeah, okay.
So node-based scripting system
allows all objects and actions to be connected,
allows the artist to focus on creativity
rather than mundane tasks.
It will be available first in Tom Clancy's
of the division later in 2014.
And this was really cool also in the video.
It allows easy experimentation and testing
of whatever's being worked on.
So the video shows patterns being altered
with just like a slider on the side of a helicopter
and like a little robot,
just like walking around in a test environment
where you can like put stuff for it to step on
and you can test it and look at how it's gonna work.
Unity 5 has been announced.
Moving on to the next thing.
This is from TechCrunch.
I'll jump in once we get to here.
Better lighting, better audio,
and early support for plugin-free browser games.
Wow.
Really cool.
Really cool. Wow!
Okay, I'll let you cover this.
Okay, so what I was really expecting when I saw this,
and Linus probably remembers me saying this,
is not surprised on the timing,
because this coming out and Unity being such a big force
in the VR scene with Oculus,
I assumed it was gonna tie in something
really heavily with Oculus,
but it actually seems the main things are the web stuff.
So, plugin list support for browsers,
like early access web GL support,
like all this kind of stuff.
Audio systems, lighting, stuff like that,
all being brought into Unity,
which is really cool because Unity is such a heavy hitter
when it comes to indie games,
and then allowing them all to access this kind of stuff
is very cool.
Obviously, this is also going to go to Oculus,
and people have been talking about how,
while this is really cool,
a lot of this was actually able to be brought in
if you were a really technical Unity user.
You could apply all this stuff yourself
with mods and whatnot,
but this is now easily done by anyone,
so that's actually really important, in my opinion.
There's also a video of new features for Source 2,
which is really cool,
and then we should probably move on already.
Reverend Stig says, shut up about Oculus.
Oh, that ain't happening.
No.
The Mantle and True Audio patch for Thief has been released.
I gotta wonder how many of the people
who cared about Thief have already played it.
Yeah, did I tell you I stopped completely?
After I got the benchmarking run, I just quit,
because I was like, the audio in this game
is too messed up for me to care.
Okay, well, at least True Audio may help things.
So, Tom's Hardware actually has some benchmarks
of Thief running with True Audio and Mantle.
I haven't looked at these yet, so that's interesting,
but, hmm, let's have a look.
Theme Frame, lowest detail preset.
Why are we even looking at this?
Okay, normal details, here we go.
Normal.
So, here's DirectX versus Mantle.
Oh, we're looking at some pretty significant improvements.
So, here's a 270, which is not even
a super high-powered graphics card,
and an 8350, which is a pretty decent CPU,
and we're looking at, wow,
like 30% improvement in performance, of minimum,
but that's the most important thing, anyway.
Minimum, okay, yeah.
I was like, that seems very low,
for a really weird reason.
Makes sense.
Yeah, I was looking at minimum FPS.
That's pretty impressive.
Positional audio was just completely broken in the game,
but it may actually be fixed now.
You should give it a shot.
Maybe that's what I wanted to bring up with this,
is I'm probably gonna try it again now,
because positional audio is brutal before.
There could be someone two floors below you, walking around,
and he sounds like he's exactly beside you
on the same level.
I was like, what is this?
It was really bad.
The game was always supposed to work,
was with, shoot, no, I forget what it's called,
convoluted reverb.
So that means that audio was supposed to be dynamic
and real-time, and instead of being a scripted
or pre-done effect, like when someone's underwater,
boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
like it was supposed to just,
the audio was just supposed to bounce off stuff
in a natural way, and so it was completely broken
out of the gate.
But now with true audio, AMD users,
who happen to be running three different cards,
can use their hardware DSP to accelerate
the true audio convoluted reverb stuff.
But don't worry, guys, you can still use it.
You can just offload it to your CPU.
Those performance improvements noted on certain resolutions,
like, what is it, yeah, 4770K with the 270X,
and I believe it was 1440p, got like a one FPS improvement.
Right.
So it's like, this is the same story
that we talked about before, where it really matters
on the whole combination of your setup,
how well it's gonna work out for you.
Right.
But yeah, anyways, moving on.
All right, do it.
All right, so Project Morpheus,
I'm gonna jump on specs real quick,
and then jump on things that aren't specs after that.
So it's gonna be a 1920 by 1080 screen.
I'm gonna do a bunch of verses here at the beginning.
So 1920 by 1080 screen, and I'm gonna compare this
to Development Kit 2 from Oculus.
So I'm comparing the spec'd out,
probably release version of Morpheus
with the current developer version of Oculus,
not the release version of Oculus,
because we have no idea.
So 1920 by 1080 screen on the release version of Morpheus,
and 960 by 1920 per eye on the Oculus one.
Morpheus will have a 90 degree FOV,
and the Dev Kit 2 for Oculus
is gonna have a 100 degree FOV.
You're gonna be able to integrate your PlayStation camera
and PlayStation Move to take in part skeleton movement
from the camera and hand movement from the Move
or whatever like that, which is actually really cool,
because that's stuff that isn't first party support
from Oculus, at least, well, the camera is,
but you're gonna have to get Hydra or,
I can't remember the name of it,
but that other 6S, no, not 6-axis.
Oh, it's a Hydra, the two-man one?
No, but the other thing that's coming out
that looks like handles,
made by the same company that made Hydra for them.
I can't remember.
I don't remember what it's called,
but that thing that's not out yet,
or something like that, which could be really expensive,
it's gonna be a five inch panel,
it's gonna be used HDMI and USB,
but they have been quoted that hopefully won't be a thing,
it'll hopefully be wireless at some point,
so that could be on release, we're not sure yet.
It's gonna be a five inch panel,
now we're gonna get into some quotes.
Problems with these quotes before I even say them.
They're both from people at Oculus.
These are the main quotes I've found so far.
They're obviously gonna be negative,
because they're people from Oculus.
That being said, Sony has approached Oculus
and is trying to work together with them, so.
That's a rumor.
That's a rumor.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
So there's, hold on, I'm gonna find it,
because I've got it in the doc here.
Sure, I'm just gonna.
So there's a post on Reddit where, here it is.
So guys, I'll post this in the chat,
so you guys should check this out after,
but it's basically just saying,
okay, allegedly, Sony and Oculus may be
looking to work together on VR game development,
because Sony's solution isn't gonna work on a PC,
and Oculus's solution isn't gonna work on a console,
so there's no real competition between them
from a hardware perspective.
They might as well enable game developers
to have a larger platform to launch their games on.
Which is why eValkyrie, while it's an exclusive for Oculus,
is also an exclusive for Morpheus.
It's an exclusive for both of them,
which is really interesting,
and shows kind of a backbone behind that.
Just like our relationship is exclusive.
Oh God, yes it is.
So those quotes, as we jump into it now,
is John Carmack saying calibrate PS4 VR expectations.
A game that ran at 60 FPS on PS3
could be done in VR on PS4,
but it's gonna have to have run at 60 FPS on PS3,
so it'll have to be a 1080p game at 60 FPS on PS3
to be able to run on Project Morpheus.
That's from John Carmack.
John Carmack has extremely high expectations
whenever it comes to anything to do with displays,
and he's on Oculus's team,
which no matter what you think about platform usability,
they're still competitors.
He just kind of says whatever he wants, though.
He does, he totally does.
So, I don't know.
I personally think he has a really good point,
but bear in mind that it's each side of the fence.
Another quote, this is coming from Palmer,
like CEO of Oculus, and this is fairly old, actually.
Consoles are too limited to do what we want to do.
So, if you're looking at a VR perspective
and one of the biggest pioneers in that industry,
and they're saying this thing is too limited
to be able to do it.
Now, one of the reasons behind that quote, actually,
was the platform being very locked down.
You can't upgrade graphics on a PlayStation,
and that was actually a lot of the reasoning,
not necessarily that it's currently not powerful enough,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
That being said, every single demo that I have played,
I have not played Eve Valkyrie on an Oculus yet,
and they're saying that it's gonna work
on PlayStation anyways,
so I don't know what to say about that,
but every demo that I've played on an Oculus
would easily run on a PS4.
That being said, a lot of them are kinda tech demos so far,
showing how it works, not supposed to be fully-fledged games.
So, we'll see that more in the future.
They have a bunch of really interesting partners,
like Epic Games, Crytek, Autodesk, Unity, and more,
and they're also gonna be showcasing things
like demos of Eve, Eve Valkyrie, sorry, and Thief.
So, that's actually really interesting.
Funny story, the demo was running on a Windows 7 PC.
And that's like...
I mean, this is just typical.
We're not surprised.
This happens every bloody time.
There's a new console refresh or whatever else.
It happens with Xbox exclusive games,
and it happens with PlayStation exclusive games,
which aren't supposed to be able to run on PC,
and they're running on a PC.
And it's-
That makes me so mad.
It's like, you already have the PC version.
That's really sad.
But yeah, so that actually wasn't surprising at all,
but it's still funny to joke about.
Another thing that happened this week was
what I was kind of just talking about
was Oculus Rift Development Kit 2 came out,
and everyone and their mom bought one.
So, in 36 hours, why is my notes gone on this?
There it is, 12.5 thousand units sold in 36 hours.
That's 4.375 million dollars of revenue.
And they haven't even actually released
a commercial product yet.
Yeah, so I'll get into the commercial product thing soon.
So, more specs on this.
I already talked about some of it.
Just to give you a refresher,
it's 960 by 1920 per eye, 100 degree FOV,
and now refresh rates.
They've made the refresh rates a lot better.
That's wrong.
Why is this changed?
I'm like, sure that's wrong,
but you wanna check the ref-
I'll check it real quick.
Sure.
This is your baby, man.
Why was that changed?
Anyways, luckily I recognize that.
It's up to 75 hertz,
running at 75, 72, or 60 hertz refresh rate,
which is really interesting.
That actually makes a surprisingly big difference.
My 30 inch monitor, my 305T,
I wasn't able to crazy overclock it or anything
to 100 hertz or whatever,
but I didn't remember.
We went through this.
I managed to get it running at 72,
and it makes a really big difference.
Especially when things are that close to your face,
any amount of latency or lag is really noticeable.
So that is supposed to help a lot.
I haven't tried it yet, but who knows?
Low persistence, so we're looking at two milliseconds,
three milliseconds, or full,
which is gonna be really interesting.
That's coming in with the OLED display
being able to switch on and off,
so that there isn't a frame sitting there
for a really long time.
This comes in, again, any amount of latency or lag
is very noticeable when it's that close to your face,
and when the presence is that high,
when you're that ingrown in this thing,
if there's any amount of latency, it feels really weird.
Your brain is gonna have issues with that,
so that's probably gonna help it as well.
It's gonna have a gyroscope, accelerometer,
and a magnetometer, which is not super surprising,
and a built-in latency tester,
which is actually really cool.
So this is gonna be motion to pixel, essentially.
You better explain exactly what that means.
So if you move, and there's supposed to be motion
in the game, how long does it take
for that to actually appear on the screen?
Because that's gonna feel really weird,
and that's gonna really disconnect you
from the experience if you go like this,
and it takes a few seconds, and it's like, uh.
And that's the main reason why people liked Oculus already,
was a lot of VR experiences in the past
had this issue where you'd turn,
and then it would catch up, and it would kinda like,
this actually happened, where you'd turn,
and then it would go past your vision,
because it's predicting, and then it would slot back.
You'd turn, it just did this thing all the time.
So that was already really good,
and now it's supposed to be a lot better,
so that's gonna help a lot.
There's the external camera, which we saw in Crystal Cove,
so it has tracking IR LEDs all across the front.
Now there's problems with this,
and this has been voiced by a lot more people than just me,
but especially in games like Valkyrie.
If you wanna flip over in Valkyrie, so you go like this,
and there's tracking IR LEDs,
camera sitting right in front of you,
and you take all those IR LEDs and go,
nope, you can't see them anymore,
there's probably gonna be issues.
I've played rollercoaster games
where I've done a 180 in my chair.
The camera can no longer see my IR LEDs.
There's gonna be some interesting stuff with this,
and that comes into a quote from Palmer,
saying DK2, Development Kit 2, is really for developers.
It is not for consumers.
We don't need consumers to buy this.
We don't want consumers to buy this
because the consumer version
is really going to be so much better.
I'm buying one, and I've recommended some people buy them,
but...
That was based on the rumors
that DK2 was gonna be pretty darn close
to the release version.
That was partially based on that, yes,
and it's based on the main people
that I'm recommending it to
are people that are gonna just play with it a lot
no matter what, and they'll get a lot of usage out of it,
so it'll be okay.
But don't buy this expecting for everything
to be like sugar and cream.
It's not all just gonna work out of the gate.
There isn't a ton of things
that work really well with it yet.
You're gonna be playing a lot of tech demos
or not playing with it.
There's gonna be a lot of things
that are different with the release version,
and he wants to make that clear.
He's crushed expectations on multiple platforms
of people saying that DK2 is gonna be the same thing
as the release version,
which I actually thought was fairly true
because most of the rumors have been fairly true so far,
and that was a pretty big rumor.
One thing that they're interested in doing
is making integrated audio
because they're tired of big, clunky headphones.
Again, with the Valkyrie idea,
if you flip your head over and your headphones fall off,
that's really immersion-breaking.
That being said, it's gonna increase the cost,
and I'm probably just gonna wanna replace them, so.
Right.
I don't know.
Hopefully they maybe have a model
that doesn't have it built in.
That's gonna be out on the consumer version,
so maybe, but again, I also doubt it.
It's probably gonna be on every single one.
They'll probably go Model T style.
You can have any color you want as long as it's black.
Yeah, yeah, so I wouldn't be surprised
if that's a thing at all, but we'll see.
It is definitely going to be removable.
That is something that he said,
so you can take them off or just not use them or something.
Because I'd wanna use my own earbuds.
Yeah, your own earbuds or your own headphones
if you come up with some solution
so they don't fly off your head or something like that.
People are gonna wanna do their own thing.
He realizes that, he knows that.
He's a audio freak anyways.
My headphones would probably be kinda awesome
because it comes like this.
It doesn't sit in the same spot as the headband
and it clamped quite tight.
Yeah, so it might work.
Mine won't at all.
Mine will go flying right off my head.
So I know I'll have to figure something out,
but I'll probably just wear earbuds.
So I don't know.
Not a big deal, but yeah, guys,
don't necessarily go rush and buy this.
I know a lot of people did.
A lot of people that I sit in the Team Street with
and talk on the After Pretty with have all bought it.
And I'm like, guys, guys, maybe no.
All right, our last topic of the day.
Walmart announces video game trade-in program
for store credit.
So I guess the advantage of trading in your games
at Walmart versus anywhere else
is that you can buy whatever you want
with the credit you get.
You could go in and literally trade Super Smash Brothers
for eggs if you really, really wanted to.
And then since you're a Smash Brothers player,
you'd probably want to throw them at people.
Do they have eggs in Smash Brothers?
I don't think so.
I don't know where I was going with that.
I know they don't have eggs in Smash Brothers.
Well, there could be, isn't there that one character?
Who's an egg character?
The last one I played was Brawl, so.
I don't remember.
Anyway, not the point.
Games but not consoles can be traded,
and they actually started this pilot program back in 2009.
And you need the retail box for the game,
so folks trading in much older games
are probably still gonna need to go to GameSpot
or something like that.
And the program for the resale of used games
that come in is not open yet,
but is going to be coming later this year,
but employees are able to buy them already.
The average credit payout per game is $35,
which seems like something that they're bragging about now,
but will not be able to sustain later,
because they have to make money on it,
otherwise how is this gonna work?
And we lied, and there's another topic.
Do you wanna talk about this at all, or are you able to?
Able to?
Yeah.
What do you mean?
Well, the thing that,
are you able to talk about it?
Oh, no.
Okay, forget it.
Okay, so WildStar, there's a 20% coupon code pre-order.
I guess that's all we really have to say.
Guys, thank you for watching the show.
If you are wondering if there will be a garage sale
after the show where we get rid of some stuff on Le Cheap,
yes, there will be.
That is one of the things
that will be in the garage sale today.
So stay tuned, and...
Before we go, just so everyone knows,
the build blog submissions thread will be closed soon.
There's exactly two, because people saw them
and were like, I give up.
So, pretty sure we know who's gonna win next week.
Come on, guys.
Anyways, yeah, bye.
I'll be back in a minute.
Here comes Carl.
He got the
car.
He got the car.