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Welcome to Episode 238 of Pelo Buddy TV, an unofficial Peloton podcast & Peloton news show. This week we cover the following topics: Peloton has added return fees to their “Home Trial” program. Peloton's CFO teased they are working on new third party integrations for sleep & recovery data. Peloton highlighted several features they have added to the Teams feature over the last year. Katie taught a Tread Bootcamp class with Andy – who will in turn teach a Row Bootcamp with Katie later. There is a flash challenge where you can earn a badge for taking the 3 Peloton Tri classes. There is a new artist series for Bad Bunny's new album “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” Peloton highlighted some classes in “This Week at Peloton.” Peloton will host in-person run clubs on September 17 in New York & London. There will be a Berlin Marathon shakeout run with Marcel Maurer & Jeffrey McEachern. Peloton has a new apparel collection in collaboration with “Stay Cool” Happy Birthday to Jon Hosking & Hannah Corbin this week. Matt Wilpers announced he is now a Dad. Cliff Dwenger shared his second child was born. Aditi Shah was featured in the New York Times. Alex Toussaint has a new collaboration with PUMA releasing this week. Kristin McGee is teaching yoga classes through her own app & platform. Peloton employee Jessie Malone was featured in the Apple Keynote. Class Picks of the Week Enjoy the show? Become a Pelo Buddy TV Supporter! Find details here: https://www.pelobuddy.com/membership-account/membership-levels/ You can find links to full articles on each of these topics from the episode page here: https://www.pelobuddy.com/pelo-buddy-tv-episode-238/ The show is also available via YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/PeloBuddy This episode is hosted by Chris Lewis (#PeloBuddy) and Amanda Segal (#Seglo3).
September, was bringst du uns diesmal Schönes? Die Stammhörer wissen, was diesen Monat auf der Agenda steht: Die alljährliche Apple Keynote für das iPhone, die Watches und noch ein bisschen mehr „Schi Schi“. Mit was will uns Tim also dieses Jahr das Geld, pardon ich meine das Funkeln in die Augen treiben? Natürlich haben sich Fabian und Thomas mal wieder in das Technikgewirr gestürzt und klären euch auf, damit ihr eure hart verdienten Euronen auch in das richtige Gerät investiert. Also schaltet euren Brokerpodcast aus und lasst euch von eurem Lieblingspodcast berieseln, jetzt wird es wieder wild.
Az Apple ismét felrobbantotta a tech-világot: bemutatkozott az iPhone 17 család, az ultrakönnyű iPhone Air, a brutál erős iPhone 17 Pro és Pro Max, a következő szintre lépő Apple Watch Ultra 3, valamint az AirPods Pro 3. Ebben az epizódban mindent kibeszélünk: a dizájntól a kamerákon át az AI-funkciókig, sőt még azt is, hogyan változtatják meg ezek az újdonságok a mindennapjainkat.Ha érdekel, merre tart a jövő mobilja, órája és fülhallgatója – akkor ez az adás kötelező!
You dive right into the Apple event fallout with Pilot Pete, Adam, and Dave weighing their wish lists against reality. The iPhone 17 shines with its blistering 3000-nit display, always-on ProMotion, liquid-cooling in the Pro models, and a storage bump to 256GB minimum. The real curveball? The iPhone Air. Sleek, […]
We dive into all the camera and pro video updates from Apple's iPhone keynote.--The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are the personal views of the hosts and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of their respective employers or organizations. This show is independently produced by VP Land without the use of any outside company resources, confidential information, or affiliations.
Directo tras la keynote del 9 de septiembre de 2025: mesa caliente, risas y una opinión impopular como titular. ¿Fue un “Apple lo cambia todo” o una presentación incremental con muchos detalles y poco “wow”? Desgranamos iPhone 17, el nuevo iPhone Air que divide a la comunidad, Apple Watch Ultra 3/Series 11/SE 3 y la bajada de precio de los nuevos AirPods, con debate sobre Apple Intelligence e iOS 26 (RC ya disponible) y si de verdad está a la vuelta de la esquina el gran salto integrado en todo el ecosistema. Lo más jugoso (sin rodeos):iPhone Air, ¿gancho o experimento? Más fino, cámara muy saliente, distribución “estilo Pixel”, lanyard oficial (¡69 €!), y dudas de batería —postureo vs utilidad real.Precios en España: iPhone 17 desde 959 €, iPhone Air 1.219 €, iPhone 17 Pro desde 1.319 €. AirPods nuevos a 249 € (más baratos que los anteriores). Apple Watch: Ultra 3 899 €, Series 11 449 €, SE 3 269 €.“Incremental” pero con matices: vapor chamber, cambio de materiales, capturas auto en vertical/horizontal y demo de traducción que no convence en escena.Apple Watch, batería aún justa y nuevas alertas de hipertensión (enfoque de tendencias, sin promesas clínicas en escena).Apple Intelligence & iOS 26: caramelitos hoy, promesa mañana. Soñamos con agentes creativos en Final Cut y flujos AI realmente integrados para el usuario medio.Apple Silicon, la base de todo: del M1 al M4 hay salto, pero el usuario tipo ya vive “sobrado”; para fuerza bruta (SD, entrenar modelos), mejor otras bestias.¿Te convence el iPhone Air o es puro postureo? ¿Y la keynote: necesaria y sensata… o la más floja en años? Dale al play y súmate al debate. SEO – palabras clave: Apple Keynote 2025, WWDC25 (opinión), iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Air, iPhone 17 Pro, Apple Watch Ultra 3, Series 11, SE 3, AirPods 2025 precio, iOS 26, Apple Intelligence, opinión impopular, análisis, debate, España.Conviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/el-garaje-de-cupertino--3153796/support.
Der Sommer ist da und mit ihm Apples jährliche WWDC-Keynote! Traditionell stürzen sich eure Podcast-Helden von Pixeltyps Nebengeräuschen, Fabian und Thomas, ins Getümmel, um die neuesten Ankündigungen für euch unter die Lupe zu nehmen. Dieses Jahr steht ein ganz besonderes Thema im Mittelpunkt: Das kolportierte größte Redesign seit iOS 7, das die Benutzeroberfläche auf allen Apple-Plattformen grundlegend neu interpretiert – Stichwort "Liquid Glass". Doch das ist noch längst nicht alles! Auch die heiß erwarteten KI-Funktionen, die in den Tiefen des Systems verwurzelt sind, sowie spannende Neuerungen für Produktivität und die Kommunikation werden beleuchtet. Ist das wirklich ein bahnbrechender Gamechanger für die Apple-Welt oder doch nur heiße Luft? Fabian und Thomas diskutieren die heißesten Gerüchte und ihre ganz persönlichen Einschätzungen zu all den spannenden Themen. Seid gespannt, ob Apple mit diesen Neuerungen wirklich ins Schwarze trifft – die Antwort gibt's nur bei uns! In diesem Sinne, macht euch einen kühlen Cocktail und genießt die nächste Stunde pure Information von eurem Lieblingspodcast. https://www.youtube.com/live/0_DjDdfqtUE?si=2xMZLTcOirtEXTEw
Apple just dropped the biggest design overhaul since iOS 7, and hosts Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard dive deep into everything announced at WWDC 2025, from the stunning "liquid glass" interface to game-changing iPad features that finally make it feel like a real computer. Liquid Glass Interface - Biggest visual redesign in many years! Translucent elements, enhanced lighting effects, and improved visual hierarchy Design Principles - Built around hierarchy, harmony, consistency, layering, depth, and vitality for a more expressive user experience Visual Effects - Enhanced Control Center with peek-through background visibility and ghostly transparent aesthetic Apple Intelligence Levels Up Live Translation - Real-time translation in Messages, FaceTime, and Phone calls running entirely on-device for privacy Visual Intelligence Expansion - Now works with screenshots and integrates with third-party apps like Etsy for product searches ChatGPT Integration - Enhanced Image Playground functionality with ChatGPT support across the platform Carplay & Music Updates Message Improvements - Tapback support directly in CarPlay without needing CarPlay Ultra Widgets Integration - CarPlay now supports widgets for enhanced navigation and app experiences Apple Music Features - Auto Mix with crossfade and beat matching, plus lyric translation for foreign language songs Phone App Overhaul Call Screening - System asks unknown callers for their name and reason before connecting you Hold Assist - Automatically waits on hold and notifies when a human agent returns to call Unified Interface - Streamlined call history and contact management in a single interface Gaming & Social Features Apple Games App - New dedicated hub for Apple Arcade with recommendations and social "Play Together" features Game Library - Comprehensive view of installed games with play history and activity tracking Messages Upgrades Built-in Polling - Native poll creation with expandable voting options and visual participant tracking Custom Backgrounds - Personalized chat backgrounds, including AI-generated options through Image Playground Group Payments - Apple Cash support for splitting expenses in group chats Smart Filtering - Automatic separation of unknown sender messages into a dedicated folder Apple Watch Enhancements Gesture Controls - New wrist flick gesture to dismiss notifications and return to watch face Configurable Widgets - Enhanced customization options for watch complications and widgets Integration Features - Seamless connection with iPhone's hold assist and other new iOS features Accessibility Advances System-wide Reader - Enhanced reading experience across all apps and interfaces Braille Improvements - Better support for connected Braille displays on iPhone Enhanced Features - Updates to Live Listen, background sounds, and Personal Voice capabilities iPadOS 26 Mac-Style Windows - Red, yellow, green window control buttons finally come to iPad Default Apps - Set specific applications to open different file types automatically Preview App - New system app for viewing and annotating PDFs and images Folder Customization - Color-coded folder system across Files app (also coming to Mac) Background Processing - Computationally intensive tasks can run in the background Shor These show notes have been truncated due to length. For the full show notes, visit https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today/episodes/756 Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard
Apple just dropped the biggest design overhaul since iOS 7, and hosts Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard dive deep into everything announced at WWDC 2025, from the stunning "liquid glass" interface to game-changing iPad features that finally make it feel like a real computer. Liquid Glass Interface - Biggest visual redesign in many years! Translucent elements, enhanced lighting effects, and improved visual hierarchy Design Principles - Built around hierarchy, harmony, consistency, layering, depth, and vitality for a more expressive user experience Visual Effects - Enhanced Control Center with peek-through background visibility and ghostly transparent aesthetic Apple Intelligence Levels Up Live Translation - Real-time translation in Messages, FaceTime, and Phone calls running entirely on-device for privacy Visual Intelligence Expansion - Now works with screenshots and integrates with third-party apps like Etsy for product searches ChatGPT Integration - Enhanced Image Playground functionality with ChatGPT support across the platform Carplay & Music Updates Message Improvements - Tapback support directly in CarPlay without needing CarPlay Ultra Widgets Integration - CarPlay now supports widgets for enhanced navigation and app experiences Apple Music Features - Auto Mix with crossfade and beat matching, plus lyric translation for foreign language songs Phone App Overhaul Call Screening - System asks unknown callers for their name and reason before connecting you Hold Assist - Automatically waits on hold and notifies when a human agent returns to call Unified Interface - Streamlined call history and contact management in a single interface Gaming & Social Features Apple Games App - New dedicated hub for Apple Arcade with recommendations and social "Play Together" features Game Library - Comprehensive view of installed games with play history and activity tracking Messages Upgrades Built-in Polling - Native poll creation with expandable voting options and visual participant tracking Custom Backgrounds - Personalized chat backgrounds, including AI-generated options through Image Playground Group Payments - Apple Cash support for splitting expenses in group chats Smart Filtering - Automatic separation of unknown sender messages into a dedicated folder Apple Watch Enhancements Gesture Controls - New wrist flick gesture to dismiss notifications and return to watch face Configurable Widgets - Enhanced customization options for watch complications and widgets Integration Features - Seamless connection with iPhone's hold assist and other new iOS features Accessibility Advances System-wide Reader - Enhanced reading experience across all apps and interfaces Braille Improvements - Better support for connected Braille displays on iPhone Enhanced Features - Updates to Live Listen, background sounds, and Personal Voice capabilities iPadOS 26 Mac-Style Windows - Red, yellow, green window control buttons finally come to iPad Default Apps - Set specific applications to open different file types automatically Preview App - New system app for viewing and annotating PDFs and images Folder Customization - Color-coded folder system across Files app (also coming to Mac) Background Processing - Computationally intensive tasks can run in the background Shor These show notes have been truncated due to length. For the full show notes, visit https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today/episodes/756 Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard
Apple just dropped the biggest design overhaul since iOS 7, and hosts Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard dive deep into everything announced at WWDC 2025, from the stunning "liquid glass" interface to game-changing iPad features that finally make it feel like a real computer. Liquid Glass Interface - Biggest visual redesign in many years! Translucent elements, enhanced lighting effects, and improved visual hierarchy Design Principles - Built around hierarchy, harmony, consistency, layering, depth, and vitality for a more expressive user experience Visual Effects - Enhanced Control Center with peek-through background visibility and ghostly transparent aesthetic Apple Intelligence Levels Up Live Translation - Real-time translation in Messages, FaceTime, and Phone calls running entirely on-device for privacy Visual Intelligence Expansion - Now works with screenshots and integrates with third-party apps like Etsy for product searches ChatGPT Integration - Enhanced Image Playground functionality with ChatGPT support across the platform Carplay & Music Updates Message Improvements - Tapback support directly in CarPlay without needing CarPlay Ultra Widgets Integration - CarPlay now supports widgets for enhanced navigation and app experiences Apple Music Features - Auto Mix with crossfade and beat matching, plus lyric translation for foreign language songs Phone App Overhaul Call Screening - System asks unknown callers for their name and reason before connecting you Hold Assist - Automatically waits on hold and notifies when a human agent returns to call Unified Interface - Streamlined call history and contact management in a single interface Gaming & Social Features Apple Games App - New dedicated hub for Apple Arcade with recommendations and social "Play Together" features Game Library - Comprehensive view of installed games with play history and activity tracking Messages Upgrades Built-in Polling - Native poll creation with expandable voting options and visual participant tracking Custom Backgrounds - Personalized chat backgrounds, including AI-generated options through Image Playground Group Payments - Apple Cash support for splitting expenses in group chats Smart Filtering - Automatic separation of unknown sender messages into a dedicated folder Apple Watch Enhancements Gesture Controls - New wrist flick gesture to dismiss notifications and return to watch face Configurable Widgets - Enhanced customization options for watch complications and widgets Integration Features - Seamless connection with iPhone's hold assist and other new iOS features Accessibility Advances System-wide Reader - Enhanced reading experience across all apps and interfaces Braille Improvements - Better support for connected Braille displays on iPhone Enhanced Features - Updates to Live Listen, background sounds, and Personal Voice capabilities iPadOS 26 Mac-Style Windows - Red, yellow, green window control buttons finally come to iPad Default Apps - Set specific applications to open different file types automatically Preview App - New system app for viewing and annotating PDFs and images Folder Customization - Color-coded folder system across Files app (also coming to Mac) Background Processing - Computationally intensive tasks can run in the background Shor These show notes have been truncated due to length. For the full show notes, visit https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today/episodes/756 Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard
Apple just dropped the biggest design overhaul since iOS 7, and hosts Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard dive deep into everything announced at WWDC 2025, from the stunning "liquid glass" interface to game-changing iPad features that finally make it feel like a real computer. Liquid Glass Interface - Biggest visual redesign in many years! Translucent elements, enhanced lighting effects, and improved visual hierarchy Design Principles - Built around hierarchy, harmony, consistency, layering, depth, and vitality for a more expressive user experience Visual Effects - Enhanced Control Center with peek-through background visibility and ghostly transparent aesthetic Apple Intelligence Levels Up Live Translation - Real-time translation in Messages, FaceTime, and Phone calls running entirely on-device for privacy Visual Intelligence Expansion - Now works with screenshots and integrates with third-party apps like Etsy for product searches ChatGPT Integration - Enhanced Image Playground functionality with ChatGPT support across the platform Carplay & Music Updates Message Improvements - Tapback support directly in CarPlay without needing CarPlay Ultra Widgets Integration - CarPlay now supports widgets for enhanced navigation and app experiences Apple Music Features - Auto Mix with crossfade and beat matching, plus lyric translation for foreign language songs Phone App Overhaul Call Screening - System asks unknown callers for their name and reason before connecting you Hold Assist - Automatically waits on hold and notifies when a human agent returns to call Unified Interface - Streamlined call history and contact management in a single interface Gaming & Social Features Apple Games App - New dedicated hub for Apple Arcade with recommendations and social "Play Together" features Game Library - Comprehensive view of installed games with play history and activity tracking Messages Upgrades Built-in Polling - Native poll creation with expandable voting options and visual participant tracking Custom Backgrounds - Personalized chat backgrounds, including AI-generated options through Image Playground Group Payments - Apple Cash support for splitting expenses in group chats Smart Filtering - Automatic separation of unknown sender messages into a dedicated folder Apple Watch Enhancements Gesture Controls - New wrist flick gesture to dismiss notifications and return to watch face Configurable Widgets - Enhanced customization options for watch complications and widgets Integration Features - Seamless connection with iPhone's hold assist and other new iOS features Accessibility Advances System-wide Reader - Enhanced reading experience across all apps and interfaces Braille Improvements - Better support for connected Braille displays on iPhone Enhanced Features - Updates to Live Listen, background sounds, and Personal Voice capabilities iPadOS 26 Mac-Style Windows - Red, yellow, green window control buttons finally come to iPad Default Apps - Set specific applications to open different file types automatically Preview App - New system app for viewing and annotating PDFs and images Folder Customization - Color-coded folder system across Files app (also coming to Mac) Background Processing - Computationally intensive tasks can run in the background Shor These show notes have been truncated due to length. For the full show notes, visit https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today/episodes/756 Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard
Apple just dropped the biggest design overhaul since iOS 7, and hosts Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard dive deep into everything announced at WWDC 2025, from the stunning "liquid glass" interface to game-changing iPad features that finally make it feel like a real computer. Liquid Glass Interface - Biggest visual redesign in many years! Translucent elements, enhanced lighting effects, and improved visual hierarchy Design Principles - Built around hierarchy, harmony, consistency, layering, depth, and vitality for a more expressive user experience Visual Effects - Enhanced Control Center with peek-through background visibility and ghostly transparent aesthetic Apple Intelligence Levels Up Live Translation - Real-time translation in Messages, FaceTime, and Phone calls running entirely on-device for privacy Visual Intelligence Expansion - Now works with screenshots and integrates with third-party apps like Etsy for product searches ChatGPT Integration - Enhanced Image Playground functionality with ChatGPT support across the platform Carplay & Music Updates Message Improvements - Tapback support directly in CarPlay without needing CarPlay Ultra Widgets Integration - CarPlay now supports widgets for enhanced navigation and app experiences Apple Music Features - Auto Mix with crossfade and beat matching, plus lyric translation for foreign language songs Phone App Overhaul Call Screening - System asks unknown callers for their name and reason before connecting you Hold Assist - Automatically waits on hold and notifies when a human agent returns to call Unified Interface - Streamlined call history and contact management in a single interface Gaming & Social Features Apple Games App - New dedicated hub for Apple Arcade with recommendations and social "Play Together" features Game Library - Comprehensive view of installed games with play history and activity tracking Messages Upgrades Built-in Polling - Native poll creation with expandable voting options and visual participant tracking Custom Backgrounds - Personalized chat backgrounds, including AI-generated options through Image Playground Group Payments - Apple Cash support for splitting expenses in group chats Smart Filtering - Automatic separation of unknown sender messages into a dedicated folder Apple Watch Enhancements Gesture Controls - New wrist flick gesture to dismiss notifications and return to watch face Configurable Widgets - Enhanced customization options for watch complications and widgets Integration Features - Seamless connection with iPhone's hold assist and other new iOS features Accessibility Advances System-wide Reader - Enhanced reading experience across all apps and interfaces Braille Improvements - Better support for connected Braille displays on iPhone Enhanced Features - Updates to Live Listen, background sounds, and Personal Voice capabilities iPadOS 26 Mac-Style Windows - Red, yellow, green window control buttons finally come to iPad Default Apps - Set specific applications to open different file types automatically Preview App - New system app for viewing and annotating PDFs and images Folder Customization - Color-coded folder system across Files app (also coming to Mac) Background Processing - Computationally intensive tasks can run in the background Shor These show notes have been truncated due to length. For the full show notes, visit https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today/episodes/756 Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard
Ein weiterer Sommer, eine weitere Keynote – und natürlich ein neuer Podcast. Die Tradition verlangt es, das Apple-Gesetz gebietet es. Auch in diesem Jahr lädt Apple zur jährlichen WWDC, und wer darf da nicht fehlen? Ganz klar, eure Podcast-Helden von Pixeltyps Nebengeräuschen! Fabian und Thomas haben sich erneut in die Welt von Apples neuem Software-Hype gestürzt. Dieses Mal im Fokus: Das größte Redesign seit iOS 7. Ob das wirklich ein echter Gamechanger ist oder nur Glasbläserei – das erfahrt ihr nur bei uns. In diesem Sinne, macht euch einen kühlen Cocktail und genießt die nächste Stunde pure Information von eurem Lieblingspodcast.
Trump setzt US-Marines in Los Angeles ein.
We share our thoughts on this year's Apple Keynote from WWDC. Justin share's his thoughts on China's ban on AI before entrance exams. And where is Apple on a deployment date for Apple Intelligence? Starring Sarah Lane, Tom Merritt, Justin Robert Young, Terrance Gaines, Roger Chang, Joe. To read the show notes in a separate page click here! Support the show on Patreon by becoming a supporter!
Dieses Mal ohne großes Tamtam und Show hat Apple ein neues iPhone auf den Markt gebracht, und zwar das iPhone 16e. Apples Antwort für den preiswerten Einstieg in die Obstabteilung. Aber ist das wirklich so? Um euch dieses Kopfzerbrechen zu nehmen, haben sich Fabian und Thomas wieder in die Recherche begeben, um dies für euch herauszufinden. Die Folge ist wie sein Thema kurz und knackig. Also rein mit den Kopfhörern und lasst euch den Faktencheck nicht entgehen.
Simon redet mit Max über die letzte Apple Keynote und die Vorstellung des Iphone 16
Welches war dein erstes Handy? Welches wolltest du immer haben, durftest aber nicht? Wie viel sozialen Druck hat dir dieses kleine, fiese Gerät schon beschert? Im Jahre 2024 kostet dich der Ferrari unter den Smartphones nur schlappe 2000€. Mit nicht weniger coolem Sh*t sollte man Kinder in die Schule schicken, sonst gibt's Ärger! Doch was tun, wenn man im Garten keine Bitcoins anbaut oder Mama sich erdreistet, kein internationales Immobilien-Imperium anzuführen? Dann hilft eventuell, bei der nächsten Apple Keynote ausnahmsweise mal wirklich hinzuhören, ob der Ferrari für die Hosentasche wirklich der schnellste ist, oder man mit einem fies aufgemotzten Mofa nicht irgendwie auch ans Ziel kommt. Des Weiteren bringen wir heißen Gossip mit und geben einen kleinen Einblick, was draus werden kann, wenn man unfreundlichen Promis im Zug begegnet. Zückt eure überteuerten Smartphones und höret her: Folge 170 kickt härter als Weihnachten in Venezuela! Tickets dudes LIVE UNCUT: https://shop.myticket.de/selection/event/seat?perfId=10229214442415&table=false&choiceSelectionDone=false&productId=10229214342426&tourId=10229214426154 Instaram: https://www.instagram.com/niklasunddavid/?hl=de dudes. Der Podcast: https://www.instagram.com/dudesderpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@niklasunddavid Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte!: https://linktr.ee/dudes_podcast Du möchtest Werbung in diesem Podcast schalten? Dann erfahre hier mehr über die Werbemöglichkeiten bei Seven.One Audio: https://www.seven.one/portfolio/sevenone-audio
Ez most milyen év volt? S vagy hűha meg AI meg mivan??? iPhone16, iPhone 16 Pro, iPhone 16 Pro Max Watch10, AirPods Pro, AirPods MaxYT: https://www.youtube.com/xabesbarataiKözösség: t.me/xabesbarataiBB: twitter.com/myrtlewoodsterDix: twitter.com/dikangaborSanko: twitter.com/NagySnd35898231Zoli: https://twitter.com/CsomarZoXaB: https://twitter.com/xab83email: xab@me.com
27 nap 1800 belföldi kilométer, újra beilleszkedni nyaralás után, lagom helyreigazítás, LAGOM, LYKe-KE, HYGGE, rossmann gadget, fotó nyomtatás, memotik https://apps.apple.com/hu/app/memotik/id6463273991, temu és más szarok, Onewheel Pint S bejelentés, e-foil, NFL szezon indul, délutáni alvás, dji neo unboxing, hover x1, flag football, https://nflflag.com/coaches/flag-football-rules/how-to-play-flag-football, VOLVO EX30, vége a német autóiparnak, 23 legtöbbet eladott autója https://www.statista.com/statistics/239229/most-sold-car-models-worldwide/Remarkable , elektromos autózás, jégeső para,Remarkable Paper Pro, https://www.eink.com/brand/detail/Gallery, ami jó azt nem kell lecserélni, Apple Keynote hétfőn, új iPhone, Watch, DJI NEO https://ipon.hu/shop/termek/dji-neo-fly-more-combo/2305448, GoPro13YT: https://www.youtube.com/xabesbarataiKözösség: t.me/xabesbarataiAdrián: https://twitter.com/adrianszpiCsomár Zoli: x.com/CsomarZoKam: twitter.com/fkamilloXaB: https://twitter.com/xab83email: xab@me.com
Dobrodošli na Zalet Podkast — podkast o dizajnu digitalnih proizvoda!We have a new guest! It's also our first episode in English! In this episode, we had the privilege of hosting Andy Chung. Andy is a product designer and co-founder of Read.cv. We had the chance to talk about his time at Facebook, consumer software, and what it's like building Read.cv
We've discussed the underwhelming Apple keynote, highlighting the lack of significant updates and innovation
Aktienpodcast mit Philipp & Marcel von Modern Value Investing
Send us a Text Message.I've had a bit of a delay with some episodes, but I promise you, you'll enjoy this one. It's a pretty simple podcast, but an enjoyable show nonetheless. You have to love how your content puts you in a position to create. You'll see what I mean when you listen to this episode. The Apple Keynote happened (of course). I got an opportunity to be a guest on an internet radio station. And the walking podcast updates are shared. These things and many more on another episode of thePass. I hope you enjoy it. #PassTheMessage #ThePassBTPodMusic for Intro & Outro:Tanya ChinaLinks:Bagby Referral CodeBrick App 10% Off (promo Code BRYANBRICK)Ono Affiliate link (code BryanTaylor)Bullet Journal Link (10% Off with code BRYANBUJO)Flow Page Link (All podcast platforms)10% Discount from AnkerBlue Yeti XPeachie Clean RVA988 Suicide & Crisis Line Bryan's NewsletterRely on BOT, LLCExternal Links:Microjournaling template (Spacetime)Who Ya Got Guest appearance
Apple Keynote. This is a powerful app that is the equivalent to Microsoft power point. The TTJ Instructor team walks you through creating slide shows, adding text, shapes, media, and even formatting shapes and text you add. Lots of information, rewind as needed, but this session will teach you as a VoiceOver user or even sited user how to create great presentations.
Iscriviti al mio canale youtubeDimmi la tua su Twitter, su Threads, su Telegram, su Mastodon, su BlueSky o su Instagram.Mail jacoporeale@yahoo.it Scopri dove ascoltare il podcast e lascia una recensione su Apple Podcast o Spotify.Ascolta An iPad guy su YouTube Podcast.Supporta il podcast.
Čipům Apple Silicon začíná růst konkurence.
Před vývojářskou konferencí se ještě dočkáme jedné Apple Keynote. Nové produkty Apple představí 7. 5. a i podle vizuálu pozvánky bude keynote zaměřená na iPady.
Dnešní díl možná kdekoho nakrkne.
Moderatorin Anna Kalinowsky, heise-online-Chefredakteur Dr. Volker Zota (@DocZet) und Malte Kirchner (@maltekir) sprechen in dieser Ausgabe der #heiseshow unter anderem über folgende Themen: - Apple präsentiert neue Macs: Malte war in den USA und hat alle Infos zu Apples Keynote mitgebracht. Wir sprechen über den neuen iMac, die neuen MacBooks und die M3-Chips. - Die Deutsche Bahn möchte Fenster in Zügen für besseren Mobilfunkempfang nachlasern: Für 50 Millionen Euro möchte die Deutsche Bahn die metallbeschichteten Fenster in ihren Fernzügen lasern, um einen besseren Mobilfunkempfang zu ermöglichen. Ist das eine gute Idee oder hätte es günstigere Alternativen gegeben? - Word wird 40: Obwohl das Textprogramm nicht direkt als großer Erfolg startete und auch heute noch reihenweise Nutzer in die Verzweiflung treibt, ist Microsoft Word seit vielen Jahren Marktführer. Was ist das Erfolgsrezept? Außerdem wieder mit dabei: ein Nerd-Geburtstag, das WTF der Woche und knifflige Quizfragen.
Moderatorin Anna Kalinowsky, heise-online-Chefredakteur Dr. Volker Zota (@DocZet) und Malte Kirchner (@maltekir) sprechen in dieser Ausgabe der #heiseshow unter anderem über folgende Themen: - Apple präsentiert neue Macs: Malte war in den USA und hat alle Infos zu Apples Keynote mitgebracht. Wir sprechen über den neuen iMac, die neuen MacBooks und die M3-Chips. - Die Deutsche Bahn möchte Fenster in Zügen für besseren Mobilfunkempfang nachlasern: Für 50 Millionen Euro möchte die Deutsche Bahn die metallbeschichteten Fenster in ihren Fernzügen lasern, um einen besseren Mobilfunkempfang zu ermöglichen. Ist das eine gute Idee oder hätte es günstigere Alternativen gegeben? - Word wird 40: Obwohl das Textprogramm nicht direkt als großer Erfolg startete und auch heute noch reihenweise Nutzer in die Verzweiflung treibt, ist Microsoft Word seit vielen Jahren Marktführer. Was ist das Erfolgsrezept? Außerdem wieder mit dabei: ein Nerd-Geburtstag, das WTF der Woche und knifflige Quizfragen.
The guys have a little gear envy drooling over Sony's new Burano cinema camera while providing some practical explanations to cinema camera specs alongside more budget-friendly camera recommendations. They also discuss the potential implications of the ChatGPT based Open Interpreter with special guest Blaise Nelson, and they share some initial opinions of the featured products from Apple's September 12th keynote. Episode Timestamps:2:18 - OpenAi's Code Interpreter... in Your Terminal w/ Certified Pro Blaise Nelson20:13 - September 12th Apple Event40:27 - What We Can Learn From Sony's Ultimate Cinema CameraJoin the Blackbar Discord to keep the conversation going:http://discord.blk.bar/
Apple Keynote event. iOS 17 Main blind and low vision Accessibility Features Apple Keynote event. iPhone Design & display The Super Retina XDR display on iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus is great for watching content, and playing games. And, when it is sunny, peak outdoor brightness reaches up to 2000 nits — twice as bright as the previous generation. The all-new Action button on iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max replaces the single-function switch used to toggle between ring and silent, offering additional options such as camera, flashlight or magnifier. Performance iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus boast the fast and efficient A16 Bionic chip. With two high-performance cores that use 20 percent less power and four high-efficiency cores, the 6-core CPU is faster than the previous generation and easily handles intensive tasks while delivering extraordinary battery life. iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max are powered by A17 Pro, the industry's first 3-nanometre chip. A17 Pro brings improvements to the entire chip, including the biggest GPU redesign in Apple's history. The new CPU is up to 10 percent faster, and the Neural Engine is now up to 2x faster, powering features like autocorrect and Personal Voice in iOS 17. The pro-class GPU is up to 20 percent faster and unlocks entirely new experiences, featuring a new 6-core design that increases peak performance and energy efficiency. And with hardware-accelerated ray tracing, iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max bring true-to-life gaming to the palm of users' hands with console titles never before seen on a smartphone. Camera The advanced camera system on iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus helps users capture everyday moments. A 48MP Main camera shoots sharp photos and videos while capturing fine details, with a quad-pixel sensor and 100 percent Focus Pixels for fast autofocus. An additional 2x Telephoto option on iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus gives users three optical-quality zoom levels — 0.5x, 1x, 2x — for the first time on an iPhone dual-camera system. Using the power of computational photography, a new 24MP super-high-resolution default comes to the entire iPhone 15 lineup, offering incredible image quality at a practical file size ideal for storing and sharing. Next-generation portraits lets users shoot portrait shots of people, dogs and cats from without having to switch to Portrait mode. iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max both pack the equivalent of seven pro lenses — all enabled by A17 Pro. The Main camera allows users to switch between three popular focal lengths — 24 mm, 28 mm, and 35 mm. iPhone 15 Pro features an expansive 3x Telephoto camera, and iPhone 15 Pro Max provides the longest optical zoom ever on iPhone: 5x at 120 mm. ProRes video can be recorded directly to external storage, enabling higher recording options up to 4K at 60 fps, and greater flexibility on set when using iPhone as the main camera. Connectivity The iPhone 15 lineup offers convenient new ways to charge, with USB-C - a universally accepted standard for charging and transferring data, allowing the same cable to charge iPhone, Mac, iPad, and the updated AirPods Pro (2nd generation). On the Pro models, the new USB-C port supports USB 3 for data transfer speeds up to 10 gigabits per second, up to 20x faster than before. All new iPhone 15 models feature the second-generation Ultra Wideband chip, enabling two iPhone devices with this chip to connect at three times the range as before. This opens up a new way to use Precision Finding for Find My friends, so users can share their location and find each other, even in crowds. We are also excited to announce the launch of Apple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2 today! Apple Watch Series 9 Top Features New S9 SiP Most powerful watch chip that delivers systemwide improvements and brand-new features New 4-core Neural Engine that can process machine learning tasks up to twice as fast when compared with Series 8 Double Tap Enabled by the faster Neural Engine which processes data from the accelerometer, gyroscope and optical heart sensor The new machine learning algorithm detects the unique signature of tiny wrist movements and changes in blood flow when the index finger and thumb form a double tap Double tap allows users to quickly and conveniently perform some of the most common actions by controlling the primary button in an app For example, it can be used to answer and end a phone call, take a photo with Camera Remote app on Apple Watch and more On-device Siri For requests that do not require information from internet, they can be processed on device, e.g. Setting a timer or starting a workout The new Neural Engine also makes dictation up to 25 percent more accurate than Apple Watch Series 8. With on-device processing, Siri can also be used to access data from the Health app for health- and fitness-related enquiries. Available as a software update later this year. Precision Finding S9 SiP also includes a second-generation Ultra Wideband (UWB) chip to enable Precision Finding for the iPhone 15 family. This provides distance and direction, as well as visual, haptic, and audio guidance to a misplaced iPhone Display brightness The power-efficient S9 SiP and advanced display architecture increase the maximum brightness up to 2000 nits, double that of Series 8 In dark rooms or early mornings, the display can also lower to just one nit Apple Watch Ultra 2 Top Features On top of all the same, new, powerful features available on Series 9, Apple Watch Ultra 2 is also updated with these new features: New Modular Ultra watch face Designed to take advantage of the large display, the outermost edge presents real-time data, including seconds, altitude or depth This watch face also offers the most information of any Apple digital watch face Expanded altitude range Tested for use across 500m below sea level and up to 9000m to ascend the world's tallest peaks Updated Oceanic+ app A new water sport - free diving - is now available on the updated Oceanic+ app from Huish Outdoors Depth app The updated Depth app now saves a log of each session so users can review the recent sessions on Apple Watch Ultra Complete history of all dives with a GPS entry point can also be viewed on Fitness app on iPhone We also saw new AirPod Pro!
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This week's topics: Apple iPhone event review Keynote poker results Guests: Jeff Gamet, David Ginsburg, Chuck Joiner, Patrice Brend'amour
Wed, 13 Sep 2023 02:53:48 +0000 https://www.thepioneer.de/originals/thepioneer-briefing-business-class-edition/podcasts/bdi-chef-siegfried-russwurm-ueber-deutschlands-schwaechelnde-wirtschaft 9417205e33c852f991c76f1e41b4743f Gabor Steingart präsentiert das Pioneer Briefing Sie möchten Teil unserer Mission werden und unabhängigen und werbefreien Journalismus unterstützen? Dann werden Sie jetzt Pioneer Inhalt der heutigen Folge: 1.(00:00:17) Marokko und Libyen werden von schweren Naturkatastrophen heimgesucht. Podcast-Redaktionsleiter Stefan Rupp spricht mit der Berliner Tänzerin und Tanzpädagogin RAKSAN über die Situation vor Ort. 2.(00:07:33) Im Interview: ThyssenKrupp´s Aufsichtsratschef und Chef des Bundesverbandes der Deutschen Industrie, Siegfried Russwurm über den Zustand der deutschen Wirtschaft. Er spricht im live Gespräch mit Gabor Steingart über Rezession und Deindustrialisierung. 3.(00:22:08) Anne Schwedt berichtet, welche Neuigkeiten auf der Apple Keynote präsentiert wurden. 4.(00:25:00) Die alten Feinde Gerhard Schröder und Oskar Lafontaine nähern sich wieder an. Sie haben Feedback oder Fragen? Melden Sie sich gerne beim Pioneer Support. 2324 full Gabor Steingart präsentiert das Pioneer Briefing no Gabor Stein
Do Apple Keynote už stříháme metr
Léto končí a s ním patrně i pověstná okurková sezóna
This MacVoices Live! session wraps with Chuck Joiner, David Ginsburg, Brian Flanagan-Arthurs, Eric Bolden, Brittany Smith, Guy Serle, Jeff Gamet, Web Bixby, Kelly Guimont and Mark Fuccio discussing repurposing old iMacs as monitors, Apple's keynote video editing techniques, the ongoing situation at Reddit, and the release of the pilot episode of Apple TV+ show Silo on Twitter. (Part 3) This edition of MacVoices is supported by MacVoices Magazine, our free magazine on Flipboard. Updated daily with the best articles on the web to help you do more with your Apple, access MacVoices Magazine content on Flipboard, on the web, or in your favorite RSS reader. Show Notes: Chapters: 0:02:23 Limitations of using an iMac as a monitor0:03:40 AstroPad's Lunar Display: A Chat Room Discussion0:04:23 Analyzing Apple's Keynote Videos: A Filmmaker's Perspective0:06:00 YouTuber Breaks Down Slick Techniques in Apple Keynote Videos0:06:29 Reddit: The Controversial Not Safe for Work Situation0:07:08 Reddit users fighting back against data monetization0:08:53 Reddit moderators threatened by the platform's new policies0:10:38 Reddit's questionable decisions amidst impending IPO and data monetization0:13:21 Frustration with YouTube as a platform choice0:15:05 Apple TV's strategy for promoting their shows0:16:34 Mistake of releasing on Twitter instead of YouTube0:17:01 Twitter and Elon Musk: An Unlikely Combination0:19:36 The Unpaid Employees of Twitter and Apple0:21:06 Excitement for upcoming fight between Musk and Zuckerberg Links: A look at the mind-blowingly clever editing techniques used in Apple keynote videoshttps://9to5mac.com/2023/06/21/apple-keynote-videos-transitions-and-editing/ The Morning After: Popular subreddits welcomed adult content to protest Reddit changeshttps://www.engadget.com/the-morning-after-popular-subreddits-welcomed-adult-content-to-protest-reddit-changes-111510310.html Reddit threatened protesting moderators: Subreddits ‘cannot remain closed'https://9to5mac.com/2023/06/23/reddit-threatened-protesting-moderators/ Apple Shares Full First Episode of Sci-Fi Show 'Silo' on Twitterhttps://www.macrumors.com/2023/06/27/silo-first-episode-twitter/ Guests: Web Bixby has been in the insurance business for 40 years and has been an Apple user for longer than that.You can catch up with him on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Eric Bolden is into macOS, plants, sci-fi, food, and is a rural internet supporter. You can connect with him on Twitter, by email at embolden@mac.com, on Mastodon at @eabolden@techhub.social, and on his blog, Trending At Work. Brian Flanigan-Arthurs is an educator with a passion for providing results-driven, innovative learning strategies for all students, but particularly those who are at-risk. He is also a tech enthusiast who has a particular affinity for Apple since he first used the Apple IIGS as a student. You can contact Brian on twitter as @brian8944. He also recently opened a Mastodon account at @brian8944@mastodon.cloud. Mark Fuccio is actively involved in high tech startup companies, both as a principle at piqsure.com, or as a marketing advisor through his consulting practice Tactics Sells High Tech, Inc. Mark was a proud investor in Microsoft from the mid-1990's selling in mid 2000, and hopes one day that MSFT will be again an attractive investment. You can contact Mark through Twitter, LinkedIn, or on Mastodon. Jeff Gamet is a technology blogger, podcaster, author, and public speaker. Previously, he was The Mac Observer's Managing Editor, and the TextExpander Evangelist for Smile. He has presented at Macworld Expo, RSA Conference, several WordCamp events, along with many other conferences. You can find him on several podcasts such as The Mac Show, The Big Show, MacVoices, Mac OS Ken, This Week in iOS, and more. Jeff is easy to find on social media as @jgamet on Twitter and Instagram, jeffgamet on LinkedIn., @jgamet@mastodon.social on Mastodon, and on his YouTube Channel at YouTube.com/jgamet. David Ginsburg is the host of the weekly podcast In Touch With iOS where he discusses all things iOS, iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Apple Watch, and related technologies. He is an IT professional supporting Mac, iOS and Windows users. Visit his YouTube channel at https://youtube.com/daveg65 and find and follow him on Twitter @daveg65 and on Mastodon at @daveg65@mastodon.cloud Kelly Guimont is a podcaster and friend of the Rebel Alliance. You can also hear her on The Aftershow with Mike Rose, and she still has more to say which she saves for Twitter and Mastodon. Andrew Orr is a freelance writer and amateur photographer and Contributing Editor at AppleInsider. He loves Apple products and enjoys writing and sharing all things tech. When he's not writing about Apple, you can often find him snapping photos with his iPhone. Follow him on Twitter or sample his musical tastes on Apple Music…if you dare. Jim Rea has been an independent Mac developer continuously since 1984. He is the founder of ProVUE Development, and the author of Panorama X, ProVUE's ultra fast RAM based database software for the macOS platform. Follow Jim at provue.com and via @provuejim on Twitter. Guy Serle, best known for being one of the co-hosts of the MyMac Podcast, sincerely apologizes for anything he has done or caused to have happened while in possession of dangerous podcasting equipment. He should know better but being a blonde from Florida means he's probably incapable of understanding the damage he has wrought. Guy is also the author of the novel, The Maltese Cube. You can follow his exploits on Twitter, catch him on Mac to the Future on Facebook, at @Macparrot@mastodon.social, and find everything at VertShark.com. Brittany Smith is a trained cognitive neuroscientist who provides ADD/ADHD, technology, and productivity coaching through her business, Devise and Conquer, along with companion video courses for folks with ADHD. She's also the cofounder of The ADHD Guild, a community for nerdy folks with ADHD. She, herself, is a self-designated “well-rounded geek”. She can be found on Twitter as @addliberator, on Mastodon as @addliberator@pdx.social, and on YouTube with tech tips. Support: Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon http://patreon.com/macvoices Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect: Web: http://macvoices.com Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner http://www.twitter.com/macvoices Mastodon: https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner MacVoices Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/ MacVoices Group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe: Audio in iTunes Video in iTunes Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher: Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss
This MacVoices Live! session wraps with Chuck Joiner, David Ginsburg, Brian Flanagan-Arthurs, Eric Bolden, Brittany Smith, Guy Serle, Jeff Gamet, Web Bixby, Kelly Guimont and Mark Fuccio discussing repurposing old iMacs as monitors, Apple's keynote video editing techniques, the ongoing situation at Reddit, and the release of the pilot episode of Apple TV+ show Silo on Twitter. (Part 3) This edition of MacVoices is supported by MacVoices Magazine, our free magazine on Flipboard. Updated daily with the best articles on the web to help you do more with your Apple, access MacVoices Magazine content on Flipboard, on the web, or in your favorite RSS reader. Show Notes: Chapters: 0:02:23 Limitations of using an iMac as a monitor 0:03:40 AstroPad's Lunar Display: A Chat Room Discussion 0:04:23 Analyzing Apple's Keynote Videos: A Filmmaker's Perspective 0:06:00 YouTuber Breaks Down Slick Techniques in Apple Keynote Videos 0:06:29 Reddit: The Controversial Not Safe for Work Situation 0:07:08 Reddit users fighting back against data monetization 0:08:53 Reddit moderators threatened by the platform's new policies 0:10:38 Reddit's questionable decisions amidst impending IPO and data monetization 0:13:21 Frustration with YouTube as a platform choice 0:15:05 Apple TV's strategy for promoting their shows 0:16:34 Mistake of releasing on Twitter instead of YouTube 0:17:01 Twitter and Elon Musk: An Unlikely Combination 0:19:36 The Unpaid Employees of Twitter and Apple 0:21:06 Excitement for upcoming fight between Musk and Zuckerberg Links: A look at the mind-blowingly clever editing techniques used in Apple keynote videos https://9to5mac.com/2023/06/21/apple-keynote-videos-transitions-and-editing/ The Morning After: Popular subreddits welcomed adult content to protest Reddit changes https://www.engadget.com/the-morning-after-popular-subreddits-welcomed-adult-content-to-protest-reddit-changes-111510310.html Reddit threatened protesting moderators: Subreddits ‘cannot remain closed' https://9to5mac.com/2023/06/23/reddit-threatened-protesting-moderators/ Apple Shares Full First Episode of Sci-Fi Show 'Silo' on Twitter https://www.macrumors.com/2023/06/27/silo-first-episode-twitter/ Guests: Web Bixby has been in the insurance business for 40 years and has been an Apple user for longer than that.You can catch up with him on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Eric Bolden is into macOS, plants, sci-fi, food, and is a rural internet supporter. You can connect with him on Twitter, by email at embolden@mac.com, on Mastodon at @eabolden@techhub.social, and on his blog, Trending At Work. Brian Flanigan-Arthurs is an educator with a passion for providing results-driven, innovative learning strategies for all students, but particularly those who are at-risk. He is also a tech enthusiast who has a particular affinity for Apple since he first used the Apple IIGS as a student. You can contact Brian on twitter as @brian8944. He also recently opened a Mastodon account at @brian8944@mastodon.cloud. Mark Fuccio is actively involved in high tech startup companies, both as a principle at piqsure.com, or as a marketing advisor through his consulting practice Tactics Sells High Tech, Inc. Mark was a proud investor in Microsoft from the mid-1990's selling in mid 2000, and hopes one day that MSFT will be again an attractive investment. You can contact Mark through Twitter, LinkedIn, or on Mastodon. Jeff Gamet is a technology blogger, podcaster, author, and public speaker. Previously, he was The Mac Observer's Managing Editor, and the TextExpander Evangelist for Smile. He has presented at Macworld Expo, RSA Conference, several WordCamp events, along with many other conferences. You can find him on several podcasts such as The Mac Show, The Big Show, MacVoices, Mac OS Ken, This Week in iOS, and more. Jeff is easy to find on social media as @jgamet on Twitter and Instagram, jeffgamet on LinkedIn., @jgamet@mastodon.social on Mastodon, and on his YouTube Channel at YouTube.com/jgamet. David Ginsburg is the host of the weekly podcast In Touch With iOS where he discusses all things iOS, iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Apple Watch, and related technologies. He is an IT professional supporting Mac, iOS and Windows users. Visit his YouTube channel at https://youtube.com/daveg65 and find and follow him on Twitter @daveg65 and on Mastodon at @daveg65@mastodon.cloud Kelly Guimont is a podcaster and friend of the Rebel Alliance. You can also hear her on The Aftershow with Mike Rose, and she still has more to say which she saves for Twitter and Mastodon. Andrew Orr is a freelance writer and amateur photographer and Contributing Editor at AppleInsider. He loves Apple products and enjoys writing and sharing all things tech. When he's not writing about Apple, you can often find him snapping photos with his iPhone. Follow him on Twitter or sample his musical tastes on Apple Music…if you dare. Jim Rea has been an independent Mac developer continuously since 1984. He is the founder of ProVUE Development, and the author of Panorama X, ProVUE's ultra fast RAM based database software for the macOS platform. Follow Jim at provue.com and via @provuejim on Twitter. Guy Serle, best known for being one of the co-hosts of the MyMac Podcast, sincerely apologizes for anything he has done or caused to have happened while in possession of dangerous podcasting equipment. He should know better but being a blonde from Florida means he's probably incapable of understanding the damage he has wrought. Guy is also the author of the novel, The Maltese Cube. You can follow his exploits on Twitter, catch him on Mac to the Future on Facebook, at @Macparrot@mastodon.social, and find everything at VertShark.com. Brittany Smith is a trained cognitive neuroscientist who provides ADD/ADHD, technology, and productivity coaching through her business, Devise and Conquer, along with companion video courses for folks with ADHD. She's also the cofounder of The ADHD Guild, a community for nerdy folks with ADHD. She, herself, is a self-designated “well-rounded geek”. She can be found on Twitter as @addliberator, on Mastodon as @addliberator@pdx.social, and on YouTube with tech tips. Support: Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon http://patreon.com/macvoices Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect: Web: http://macvoices.com Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner http://www.twitter.com/macvoices Mastodon: https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner MacVoices Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/ MacVoices Group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe: Audio in iTunes Video in iTunes Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher: Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss 00:02:23 Limitations of using an iMac as a monitor 00:03:39 AstroPad's Lunar Display: A Chat Room Discussion 00:04:23 Analyzing Apple's Keynote Videos: A Filmmaker's Perspective 00:06:00 YouTuber Breaks Down Slick Techniques in Apple Keynote Videos 00:06:29 Reddit: The Controversial Not Safe for Work Situation 00:07:08 Legal vs Monetization: Reddit's Dilemma 00:08:52 Reddit moderators threatened by the platform's new policies 00:10:37 Reddit's questionable decisions amidst impending IPO and data monetization 00:13:20 Frustration with YouTube as a platform choice 00:15:05 Apple TV's strategy for promoting their shows 00:16:33 Mistake of releasing on Twitter instead of YouTube 00:17:01 Twitter and Elon Musk: An Unlikely Combination 00:19:35 The Unpaid Employees of Twitter and Apple 00:21:06 Excitement for upcoming fight between Elon Musk and Zuckerberg 00:23:38 Thank you and closing remarks from the host
Apple had its keynote for WWDC 2023. We watched live and broke it all down afterward. They finally announced Apple Vision Pro, released some new Macs, and reviewed all the OS updates we'll see this fall. Watch the full 2+ hour keynote from Apple Keynote: 15-inch Macbook Pro (02:25) Mac Studio (03:45) Mac Pro (04:45) iOS 17 (06:55) iPadOS 17 (17:30) macOS Sonoma (20:35) Safari (23:50) AirPods and Audio (27:50) tvOS (28:55) watchOS 10 (30:00) Apple Vision Pro (33:25) Find us elsewhere: https://notpicks.com https://www.notnerd.com https://www.youtube.com/c/Notnerd https://ratethispodcast.com/notnerd https://www.tiktok.com/@notnerdpod https://www.twitter.com/n0tnerd/ https://www.instagram.com/n0tnerd https://www.facebook.com/n0tnerd/ info@Notnerd.com Call or text 608.618.NERD(6373) If you would like to help support Notnerd financially, mentally, or physically, don't hesitate to get in touch with us via any of the methods above. Consider any product/app links to be affiliate links.
Darko Mesaroš, Senior Developer Advocate at AWS, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss all the weird and wonderful things that can be done with old hardware, as well as the necessary skills for being a successful Developer Advocate. Darko walks through how he managed to deploy Kubernetes on a computer from 1986, as well as the trade-offs we've made in computer technology as hardware has progressed. Corey and Darko also explore the forgotten art of optimizing when you're developing, and how it can help to cut costs. Darko also shares what he feels is the key skill every Developer Advocate needs to have, and walks through how he has structured his presentations to ensure he is captivating and delivering value to his audience.About DarkoDarko is a Senior Developer Advocate based in Seattle, WA. His goal is to share his passion and technological know-how with Engineers, Developers, Builders, and tech enthusiasts across the world. If it can be automated, Darko will definitely try to do so. Most of his focus is towards DevOps and Management Tools, where automation, pipelines, and efficient developer tools is the name of the game – click less and code more so you do not repeat yourself ! Darko also collects a lot of old technology and tries to make it do what it should not. Like deploy AWS infrastructure through a Commodore 64.Links Referenced: AWS: https://aws.amazon.com/ Blog post RE deploying Kubernetes on a TRS-80: https://www.buildon.aws/posts/i-deployed-kubernetes-with-a-1986-tandy-102-portable-computer AWS Twitch: https://twitch.tv/aws Twitter: https://twitter.com/darkosubotica Mastodon: https://hachyderm.io/@darkosubotica TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Chronosphere. When it costs more money and time to observe your environment than it does to build it, there's a problem. With Chronosphere, you can shape and transform observability data based on need, context and utility. Learn how to only store the useful data you need to see in order to reduce costs and improve performance at chronosphere.io/corey-quinn. That's chronosphere.io/corey-quinn. And my thanks to them for sponsor ing my ridiculous nonsense. Corey: Do you wish your developers had less permanent access to AWS? Has the complexity of Amazon's reference architecture for temporary elevated access caused you to sob uncontrollably? With Sym, you can protect your cloud infrastructure with customizable, just-in-time access workflows that can be setup in minutes. By automating the access request lifecycle, Sym helps you reduce the scope of default access while keeping your developers moving quickly. Say goodbye to your cloud access woes with Sym. Go to symops.com/corey to learn more. That's S-Y-M-O-P-S.com/coreyCorey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and my guest today is almost as bizarre as I am, in a somewhat similar direction. Darko Mesaroš is a Senior Developer Advocate at AWS. And instead of following my path of inappropriately using things as databases that weren't designed to be used that way, he instead uses the latest of technology with the earliest of computers. Darko, thank you for joining me.Darko: Thank you so much, Corey. First of all, you know, you tell me, Darko is a senior developer advocate. No, Corey. I'm a system administrator by heart. I happen to be a developer advocate these days, but I was born in the cold, cold racks of a data center. I maintain systems, I've installed packages on Linux systems. I even set up Solaris Zones a long time ago. So yeah, but I happen to yell into the camera these days, [laugh] so thank you for having me here.Corey: No, no, it goes well. You started my career as a sysadmin. And honestly, my opinion, if you asked me—which no one does, but I share it anyway—is that the difference between an SRE and a sysadmin is about a 40% salary bump.Darko: Exactly.Corey: That's about it. It is effectively the same job. The tools are different, the approach we take is different, but the fundamental mandate of ‘keep the site up' has not materially changed.Darko: It has not. I don't know, like, what the modern SRS do, but like, I used to also semi-maintain AC units. Like, you have to walk around with a screwdriver nonetheless, so sometimes, besides just installing the freshest packages on your Red Hat 4 system, you have to also change the filters in the AC. So, not sure if that belongs into the SRE manifesto these days.Corey: Well, the reason that I wound up inviting you onto the show was a recent blog post you put up where you were able to deploy Kubernetes from the best computer from 1986, which is the TRS-80, or the Trash-80. For the record, the worst computer from 1986 was—and remains—IBM Cloud. But that's neither here nor there.What does it mean to deploy Kubernetes because, to be direct, the way that I tend to deploy anything these days, if you know, I'm sensible and being grown up about it, is a Git push and then the automation takes it away from there. I get the sense, you went a little bit deep.Darko: So, when it comes to deploying stuff from an old computer, like, you know, you kind of said the right thing here, like, I have the best computer from 1986. Actually, it's a portable version of the best computer from 1986; it's a TRS-80 Model 102. It's a portable, basically a little computer intended for journalists and people on the go to write stuff and send emails or whatever it was back in those days. And I deployed Kubernetes through that system. Now, of course, I cheated a bit because the way I did it is I just used it as a glorified terminal.I just hooked up the RS 232, the wonderful serial connection, to a Raspberry Pi somewhere out there and it just showed the stuff from a Raspberry Pi onto the TRS-80. So, the TRS-80 didn't actually know how to run kubectl—or ‘kube cuddle,' what they call it—it just asked somebody else to do it. But that's kind of the magic of it.Corey: You could have done a Lambda deployment then just as easily.Darko: Absolutely. Like that's the magic of, like, these old hunks of junks is that when you get down to it, they still do things with numbers and transmit electrical signals through some wires somewhere out there. So, if you're capable enough, if you are savvy, or if you just have a lot of time, you can take any old computer and have it do modern things, especially now. Like, and I will say 15 years ago, we could have not done anything like this because 15 years ago, a lot of the stuff at least that I was involved with, which was Microsoft products, were click only. I couldn't, for the love of me, deploy a bunch of stuff on an Active Directory domain by using a command line. PowerShell was not a thing back then. You could use VB Script, but sort of.Corey: Couldn't you wind up using something that would effect, like, Selenium or whatnot that winds up emulating a user session and moving the mouse to certain coordinates and clicking and then waiting some arbitrary time and clicking somewhere else?Darko: Yes.Corey: Which sounds like the absolute worst version of automation ever. That's like, “I deployed Kubernetes using a typewriter.” “Well, how the hell did you do that?” “Oh, I use the typewriter to hit the enter key. Problem solved.” But I don't think that counts.Darko: Well, yeah, so actually even back then, like, just thinking of, like, a 10, 12-year step back to my career, I automated stuff on Windows systems—like Windows 2000, and Windows 2003 systems—by a tool called AutoIt. It would literally emulate clicks of a mouse on a specific location on the screen. So, you were just really hoping that window pops up at the same place all the time. Otherwise, your automation doesn't work. So yeah, it was kind of like that.And so, if you look at it that way, I could take my Trash-80, I could write an AutoIt script with specific coordinates, and I could deploy Windows things. So actually, yeah, you can deploy anything with these days, with an old computer.Corey: I think that we've lost something in the world of computers. If I, like, throw a computer at you these days, you're going to be pretty annoyed with me. Those things are expensive, it'll probably break, et cetera. If I throw a computer from this era at you, your family is taking bereavement leave. Like, those things where—there would be no second hit.These things were beefy. They were a sense of solidity to them. The keyboards were phenomenal. We've been chasing that high ever since. And, yeah, they were obnoxiously heavy and the battery life was 20 seconds, but it was still something that—you felt like it is computer time. And now, all these things have faded into the background. I am not protesting the march of progress, particularly in this particular respect, but I do miss the sense of having keyboards didn't weren't overwhelmingly flimsy plastic.Darko: I think it's just a fact of, like, we have computers as commodities these days. Back then computers were workstations, computers were something you would buy to perform a specific tasks. Today, computer is anything from watching Twitch to going on Twitter, complaining about Twitter, to deploying Kubernetes, right? So, they have become such commodities such… I don't want to call them single-use items, but they're more becoming single-use items as time progresses because they're just not repairable anymore. Like, if you give me a computer that's five years old, I don't know what to do with it. I probably cannot fix it if it's broken. But if you give me a computer that's 35 years old, I bet you can fix it no matter what happened.Corey: And the sheer compute changes have come so fast and furious, it's easy to lose sight of them, especially with branding being more or less the same. But I saved up and took a additional loan out when I graduated high school to spend three grand on a Dell Inspiron laptop, this big beefy thing. And for fun, I checked the specs recently, and yep, that's a Raspberry Pi these days; they're $30, and it's not going to work super well to browse the web because it's underpowered. And I'm sitting here realizing wait a minute, even with a modern computer—forget the Raspberry Pi for a second—I'm sitting here and I'm pulling up web pages or opening Slack, or God forbid, Slack and Chrome simultaneously, and the fan spins up and it sounds incredibly anemic. And it's, these things are magical supercomputers from the future. Why are they churning this hard to show me a funny picture of a cat? What's going on here?Darko: So, my theory on this is… because we can. We can argue about this, but we currently—Corey: Oh, I think you're right.Darko: We have unlimited compute capacity in the world. Like, you can come up with an idea, you're probably going to find a supercomputer out there, you're probably going to find a cloud vendor out there that's going to give you all of the resources you need to perform this massive computation. So, we didn't really think about optimization as much as we used to do in the past. So, that's it: we can. Chrome doesn't care. You have 32 gigs of RAM, Corey. It doesn't care that it takes 28 gigs of that because you have—Corey: I have 128 gigs on this thing. I bought the Mac studio and maxed it out. I gave it the hostname of us-shitpost-1 and we run with it.Darko: [laugh]. There you go. But like, I did some fiddling around, like, recently with—and again, this is just the torture myself—I did some 6502 Assembly for the Atari 2600. 6502 is a CPU that's been used in many things, including the Commodore 64, the NES, and even a whole lot of Apple IIs, and whatnot. So, when you go down to the level of a computer that has 1.19 megahertz and it has only 128 bytes of RAM, you start to think about, okay, I can move these two numbers in memory in the following two ways: “Way number one will require four CPU cycles. Way number two will require seven CPU cycles. I'll go with way number one because it will save me three CPU cycles.”Corey: Oh, yeah. You take a look at some of the most advanced computer engineering out there and it's for embedded devices where—Darko: Yeah.Corey: You need to wind up building code to run in some very tight constraints, and that breeds creativity. And I remember those days. These days, it's well my computer is super-overpowered, what's it matter? In fact, when I go in and I look at customers' AWS bills, very often I'll start doing some digging, and sure enough, EC2 is always the number one expense—we accept that—but we take a look at the breakdown and invariably, there's one instance family and size that is the overwhelming majority, in most cases. You often a—I don't know—a c5.2xl or something or whatever it happens to be.Great. Why is that? And the answer—[unintelligible 00:10:17] to make sense is, “Well, we just started with that size and it seemed to work so we kept using it as our default.” When I'm building things, because I'm cheap, I take one of the smallest instances I possibly can—it used to be one of the Nanos and I'm sorry, half a gig or a gig of RAM is no longer really sufficient when I'm trying to build almost anything. Thanks, JavaScript. So okay, I've gone up a little bit.But at that point, when I need to do something that requires something beefier, well, I can provision those resources, but I don't have it as a default. That forces me to at least in the back of my mind, have a little bit of a sense of I should be parsimonious with what it is that I'm provisioning out there, which is apparently anathema to every data scientist I've ever met, but here we are.Darko: I mean, that's the thing, like, because we're so used to just having those resources, we don't really care about optimizations. Like, I'm not advocating that you all should go and just do assembly language. You should never do that, like, unless you're building embedded systems or you're working for something—Corey: If you need to use that level of programming, you know.Darko: Exactly.Corey: You already know and nothing you are going to talk about here is going to impact what people in that position are doing. Mostly you need to know assembly language because that's a weeder class and a lot of comp-sci programs and if you don't pass it, you don't graduate. That's the only reason to really know assembly language most of the time.Darko: But you know, like, it's also a thing, like, as a developer, right, think about the person using your thing, right? And they may have the 128 gig us—what is it you called it? Us-shitpost-1, right—that kind of power, kind of, the latest and greatest M2 Max Ultra Apple computer that just does all of the stuff. You may have a big ‘ol double Xeon workstation that does a thing.Or you just may have a Chromebook. Think about us with Chromebooks. Like, can I run your website properly? Did you really need all of those animations? Can you think about reducing the amount of animations depending on screen size? So, there's a lot of things that we need to kind of think about. Like, it goes back to the thing where ‘it works on my machine.' Oh, of course it works on your machine. You spent thousands of dollars on your machine. It's the best machine in the world. Of course, it runs smoothly.Corey: Wait 20 minutes and they'll release a new one, and now, “Who sold me this ancient piece of crap?” Honestly, the most depressing thing is watching an Apple Keynote because I love my computer until I watch the Apple Keynote and it's like, oh, like, “Look at this amazing keyboard,” and the keyboard I had was fine. It's like, “Who sold me this rickety piece of garbage?” And then we saw how the Apple butterfly keyboard worked out for everyone and who built that rickety piece of garbage. Let's go back again. And here we are.Darko: Exactly. So, that's kind of the thing, right? You know, like, your computer is the best. And if you develop for it, is great, but you always have to think other people who use it. Hence, containers are great to fix one part of that problem, but not all of the problems. So, there's a bunch of stuff you can do.And I think, like, for all of the developers out there, it's great what you're doing, you're building us so many tools, but always that take a step back and optimize stuff. Optimize, both for the end-user by the amount of JavaScript you're going to throw at me, and also for the back-end, think about if you have to run your web server on a Pentium III server, could you do it? And if you could, how bad would it be? And you don't have to run it on a Pentium III, but like, try to think about what's the bottom 5% of the capacity you need? So yeah, it's just—you'll save money. That's it. You'll save money, ultimately.Corey: So, I have to ask, what you do day to day is you're a senior developer advocate, which is, hmm, some words, yes. You spend a lot of your free time and public time talking about running ancient computers, but you also talk to customers who are looking forward, not back. How do you reconcile the two?Darko: So, I like to mix the two. There's a whole reason why I like old computers. Like, I grew up in Serbia. Like, when I was young in the '90s, I didn't have any of these computers. Like, I could only see, like, what was like a Macintosh from 1997 on TV and I would just drool. Like, I wouldn't even come close to thinking about getting that, let alone something better.So, I kind of missed all of that part. But now that I started collecting all of those old computers and just everything from the '80s and '90s, I've actually realized, well, these things are not that different from something else. So, I like to always make comparisons between, like, an old system. What does it actually do? How does it compare to a new system?So, I love to mix and match in my presentations. I like to mix it, mix and match in my videos. You saw my blog posts on deploying stuff. So, I think it's just a fun way to kind of create a little contrast. I do think we should still be moving forward. I do think that technology is getting better and better and it's going to help people do so much more things faster, hopefully cheaper, and hopefully better.So, I do think that we should definitely keep on moving forward. But I always have this nostalgic feeling about, like, old things and… sometimes I don't know why, but I miss the world without the internet. And I think that without the internet, I think I miss the world with dial-up internet. Because back then you would go on the internet for a purpose. You have to do a thing, you have to wait for a while, you have to make sure nobody's on the phone. And then—Corey: God forbid you dial into a long-distance call. And you have to figure out which town and which number would be long distance versus not, at least where I grew up, and your parents would lose their freaking minds because that was an $8 phone call, which you know, back in the '80s and early '90s was significant. And yeah, great. Now, I still think is a great prank opportunity to teach kids are something that it costs more to access websites that are far away, which I guess in theory, it kind of does, but not to the end-user. I digress.Darko: I have a story about this, and I'm going to take a little sidestep. But long-distance phone calls. Like in the '80s, the World Wide Web was not yet a thing. Like, the www, the websites all, just the general purpose internet was not yet a thing. We had things called BBSes, or Bulletin Board Systems. That was the extreme version of a dial-up system.You don't dial into the internet; you dial into a website. Imagine if you have a sole intent of visiting only one website and the cost of visiting such a website would depend on where that website currently is. If the website is in Germany and you're calling from Serbia, it's going to cost you a lot of money because you're calling internationally. I had a friend back then. The best software you can get were from American BBSes, but calling America from Serbia back then would have been prohibitively expensive, like, just insanely expensive.So, what this friend used to do, he figured out if he would be connected to a BBS six hours a day, it would actually reset the counter of his phone bill. It would loop through a mechanical counter from whatever number, it would loop back again to that number. So, it would take around six and some hours to complete the loop the entire phone counting metric—whatever they use back in the '80s—to kind of charge your bill, so it's effectively cost him zero money back then. So yeah, it was more expensive, kids, back then to call websites, the further away the websites were.[midroll 00:17:11]Corey: So, developer advocates do a lot of things. And I think it is unfair, but also true that people tend to shorthand those of those things do getting on stage and giving conference talks because that at least is the visible part of it. People see that and it's viscerally is understood that that takes work and a bit of courage for those who are not deep into public speaking and those who are, know it takes a lot of courage. And whereas writing a blog post, “Well, I have a keyboard and say dumb things on the internet all the time. I don't see why that's hard.” So, there's a definite perception story there. What's your take on giving technical presentations?Darko: So, yeah. Just as you said, like, I think being a DA, even in my head was always represented, like, oh, you're just on stage, you're traveling, you're doing presentations, you're doing all those things. But it's actually quite a lot more than that, right? We do a lot more. But still, we are the developer advocate. We are the front-facing thing towards you, the wonderful developers listening to this.And we tend to be on stage, we tend to do podcasts with wonderful internet personalities, we tend to do live streams, we tend to do videos. And I think one of the key skills that a DA needs to have—a Developer Advocate needs to have—is presentations, right? You need to be able to present a technical message in the best possible way. Now, being a good technical presenter doesn't mean you're funny, doesn't mean you're entertaining, that doesn't have to be a thing. You just need to take a complex technical message and deliver it in the best way possible so that everybody who has just given you their time, can get it fully.And this means—well, it means a lot of things, but it means taking this complicated topic, distilling it down so it can be digested within 30 to 45 minutes and it also needs to be… it needs to be interesting. Like, we can talk about the most interesting topic, but if I don't make it interesting, you're just going to walk out. So, I also lead, like, a coaching class within internally, like, to teach people how to speak better and I'm working with, like, really good speakers there, but a lot of the stuff I say applies to no matter if you're a top-level speaker, or if you're, like, just beginning out. And my challenge to all of you speakers out there, like, anybody who's listening to this and it has a plan to deliver a video, a keynote, a live stream or speak at a summit somewhere, is get outside of that box. Get outside of that PowerPoint box.I'm not saying PowerPoint is bad. I think PowerPoint is a wonderful tool, but I'm just saying you don't have to present in the way everybody else presents. The more memorable your presentation is, the more outside of that box it is, the more people will remember it. Again, you don't have to be funny. You don't have to be entertaining. You just have to take thing you are really passionate about and deliver it to us in the best possible way. What that best possible way is, well, it really depends. Like a lot of things, there is no concrete answer to this thing.Corey: One of the hard parts I found is that people will see a certain technical presenter that they like and want to emulate and they'll start trying to do what they do. And that works to a point. Like, “Well, I really enjoy how that presenter doesn't read their slides.” Yeah, that's a good thing to pick up. But past a certain point, other people's material starts to fit as well as other people's shoes and you've got to find your own path.My path has always been getting people's attention first via humor, but it's certainly not the only way. In many contexts, it's not even the most effective way. It works for me in the context in which I use it, but I assure you that when I'm presenting to clients, I don't start off with slapstick comedy. Usually. There are a couple of noteworthy exceptions because clients expect that for me, in some cases.Darko: I think one of the important things is that emulating somebody is okay, as you said, to an extent, like, just trying to figure out what the good things are, but good, very objectively good things. Never try to be funny if you're not funny. That's the thing where you can try comedy, but it's very difficult to—it's very difficult to do comedy if you're not that good at it. And I know that's very much a given, but a lot of people try to be funny when they're obviously not funny. And that's okay. You don't have to be funny.So, there are many of ways to get people's attentions, by again, just throwing a joke. What I did once on stage, I threw a bottle at the floor. I was just—I said, I said a thing and threw a bottle at the floor. Everybody started paying attention all of a sudden at me. I don't know why. So, it's going to be that. It can be something—it can be be a shocking statement. When I say shocking, I mean, something, well, not bad, but something that's potentially controversial. Like, for example, emacs is better than vim. I don't know, maybe—Corey: “Serverless is terrible.”Darko: Serverl—yeah.Corey: Like, it doesn't matter. It depends on the audience.Darko: It depends on the audience.Corey: “The cloud is a scam.” I gave a talk once called, “The Cloud is A Scam,” and it certainly got people's attention.Darko: Absolutely. So, breaking up the normal flow because as a participant of a show, of a presentation, you go there you expect, look, I'm going to sit down, Corey's going to come on stage and Corey says, “Hi, my name is Corey Quinn. I'm the CEO of The Duckbill Group. This is what I do. And welcome to my talk about blah.”Corey: Tactically, my business partner, Mike, is the CEO. I don't want to I don't want to step too close to that fire, let's be clear.Darko: Oh, okay [laugh]. Okay. Then, “Today's agenda is this. And slide one, slide two, slide three.” And that the expectation of the audience. And the audience comes in in this very autopilot way, like, “Okay, I'm just going to sit there and just nod my head as Corey speaks.”But then if Corey does a weird thing and Corey comes out in a bathtub. Just the bathtub and Corey. And Corey starts talking about how bathtubs are amazing, it's the best place to relax. “Oh, by the way, managing costs in the cloud is so easy, I can do it from a bathtub.” Right? All of a sudden, whoa [laugh], wait a second, this is something that's interesting. And then you can go through your rest of your conversation. But you just made a little—you ticked the box in our head, like, “Oh, this is something weird. This is different. I don't know what to expect anymore,” and people start paying more attention.Corey: “So, if you're managing AWS costs from your bathtub, what kind of computer do you use?” “In my case, a toaster.”Darko: [laugh]. Yes. But ultimately, like, some of those things are very good and they just kind of—they make you as a presenter, unpredictable, and that's a good thing. Because people will just want to sit on the edge of the seat and, like, listen to what you say because, I don't know what, maybe he throws that toaster in, right? I don't know. So, it is like that.And one of the things that you'll notice, Corey, especially if you see people who are more presenting for a longer time, like, they've been very common on events and people know them by name and their face, then that turns into, like, not just presenting but somebody comes, literally not because of the topic, but because they want to hear Corey talk about a thing. You can go there and talk about unicorns and cats, people will still come and listen to that because it's Corey Quinn. And that's where you, by getting outside of that box, getting outside of that ‘this is how we present things at company X,' this is what you get in the long run. People will know who you are people will know, what not to expect from your presentations, and they will ultimately be coming to your presentations to enjoy whatever you want to talk about.Corey: That is the dream. I really want to thank you for taking the time to talk so much about how you view the world and the state of ancient and modern technologies and the like. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you?Darko: The best way to find me is on twitch.tv/aws these days. So, you will find me live streaming twice a week there. You will find me on Twitter at @darkosubotica, which is my Twitter handle. You will find me at the same handle on Mastodon. And just search for my name Darko Mesaroš, I'm sure I'll pop up on MySpace as well or whatever. So, I'll post a lot of cloud-related things. I posted a lot of old computer-related things, so if you want to see me deploy Kubernetes through an Atari 2600, click that subscribe button or follow or whatever.Corey: And we will, of course, include a link to this in the show notes. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I appreciate it.Darko: Thank you so much, Corey, for having me.Corey: Darko Mesaroš, senior developer advocate at AWS, Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry and insulting comment that you compose and submit from your IBM Selectric typewriter.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.
iPhone announcement anniversary. Keynote introduction anniversary. Safari is released to the world. Apple releases audiobooks with AI narrators. Apple's dumping Broadcom, but keeping Qualcomm for now. Apple releases minimal in 2023, except for that headset. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: Atomic Clock Leo's Pick: Foreca Andy's Pick: Algorithms to Live By Jason's Pick: Mela Hosts: Leo Laporte, Andy Ihnatko, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: zocdoc.com/macbreak
iPhone announcement anniversary. Keynote introduction anniversary. Safari is released to the world. Apple releases audiobooks with AI narrators. Apple's dumping Broadcom, but keeping Qualcomm for now. Apple releases minimal in 2023, except for that headset. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: Atomic Clock Leo's Pick: Foreca Andy's Pick: Algorithms to Live By Jason's Pick: Mela Hosts: Leo Laporte, Andy Ihnatko, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: zocdoc.com/macbreak
iPhone announcement anniversary. Keynote introduction anniversary. Safari is released to the world. Apple releases audiobooks with AI narrators. Apple's dumping Broadcom, but keeping Qualcomm for now. Apple releases minimal in 2023, except for that headset. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: Atomic Clock Leo's Pick: Foreca Andy's Pick: Algorithms to Live By Jason's Pick: Mela Hosts: Leo Laporte, Andy Ihnatko, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: zocdoc.com/macbreak
iPhone announcement anniversary. Keynote introduction anniversary. Safari is released to the world. Apple releases audiobooks with AI narrators. Apple's dumping Broadcom, but keeping Qualcomm for now. Apple releases minimal in 2023, except for that headset. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: Atomic Clock Leo's Pick: Foreca Andy's Pick: Algorithms to Live By Jason's Pick: Mela Hosts: Leo Laporte, Andy Ihnatko, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: zocdoc.com/macbreak
Swing Vision started as an app that leveraged the Apple Watch to help tennis players improve their game. Players could now track swing movements, hits, and scores. But after working at Tesla, Swupnil Sahai, the co-founder of Swing Vision, realized there was a lot more they could do with this simple idea. By mounting an iPhone on a court, and through motion tracking within the app, that can now offer: Automated scoring Line calling Recorded match highlights And so much more. In this episode we talked about the impact of having Swing Vision featured on the Apple Keynote, coaching players with AI, and last, between you and me, we also talked about Diego paying a little extra to have the speed of his serves register faster than they actually are.