 Where is there the shiny green button? It's another problem is the red button is much more attractive like it's it it draws my eye much stronger now Push what was that? Um, if you guys remember that genesis video Land of confusion. Yes, exactly where it was like the whole joke was like he pushed the wrong button And then it was it was like it was like nothing versus nuke and he pushed the nuke instead because it was red Hey, hey buddy. Come on. Hey, leave the red button alone Hey, he's having so much fun with Odie. Oh, I know those two The thing about a new dog is it gets a little better every day, but it's it's like sitting in boiling water You don't notice it till suddenly you look back. You're like, wow Yeah, yeah, Wendy's in when someone comes over and like, oh, you've got such a well-behaved dog. Yeah, right No, I've totally had that situation like really I Still think he's got a way to go but all right. I just had been sweeping up a newspaper each you through so I mean Well, I had a friend who works in entertainment, but not really tech Get a hold of me and said can you intro me to Len Peralta? I've seen his work and he's amazing. Oh, that's great Yes, I can I know I was so pleased Oh, I didn't even know that he was looking for a sort of like illustrative work, but he was yeah or is so yeah Hopefully the two of them can work on fun things. I'm sure he's so appreciative of that. Totally. Yeah No, I mean I I didn't even you know, I didn't actually Forage the the Relationship it happened on its own according to the chat room the dog is doing a great job of training you That's what I'm afraid of yeah All right, are you all ready to do a little show here? Yeah Let's do it then I'm gonna start us in 15 seconds reasons I will disclose later No, it's just I'm trying to make it easy to write down the start time that I put in the patreon post So there you go. It's later. I disclosed here. We go Thanks to everyone who supports a daily tech news show directly to find out more and join them because it helps head to Daily tech news show comm slash support This is the Daily Tech news for Thursday August 30th 2018 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt and from studio feline I'm Sarah Lane Joining us from CNET. It's great to have Aaron Carson back on the show. How's it going Aaron? It's going well. We are going to talk succulents And petrified wood and And more Jinsing this is all in Aaron's feature story. She did for CNET About ways that national parks are using technology to stop bad behavior kind of right indeed Yeah, it's like a national parks have a little bit of a problem on their hands that they're trying to address to tech And not all of them have solutions in tech So I don't know maybe the combined audience brain power can can help out Let's start with a few tech things you should know Google's Titan security key is now for sale in the Google store to the general public with a full kit And clearly a USB key Bluetooth key and various connectors available for $50 and shipping immediately Google Cloud customers have had Titan availability since last month and Titan keys used the Fido standard as well and work as a second second factor for services like Facebook and Dropbox and Github and of course Google account login It's so convenient that they work on Google Apple announced an event for September 12th at the Steve Jobs Theater and Cupertino What could it be? Media invites include the tagline gather round with a Coppery or flaming looking circle on it. I think it means the return of the home button Anyway, what's probably actually going to happen are three new flagship iPhones or redesigned Apple watch Maybe some Mac and iPad updates. It's always possible more information on Apple's wireless charging mats. The air power would be Welcomed whether they'll do it or not. We'll have to see on September 12th a new circular phone Spread the word everybody See how far that goes Sony unveiled the new Xperia XZ3 with a six inch 2880 by 1440 led display And an 18 by 9 aspect ratio has a 33 30 milli amp battery It's a little bit bigger than the XZ to a fingerprint reader on the back and will ship with Android 9 pi Inside is a Snapdragon 845 processor for gigs of RAM 64 gigs of storage and a little AI inside as well There's a new side sense function. So if you tap the side of the phone It'll bring up a menu filled with apps that the phone thinks you're probably looking for based on what you were already doing The Xperia XZ3 goes on sale in October for nine hundred dollars And Lenovo announced a slew of stuff at IFA a new Chromebook new Windows laptops home device smart home devices Among them was the yoga book C930 Whereas the yoga book a 12 two years ago put a touchscreen where the keyboard should be the yoga book C930 swaps out the keyboard for an eink screen Which you can then use as a keyboard a notepad or an e-reader C930 will be available in October starting at $1,000 everyone who's interested in that email us feedback at daily tech news show comm Laugh Tom I do and I want to stop laughing. So stop my laughing feedback All right, let's talk a little bit more about Apple. This is an actual confirmed story that Apple says did happen Yeah, true story Apple confirmed it did acquire Aconia holographics. That's a startup basement Colorado that makes lenses for augmented reality Glasses Aconia was founded in 2012 and originally focused on holographic data storage Then pivoted to focus more on AR displays Aconia has a portfolio of more than 200 patents related to holographic systems and materials That's according to us website, which probably did not hurt the deal for Apple either Yeah, it looks like we're talking about a company that makes some essential parts for augmented reality glasses So Aaron I'm guessing everybody's gonna jump to the conclusion. Apple's getting closer to putting out some augmented reality glasses You know, it feels like every so often we get one more bread crumb along this path It's like maybe leading us up to something that Apple is doing for AR and you know, every so often people turn up like a patent That's recently surfaced or I was I was thinking earlier about how I think it was in January 2017 There was the report that Apple was working with Zeiss sunglasses little clues along the way Is it is it possible? It's just us making the mistake of the the plate platonic story about the elephant Where we're like, oh, it's glasses. It must be augmented reality Oh, it's a Zeiss sunglasses and it turns out like it's a motorcycle helmet or something entirely different We hadn't expected hey humans and confirmation bias. I think that's one of the strongest relationships that exists out there It would be like Apple though to jump into this market right now because it is at the point where it exists There are some products you can buy you can even get a magic leap if you're in the right city and a developer and want to spend a couple thousand dollars And that's that's the beginning of the window in which Apple will jump in on a product line and say But we figured out how to do it better if they're just acquiring something like aconia Feels like it's probably year or two off from us actually seeing a product if we see one You know Well, let's talk about google the google assistant now can understand two languages at once using google's language identification model lang id In the google home app the assistant on your phone and google itself pretty much any platform google assistant is available in Google announced the upcoming feature at i o earlier this year by lingual language pairings can be made Mix and match from the following languages english german french spanish italian And japanese with more languages coming in the future google also says it's working on Tri-lingual support because that's what patrick beija's family is going to need because he speaks french His wife speaks swedish and they both speak english and japanese they're gonna need quadrilateral probably Finish as well, right They might have to being in finland, but they just speak swedish in finland too, but yeah, what makes sense, right? Those in germany france or the uk can use the bilingual assistant on a google home max which goes on sale in those countries today Very cool You know, i'm not really a bilingual person. I'd love to think that i am, but i'm not really However, if you've if you've got the assistant and you're used to You know calling up information or or or getting responses from it and Yeah, you're in a bilingual household or for whatever reason are interested in getting results in two different languages Really interesting especially because i mean english german french spanish italian japanese That's a whole you know that that is that's actually Uh, that's It's very complex to go from english to japanese for example Yeah, i wonder if it is more complex for the ai To maybe not in between two romance languages like french and spanish for instance or spanish and italian Then it is to go to japanese. It's certainly harder for us, right? Um, that's a really interesting question like does that Is that ease that we have translate into the ai training because the biggest deal here Is for the assistant to be able to understand without prompting. Oh, she's speaking spanish now Uh, so that you know if you're abuela walks up to the assistant and wants it to start playing her playlist She can speak in spanish While the kids maybe are just going to use english On it, uh, and and the assistant has to know on the fly which is quite a lot of processing But it's fascinating and it's it's nice to see this finally happening I mean i grew up in a household with english and spanish And i think one of the first things that my mother who is from south america asked me when my parents got a voice assistant Was like can i talk to this thing in spanish and i was like No not yet But you know, i mean it's i think it's a reality of the modern age. Um For spanish speakers alone, there's something like 437 million people in the world Who speak spanish and that actually edges out english. So it's a step in the right direction Yeah, and and we're not you know, don't forget the google assistant could already do spanish But then it wouldn't be able to do english if it was set to spanish you'd have to switch it back and forth So the big the big leap here is Not having to decide. Oh, right the assistant is set to english. I have to speak it to it in english Um, when I when I think i'll be really impressed. This is impressive. Don't get me wrong But when you can finish a sentence with english and spanish words at the same time Oh, yeah, right throw it in right. We'll be like, I know what you're saying. I get it Yeah, I get your spanglish or whatever it might be or your japanlish Your japanish is probably a thing uh Twitter confirmed it recently tested a feature that suggests accounts. You might want to Unfollow rather than follow in a statement a twitter rep told slates Yes, we know that people want a relevant twitter timeline One way to do this is to try unfollowing people that they don't engage with regularly We ran an incredibly limited test to service accounts that people are not engaging with to check if they'd like to unfollow them The company says the test has now concluded and did not say whether or not it would become a regular feature And you know slate wrote this up and and asked twitter for comment because some users were noticing this I I get the impulse and I think it's a really good one because my follow list has Pretty much just risen. I will occasionally unfollow people for this or that reason But I don't make a point of it. So I've got a lot of accounts in there that don't tweet anymore or when they do I'm surprised. I'm like, oh, do I follow that person? I didn't realize that What was interesting about the screenshots that slate put up for this was They cast it as control what's happening. You don't need to follow everyone to know what's happening Make sure you're only following the people that make twitter great for you and then suggest some people That you might want to unfollow And that feels insulting Like and these are the people that suck. So please unfollow control what's happening In your timeline. These are you know bad actors. Yeah And slave made a note of that as well in their article about this. They had a few Examples of people saying what is this control what's happening here does sort of sound like control Yeah What might be a Oh, we lost you we lost Sarah there But I I think I know where you're going which was you know control what what's happening Uh Sounds like you're you're out of control and you need to seize control back instead of just being something where you Are suggested. Hey, this this is just maybe not an account like I would take a better way to suggest it might be Still interested here are some accounts you follow that you don't engage with very often, you know double check This reminded me a little bit of when Jimmy Kimmel tells people to unfriend people You know Um, but yeah, I was I was interested in how they might determine You know interactions because I was thinking there's a lot of accounts that for example, I follow This is a completely passive Thing like news organizations or celebrities or you know, folks like that Like I'm not tweeting back and forth with you know, washington post Um, so I'll be curious to see how that works. I guess if you click through that's an interaction But there's plenty of those accounts where I never click because it's just like a breaking news alert sort of situation. Yeah Or thoughts of dog, you know Funny accounts Zte reported its worst ever first half net loss of 7.8 billion yuan after a us supplier ban Forced it to shut down for three months earlier this year Zte says it expects to return to profitability of 24.2 Million yuan in q3, but that still means it's going to have a pretty big loss for the first nine months of the year Zte's new executives remember They had to replace the executives to get rid of the ban Say that production is back in line with july and august of last year So they're back up to speed Meanwhile at ifa zte did introduce a new flagship the 6.21 inch amelette axon 9 pro with vertically aligned dual rear facing cameras a front notch Some small bottom bezels a 4000 milliamp hour battery and usb c among a bunch of other features The interesting thing is the last axon was the foldable one and everybody thought oh, we're going to keep seeing these innovative form factors This axon looks like the axon 7 except upgraded for the current year So I wonder if that shutdown put the brakes on some of these more innovative designs Anyway, the axon 9 pro goes on sale in europe in september for 640 Well, sarah, you're it Oh dear What's going on in this weird world of ours? Oh, I we I kept going with the audio so don't worry about it. Uh, we're we're we're back on video too Uh, I was just saying that zte is what's going on with zte is not just important for the phone world It's also important for what what's going on outside of the phone world as well Like what what's happening in in china? Uh, it is on a bigger stage than just the phone The phone world. I don't expect to see zte announcing any us availability anytime soon Uh and erin, I know you're not following this super closely, but you know this Are you surprised to see zte bounce back from a three month shutdown? I I think that's what's most interesting to me is you would think if someone told you this ahead of time That that company would be gone they would be done and here they are announcing a new product and profitability Yeah, I mean, I'll be curious to see what you know, uh, folks have to extrapolate about this and also, you know zte was in the news, uh because of the the lifting of the ban from president trump So, um, yeah, I think a lot of people will probably be keeping an eye on on zte and seeing how it does Yeah, um, I I again I I can't every time somebody says well if this happens that company's done Think of zte. They got they couldn't get parts from the us had to shut down their manufacturing for three months and uh They're you know, I wouldn't say they're fine, but they're still in existence and still making phones and back to profitability. So Uh when properly structured and and managed, you know, and you have the right staff. I guess it's possible Well, if anyone here is suffering from lack of sleep boy, have I got a wearable for you Garmin launched the vivo smart for wearable, which has a blood oxygen monitor or pulse ox As the company calls it that reads your oxygen saturation levels at night in order to gauge your sleep quality It can also estimate light or deep or rem stages of sleep Which then you can view as sleep stats in the garmin connect app afterwards The vivo smart for also monitors energy levels based on your stress And that is based on your heart rate variability and your sleep quality and your overall activity It can run for seven days between charges and cost $130 first of all garmin I they try to try to make it sound like they invented the word pulse ox in their press release It's it's a common term in medical Uh, we actually I am familiar with it just recently because we had chuck laturnos on Uh dts labs and he talked about having pulse ox readings from a third party Uh, so so garmin don't don't pretend you invent words that But uh, that's I love the idea of this though Yeah, I The idea that it would say like dude, you don't have enough energy. Just just chill Just relax is something I probably need someone if not a device to say to me The thing that always come to cross is my mind about that though Is like I'm usually pretty aware when I sleep poorly Yeah, of course Well, I mean For example last night I woke up and I was like didn't sleep well, but I didn't really know the details Why I didn't sleep so having those stats You know It depends on how good of a or bad of a sleepy you are or how much You feel like stress might be you know boosting your heart rates You know or or the alternative throughout the day Even if it doesn't necessarily Point to something specific like oh, you've got this ailment and you can fix it and you're going to sleep better Having more data on sleep patterns You know as somebody who's at least speaking for the people who don't sleep that well overnight overall I love this even if I don't know exactly how to fix it I I love having this kind of data and I've you know, I've had smart watches in the past that Attempted to do this or even a you know an iphone That supposedly was using sonar to you know See when I was moving around to get a sense of you know when when my deep sleep versus my run sleep was happening And yeah, I never really understood if that was all that accurate or not But it's still really interesting especially when the ultimate goal is to be as stress-free and as well rested as possible Yeah, because the the key here is I mean millions of these trackers have done sleep tracking before that's not new It's saying we're going to conclude that with your heart rate your activity levels and figure out like hey You're too stressed. You need to rest I absolutely know when I had a bad night's sleep, but I'll still barrel through the day And be like well, you just got to do it and if this was able to say like hey If you take an hour and just rest right now, it's going to pay off You you don't have the energy to do what you're doing right now. Don't go for that run Uh, don't lift those boxes or whatever. I mean, I imagine if it told me not to do the show I'd ignore it, but Stress be dinged Hey folks, if you want to get all the tech headlines each day in about five minutes Be sure to subscribe to daily tech headlines dot com Well, erin, uh just published a feature we mentioned it at the top of the show that looks at the tech National parks are using to keep visitors and poachers from stealing resources a lot of interesting stuff in here erin Where do you want to start? Let's start with the cacti Yeah, so, uh, it's like tagging a dog, but for a cactus Exactly. Yeah. So um about eight years ago rangers of suaro national park outside of tucson had Come across this trailer that was packed with suaro cacti This has been an ongoing problem for them If you haven't seen them suaro like the iconic, you know, cowboy cacti and their prized landscape items And they can go for about a hundred dollars a foot and so it kind of depends but of you know, unscrupulous landscaping company can For example pocket the money you pay them and just go dig one up for free um, so the park has been trying to figure out how to Curve that problem And this is because these these cactuses are so valuable that I guess Nair duels can can make a lot of money selling them to gardeners But what I got from your story is it relies on the garden shops on the on the nurseries To enforce this to to do the scanning and then say well hold on where'd you get this it has a it has a tracker in it I I wonder how many that would buy from these people in the first place would be willing to do that Yeah, you know, I think for for them part of their messaging is this this is a deterrent And the rangers want this idea out there of like do you want to be the one who? digs up a cacti that's been Chipped on the off chance or the case that um, you know a nursery does decide to check if this was like a legally obtained Cactus, so um and the chips are passive. That's the other thing is this is not like a case where you have a map And there's like a dot and you're like there's like a high speed chase because there's a So Exactly, so this is this is like largely just a deterrent like you don't want to take a chance, right? Hopefully I guess the nurseries could get caught too if if if somebody came in and decided to do a spot scan So the nurseries are going to want to scan to make sure Uh, they're getting these things and I didn't realize just how slowly they grow It's not like you can pop up these big ones like you see in the roadrunner cartoons overnight. It takes a lot of time Yeah, absolutely. I mean a 200 year old cactus can you know be Five five feet tall. Yeah, it's kind of impressive. Um, so and that's kind of the other factor to this is that if someone does steal You know a large cactus. This is not something that can be readily replaced Yeah Another interesting one was the was the petrified wood because that was where a little bit of technology Turned out to be a good thing turned out that things aren't as bad as we thought maybe Yeah, so at um at the park, you know, they've had this kind of almost pr problem That people over time have just picked the park clean And that's anyone from folks who just want a souvenir of this beautiful colorful like striated wood to people who want to maybe load up a trunk in their car and sell it um, and and the thing with that is like well if you have a park and The idea is there's nothing left in the park. No one's going to go to your park So rangers basically dug up all this archival photography and tried to match the vantage point and the location to just compare How how much has changed and they found overall the problem was not as bad as they Had feared that it might be well and you mentioned in your story There was a petrified forest or or a petrified park anyway in the black hills in the dakotas That did have to shut down because everyone took everything worth looking at So I wonder if that that's what caused the the story to get confused maybe Yeah, because when you have uh an event like that that has happened, you know this this park that existed um had these kind of incredible fern like fossils of this plant called a sci-cad and And you come across something like that and people start they take one they take two for various reasons They clean out the park and so it feels like there's an immediate danger because this has happened in our country's history that we basically lost a site because People wouldn't leave it alone because yeah, they they took all the fern fossils The other thing that was interesting is people sending back the petrified wood Doesn't really help Like if you if they took a little chip and then felt bad and sent it back Which apparently they do the fact that they've now removed it from the location And they don't know where that location is really hurts the archaeology of it Absolutely and at this point the park has something that they call a conscience pile It's big enough that you know, it's got a name obviously But people start to feel guilty There's also this kind of legend that you might get cursed if you take something from the park And so they get letters from people apologizing and maybe detailing their kind of you know Poor luck in the time since but folks at the park really they can't pinpoint an exact location of where that came from And sometimes they get things that they know didn't come from the park at all like seashells, which is you know, okay, sure But for I took this this hot dog Take it off my hands. Yeah, you know But that kind of compromises the scientific value of the site because if you have something That you don't really know where it came from you can't study it within the context that it was originally existing in Now, uh, there's lots of good stuff in this article. I highly recommend folks go read it We'll have a link in the show notes. You can find it at cnet.com For instance dying ginseng roots so that you can scan them under fluorescent lights to see if the ginseng that's being Carried around was actually stolen from a place That it shouldn't have been but the last thing I want to mention is redwood national parks burl thieves That's one where they need some help. They need some technology help because It's very difficult to stop people from from taking these things and they're essential to the growth of the redwoods Absolutely, and this is the case where you know, it's uh, it's really easy to think sometimes that tech can be a cure You know for anything but there are obstacles that parks face as far as resources and management and whatnot and people poach burls because it's it's beautiful wood and uh but when they carve out a large chunk of this Ancient tree they're opening it up to pathogens And they're compromising the tree's future ability to be able to like spawn more trees Um, and when you look at the pictures, this is really heartbreaking Yeah, and burl is like a growth kind of on the side and and is valued because I guess it's easy to carve into bowls and stuff Exactly. Yeah, and they can they can be massive. Um, but when you carve one out you get this kind of nice smooth flat You know kind of wood as this beautiful grain on it But it's it's basically kind of an outgrowth of the tree that didn't quite happen. And so it just starts like bulges yeah Don't steal burls and if you have a good idea to help people prevent burl thieves Feedback at daily tech news show dot com. Yeah, and as somebody who you know when I think of poaching I think of poaching a Animal that is endangered, you know, you know in a national park somewhere very far away from me It's good to remember that the ecosystem includes lots of uh flora and fauna And they're all very important to uh to to keep intact. Don't steal Thanks to everybody who participates in our subreddit. None of you are thieves. Um, and if you are uh, well, well Stop Stopping thieves But what you should do instead is submit stories and vote on others at daily tech news show dot reddit dot com Also, we're on facebook at facebook.com slash groups slash daily tech news show Next time you have the impulse to steal a burl instead just email us and sarah might read your email on the show, right? Correct. Like the email i'm about to read from ryan. He uh, he had some thoughts on our conversation with scott johnson yesterday On the best smart watch features. Why are they smart watches? Why are they great ryan says recently? I had a date with a cardiologist through tender ryan says ultimately it didn't work out But that's beside the point ryan asked her how accurate the apple watch was for a diagnosing heart irregularity And she said it was around 95 accuracy She also recommended that people wear them for this very reason. What's funny is that apple doesn't advertise this fact It's only through news reports and word of mouth that the feature becomes more apparent ryan says in the professional world I work as a software developer in the medical device field from experience I know there's a whole lot of work that goes into submitting devices to the fda in order to market a device as a medical device A lot of documentation that needs to happen for every software release cycle I can understand why apple wouldn't want to market the apple watch as a medical device personally though The entire reason I have an apple watch is for this reason everything else like notifications That's just icing detecting heart irregularity is an incredible feature Even if it isn't advertised and it would be great if google were to take note of this feature and put something similar in their offerings Hmm. Um, I'm Well, yeah Something like that in wear os And if anyone knows knows these features well enough to compare them let us know, but I know there is there is similar Similar functionality there. Uh, it may not be exactly as good as what we're talking about here, but thank you ryan Yeah, thank you ryan and perhaps you'd like the new garmin wearable that we talked about earlier on the show Uh, thank you also to erin karson for being with us erin so good to see you let folks know where they can keep up with all of your work You can find me at cnet.com and on twitter. I am at erin karson Excellent. Yeah, and uh people in the chat room are demanding you become a permanent member of dts So I think they like having you on the show Very kind people Uh, don't forget folks, uh, we we can do more Uh, because you help us so if you if you're willing to help us out Uh, go to patreon.com slash dts because even just giving us a dollar Uh, really helps the show get better and better. Don't forget. I'm heading out to greenville illinois for a meet up Friday september 7th at 6 p.m 6 p.m to 8 p.m at the family vine winery on 13 49 red ball trail in greenville illinois We'll have that in the show notes uh linked to their facebook page as well. So if you're in the southern illinois area Or can reach it. I'd love to see a friday september 7th at 6 p.m Our email address is feedback at daily tech news show dot com. Thanks to everybody who gives us feedback You make the show better every day. We're also live monday through friday at 4 30 p.m Eastern 20 30 utc and find out more at daily tech news show dot com slash live back tomorrow with patrick norton as our guest talk to you then This show is part of the frog pants network. Get more at frog pants dot com All right, man club. Hope you have enjoyed this bro You made it That was fun It was a good show. It was a great show, iran. Thank you You Burl thieves minus the equals burlives What should we call this? He says no, I didn't do it I've just been sleeping and number one in the On the showbot is curbing cacti crime Oh, I like that triple c triple c. That's pretty good curbing cacti crime That's one of those things where I'd be like what come on But you read the article and you're like actually it makes sense. This is a really legitimate issue Whenever editors on twitter last night said or use the phrase grand theft cactus and I was like, uh, what did I think of that? Hot cacti That's too Cactus sharps Sharps like an old word for thieves and then Stickers being wait sharps is a word for a thief like hard card sharps were were people who would filter you out of your money three card card not card shark card sharp sharp with a p Well, I don't know. I didn't know that one. Yeah, I think I need anything. No, just home I'm Give tom a second. I'll pull something out Be like in fact, let me show you what a card sharp looks like I have one from 1987 card sharp in 15 94 Just happened to have kept it all these years the Italian baroque artist Michelangelo painted me in his famous the card sharps Card sharp. Why do I know this? Well? Yeah, because a card shark is just a somebody who's like I think good at playing car shark is one of those things where people start saying something wrong And then it catches it's on because it kind of sounds right like oh, yeah, like a shark. I get it But the earlier name was card sharp Wow So interesting In fact, hold on Like a pool shark and all those other Oh, right. Yeah, like I wonder if pool shark is part of that lineage. Uh, oh, no, I'm sharing you back to yourself. That's wrong Oh, okay. So Here we go Yeah, the grammar rest card sharp is preferred in British English while card shark is more common in american canadian and australian english Because we all munged it Yeah, exactly. This is, you know, we're all the, you know, the old commonwealth They share their main definitions namely a professional card player, uh, a person who is skilled in card games and a person who is skilled in cheating in card games The british the british card sharp more often implies cheating card shark Especially in american english often simply is a term for somebody who spends a lot of time playing cards He's just real kind of they've kind of morphed into their own thing Hmm But this is uh, Michelangelo's the card sharps from the 16th century Oh, yes, one of his best. What's that guy got behind his back? A card cards more cards He's kind of look like a knife or something. I thought it was going to be No, it's like a little dagger on his side and then Yeah, I I think all three of these individuals look shady for different reasons. Oh, yeah, because they're card sharps. That's why And again the middle is not being subtle at all Head to wikipedia and look up card sharps audio listeners if you want to play along at home Tom is still sharing screen by the way card sharps That is new. I didn't know that I really didn't For that. No I'm neither a card sharp or shark. I'm very bad at cards I'm a card blunt myself. I am a card. No, thank you I'll just watch I can uh, I can lay down some yuker, but you can't really bet on yuker. So Uh, why not? Maybe you can I just haven't been introduced into betting on yuker I mean you bet on anything but some some things lend themselves to it more than others Yeah, it's not like there's like a vegas house yuker house going on. I don't know actually I wonder it probably is Because there is Vegas has everything Yeah, there's like a cactus black market and somebody's betting on yuker You know what I was wondering about recently when I'm uh, when I was in in vegas is because yes I I don't really gamble but I find the whole thing fascinating Why do we not have pachinko rooms in vegas? Because you don't need to Well, like I mean with all of the Particularly japanese tourists. Um, but you know, but but other you know does not I'm showing you vegas yuker.com which advertises the weekly yuker games Uh at meepleville Let's look up vegas pachinko Uh, because my guess I Just the reason I bring up pachinko is because I thought of one of the most interesting things about japan was just Hold on, hold on the nevada gaming board has approved a license bid by japanese gaming company sega to bring pachinko machines It it sounds like maybe it was a political thing Interesante Okay So that's why Hmm because Yeah, I I understand pachinko is its own thing but for kind of that slot machine You know fun lights sounds the whole thing Vegas would be perfect for that Well, I was just gonna guess like maybe it doesn't make you as much money So the casinos all put in slot machines other than nickel slots for people still play them Yeah, no, but you but they probably make a lot of money off that Maybe pachinko allows you to win too often or something. I don't know I say bring more pachinko to vegas I like pachinko date on that article 2017 was the date on that That's about a year ago. So I don't know somebody who lives in vegas. Um, let us know when you see your first pachinko machine and we will I can make a note of it. Say go I interviewed russ pits this morning How did you how is our fair pits? He is great. Uh, he is bringing the escapist back to life I know it's so awesome And uh, we had a wonderful half hour or so conversation About that and the state of the internet and reminiscing about half price books a little bit because we both worked there back in the 90s Yeah, russ and I realized we both worked for the same company In every decade except this one since the 80s. We worked at half price books together in the 90s We worked at tech tv together in the 2000s We have yet to work at the same company in the teens Hey, you got two years. I know we gotta figure this out. Yeah um, that's great, uh, I Very fond of russ and i'm glad that he's doing so good. Oh, yeah So if you're a patron you have that lab's interview in your feed right now And if you're not it will come out on saturday Hooray He even referenced his famous email at one point Eagle salmon No, sorry just had a frog in my throat. Oh, yeah, sorry It's not it like you said never mind. No. No, of course not Uh, yeah, erin, we're probably confusing you unless you know who russ is I don't He's like i'm politely not I apologize for this trip down memory lane on behalf of myself and sarah We we both worked with russ at tech tv. He was a producer on the screensavers And I worked with him at half price books in austin back in the 90s before that Poseidon all of that. Yeah, he has gone on to much bigger and better things. He has a charity called take this That helps with anxiety and suicide prevention amongst gamers specifically targeting conventions when when people are likely to be stressed out And he just took over the escapist Which he had been the editor-in-chief at like 10 years ago But it was about to go under and he kind of helped rally to save it and they're rebuilding it now Oh, cool Sounds like he's got some good stuff going Yeah, he also wrote a very iconic Goodbye He just we don't have to get into it somebody fill in erin at a later time He wrote a book about it. So it's not like he's trying to hide it. Right. Yeah. It was just it was it was a goodbye tech tv whole company Thousands of people was one of those classic dot com era like, you know, right? You all it was it was the mic drop to end all mic drops Just leave it at that I still remember where I was Me too because the best part And I always tell the stories like the best part is like you can hear people Oh, oh, because we're all kind of it was cubicle life, right? You know and you hear me. Oh my god. Look at this and finally someone's like, who's respite? And that was the end of it Oh, it's just the best ending to a wonderful Yeah, truly truly legendary. Nothing has ever taught that for me as far as a a Mass email goes to a company. Well, it's gotta be something special if it's like a mass email that you're reminiscing about 10 well 15 years 20 years later. I mean 18 years later still funny Maybe 15 years later. I guess. What do you think odie? He says, I don't know how to email Not yet Sawyer wants to get in touch with him, uh to collaborate on some film projects. So Yeah, I mean he's kind of Little bit. Yeah, he certainly isn't looking energetic right this second Maybe he needs a Garmin app a tired dog is a happy dog It's a happy me That's for sure I'll tell you You know, I realized yesterday in the pre-show Amos and I had talked a little bit about smartwatches Uh, and I meant to bring it up in the conversation on yesterday's show and it just I didn't I forgot But you have an interesting way of managing your smartwatches so that you're always collecting data Right, um I have an original uh apple watch that I purchased like in november the first year they were out And I have a series three that is my daily wearer now And I have converted my original one to a sleep time only one So at night when I'm getting ready for bed, I'll put it on and in the morning I'll swap it back out for my series three and go about my day So it's it the the night time one will track sleeping habits. It has It won't give you any alerts for your for your cardiac Symptoms or whatever like the series three will and it has um, but it does track sleeping and it it I you can set them up separately in your phone. So my Series zero as I call it It doesn't have any alerts It's in permanent theater mode and it'll tell me the time if I need to and it's how I wake up in the morning Because I set it by my alarm, but it's always gathering that sleeping data that restlessness and and all of that. So well, so so Having used this for a while a mess. What have you learned about your sleeping habits? That I don't sleep enough That's the big thing I've also got um a mild case case of sleep apnea. So I've got you know the little machine So I'm actually gathering a lot of information about my sleep on a regular basis blood pressure checks all that kind of stuff so um, it's I'm finding habits that Will improve my quality of sleep and my quantity of sleep for instance here lately I've been leaving my my cell phone downstairs in the living room to charge overnight I don't even take it to the bedroom with me. So I don't have that that oh, I'll just check one more story I'll just watch one more video or whatever So I'm falling asleep a lot faster than even if I took my phone upstairs and didn't look at it It's still there. Yeah and uh It's it's interesting. It's giving me some data. I'm not sure exactly how to use it at best But I'm slowly incorporating it into my life and in trying to make the the small changes that you can make incrementally You know when I go to bed I I always have my phone next to me because it's my alarm clock. I don't have another one Which has actually it has it has it has led me astray a couple of times where I just like it Uh, you know Ran out of batteries and then I woke up late and they're like, ah my god, but for the most part. Yeah, I don't I don't really want to I don't lay in bed and look at my phone and I understand that um For some people it's sort of psychological Like too much news before bed is you know kind of bad for you know What you're going to dream about or the actual light into your eyes is you know Is counterproductive to going to sleep. I don't really have either of those problems But I like the idea of yeah saying it's time for bed. It's not phone time. It's not computer time Nothing about this is going to be part of this. I'm going to sleep and it's going to be down next to me And I will I will see you in eight hours. Hopefully when when the alarm goes off It doesn't always work that way, but that's I I find that that's the most zen way for me to go about Sleeping at night. I'm pretty restrictive on the notifications. I have to well Obviously this the sleep watch because there's no notifications to go to that in last year on my emergency contact list But even my daily wear my series three I don't really have a lot of notifications going to it unless I'm expecting something like, you know This week slack is on my watch because well, there's constantly stuff going on Um for the show But I found that even that the fact that I have a series three really Relieves the phone anxiety the phone separation anxiety. Oh, what if someone needs to call me? What if a kid calls me from school? Whatever else because I can get it on my watch meanwhile my watch doesn't have near the functionality It doesn't have games. It doesn't have facebook. It doesn't have all these distractors So if I leave my phone in my truck at work and just go into work I actually get way more done without that constant The the the daemon running in the back of my head. Hey, check your phone. Check your phone. Check your phone I just completely separate myself from it and that that's weird to me because I'm the biggest techie in my house like I'm I'm all about you know, I love new tech. I love I watch repeats of Of apple announcements because I want to see what they're what they got going on if I can't catch it live I'm that guy, but I'm finding that here at least in the last several months the more I separate myself from my phone The better my overall quality of life is becoming I think you should call the one the watch you wear to sleep your night watch and then we can call you a night watch man Um, I see what you're going with there and with that we end our video Thank you for watching audio folks after that. 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