 Coming up on DTNS, who is a modular gaming PC for Rob Dunwood? Share some tips for good home video and AI gets better at rap battles. This is the Daily Tech News for Friday, December 4th, 2020 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt and from Studio Redwood. I'm Sarah Lane, drawing the top tech stories from Cleveland. I'm Len Peralta and from Columbus, Ohio and Rob Dunwood. And I'm the shows producer. We were just talking about glasses and proper screen management with glasses, as well as TikTok and TV shows and more on good day internet. Get that wider show. Become a member at patreon.com slash DTNS. Let's start with a few tech things you should know. If you live in Nashville, Tennessee or Huntsville, Alabama, you can now sign up for Google Fibers, two gigabit per second fiber internet service. That's two gigs down, but still only one gig up is still very fast. The plan costs $100 a month and includes a Wi-Fi 6 multi gig router, tri-band mesh extender and installation. The Wi-Fi router supports two gig speeds with Wi-Fi 6 devices. And the multi gig router has a 10 gigabit per second port, though you may need adapters at both ends to get wired two gigabyte speed. The journal Science published a paper from researchers at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei claiming to have achieved quantum supremacy, the ability to do a problem significantly faster than a non-quantum system. The system is called Juxiang, completed in just more than three minutes. A complex statistical test that would take the Sunway Taihu Light Super computer more than two billion years to complete. Juxiang uses photons traveling through optical circuits laid out on a lab bench guided by mirrors. The settings for the problem were effectively hard-coded into the optical circuits that make it difficult to reprogram for other uses, but it did it. This is the first claim of quantum supremacy since Google in October 2019. The Wall Street Journal sources say that the US Department of Justice is discussing a deal to allow Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou to return to China from Vancouver, Canada in exchange for admitting wrongdoing. Meng has been on bail in Vancouver wearing an ankle monitor since December 5th, 2018, after the US requested her extradition on charges that she lied to banks about Huawei's business ties to Iran. A few more details came out around Google's former co-head of AI ethics, Timnit Gebrew, no longer being at the company. We talked about that a little length yesterday. We mentioned that Gebrew said that she had been fired over her stance on a paper. Google is characterizing it as a resignation. The paper we now know examined potential bias in a large scale language model. Google's head of AI, Jeff Dean, said the paper didn't take into account recent research to mitigate the risk of bias and block the paper from publication. Dean said Gebrew wanted to know who all had reviewed the paper and their exact feedback, and if she didn't get that, she would set an end date for employment. And Dean now says that means Gebrew resigned. The US Department of Defense added SMIC, China's largest chipmaker, to a list of alleged Chinese military companies. While the list itself doesn't carry direct penalties from the US, a recent executive order will prevent US investors from buying securities from listed companies in late 2021. In September, the US Commerce Department began informing some US companies that they would need to acquire licenses before supplying goods or services to SMIC, citing unacceptable risk that equipment could be used for military purposes. All right, let's talk a little bit more about good news for your phone use on a plane, Rob. Oh man, so after seven years of contemplation, the FCC decided that allowing passengers to make phone calls on planes is still a horrible, horrible idea and it will not remove the ban currently in place. Back in 2013, the FCC proposed removing a ban and it has taken them until today, actually, to say, nah, we're good. We're not doing that. And the decision is strongly based on strong opposition from pilots and flight attendants. You know, there's a lot of safety concerns that they say. A lot of it is probably just they want to cut down on the flights for people saying you're talking too loud because I can just see, I can see fistfights coming from long flights from, let's say, like DC to LA to where somebody is just talking loud the whole time and it gets to the point to where fists of cuffs are thrown. So well, and there's that whole thing about when someone's having a one-sided conversation, it's more annoying than when two people are talking to each other because you're sort of fixated on what that other person that silent might be saying. And yeah, it's, you know, think of being on a red eye and, you know, everyone kind of, you know, trying to maybe sleep if you can. Maybe you don't, but you're quiet. If I get a phone call and I'm, you know, chatting loudly with my mom next to somebody who's trying to get a little shut eye, they should be mad at me. I also forgot that this was a thing. I already don't like it when people chat too much with the person next to them behind me, right? Like just keep it low, keep it low. Yeah, keep it low or, or, I don't know, yeah. Be a quiet texture. I had forgotten that this was even something that was being contemplated probably because I haven't been on a plane in a while and I don't plan to anytime soon. So it's sort of like, I don't know, whatever they rule doesn't have anything directly to do with me these days. But yeah, I'm glad that I don't have to power off all my devices when a plane takes off or lands the way that we used to. And you know, a lot of people were like, but why? Why do we have to do that? And you know, FAA was like, okay, you don't really anymore. But yeah, talking on the phone, no go. I'm happy. I remember when they were thinking about this or when they started thinking about it, because I was flying probably five, six times a month and it would have just made my life miserable if I had to listen to a plane full of people chatting for hours at a time. So I'm glad they decided not to do this. Well, speaking of things we haven't done in a long time, I want you to think back to a long time in the past, January. Oh my gosh. Remember January? CES. Razor, if you recall, was showing off another modular gaming PC system back then. We talked about it on DTNS. Well, just under the wire to avoid being vaporware, Razor announced the Tomahawk, a case that comes with two PCIe slots, one for a GPU and the other for an Intel NUC element. The 210 millimeter by 365 millimeter by 150 millimeter metal chassis is 10 liters in capacity, comes with a 750 watt PSU, uses active cooling, four USB-A 3.2 ports, two Thunderbolt USB-C three ports, two, I'm sorry, they're USB-C Thunderbolt three ports, two gigabit ethernet ports, onboard Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.0 and even a 3.5 millimeter jack. The case is matte black aluminum with dual-sided detachable glass doors and chroma RGB lights at the bottom to do some fun light-up stuff. The NUC module itself contains a 45 watt core i9-9980HK coffee lake processor, 16 gigabytes of DDR4 RAM, 512 gigabytes of NVMe solid state drive, as well as a two terabyte hard drive. You can upgrade the NUC's memory and storage, but not the CPU. The way you update a CPU in this case is you get a different NUC. So if Intel makes some more than a compatible here, you'll be able to do that. You can use a variety of full-size GPUs and Razor will sell the Tomahawk to you two ways. They both come with the NUC, but you can order the Tomahawk without a GPU and bring your own or you can order it with an NVIDIA RTX 3080 Founders Edition pre-installed. Now the Tomahawk is $2,400 if you don't get a GPU with it. It's $3,200 with the RTX 3080, and if you're thinking, oh maybe this is my way to get an RTX 3080 while the pre-orders are open in the US, but it's already out of stock. So good luck getting one of these. I think a lot of people think this is cool technology. It makes it easier for you to plug and play and swap and upgrade, you know, to a new GPU and a new GPU comes out. But Rob, it seems like a pretty narrow difference between the people who want to DIY and build themselves and people who just want to buy an off-the-shelf machine. Yeah, I hate to be that old guy that says, you know, just wants to poo-poo everything, because in essence this sounds cool, but I don't know what business critical issue this is solving for me. I am someone, I don't build PCs today, but I did back in the day. And one of the biggest reasons that I built, you know, there were two main reasons that I built my own PCs. One, cost, you know, you could build something significantly less expensively than what it costs to buy it, you know, pre-built. And two, oftentimes you wanted to have the bleeding edge, so you literally need to, you needed to have the ability to pull something out and then put something else into, get your machine to be the fastest on the block. This doesn't really do either of those things. It's, you know, like for the person, it's like, well, I want to build, but I don't really want to build. I guess it's for them, but you're not saving money and you're not necessarily going to have the best of breed. So, like I said, for me, it's cool technology, but I don't know that there's a use case for, you know, for someone like myself. Yeah, it's a good, you got to be for somebody who has enough money that they just don't want to go to the trouble of unscrewing the case. That's a pretty narrow slice, I think. Razer also announced the Hammerhead True Wireless Pro earbuds that feature active noise cancellation or THX certified and IPX4 rated for water resistance. The buds can reduce audio latency to 60 milliseconds when you're gaming. Hammerhead True Wireless Pro is available right now also for $200. I like the look of those. All right, Thursday, Warner Mita Studios announced all its 2021 films would go to HBO Max and theaters at the same time and Chaos ensued. Apparently, they did so without consulting the theaters themselves. AMC CEO Adam Aaron said in response to the announcement that, quote, Warner Media intends to sacrifice a considerable portion of the profitability of its movie studio division to subsidize its HBO Max startup and, quote, we will do all in our power to ensure that Warner does not do so at our expense. Regal Theater's owner, Cineworld, released a statement saying it plans to reopen cinemas in Q1 of 2021 and believes, quote, WB will look to reach an agreement about the proper window and terms that will work for both sides. Meanwhile, in an interview with the Washington Post, AT&T CEO John Stanky said that this could be a lifeline for theaters. He pointed out that once people go back to theaters, you may see all the studios release a bunch of movies at once creating a bubble where the movies don't make as much as they would be expected to otherwise. Stanky also added that the company realized, quote, we're going to have some really good content here that's spoiling and can be used for other purposes. Huh. Yeah, so the top line here is we were wondering yesterday when we talked about this, did the theaters sign onto this? And the answer is no. No. Warner Media is playing hardball, just announcing this and making the theater scramble to negotiate something later. It sounds like John Stanky is saying, look, theaters are going to get more money out of having us do this than they would if we just held up all our releases until 2022. And that seems to be the negotiating position of AT&T. Sitting on movies, like theaters don't get anything out of that. They get nothing. Yeah, and I feel bad for the, you know, for the movie theaters as much as you can for corporations. I feel bad for the people who are displaced out of work. But, you know, these companies are not going to just sit on all this content and let it get stale and then not be able to make any money on it. So it's like, you know, this is what we're going to do. And I just don't know that there's a lot that the movie theaters are going to be able to do about it. I mean, they'll probably come to some type of agreement. But, you know, for the next year or maybe even more than that, you know, movie theaters are just not going to, you know, be the place where people are going to watch content. Yeah, I do think Warner has him over a barrel. I don't think it's impossible that maybe we end up with a couple of small windows. My best guess, though, is we're going to see revenue shares come out of this. We're going to see Cineworld AMC and whoever else tries to negotiate getting a cut of some digital revenue the way they did with Wonder Woman. But it's going to be less of a cut because WarnerMedia just went ahead and said, we're doing it. You know, so the horse is out of the bar. And in fact, John Stanky said in his interview with the Washington Post, the horse is out of the bar. And like this is, this is not going back. Hey, folks, if you want to join in the conversation about this or anything else in our Discord, you can do so by linking to a Patreon account at patreon.com slash DTNS. Well, Rob's been putting a lot of work into his video set up and agreed to share some of the tricks he's learned and a few of the products he thinks are worth knowing about if you're setting up your video from home. What do you got for us, Rob? So like everyone else on earth, I am doing a lot of video conferencing from the house. And, you know, I discovered in the conversation with my dad who happens to be a photographer that I really looked horrible whenever I was doing my calls. Now, I'm an engineer that has been doing, you know, teleconferences for literally a year. Since you've been able to do webinar type stuff online, I've been doing it. But you never really showed your face. You just showed your product. So it didn't matter what you looked like. But now that's really changed. You know, people want to see your face. They want to see, you know, make sure that you, you know, like, you know, that you're dressed at least the top half of your body. And, you know, I was doing everything. I was using a actual Logitech camera, not using the camera on my laptop. But I didn't think about lights. Lights were the lights that I had, you know, you know, turn the light switch on, turn the lamp on, whatever it was near me. But I started to play around with just, oh, well, if I put this light here, or if I actually sit in front of the window as compared to sitting behind the window, I'll look a little better. And, you know, what I've done for my setup, because I'm actually building an office down in my basement, since I'm going to be working from home for the foreseeable future. And I said, okay, well, I need to get some artificial light down here. So instead of just buying lamps, let's actually buy purpose built lights to do this. So, you know, what I'm doing right now, I know I'm jumping a little across the screen because I'm, I've got this chroma key from Skype, you know, kind of not making me look as good as it can look. But in OBS, setup I've got actually looks pretty good. And I'm using a $100 set of lights. These are Moondog, you know, softbox lights that I bought. Now I'm in my basement. I have an enormous amount of room down here. So I'm able to use these giant light boxes that I'm able to light myself with a hair light and a key light and actually put a backlight on the background behind myself. But you don't have to go that, you know, you know, you know, big lights like this, you can also use small lights that you literally would just clamp to your desk. A lot of people, the first thing they say is all I need to get a ring light. I wear glasses, ring lights and glasses are not necessarily the way to go because you will see the ring light in your glasses. Yeah, it's great. So I said, okay, well, I don't want to do that. I want to get at least, you know, a left light in a right light. So I don't have the glare of my glasses just being distracting. So, you know, I started to look and it's like, you know, newer, they make lights that, I mean, you can get a couple of them for 50 bucks that literally they're just desktop lights that you sit on your desk. And, you know, you get them positioned right. You can turn the heat up and down. They even have filters on them that you can change the color of the light if you choose to do so. And for 50 bucks, you can, you know, you can significantly increase how you look on camera. A lot of people think that I need to buy a better camera. That's rarely the case. You just need to have better light for the camera that you have. So I have been, for the last probably three or four months because my dad called me out on it, trying to figure out how to as inexpensively as I can make the lighting better so that I actually look better when I'm doing, you know, teleconferencing and stuff like that, which I'm doing quite a bit of these days. Yeah, I'm using the same newer. I think they're actually older versions of newer, but the NEWER here, and they work great. And they're nice and efficient, inexpensive LEDs, so they don't use a lot of power and they're adjustable, like you said. The mount dog stuff that you were talking about though, those are big old box lights, you know, they're soft box lights. That's the kind of stuff people use for professional shoots. It is the kind of stuff that you use for professional shoots. Now, once again, my dad is a retired professional, he's a retired professional, you know, photographer. The soft boxes that he uses are significantly more than what I've got here. I tried to keep the cost down to, you know, all I'm doing is just lighting myself while I'm doing a, you know, a webinar style call. So these lights, literally when I got them, they were a hundred bucks. I think the price has gone up a little bit now that they might be like a hundred and ten bucks. But, you know, the light that I'm getting right now, you know, three point lighting, $110. Like I said, you can get, if you just need two desktop lights, you can get those for as little as 40 bucks, 41, 42 bucks. And if you want to go with the nice Elgato, like the key lights that you can control with apps and all that kind of stuff, you can spend a little bit more. You can spend as much as $200 a light for a still a relatively low end or medium range light. But it's, you know, the light is everything when it comes to doing video. It's not always the camera. In fact, it's probably rarely your camera as long as you have a camera that is not the one built into your laptop. If you if you actually got a like a logic tech camera or anything that you spent, you know, a hundred bucks on as far as a camera, those are going to do just fine for, you know, for webinars and, you know, for go to meetings and for zoom calls and all that kind of stuff is just get your light right and you'll look a lot better. I think a lot of times too. Oh, go ahead, Tom. No, no, no. I was just going to say those Elgatos, yeah, as as pricey as they are, they really aren't that different from the newers. It doesn't seem like. No, they aren't. And like I said, they have a application that you can control everything from within the app. So they get some stuff built into it. Like I said, for me, I was just trying to go as cheap as possible. And since I've got the space, I've got these giant 24 inch, but I think they're 24 by 28 inch soft boxes that cost me a hundred bucks. And, you know, like said, the difference between where I look like now, I used to look like I was sitting in a dungeon. Yeah. What I was going to say is I have the ring light glasses issue, which is, you know, it's an ongoing saga, but we'll figure it out eventually. But when I, because I'm in a garage right now, my studio redwood, surprise, it's a garage. And I've got these fluorescent overhead lights that at first I was like, Oh, they're awful, you know, it horrible lighting. But I've actually learned to use them as kind of fill and back lights because I've got my ring light and I have it on a really, um, a warm setting, which offsets that sort of fluorescent stuff. So, Yeah, yeah. And you mentioned the window as well. You know, are you frequently near a window in the middle of the day? It's like, you can use the light that you've already got and supplement it and, and turn out was something that looks really nice. Right. You know, there's, if we go back in the annals of shows that I've done, there were times when I was actually sitting in front of a window, my back was to the window and there was nothing I could do. I couldn't move my desk when I couldn't move the window. So I literally just took a plant and put it in front of the window to just diffuse the light a little bit. And if I remember, one of you guys asked me, he's like, Rob, did you get a new camera? He's like, no, I just changed the lighting a little bit. So it was me because I was like, it looks so good. So, uh, yeah, it's just playing around, uh, you know, with your light changing the angle of your desk, changing the angle of your light, you know, doing those little things. I mean, you got to play with it until you get it right for your situation where you're set up. But don't just go out and spend a thousand dollars on a camera and you still don't have a thousand dollars worth of lights because you're going to still look like, you know, not that great. You want to get your light right. Well, Tom mentioned a rapping robot at the top of the show. So let's dive in, shall we? Music technologist Gil Weinberg of the Georgia Institute of Technology has adapted a musical robot called Shimon to compose lyrics and then perform them in real time. Shimon can collaborate with people on compositions or even engage in rap battles, which is all the rage if you're on Instagram anyway. Shimon is believed to be the first robot capable of composing its own rap songs. Shimon can identify keywords in an opponent-spoken lyrics and then generate new lyrics based around those original lyrics generated from custom data that sets Shimon has trained on using deep learning. Shimon is capable of rhyming by using a phoneme data set. Phonemes are distinct units of pronunciation that make up a word sound. So it kind of learns what you're doing and knows how to replicate it. To keep Shimon responding in real time, the response vocabulary was capped at 3,000 words and limiting the amount of time that it listens. So the robot can wrap a comeback in less than seven seconds. Shimon also improvises head gestures and eyebrow wiggles. And it's really darn cute. The solution is passing by. We are the servants of the world for the world's showing aim because you're trying to make a claim. I want to be a human. You want to be human but you got to get a certain mature system. That's a rap battle with Dash Smith on the official YouTube for this. They say they made Shimon's sound computer-y on purpose, which I think was because if they made, if they gave it a more natural sounding artificial voice, it would have even more of an uncanny valley. So they're like, we want to make it clear that it's a robot. Rappers out of work everywhere. I don't know. I mean, it's got a long way to go. But in the video, the YouTube video, which we'll have in our show notes, it's really cool because it is sort of this adorable robot kind of, you know, Dappin' to the beat. And what can't we do? We heard what it sounded like today. In three years, battle rappers, they better watch out. It's only going to get better. Yeah. Versus in three years, we'll be featuring Shimon against somebody. You do a collab with stuff. Yeah, right. It's going to show up on my iTunes or my Apple music, I should say. Yeah. And as goofy as that sounds when we play it back, in some respects, it's impressive that that wasn't programmed, right? It's easy for you to go like, well, that's easy. I just, you know, type into any kind of speech synthesizer and make that happen. That was created on the fly. Like you really got to listen closely to the entire rap battle with Dash Smith to understand that it's taking things that Dash says and incorporating them. Within seconds. There's some real semantic processing going on there, which is impressive. It's hard to do. Well, I've got a story that may make you laugh or cry, depending on who you are. Taiwan News reports that Taiwanese Facebook user Jin Wu says that he purchased a hard to get Sony PS5 from a reseller on November 20th from a woman who seemed to know little about gaming and was selling the PS5 for a particularly low price when we arrived to collect the PS5. He was met by a middle-aged man who seemed to be an avid gamer. When we asked the man, why are you getting rid of the PS5? The man said, my wife wants to sell it. It turns out that women can tell the difference between a PS5 and an air filter. So the implication here is that his wife told him he couldn't buy a PS5. So he secretly somehow got a hold of a PS5 and told her it would try or at least tried to tell her it was an air filter. It feels like he could have thought a little more about that. Right. The whole thing, because she's probably looking at the receipt and being like, wait a second. No, you said it was an air filter. He might have been able to get away with a giant Wi-Fi router. Right. Yeah. Yeah, he has an air filter. Keep the receipt away from her. And she goes, what is that? And be like, oh yeah, that's just to store a Wi-Fi router. That's for our network. I just love the idea of these two men meeting each other somewhere and the guy saying, why are you doing this? And he's like, my wife made me. She's not even here right now. She clearly made the sale. Like she was the one talking on the phone. Like, yeah, come and get it. I don't know anything about it, but I'm selling it for face value. I'm assuming she sold it for face value rather than profit because he said it was affordable. I can't imagine she sold it at a loss. That would obviate the whole point. But she made the husband give it up as I believe extra punishment for doing. Go and you give that man your PS5. Yeah, you look him in the eye and hand it over. You tell him what you did. Oh, air filters. Good times. Yeah. I like, Rob, you're onto it. Something about Wi-Fi, something that it's an internet appliance, internet of things. Yeah. When I first saw the design of it, it's grown on me to the point where I actually want one now, but it looked like a Wi-Fi router. It's like, man, can that thing sit flush? I mean, it just, it just looked a little weird. It's like, you know, you just need to throw some antennas on it or something like that. It would be a giant Wi-Fi router. And then she's like, I'm doing some trace roots on this new router and it's throwing some really odd packets, honey. We need to talk about this. All right. Let's check out the mailbag. Let's do it. So Martin wrote in and had an interesting story about, you know, movie theaters versus the option of watching at home and the more options that we have now. Martin says he and his fiancé each had a center world unlimited membership. They're in the UK, I believe. And Martin says they'd make a trip once or twice a month and they'd see four to six films in a single day. So it was like, they're kind of fun movie days. It says in 2018, I saw 85 films in the cinema. This year I've seen 13 all pre-lockdown and we didn't feel ready to return when center world opened back up but since closed down again but they haven't been since. So Martin said they looked at adding a movie package to their TV subscription. Martin says we're fairly confident we still be able to see the big releases with only a couple months or less delay. However, when we went to the cinema we would use smaller films that sometimes we'd not heard of to fill up our day, you know, to get our money's worth. Although we hadn't heard of them we'd enjoy seeing them and sometimes see really good films we would not have considered seeing otherwise. The downside to having the TV or on demand service is we probably will miss out on those smaller films we might not consider watching them because we're not in the theater wasting time. Although we have to consider the issue of distractions and going to the cinema forces us to put our phones away. So yeah, I think, you know, Martin you're onto something. It's not the same and you might be saving a lot of money but yeah, it's you are building a new experience not really replicating the old one. You know, it's an interesting thought that you won't run into movies at the theater if you're a regular theater goer where you just show up and go what's playing. But I think Netflix and HBO Max and those streaming services and are going to be very good at showing you independent films that you wouldn't get exposed otherwise, Rob and I were talking about this before the show actually. Yeah, it's, you know, there's a lot of stuff that just doesn't get made or you just never see it because the studios they want to make profit. I mean, that's what they're there for so you're going to see the big blockbusters they know we spent a quarter billion dollars to make it we need to make a billion dollars on it as compared to if we spend 10 million to make it then we need to make, you know, then we need to make 40. That's not necessarily making a move so you just on oftentimes see that kind of content but if it's on these streaming services as as field content, you know, you see a lot of good movies that I mean are really quality, you know, stories, quality scripts, you know, good writing, all of that stuff that you would normally not be able to see by just going to the movie theater to see big box movies. Well, if you have emails for us whether it's a personal story as Martin sent it in or a question or a comment, please send it along. Feedback at dailytechnewshow.com. We also want to shout out our patrons at our master and grand master levels today. They include Justin Zellers, Miss Music Teacher and Mike McLaughlin. Len Peralta has been busy illustrating today's topics. Actually, one of the big topics of the week, Len, that you drew here. Yeah, I am super excited for this, the big announcement about Warner Brothers taking their whole slate of movies to HBO Max. This piece is called The Warners Are Here and it depicts an image of someone opening up his door and all these huge monsters and the dune worm and Wonder Woman are all waiting to come on in. I for one am all for it and I hardly endorse bringing The Warners into my home for 2021. So yeah, so you can get this right now if you're a Patreon subscriber patreon.com for it slash Len you can download it right now or you can go to my online store at LenPeraltaStore.com where I'm also selling custom Christmas cards. So you can check it out, check that out right on the front page. Very cool, LenPeralta. Do you check those out? Also thanks to Rob Dunwood for being with us today. Rob, where can people keep up with your work? I am all things at Rob Dunwood on whatever the platform is but you can definitely check me out over on the smrpodcast.com website where you'll hear my weekly show. We want to send folks a holiday card if you're a patron and you've given us your address by December 10th you'll get one. You can check if we've got your address by going to Patreon dot com slash pledges finding DTNS and then looking in the right hand column you can either edit it to make it right, update it if it's not there or just look at it and go nope, there it is. If you want the holiday card though you have to become a patron now at dailytechnewshow.com slash Patreon. Hey, did you know we're live Monday through Friday at 4 30 p.m. Eastern 2130 UTC? Well, you can find out more at dailytechnewshow.com slash live thanks to everybody who does join us live. It is Friday and guess what? We'll be back on Monday. Talk to you then.