 This 10th year of Daily Tech News show is made possible by its listeners, thanks to all of you, including James C. Smith, Miranda Janell, and Justin Zellers. Coming up on DTNS, satellite text messaging comes to Android, and Shannon Morse and Nicole Lee join us from Las Vegas to talk about a smartwatch that makes you not tired and live streaming your oven. This is the Daily Tech News for Friday, January 6th, 2023 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt. And from Studio Redwood, I'm Sarah Lane. From the Las Vegas Convention Center, I'm Shannon Morse. Also from the LVCC, I'm Nicole Lee. And I'm the show's producer, Roger Chang. Oh, my friend, CES has two more days to go, apparently, but this is the last day we'll be covering it, so let's get right into the quick hits. On Tuesday's episode of DTNS, Aya's Actar, explained by Microsoft's response to the FTC lawsuit against the acquisition of Activision Blizzard, was legally aggressive. That filing included five-point list claiming that the FTC did not have constitutional standing to bring the case. Microsoft has since amended its filing to remove those claims. The company's public affairs spokesperson, David Cutty, told Axios, quote, We initially put all potential arguments on the table internally and should have dropped those defenses before we filed. Somebody missed an edit is what that sounds like. Android Automotive is becoming the operating system for GM cars, meaning the whole car runs on Android. So to keep it clear, Android Auto is the interface you see in the dashboard screen and actually can run on whatever OS the car runs on. Android Automotive is the operating system for the entire car. And while it does support Android Auto, obviously, it also supports other things, including Apple's CarPlay. The Polestar 2 already runs Android Automotive and General Motors announced it's going to be rolling it out to its brands, too, including Hummer, Chevy, GMC, Cadillac, and Buick. And Honda also plans to be using Android Automotive in the future as well. Three arrows capital filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy on July 1. Liquidators in the case of Penid, the usual account information needed to proceed with bankruptcy liquidation. Apparently, the founders have not complied, so the liquidator got approval from courts in the U.S. and also Singapore to serve the subpoena on Twitter. The account 3AC liquidation at replied the co-founder Kyle Davies the following, quote, JPEG copies of the subpoena are attached to this tweet by way of service. An unredacted copy of the subpoena was served via email and can be provided upon request. I've heard people tweet you've been served, but never actually literally mean it. That's amazing. Rackspace says its internal investigation showed attackers gained access to personal data of 27 customers during a ransomware attack in December. Now, the attackers had access to PST files. Those are files usually used for archives of emails, calendar events, contacts, things from exchange accounts. But Rackspace says there's no evidence the threat actor actually viewed, obtained, misused, or disseminated any of the data from the PSTs. Despite what many local news outlets may be saying, Google Chrome will not stop working on your parents' computer this month. However, what is true is that on January 10th, Google will release the final version of Chrome. That's Chrome 109 for Windows 7, 8, and 8.1. All of these versions are already unsupported by Microsoft, so the end of Google Chrome support not really unexpected here, especially since it was originally planned to end in July of 2021, but then got extended because of the pandemic. Chrome 109 will continue to work but will no longer receive security updates, so will be unsafe to continue to use. Yeah, so you should get it off anybody's computer, parents or otherwise, but it won't just stop working. It shouldn't work. They shouldn't want to get it on. Qualcomm announced Snapdragon Satellite. Snapdragon Satellite is a service similar to Apple's Emergency SOS. But unlike the Apple service, Snapdragon Satellite is right up front, offering full two-way texting, so you can do more than just emergency communication. The service will run on Iridium Satellites. Those use the 1 GHz L band. That's the same band as GPS and some mid-band service. Now, that's better than the Global Star because there's more satellites. Apple uses Global Star. Qualcomm's using Iridium. And that means Qualcomm can use existing phone antenna parts. You don't have to make new antenna parts. You won't have to add any new components either. It will just have to build support into the chip. Users will need to point the phone in the right direction to get service, but you may not have to hold it up above your head and the speeds will be slow. We're talking three to 10 seconds to send an average text. So you're not going to get calls or media, just text messages. Sarah, how are we going to get this into a phone? Oh, Tom, I'm glad you asked. Support will show up in phones in the second half of this year that use the Snapdragon Gen2 system on a chip and X70 modem, along with a minimal additional radio support. At launch, it'll do just emergency texts for free. Then somebody would have to work with Qualcomm to set up a regular messaging service, and we can go around the horn and who we think that might be. Satellite providers like SpaceX, AST and Link, that's Link with a Y, have all been working with cell phone carriers on similar programs that work with existing 5G phone radios as well. Yeah, so it sounds like we're going to have a lot of these kinds of services with a lot of different capabilities. When we start seeing phones with this built in in the latter part of the year, they shouldn't have to cost much more because it's just a little bit of radio work in there. Who do we think might actually launch a fold to a text messaging service on this? Samsung is my first guess. They already have such a strong partnership with Qualcomm, with the higher generation SoCs, and given that they usually put in the newest Snapdragon in their technology, I feel like Samsung would be one of the main ones. I would be very surprised if they didn't do a partnership with them for this. They would have to not do Exynos on that model, or not offer the service in places where they have Exynos. I think Samsung has already said, I'm not entirely sure of this, but I think they already said they expect to see satellite radio phones from multiple OEMs, so that would probably include Qualcomm. I'm expecting, but we'll see. Question for everybody, and I know we're not all using iPhones, but has anyone used Apple's emergency SOS function? I haven't done the test where it's like, yeah, it worked, that was fun. Honestly, I wish something like this was available for Android phones, because I'm not going to carry around another device to weigh me down when I'm going hiking in Colorado, and I would like to have something that connects me to people back in Denver, and see if something happens. Having any Android alternative is huge. This is something that would actually make me consider buying a specific smartphone brand, just because I go outdoors so often. I do think however, I don't think a lot of people know about these kinds of services, like emergency SOS, so I think a lot, it needs to be marketed better. It has to be advertised, marketed. I imagine a special purpose, and Samsung would be still a good candidate for this, maybe Motorola too, a special purpose phone that's like, this is the one that has the service. Now somebody's going to launch the service, because it has to have more than just the emergency feature in it to be marketable the way I'm talking about. Let's say Samsung decides to launch a service. They're going to pay to launch the service on Iridium. The key with Iridium is the Iridium satellites talk to each other. The global star satellites that Apple uses don't. So you can do full two-way satellite text messaging with people around the world in a way you really can't with the Apple. So cool. There are so many movies that have come out about people getting lost in the middle of the woods, like fall from last year, when girls get stuck on a tower. They could have used this. This would be an ad. If only we had two-way text support, we would get off of this building. You don't need the two-way text for the emergency. Don't do that. No, they just want to chat. And you'll be able to do... They were like, use the emergency stuff. Now we're bored waiting for the emergency. Hey, you up? What's this building? Well, on Wednesday, Chalkbeat New York reported that the New York City Department of Education blocked access to OpenAI's chat GPT on its networks and devices. That's to prevent students from using it for cheating. Children can request access to the site if they have a legitimate reason. It's not completely blocked, but they have to have a good reason. Now TechCrunch says OpenAI's spokesperson says the company is developing mitigations to help spot text generated by chat GPT hoping to work with educators on solutions to the problem, basically saying, okay, teachers, we know that this is an issue and we want to help you be able to spot when it's being used for... you know, instead of reading that long book. Yeah. So this is the first school system in the U.S. to put it on the filter list right next to Facebook that you can't use it. It's similar to like, you can't use a calculator on the test. And these days, I think I mentioned this before, now you can. They actually have tests where you're like, let them use the calculator. We've adapted to the idea like, oh, but you can still test them in ways that the calculator is not going to cover for their knowledge. And I think that's what OpenAI is saying here is like, we want to help the educators get used to what chat GPT can and cannot do so that they... Yeah, some of it may be looking for indicators, but some of it may just be like, oh, if you ask for these kinds of questions, chat GPT is never going to be able to answer that. You can test the direct knowledge of the student. Yeah, chat GPT is definitely not perfect. There's plenty of times when like even content creators trying to write like a teleprompter script, they've noticed that factual information can be very incorrect with chat GPT. So even if kids are using this and like copying and pasting from their own home computer to turn in any kind of work, they would still want to like check it and make sure it's factual. Yeah, absolutely. Also, there are AI detection software out there that I'm sure educators are using right now. It's just that. And it's going to be one of those cat and mouse race situations. Yeah. Well, I mean, asking a student to create the answer right in front of you is just one way to make sure they're not using chat GPT. But yeah, you want to be able to have them hand in papers and stuff that they work on their own time. And then using chat GPT as a tool, teaching them like, hey, you chat GPT type things are good for this. Here's how to use them. Here's how to expand your knowledge by using them. I think that's important, too. Yeah, I think I think to just say, oh, well, this isn't for classrooms because all the kids are going to do is going to cheat. That's not really the purpose of this. It's sort of similar to the calculator argument. It's like, well, if you have a calculator on a test and you're going to have a calculator in life afterwards, there's nothing really inherently wrong with using the calculator on a test because it's a tool that you have. You should understand what it's doing. It can do it maybe faster than your human brain can, you know, I don't know, figure out a complex algorithm. But chat GPT is, it's not bad for kids. It's just, yeah, you don't want to have people cutting corners the way that you don't want kids to write book reports based on cliff notes either. Yeah, no, this is cliff notes accelerated. Yeah, it's a similar problem. Folks, don't miss out on a special audio interview that Rich Drafilino recorded with CES spokesperson, Tina Anthony. This Saturday will be posted it up on Patreon. You don't have to be a patron to listen to it though. Just head to patreon.com slash DTNS. That's coming out this Saturday. Well, every CES there are way too many product announcements to cover. So we always try to bring you the ones that you're definitely going to hear about so that you can help understand those when you see the headlines or see them on your local TV or the ones that we just think are notable that they're going to help you understand things in the future. But there are always a few that don't quite make the cut each day. So once the early CES fury subsides, we try to take a second look. Here's a few of the off the beaten past CES things we want to tell you about before the week wraps up. Tuesday, we mentioned that Stalantis' deal to make archers midnight flying taxis. Another EV tall flying car made an appearance at CES. The ASCA A5 ASKA. It's a four seat electric vehicle that can travel by road or air with a range of 250 miles by air on a charge. It can be charged on existing EV infrastructure. Has range extended engine so you can put gas in it. Regular car gas that you get down at the shell station. And it can take off and land vertically from a compact space. You don't need a runway. Although it uses more energy to do that. So if you do have a 250 foot or less runway or more runway, you can get a little better energy efficiency. The FAA has accepted ASCA through their intake board. Full flight testing is starting after CES. And ASCA is taking deposits for pre-orders with delivery in 2026. Now the retail price is not for the faint of heart. It's expected to be less than $800,000. But how much less? Yeah. Like $768,000 somewhere around here. Oh. Oh, affordable. Well, that is fine. Not even a million dollars. The company also plans to launch an on-demand ride service. That's probably where they're going to sell the majority of these is to fleets. And that ride service is expected to launch in 2026. Kind of makes me wonder what gas stations are going to look like a few years from now. I was about to say, when you say rolling to a gas station, sure, this is going to roll into a gas station. Or drop into a gas station from above. That's right before you get to it. Can you imagine being at a gas station and you see somebody like fly in from above and just drop straight down? Yeah, just take it. If you're interested, I just ran out. I think this is going to be something that we were going to get used to sooner than later. But yeah, I think the ride service makes the most sense. Most consumers just aren't. This is a little, your wallet's got to be pretty thick. I want to say Uber used to have someone like a helicopter ride or something. Yeah, they were partnering on a helicopter service. So I guess it's kind of like that kind of vibe, I guess. Yeah, but this can also drive like a car. So it's not just a helicopter. Well, speaking of the future of driving, Ford's F-150 Lightning EV truck is on sale. Chevy showed off at Silverado EV last year, which goes on sale next year. And Thursday, Ram finished the big three of truck makers to introduce EVs when it showed off its Ram 1500 Revolution BEV concept truck. It was a concept. So it has some cool stuff that you might see at CES, but it might not make it into production like pillarless doors, cameras, instead of rear-view mirrors. But when it comes to market and Ram says it will, it will have a twin motor, all-wheel drive layout and the battery operates at 800 volts, which will allow the truck to DC fast charge at up to 350 kilowatts. We don't have any word on range, payload, or towing, not yet anyway, but there were lots of concepty things like touch screens, interior lighting, party modes, firmer details are going to come later. Ram says it plans to bring the car to market in 2024, whether you want to party in it or not. Party mode, the truck. Yeah, we finally got everybody into the truck. Remember there was a couple of years ago, we were talking to Tim Stevens on the show about like, hey, when are we getting electric trucks? This is, we have them, they're all on the way. I guess we don't have them, but they're all in the pipeline. And I gotta say, I mean, I've been very excited about the electric F-150, not because I'm in the market for a truck, but just because at one point it was like, wow, look at Ford, they are really pushing this whole EV truck thing and everybody else is getting on board and the Ram is, I mean, it's huge. That's a really big vehicle. It's giant. I don't know that I would even be comfortable driving it, but I'm also not really hauling a lot of stuff in the back and some people would love this. Oh, sorry, go ahead. I would pick up trucks are like a huge, huge, huge demographic in the car automobile market. So it's definitely, yeah, top seller. So this is definitely worth it. I'm excited to get one. And also the flying vehicle as well. Because it's totally in my price range. Oh, flying trucks. That's next year's CEO. Flying trucks. Flying pickups. Okay. Now we're getting somewhere. Yeah. You just can't turn to. This next one is one that I kept seeing and kept just not quite making the cut, but it's really cool. Citizen announced new CZ smartwatches that include a self-care advisor called UQ. So it's more about this app that only is available on the new generation of CZ smartwatch. Software was built with IBM Watson. And what it does is over a seven to 10 day period. It learns what they call a chronotype. It uses sleep data as well as a score from an alert test adapted from NASA's psychomotor vigilance test or PVT test, which they use to assess fatigue. So you have to take a brief gamified daily test. You have to wear the watch to bed. But if you do, the watch will recommend actions and activities to reduce fatigue. UQ only runs on the new second gen CZ watches. Those watches are decent watches. They run Wear OS. They have a gyroscope, altimeter, barometer, accelerometer, heart sensor, SPO2, ambient light sensor. And you can pre-order them now starting at $375 for delivery on March 1st. It's actually pretty nice. I wouldn't mind having a watch that can kind of figure out my fatigue cycle and tell me what I can do to fix it. Yeah. I think it's very useful. I feel like I have an Apple watch. And it's useful for counting steps and fitness and stuff like that. But this adds another layer to the whole whether you're tired all day and I certainly am tired all day. So I might need this. Yeah. I hesitate because it does sound like they actually worked with NASA. And the PVT is a real test that is used in some critical situations, like astronauts and stuff, right? So there's some definite science behind this. I'm not sure about the chronotype or how they match the sleep data with the PVT, the fact that it's a gamified PVT that's been adapted. It's not the full one. I'm curious how accurate this is. But yeah, I mean, if it helps, it helps, right? Yeah. Well, everybody loves a smart kitchen. And Samsung showed off the bespoke AI oven with a seven-inch touchscreen that can do air frying, steam cooking, has dual temperature zones, and something that Samsung is calling air sous vide. You can also use the company's smart things cooking platform to set timers and preheat things using some computer vision until you what food you're putting in it and recommends time, temperature, mode of cooking, whether it's broccoli or meat, for example. Supposedly it can recommend 780 dishes and ingredients, 106 in the EU. It can also detect things like burning and EU models can warn you if your food is getting overcooked. Plus, you can use the camera inside to check on your food remotely, and you can even livestream it as it cooks. Maybe you do cooking videos. Maybe that would be something that would be kind of helpful in real time. Coming to the EU and the US in Q3 of this year, but no word on price yet. I'm curious what regulatory differences caused the EU to get the overcooking warning and the United States not. That's interesting. We just, you know, we love well done meat. Yeah, I guess. So I should say that, you know, as Samsung is calling it air sous vide, I think, I don't think it's, I think that's a thing that exists already. Like a Nova's precision oven, a lot of steam ovens. That's, steam oven is sous vide-ish, but like without using the bag. But they're distinguishing it. They're saying it's steam cooking. There's steam cooking and there's air sous vide. I'm a little bit skeptical on that term, but it's very interesting that you can attach it to, like you can live stream your food. That's cool. I know everybody thinks that's crazy, but I think me and Sarah are like, oh yeah, live streamers, like twitch streaming cooking channels. There's so many places. It's not. Everybody thinks, oh, like how interesting is that to just watch the turkey cook. But my guess is it's going to be you in front of the camera with the oven as an inset. Yeah, like a picture in pictures. It's going to be a new niche. Hear me out. ASMR cooking videos. Okay. Little sizzle. Little sizzle. The sizzle. How good's the mic? No one's asked that. How good is the mic on the bespoke AI oven? Yeah. Well, you know, the June oven, which I reviewed for a Live With It segment in 2020, it does also have a camera, which I've used within the app to be like, well, yeah, look, there's my asparagus cooking, which you could then take that video and put it somewhere, but it's not a live stream capability. It would take a little bit of work on your part. And yeah, I mean, I think this goes a step further. And hey, people will live stream pretty much anything, and cooking videos are pretty popular because we all like to eat. Billy Gates' Van Chag in our chat is like, wait, does it sous vide mean under vacuum? But how do you have air? Yeah, exactly. That's why. Yeah, we're still stuck on that. Go on. All right. Eve Systems announced that it's Eve Door and Window, Eve Energy and Eve Motion sensors. So, you know, plugs, door sensors, stuff like that. The ones that are coming out in March will have matter support out of the box instead of you having to do a firmware update. Eve's already ahead of the game on matter with all products in its lineup, except the light strip and flare, eligible for matter upgrades. But now you won't even have to do an upgrade. It'll just be matter support out of the box. Eve also announced a kit to turn any basic roller blind into Eve Motion blinds. You don't need to do any special wiring. You don't need any special tools. You just add it to the blinds you have, and then you can control the automation in HomeKit. Although, when matter, the platform, adds blinds to the standard later this year, it will work because it's thread-compliant out of the box. It will work with all matter systems as well, so you won't be stuck in the HomeKit app after that. That one's coming March 28th for $200. I love this. I'm really excited about that. I'm excited just in particular about companies, including Eve systems, putting matter into their products and making it really easily accessible for consumers. Yeah. That's been one of the big trends out of CES, is it's matter-compliant, which usually makes me roll my eyes when I go, oh, everybody's, but this time it's important. Yes, thankfully, it's matter-compliant. Yes, it is. It's nice to know that this is already integrated into their products, so people don't necessarily have to deal with a bunch of upgrades or anything, or if they do, they also mention the eligibility, so that's pretty cool, too. I think it's great. Motion blinds would be very useful, for sure. Well, if you want something that's also potentially great, EcoFlow launched its whole home backup power solution coming in three versions, although it's really only two. The starter kit is just the existing Delta Pro power station, so if you have a power inlet box and a transfer switch, you buy a 38 cable, you plug it in, it costs $3,699. The advanced kit takes two Delta Pro power stations, connects them with a double voltage hub for 7,200 watts of output. That costs $7,498. You can pay extra to make it four batteries or even six. That should be able to power your home for about a week, depending on where you live and what you're doing. Then there's the smart control kit, which adds an EcoFlow smart home panel that can handle automatic switchover, drain-of-power outage. It can also schedule circuits to cut over battery power at peak times, so you're cutting down on your bill. EcoFlow whole home package kits are available now in the U.S. and qualify for a 30% tax credit and are coming to Europe soon. These are interesting because at least those first two kits don't require an electrician, and even the one that does the smart control kit has some nice smarts in it for the price. They're not necessarily a lot cheaper than what you would get from other companies, but EcoFlow is great. I have an EcoFlow Delta that I use as my backup in case of power outage, and they make really good stuff. This is trying to make that whole home backup just a little bit easier to install. This is a big trend that I've also seen at CES with several different companies is making power backup solutions a little bit easier. They are still relatively expensive for most folks, but you are seeing a lot of different options, a lot of different models for a variety of consumers, whether you just need something as a battery backup or you need a true and powerful generator, or if you need something that you can actually put into your home system to back up your entire household. So there's a lot coming out right now that has to do with backup power solutions, and this is one of them, so I'm excited to see it. I'm really, really enjoying the competitive market that we're starting to see. Having had a power outage literally two days ago in San Francisco due to the big storms, I would have loved a backup power solution, totally. Yeah, and it can save you money on your bill, too. If you're able to have it charged during off-peak and then provide power during peak so that you're not paying the peak rates, yeah, there's some good stuff there. EcoFlow also announced three home products. The Glacier is a fridge and freezer that can make 18 ice cubes in 12 minutes. Battery can power the device for 24 hours on a single charge, and it can hook up to solar, so you can kind of keep it going. It's available in April. Blade is a robot lawnmower, not vampire, robot lawnmower that can also collect leaves, so it can suck the leaves off your lawn, not the blood. It supports virtual boundaries, root planning, and obstacle avoidance, and includes 4G-based anti-theft protection, so you can disable it if it gets stolen. It's also coming in April, and the Wave 2 is the new battery-powered air conditioner, which also can be used as a heater. Runs eight hours off the removable battery, and will be available in May. The air conditioner made a big deal when it came out. Now it can do both. Yeah. I want to use all of these in my house. I would love a battery-powered air conditioner. The lawnmower looks pretty cool. Yeah. I want one of those straight up because my husband, it's so hard to talk him into actually using the lawnmower, so I could just be like, well, just turn on the robot. I think you still need to be out there looking it over, but still better than pushing it around, right? Yeah. That's fine. He could sit out there, and I don't know, and talk on the phone. I mean, I love my Roomba. I could not live without it, in fact. So something that is sort of like this for the outdoors, and yeah, you'd have to be supervising it on some level. We have a lot of leaves, you know? It's like, well, maybe we wouldn't have to pay landskeepers to come and clean up all the leaves every two weeks if the robot did its thing. I love that he has anti-thuff protection just in case someone just takes it. Yeah. Because you walked inside to get a lemonade or something? Hey, where's my blade? We got two more to get to. Let's get to it. What's next, Sarah? All right, Cyber Power PC showed off a concept for a new custom full-size keyboard configurator, similar to its extensive configuration offerings for its PC products. Might be familiar with the Cyber Power line. This will provide different plate and keycap and switch and cable options. It eventually hopes to provide 65% and 10 keyless options as well. We don't have a release date yet, but I know some mechanical keyboard fans will be excited about this one. Yeah, Rich Trafalino recommended we talk about this today. He's into mechanical keyboards and he was like, this is just a great entry level one or easy one even if you're not entry level. If you just want to have an easy way to do some customization. It's beautiful. It looks great. And mechanical keyboards are the thing these days. They're relatively inexpensive. Then there's the Satechi GAN charging hub that can deliver 200 watts of power across six USB-C PD ports, two of which support USB-C 3.1, so they can do laptop level power. Ways just over a pound is 4.1 by 4.1 by 1.4 inches. So it's pretty slim. The watts are distributed among the ports depending on how many you've got plugged in. So if you just plug in your MacBook Pro, you can charge 140 watts. But the more you plug in, the more distributed it gets. Satechi's 200 watt 6 port PD GAN charger coming in Q2 for 150 bucks. That's a pretty good price for a lot of peace of mind when you've got a variety of gadgets that need to not go off the grid. That's a lot of power in a backpack. Yeah, it is. It's only less than a pound, just over a pound. Yeah, you know it's not that big either. This thing is really nice and so powerful. And fast charger because it's GAN. I love GAN. Alright, let's check out the mail bag, Sarah. We got one from Russell. Russell had feedback on Roger's latest column about AMD's new CPUs and GPUs. Roger was lamenting the disappearance of the sub-$200 gaming GPU. And in response to Russell's suggestion, Roger might consider a game streaming service. Russell says Roger and the rest of us doing video editing in great use case, but then the card is for work, not strictly gaming. For serious gamers that don't want to spend the money on PC GPUs there is the option of consoles that are less than the cost of most cards. However, hopefully as the current GPU cycle becomes more commonplace, better GPU yields and competition will bring the prices back down. Yeah, go check that out. Roger's column is really good at patreon.com slash DTNS. Thank you, Russell. Also, Charles wrote in about that $3,500 baby stroller we talked about yesterday. He said it seems very expensive until you compare it to e-bikes $3,500 for an e-bikes, not that outrageous. There are e-bikes that are in the thousands to tens of thousands of dollars. Love the show, y'all rock Charles. Aw, thanks, Charles. Yeah, it still doesn't allow me to pay for it, but it does it does make it seem less expensive when you compare it. What about flying baby strollers? Yes. Just think about it. Flying baby trucks. Ooh, babies who drive flying trucks. Autonomous trucks that can fly your baby. Oh, this got weird. It did get weird, but it might be reality sooner than later. Thanks to Shannon Morse and Nicole Lee for being with us today. Shannon, where can people keep up with your work? I would say check out youtube.com slash Shannon Morse. I have been posting youtube shorts. I don't know how to do shorts. I'm learning. So please bear with me. But I'm posting a bunch of shorts from CES and I hope you enjoy them. Well, I'm sure people will. Nicole Lee, you've got some new stuff coming down the bike. Let folks know where they can keep up with that. I just started a newsletter like a few days ago. It's on button down. So the URL is button down dot email slash Nicole Lee. I'm calling it the fringe dispatch as a little homage to my favorite movie, French dispatch. But it's going to be about fringe tech stuff that I find interesting and I'll probably start with some stuff I found at CES. So check it out. Very cool. We're glad to have both of you here and hope that you, the rest of your time at CES keeps you safe and healthy. Thanks to our brand new boss, Sean. Sean just started backing us on Patreon. Thank you, Sean. Big gold star to you. We weren't sure if we would have someone to make CES coverage possible for one more day and Sean stepped up. Well done. Sean stepped up. Yeah, and all the other patrons of course. But yeah, Sean put us over the edge. Speaking of patrons, stick around for our extended show, Good Day Internet. What will we talk about today? You can also catch this show live Monday through Friday at 4 p.m. Eastern 2100 UTC. Find out more at dailytechnewshow.com slash live. Hope you have a wonderful weekend. We're back on Monday with the show. Thanks for joining us. We'll see you next week. This week's episodes of Daily Tech News Show were created by the following people, host producer and writer Tom Merritt, host producer and writer Sarah Lane, executive producer and Booker Roger Chang, CES correspondent and producer writer and host Rich Strafilino, video producer and Twitch producer Joe Kuntz, CES field producer and technical producer Anthony Lamos, Spanish language host writer and producer Dan Campos, news host writer and producer Jen Cutter, science writer and social media producer and moderator Zoe Detterding, our mods Beatmaster, W.S. Goddus1, BioCow, Captain Kipper, Steve Guadirama, Paul Rees, Matthew J. Stevens, a.k.a. Gadget Virtuoso and J.D. Galloway, modern video hosting by Dan Christensen, music and art provided by Martin Bell, Dan Looters, Mustafa A, A-Cast and Len Peralta, A-Cast ad support from Tatiana Matias, Patreon support from Dylan Harari. Contributions for this week's show came from Ayaz Akhtar, Shannon Morse and Nicole P. Guest on this week's show were Charlotte Lowe and thanks to all our patrons who made the show possible.