 uh... we're on the hangout live it's dry and secure is that a deodorant jingle deodorant jingle, yeah, come on i've decided to be an intuition culture i remember that, yeah raise your hands, raise your hands if you're sure see, everybody sing it with me aren't you glad you're here, i'm not sponsored by shure aren't you glad you're here, stop you know, now you have me thinking about the we like short shorts ad from the 7th wow oh, you mean the nearer? yeah the nearer ad we like short shorts if you did, wear short shorts, never short shorts we were dating ourselves they actually couldn't get the license to actual recordings for whatever reason so they would always re-record them what is that stuff made out of? i always thought it was just like a toxic blend of something i think it is stripping away your hair, but you had the nearer i don't know who's doing that i've tried it, it wasn't fun nearer? yeah, it's like maybe just a razor so you don't actually have to pour chemicals on your body to disintegrate things that seems more dramatic that breaks the disulfide bonds of the keratin molecules in hair yeah, no, no, don't do that people would do anything in the 70s, really they would seriously do anything calcium hydroxide crossover bands, nearer it's some slaked lime and lye these are like 19th century chemicals so a cyanide doesn't mean i want to chug it lye was in nearer? yeah holy crap you know cocaine used to be in coca-cola yeah is that a myth? cocaine was in a lot of things no, it really was super legit i mean also cocaine was available over the counter and widely sure, yeah put on baby's gum it was Zana, we're just gonna call it cocaine used to be in diapers it was crazy yeah maybe we would get up and walk around so Brian don't get chipped up by my... i'm trying to write it clear which sometimes means i make it even harder but mario, if you smell it yeah, i figure that out, yeah okay, good i just wanted to make sure i didn't make the problem worse like, oh my god, what? if you smell it, m dash z-flux, p-body, mj, what? i guess we're right up on it, right? do we have time for a quick restroom visit? roger, does brine have time to go to the restroom? you have two minutes that's enough i can do it that's time, man well, is this bathroom like on another floor? no, it's actually right there in this room, i'm watching it no, no it has to do with a quarter mile run well, he didn't say how much time he needed, so... bathroom runs not always the same yeah, they're not all equivalent no, not all runs are the same not gonna ask a follow-up question that's not all run it's probably the safer thing to do yep it's a friday, happy friday, everyone oh, you was... oh, we... the daily television show is sponsored by Nair is not sponsored by me see, now you dare to win our short shorts listen to DTNS sponsored by Nair oh, do you know that's a perfect like merchandising thing we could have short shorts in the DTNS store we could do that hey, hey, roger flash the move on button to make sure i'm logged in on the right account move on hey, there we go, great thanks excellent all right stretches all right so wait, so i play that and then they play the, um, who's the what's it the music and then while the music's playing, i say this is daily talk, no, it was before like a new style thanks the one from yesterday's, few tech things you should know oh, right i really... there's a cue in there, i see that yeah i guess the diddle diddle out because this also becomes our public show notes i wasn't sure that people might misinterpret it yeah oh dear you have so little faith in the audience all right i need silence okay the daily tech news show is powered by you and me if you're not one of us head over to dailytechnewshow.com slash support and from studio feline i'm sarah lane and i'm brian brushwood who let you in your daughter's all three of them at once i just wondered in wearing the best robe are you doing a show let it go ahead oh and from my frigid ard cave in northeast ohio i'm len paralta uh good brian thank you very much for letting me use your studio oh absolutely man no it's been a treat to to feel like a run-up operation yeah yeah this is this has been fantastic we also have our producer roger chang manning the board at home thank you roger thank you for having me absolutely uh hey you know what we should do start with a few tech things you should know qualcomm announced it removed dr paul jacob's as executive chair of the company although he will remain on the board if you don't know the family jacob's father co-founded qualcomm back in 1985 the board named jeffrey w henderson to serve as an independent and non-executive chair broadcom bid for qualcomm last november but as we've talked about extensively on dtns the offer is stalled it was rejected by qualcomm's board least twice and is now a national security review in the us and meanwhile march 10 if you squint it looks kind of like the word mario if you spell it mar10 so google is celebrating by letting users of the google maps app change their location marker into a mario cart just look for the question block shaped button in the bottom right the features rolling out today will be available for a week google assistant will let companies create custom commands when the assistant is built into their products so a smart appliance that supports google's voice assistant could start a hyper cycle even if that's not a universal command used by other appliances universal commands on google assistant already exist but are limited to what google's already set up like on off or dim google also updated assistant actions to send you notifications on your phone and has improved media playback abilities at the same time amazon launched follow-up commands for the amazon voice services so you don't have to say al's name every time you tell her to do something just the first time within a few seconds it's uh i want to think of how many euphemisms for al we get it the big a you know lexie yeah there you go all right let's talk a little bit more about automated trucks yeah man wemo announced the pilot program in atlanta and they were going to continue tests on its autonomous technology with semi-trucks which have added challenges beyond average size cars as one can imagine next week alphabet owned wemo's self-driving trucks will start taking cargo to google's data centers though drivers will be in the trucks as a safety measure earlier this week uber announced that its driverless trucks were making freight deliveries in arizona and starsky robotics announced an initial test this week of its remotely driven trucks embark has been operating its autonomous trucks since last autumn so we are living in a world where autonomous trucks deliver things that is the world we live in this second right now in multiple places i i think the most interesting part is i was thinking what's it gonna take to get people out of the cars and i'm seeing the answer just in this summary because first it'll be there'll be drivers in there for safety and then remote drivers and then it'll say well nothing ever goes wrong why can't they watch two cars at the same time why don't these remote drivers have four or five of them open and at some point it becomes just an engineering position like an IT manager first they came for the truck drivers and brian said that's cool can they get me out of the driver's seat mixed up magicians by reading robots no well i mean this is a lot like we were talking about in arizona the other day where it's like okay this is a very limited test right you're going from data centers to another place using semi trucks you know with with drivers in the driver's seat to make sure that you know if anybody's paying attention to whether or not this should work in the greater atlanta area it's it's step one of of a much larger rollout yeah but but the fact that there's so many different companies doing it at once for some reason leaps it another step forward in my mind because it's not like oh well one company's testing this and maybe they'll roll it out like these are these are coming these these are going to be a normal thing it'll be the movie Logan in reality yes as we all know all of us are getting adamantium claws and we're all going to be old alcoholics with maybe all of them i just met them one little part with the sure sure hey guys want to talk about os loyalty yeah okay a report from consumer intelligence research partners found that phone ios loyalty or os loyalty rather has remained steady since 2016 if you're wondering who wins android has a 91 loyalty rate compared to 86 percent for ios with android benefiting from a wider selection of devices much wider but because there's so many more android users ios still gets a larger number of users switching to it then the other way around this is so fascinating to me because i wish i could tell you that my position as a ios loyalist is a reasoned position that was made for you know thoughtful decisions um but that's not the case i just happened to have it and now it's inertia pushing me forward and forward and forward and now it would be a big thing to switch and i got to tell you switching to the chaotic environment of android especially where there's you know i i found that my prejudices have been increased as i have gotten cozy for the last 10 years in the ios side now i irrationally feel like you know android is a is a inherently less safe environment and so on yeah i find this fascinating in many respects one is it is a signal that we have matured on the phone operating system uh so we have we've now settled into the 90s of phone operating systems when it was windows and mac and that was pretty much it you know which i remember thinking the moment android was announced i was like i wonder if we're going to see a second coming of the pc wars and and 10 years later that seems to have borne fruit i do think that it's interesting that android is more popular i think it's very easy to explain when it's got more devices if you're like hmm i don't really like this htc oh i'll get an lg you stayed loyal to android because you stay with all your apps but you can get a new device whereas a few more people might move off of ios because they're like i don't want to go to the iphone anymore although it's a bigger jump so that's why they keep their 86 loyalty because people like i don't want to have to you know go into an entirely new ecosystem i wonder how long before these os is either become irrelevant or get disrupted what seems to be happening with windows and mac is that the operating system on the desktop is just becoming less of an issue anymore and so we're not going to see linux on the desktop be the big disruptor that people thought it's it's an entirely different setup it's chrome os it's it's different form factors all together in fact operating systems on phones are actually the ones that that are taking over this right like operating systems on phones have have taken what i think people thought would happen with windows and mac right and said to the extreme because it's all hard coded into the device well and as somebody who i've only had an iphone since smartphones were available right and i know a lot of people who are on android and i pay a lot of attention to that but some of my less technical friends who have always had and rich phones look at my phone and they're just like wow what are you doing it really is it you know when it comes to like the the the daily sort of uh you know methodical ways that you use your smartphones it's not that similar actually yeah the big things are similar but how you get there are different exactly yeah when i switch from one to the other and i use both that's the thing that always strikes me is like oh right i have a five a different five step path to make that happen well and having the opportunity to switch back and forth is one thing but most people just just don't yeah no uh reviews are out for intel's optane ssd 800p drives these are the drives that use 3d cross point memory um it's it's a matrix memory so it's it's it tells a little vague on how they implement it but essentially you stack memory on top of each other so that there's shorter distance between points then you can make it faster that's oversimplifying it the basics of how it works uh these drives cost 129 bucks for 58 gigabytes not a lot of gigabytes per dollar 199 dollars for 118 gigabytes when compared to a budget drive it might do well gizmodo liked it compared to budget drives but if you compare it to an equivalently priced hard drive pc world notes you can find better performance at higher capacity uh so its main advantage right now is longevity pc world suggests it might make sense at a corporate raid setup this is uh this is these are the ones that don't use the sata at all they actually plug right into the pc i slot that's correct they don't use sata so these so these these these are these are the the proof of concept like we can make a 3d cross point drive price is going to have to come down capacity is going to have to go up then when it's apples to apples on price and capacity these should outperform everything else yeah and nowadays i find myself increasingly as as i think more is a business and less as an individual consumer it used to be all i cared about with speed uh but nowadays data redundancy preservation of files and all that stuff that that longevity of the hardware that's the the big motivating factor as i consider safety yeah twitter ceo jack dorsi announced via periscope stream that the company is working to allow users to verify themselves so that twitter can take itself out of the selection process dorsi said it would free the company from judgment or imply any bias twitter verification was originally given out to public figures and celebrities in 2016 twitter allowed everyone to request verification but who received a blue check mark ever since who didn't was a mystery to many users still a mystery to me i still have no idea the rhyme or reason of how they pick that stuff well i don't think twitter does either that's why they're like you know what we're going to make make a whole different system where like you can verify yourself and you know we'll we'll use something that's like similar to how arabian b can can verify people who want to rent out their house because for the last several years a lot of people who would fall into the celebrity or journalist or otherwise public figure category like couldn't get check marks and they didn't know why yeah well and and it this seems inherently more fair to me and and trust me as somebody who was really excited to get my check mark oh now everyone has stars upon dars you know it's like i i i want to be petty like that but i think this is a smart decision and in fact i can see them going even farther into essentially a community driven yelp style rating of how legit public figure this person is is this person important or whatever and and you i actually think they shouldn't do that i'm not saying you're wrong that they they might but the problem is people see that check mark as a value proposition right like i'm like endorse this means they're they're credible and you can believe them and the fact of the matter is shouldn't mean that at all it should just mean this person says they're brian brushwood and we're pretty sure they are like that's really all it should mean hey what about uh facebook sarah facebook has added warner music group as a licensed partner that's the last major label to sign with the social network the deal allows labels to collect royalties on tracks that are used in videos messages as well as facebook posts themselves the company also has exclusive streaming rights for 25 weekday major league baseball games this season that's a first starting April 4th with the fillies and the mats yeah they've streamed games before but they weren't the exclusive streaming source of those games in the past so so now they've got a although i'm not sure how exclusive this is justin and i were talking about this earlier today uh they're probably going to still show these things on tv on the mlb network on tv well why are they called uh exclusive streaming so like streaming yeah the network's own apps would not have this uh well the mlb network doesn't have an app the mlb has mlb all access that's another question i have is if i'm paying for mlb all access do i not get this game then like i have a lot of questions about this but i guess it means like you're not going to see this anywhere else but facebook that isn't mlb like mlb i think is a whole different uh a whole different question so for free free streaming you're gonna have to go with facebook and it brought to my mind the idea that facebook has been becoming trying to become a media company twitter has been trying to become a media company for a long time trying to become a news company uh facebook seems like it's really really trying to be a place where you can you know put music in your videos and listen to music and and now you can you can you know watch watch baseball games and they've carried other sports live so i i do see facebook and twitter possibly becoming competitors to netflix and amazon and all of the cable networks uh i'll tell you one thing this story made me realize is if there's one thing i know less about than uh music licensing rights it's baseball that that was your big revelation yeah i was like i know nothing about either of these well but it's funny because twitter has experimented with this over the last few years in a variety of capacities and it with mixed results but no one is well not no one most people are not going to twitter to be like well let's dream the latest you know mlb game or or whatever the fact that facebook wants to try this out and the fact that they have more users um they're less reliant on that kind of you know twitter real time syntax um they you know they i think they have a better chance of this working than twitter ever did i mean twitter i think will become news uh apparently they're they're streaming with streaming partnership with bloomberg has done pretty well i don't know if they can ever bust out of that even if they get thursday night football again or something like that but who knows i i think this is an interesting thing to watch it could be in five years we're like remember when facebook and twitter we're trying to get in this game and it didn't work or we might be saying isn't it crazy that facebook and twitter are networks just you know that we think of them right alongside all this other stuff uh 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 sarah lane has been kicking ass bringing it to you all week at dailytechheadlines.com you can also find it on your amazon echo on the google home and in the anchor app or subscribe to it as a podcast dailytechheadlines.com all right let's get into a story that's been uh highly voted up on our subreddit uh daily tech headlines headed on yesterday's show this is a couple days old but i thought it's something we could dive a little more deeply into california's proposed legislation to give you the right to repair your electronics that is pretty much targeted smartphone makers but it would apply to a lot of gadgets a lot of electronics promoted say it could cut down on the high fees that manufacturers charge to repair products cut down on the added waste of products getting discarded instead of being fixed because it's so expensive to fix i might as well just buy a new one california isn't alone 17 other states have introduced similar legislation none of them yet have passed new york had a big long fight over this uh and all of the companies google apple microsoft are against it they want to control that repair situation now california has a law in the books that says companies have to provide a certain amount of repair three years for cheaper products seven years for more expensive ones but it doesn't say they have to let third parties do it so they can charge almost anything they want for that do we feel that we should have that right or should it be up to companies to say you know what if you don't like our repair policies don't buy our products it's tough because uh ultimately both sides of the issue are wishing for competition to solve it in the case of of the argument for the right to repair is saying it's bs that seven years after i buy this refrigerator there's only one company that can fix it and uh they're charging out the wazoo i would like more competition so i want this law to open it up to third party people however um in doing that that now restricts all of these companies to uh to not make a daring wild possibly poorly advised uh changes to their products for example when uh let's say let's say all of this came came to pass you might have a thing where all of a sudden apple as they put together the new macbook when they uh made headlines a few years ago when they switched to gluing parts down instead of having screws in there and they're like hey this is going to make it difficult to repair they're like yeah we know but it's also going to make it thinner and lighter and a better experience while it's working that's their crazy decision to make and if this passes you restrict their ability to do that kind of stuff i don't think you restrict their ability to do that at all well if if if for example and of course we're we're comparing future made-up uh nightmare escapes right so in the nightmare escape i'm imagining the they want to do something like go to gluing everything down then all of a sudden somebody who does not work at apple is able to say uh you can't do that because that's not what this law would say this law with all this law says uh and the versions of it are apple has to provide the manual on how to fix it and has to not prohibit people from doing it right well so it would be actually be an apples it would actually encourage apple to glue things down because they're like this way it's harder for third party right yeah if you want to build your own smartphone go ahead here here's an unfortunate example in my part no i think it's a good example though because uh it would encourage companies to make products harder to repair which would be the opposite intention of the law well and that's so often what happens this is what makes me nervous about this well-intentioned legislation often has perverse unintended consequences and it's it's pretty easy to consider some future worlds where you know innovation slows down or it becomes more complicated it's it reduces the number of players in the market because you have to be a big enough company that you can afford to to take these do things the conventional way instead of a wild-eyed outsider kind of way i want the right to repair uh i don't think the companies should be able to put it in their terms of service that if you try to repair this you lose your warranty and we won't we won't touch it anymore i think that's a law i can get behind is like don't let companies artificially restrict my ability to repair making them give diagnostic manuals to the competition to their competition i mean you're not it's not reverse engineering stuff they don't have to give away trade secrets but they do have to say like hey you know here's here's how you diagnose the problem that's where i'm i'm iffy i'm not necessarily set against it but i can see the argument a lot for the for the company to say okay but why should i be forced to do that if they can reverse engineer it the law prohibits me from stopping them fine but why should i help them yeah well and keep in mind also uh google's or sorry apple's entire brand is based on this closed architecture like we are mommy and daddy and we will take care of you and all of these third party repair people exist because of the massive success of the the daring way that they've arranged their company so to to break that and to say no no no now you have to work with these competitors these these remora that have a i'm acting like i hate repaired people that's not the case at all uh but but but these these hangers on you now have to support them directly which i don't know i it feels it just feels dangerous to me and i and i don't have anything other than a vague uh spider sense about it but i'm almost certainly wrong like i am about everything i i'm i was gonna jump in here and just saying part of part of uh what bugs me is that if you own something why are you i have seven years after you've owned it why does the company still have a control over that product you paid for it and you own it it's like saying you can never work in your car because you bought like a bmw you can only go to a bmw certified shop or a bmw dealership to get it worked on i can't pull out a wrench i can't you know um bolt a couple of a couple of nuts and take the tire off i have to do that at a certified repair it's like i paid money for it it's mine i should be able to do whatever i want to it well sure they're not telling you you can't do it they're just saying we're not going to help you do it well no right now companies are saying we're telling you you can't do it okay and that is that is what this law would address uh well and and i can't do it with the punishment of uh what like what is the what is the um you would be breaking the supposed eula agreement uh when you bought that bought that item but the punishment would be you're just out of warranty right which is kind of how it's always been yeah i mean most of the time that's it it's not just out of warranty but like if if you need to bring it in for any kind of service that is that is covered by us we won't do it even if you paid for apple care we won't do it you've broken through man that's an ugly artifact but i feel like that's fair it doesn't feel like i should be legally compelled to to do a thing i don't want to do i i don't know okay but imagine a system a situation where uh the screen on your iphone broke you've replaced the iphone yourself uh the iphone screen yourself and then uh you have a problem with iCloud not related to your hardware screen at all you bring it into apple they're like oh we can tell you replaced uh your own screen we're not going to we're not going to fix your iCloud problem right well so the question is do businesses have the right do they have the freedom to be bad and i feel like that's one of the most vital rights for every business business to have now when when roger alludes to the the john deere situation what john deere's doing with tractors is saying uh because we have the rights over this system if you go in and repair it we can sue you for violating the dmca right well and and in this case this is uh this is where i get to be the smug third party guy where i'd be like oh so at the heart of it you need a law to fix another bad law you know so which which you know you can make the case where it's like well the one law wasn't there you wouldn't need the other one to patch it yeah i i i am for right to repair laws that give me that preserve the rights that roger was describing like as long as it's saying look if you want to repair something or you want to pay someone else to repair something there shouldn't be any ill effects for that uh and if apple sells parts or if google sells parts to anyone they should anybody should be able to buy those they they you know i i feel like that's that's fair but i get where you're coming from brian of like on the other hand if it's a truly competitive arena then you could just go somewhere else and buy something else that's part of the problem too especially with phones uh you're getting fewer and fewer and this is the inherent bias with legislation like this is that it drives people to look at the the the scene benefit and uh it's much more difficult to make up the unintended consequences yeah uh well listen folks we know you got opinions on this so send them to us feedback at daily tech news show dot com uh that's where we get emails right yeah in fact the word lens feedback keeps rolling in we really hit a nerve this one comes from john and says as another counterpoint to your experiences because we were talking about word lens and and and google lens over the last couple of days john says i'm on vacation in chile and i have a very specific use case for word lens i am a diagnose celiac so i need to be really careful of what i eat but i enjoy going out to eat a restaurant so i use the feature to get a general idea of what's being offered on the menu before i have to ask the wait staff in broken english or my broken spanish which is worse uh what i should do seems like a go-to far better than i have no idea what would you recommend i i would assume that you the menu might not even be enough sometimes and you'll need to rely on lens to to make some statements like what's in this right yeah there are many menus that don't say like and here's what's in every dish yeah yeah but but i i guess you know having food restrictions in a menu that's not in your native language is a really good use case at least to get like one step beyond not knowing what the hell you're doing heck yeah yeah for sure thank you john for the email and thanks to everybody who participates in our subreddit that's how we got today's discussion topic submit those stories and vote on them at dailytechnewshow.reddit.com and keep the conversation hopping it's doing doing well over there in our facebook group facebook.com slash groups slash daily tech news show before we get out of here let's check in with len peralta who's been illustrating the show Len what do you got well of course right to repair right to uh you know right for repair information or parts available where do i go i go straight to the beastie boys everybody you got a fight for your right to make repair information parts available to product owners and third-party repair shops and services it's very catchy yeah good beat danceable it's excellent that's today's image which can pick up at lenperaltstore.com check it out oh it's so great i love it brian brishwood thank you for being with us oh thank you so much for having me guys freddy's in a row what's going on a south by this weekend we're all here for south by so wasted tomorrow if you are here in austin on march 10th come on out 2 p.m at the kung fu saloon we're going to be doing a live night attack and a meet up if you've heard my silly voice for years and wanted to see my silly face in real time you can finally do it go check it out where where can they find information about this if they're like uh that's so many things to remember is there a tweet my producer brice.com castillo at brycast kung fu saloon austin texas 2 p.m saturday oh look at that we're listed in the austin 360 south by southwest thingy that's great cool yeah well done march 10th 2018 2 p.m uh hey uh thank you everybody for supporting this show we are existing because you want us to if you get value from the show all we ask is you give a little value back you can do it as a PayPal donation dailytechno show dot com slash support you can do it by buying some in our store well we got lemper alta art in there on a shirt you could be wearing lemper altas vision on your chest right now if you go to dailytechno show dot com slash store yeah you won't get today's poster art on your chest previous poster art though who knows maybe we'll have more uh and of course you can support us directly on patreon patreon.com slash dtns as tom mentioned earlier we love to hear from you if you'd like to get a hold of us feedback at dailytechno show dot com is a great way to do it we are live monday through friday at 4 30 p.m eastern starting monday mark your calendars we go back to daylight savings time in the u.s so it's 20 30 utc do you want to find out more dailytechno show dot com slash live this show is part of the frog pants network get more at frogpants.com time and club hopes you have enjoyed this bro over laugh along with himself oh that's figured i did enough laughing for the both of us hey uh past you did enough laughing for oh yeah no in fact i've given up laughing i've taken a vow of seriousness that i just broke it's already over hey good for vows my apology is a uh my uh a signed jingle for the new um frog pants did not say worry about it it's all good uh what should we call this uh well actually we should switch roles again uh what's show bot dot tv right yes that's dot show bot dot tv show bot dot uh chat realm dot net oh show bot dot chat realm i thought there was a dts one too there was uh i think it's uh dts dot show bot dot tv okay uh mario maps you can call her al uh do self-drivers dream of crushing electric peaches putting a few concepts together there you you have the right to repair electronics freedom to be bad uh that would be funny if it was you might have the right you might have the right products man man what to impair when you're repairing get it like what to expect when you're expecting oh got it yeah we got a second uh i don't know um you might have the right to repair electronics i just voted on that one i i think what bio cap was going for is like you have the right to remain silent you have the right to remain unrepaired anything you repair can will be used against you all right i'm gonna log off guys all right thanks len it's good bye and have a great weekend stay warm yes see you next week take care okay man already already the backlash on twitter on twitter to you yeah of course of course because you had an opinion that wants to be the guy that's defending big government or big big business i'll defend a big government okay you know what nobody could ever not defend these chips okay so have a corn talk about backlash though sarah eating chips on a mic i didn't do it during the show before sarah looks so dejected she's like oh like she got jasdaisy glass i've just i've had enough it today i'm sorry i'm just trying to prevent it no i know i won't eat them what to impair when you're repairing oh you might have the right to repair electronics let's go with that you might have the right to repair oh you know what uh what if you what if you can you add a slash in there so it looks like lyrics you have the right slash to repair slash and then you can spell out electronics yeah we gave you that's a little wise oh yeah i don't know how long you do i don't know if it's too long for the character count how many characters you get uh as many as we want it's just it's up to us if it's too long like it'll scroll off people's it's not like a hard limit yeah well the good news is if it gets cut off with a dot dot dot it's pretty clear that oh these are uh this is a take on the beastie boy song i i'm not married to it either way it's your show tom no i know oh yeah you're like brian they'll you will never need to explain that to me again oh that is so true you have the right to repair electronics and then keep on going you say you're caught your uh apple caught your open in your old laptop they're so angry their top is gonna pop you got the right to repair electronics except when i write it out it looks like electronics i like that even better electronics you can do the n electron yeah there we go that's probably better you have the right to repair electron yeah there we go electrons gotcha yeah so you have this so wait that's the title you have the right to repair electronics yeah you're good with that yeah that's fine because i'm just looking at the one you uh slack to me yeah the second one i slack to you not the one with all the o's the one with all the ends okay normally you i was just a little uh a little uh surprised normally you're not into a long long constant i just don't have a lot of other options as my parents said i'm all other options it's it is a little long no race sounds good good i need to levelated and i'm taking it here and do that thing to it open with is that your dog barking uh yeah i don't actually have a dog mine heard a dog barking yeah he stopped though right yeah yeah he barked himself out that was his last bark now it'll be silver blade in the chat room said someone's dog is barking oh yeah and i thought it was my feet i'm surprised uh i'm surprised that that oh you know what i have the door cracked normally i have it shut when we're recording and i just opened it because i thought i heard a knock at it you got a fight oh you're right two pa so what else is up um blood pressure is there is there anything big happening in south by southwest i should be excited about you're more plugged in than i am these days no in fact i lean and i were talking about this this morning like there doesn't seem to be a ton of movies that are buzzy yet hey the big one is the horror movie that uh um john k from the office oh john red dreds krasinski krasinski thank you yeah the uh i'll tell you what man this being the i think this is the second friday in a row that uh that i popped in uh friday afternoons apparently there's a gap in my schedule that's pretty good to join you guys uh and i love you you know now that i got a drum to bang to let people know about the modern rogue dot com and the articles the modern rogue dot com and the articles yeah i didn't i didn't i didn't mention it we ended up the modern rogue dot com as articles well yes they're really good they're all designed to make you the most interesting person in the room every time you get a takeaway from some of the best comedy writers on the internet most of which used to i think all of which worked for cracked and got laid off uh and so where i'm trying to hire them as fast as i can nice got to catch them all crack crack crack him on former crack demons i got john cheesacus i choose you i use your biting with john cheese used biting wit against uh against topic about sardonic wit yeah there we go come on that's good uh the articles are way good i'm really excited about uh it's fun for it to be um something that that i'm not face to face with all day every day and so i wake up in the morning and i knew now have a favorite news site and i read the articles first thing i'm like this is amazing i read the modern rogue dot com for the article that's what that was the first response bonnie said oh no no i i would never watch brian and jason i i only go there for the articles i don't want to see the pinups i promise okay um well shoot anything else uh no should i uh stop the cast i guess so bye guys good to see everybody it was fun we miss you monday hate mail to ashwood drive safely