 Surprise. We're shooting top fives. Little behind the scenes. After this is done streaming, Roger, you can change the name to top five shoot behind the scenes. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's good. Behind cut. All right, so we are recording. We are good whenever you want to start. Oh, I'm gonna do top five home computers turned gaming consoles first, because that's just at the top of my list. Does that work? Yes. Okay. I'm setting up the prompter now. Here we go. Give me a shot. Okay. Would you believe these five little known video came consoles started their lives as home computers? Number five, Commodore 64 games system. Oh, that's obvious. Reskin C64 computer released only in Europe in December 1999. It was a commercial failure, only sold 20,000 units. Number four, Armstrad GX4000, slightly upgraded guts of an Armstrad CPC plus computer inside a video game console shell. So let's start from the top. It's Amstrad. There's no R. Oh, Amstrad stands for not amalgamated with something sugar trading Co. It was originally a sugar company and they went into home electronics. Amstrad. What did I say? You said Armstrad. Oh, I said Arm. Okay, gotcha. And then it's Armstrad CPC? And then, yeah, the CPC plus. Okay, cool. Amstrad. So we'll start because, and we'll go from the top, because when you said video game, instead of like video came like a C instead of a G. Quit mocking my accent, man. All right. Susie Baca. Susie Baca. Would you believe these five little known video game consoles started their lives as home computers? Number five is probably obvious. The Commodore 64 games system, a re-skinned C64 computer, released only in Europe in December 1999. It was commercial failure, only sold 20,000 units. Number four, Amstrad GX4000, a slightly upgraded guts of an Amstrad CPC plus computer inside a video game console shell. Let me do that again. Number four, Amstrad GX4000, a slightly upgraded guts of an Amstrad CPC plus computer inside a video game console shell. Number three, the Atari XEGS. Atari repackaged the 65XE home computer as a game system. It featured CX40 joystick, a keyboard, and the XG1 light gun. Number two, FM Towns Marty. Based on Fujitsu's FM Towns computer system, the Marty was backward compatible with games made for the older FM Towns. Number one, the Amiga CD32. Internally, it was an Amiga 1200 with an extra chip, CD-ROM and TV connections. What would you add to the list? Let me know in the comments. Do we have time for the... Yeah, let's try squeezing in. If it doesn't make it in, I want to put it in. What would you add to the list? Let me know in the comments. And if you can help, support us at patreon.com slash DTNS. See you there. Cool. All right, good to go to the next one. Yep. Yep. We're gonna fight misinformation. Hey, misinformation, are you ready to fight? You mean disinformation? Misinformation comes for all of us. Here are five ways to fight it. Number five, limit how much you read next door or watch local TV news. Both will make you think your neighborhood is much worse than it is. Number four, don't get news from social media like Twitter or TikTok. Those experts, most of them are not experts. Number three, curate your own reliable news sources and then read them intentionally. I read my news in the morning like a morning newspaper. BBC, Wall Street Journal, Economist for World Stuff and Deadline in the LA Times for my local. Number two, treat 24-7 TV news channels like dessert or alcohol, consume them in moderation if at all. Don't expect nutritional value. At number one, look at what's actually around you. Are eggs still out of stock? No, is that shop packed? Maybe it's not being boycotted. Be careful what you put in your brain, just like you're careful what you eat. And hey, if you could support us, patreon.com slash DTNS. See you there. Cool. You're whipping these out. Oh, careful. All right, earn an Apple Vision Pro. Hopefully these don't come out. I cut a bunch and hopefully I cut enough. Yeah. Give it our best shot. All right, here we go. Want an Apple Vision Pro but you're broke? Five ways to afford an Apple Vision Pro. Number five, sell your stuff. Your old tech, your collectibles. I don't know, your car. Seriously, it's a good way to clean up clutter and get some cash. Number four, start an Etsy shop. Sell t-shirts with AI generated artwork, I guess. Number three, set up a GoFundMe page. I mean, if you can GoFundMe a honeymoon or move to Scotland, why not your Vision Pro? Number two, a side hustle. You just need to work 286 hours of McDonald's at $12.20 an hour. Just 35 eight-hour days or spend 208 hours driving an Uber or doing task rabbit gigs. And number one, go for the payment plan. If you qualify, you can buy a Vision Pro for just $291.58 a month for 12 months. It's like a car payment but without the car. The Apple Vision Pro could be a groundbreaking device. What would you do to get your hands on one? Let me know in the comments. You can support us at patreon.com slash DTNS if you have any money left. That's good. Do the last part from the Apple Vision Pro could be groundbreaking. Okay, yep, got it. The Apple Vision Pro could be a groundbreaking device. What would you do to get your hands on one? Let me know in the comments and support us at patreon.com slash DTNS if you have any money left. Ah, good. All right. Hey, Zoe. Hello, Zoe. Are we on YouTube and Twitch, right? Correct, both. Hi, YouTube. Just shooting some top fives if you're just joining us. They get edited up to look all pretty by Roger later. Although not too pretty since we're going for something different this time. All right. Okay, here's the tech of 1924. That tech is like 100 years old. Wait, what tech? This tech. Here are five big tech news headlines from 1924. Number five, movie makers Metro Pictures and Goldwyn Pictures merged in Los Angeles to form Metro Goldwyn Mayor, aka MGM. Now owned by Amazon. Number four, on June 5th, GE engineer Ernst Alexandersen sent the first fax across the Atlantic Ocean. A fax, for real. Number three, Greenwich Mean Time begins. Hourly time signals are broadcast for the first time from the Royal Greenwich Observatory and the BBC took over broadcasting those pips in 1990. Number two, the Computing Tabulating Recording Company or CTR changed its name to International Business Machines or IBM. At number one, Scottish engineer John Logie-Baird demonstrated a working analog television system to the Radio Times. 1924, it's like 2024, but without all the pain and agony yet? I don't know. If you could support us on Patreon, do it. Patreon.com slash DTS. Cool. Yeah, I didn't have it outwritten for that, so I just ad-libbed. Okay, AppleVision Secrets. Secrets, see. All right, here we go. Five secrets of the AppleVision Pro or at least things you might not have known. Number five, you select things with your eyes. Just look at something and it gets highlighted then you pinch to click. Number four, you have to pinch lightly. Don't hold the pinch too long. Number three, there's a lot of computer power. It's expensive because it has two 45K micro LED screens and an M2 chip and separate R1 chip just to handle the sensors. I think it's supposed to be just 4K, right? Not 45K. I'm gonna do that again. Number three, there's a lot of computer power. It's expensive because it has two 4K micro LED screens and an M2 chip and a separate R1 chip just to handle the sensors. Number two, it's hard to share. Each one is highly customized to you whether you do the optical inserts or not. At number one, you can pay with your eyes too. Apple's Optic ID scans your retina to work like face and touch ID do on other devices, including things like Apple Pay. Blink to pay. Now, are you gonna spend $3,500 on one? I don't know. If you don't, maybe give us a smaller amount of money at patreon.com slash DTNS. Cool. All right. Wow. What is it? 13 minutes. 13 minutes. They do go faster. Five, so, yeah, I can squeeze it. I'll cut it down. It's gonna be fast. It'll be amazing. It'll be very TikTok. I'll use a bunch of America's Funniest Home Video Clips of people falling in pools or something. Thanks, everyone, for being on the stream and listening to us. We'll catch you tomorrow. Yeah, thanks, y'all. Bye.