 Och så länge det är liv, det är bra för videorna. Det är inte officiellt. Jag gör det i Alphagique Media liv. Okej, här går vi. Det här är en publik DTNS-avgörande. En beskrivning i engelska kommer att följa. Välkommen till showen med dagliga teknologiska nyheter med Tom Merritt och Jester. Jag heter Carl och är en av flera exekutiva medproducenter och alltså en av Toms skefer. Det kan du också bli genom att tonera en dollar eller mer i månaden på Patreon.com. Det är dagliga teknologiska nyheter i september 10, 2015. Jag heter Tom Merritt och jag har varit med för länge. Vi har varit med i en liten och senare editare på det brittiska tekniska nätet på showen. Men i förhållande av kvinnorna, kvinnorna Victoria, som är den längsta regeringen på Monarch i brittisk historie, så tänkte vi att vi skulle ha dem tillbaka. Sänk vittorierna, men vi är här i USA och är bara normal. Alla djur har varit normalt. Jag har inte en stor snö på det. Ja, jag har tagit en fantastisk hatt, som vanligt. Vad är en djur? Jag måste säga att om du är en rörelse i en rörelsefamilj, om du tar de här länderna, så har hon ingen liv, inte en djur, men det är det. Jag tror att det är 67, är det rätt? Ja, men det är någon annan som är hos, effektivt. Okej. Jag kan inte tänka, jag vill inte tänka. Jag tror att det är mer pengar än problem. Även om hon inte har så mycket pengar. Åh, hon är inte så bäst. Jag tror att hon inte är plänt. Jag tror att det är en bra poäng. Okej, vi är här för att tala om teknologi, så vi ska gå in i några länder. Google's Payment System Android Pay rollar ut i USA. Android Pay kommer att arbeta i ställen som Best Buy, Walgreens, Subway, Whole Foods och Gamestop, med en NFC-nabelt Android-device, eller online, under djurna app-purchänsningar. Android Pay supports debit- och kreditkarten från Visa, Mastercard, Discover, Amex, och en number of bank credit unions. Google säger att det rollar ut Android Pay gradually over the next few days och expand the number of supported banks and stores over the next few months. Så vi har Apple Pay, Android Pay, supplanting Google Wallet. Google Wallet nu blir en sånna förhållande som square. Och så har vi Samsung Pay. Några av dem är verkligen färdiga här i USA. Är det nåt annat än i UK? Nej, jag tror att det är lite av en lotterie, som Apple Pay har shown här i USA. Vi har haft en rollout med alla andra, och jag är med i Barclays. Barclays vill starta sin e-system, så att de inte är i Apple Pay-systemet. Så att ingen av mina kartor jobbar i Apple Pay. Så jag tror att det finns lite konsumt och fatik, kanske, i några av de Pay-systemet. De som är i, älskar det. Men de som inte kan älskas, kan inte. Du vet inte vad det är. Jag kommer bara att tappa den i den. Ja, jag har utgörat Apple Pay några gånger och älskat det. Men även när jag har varit tillbaka till en store som brukar älskas det. Kadentligen sker det. Det är bara att det inte är så ubiquitiskt för att hålla på med. Ja, det finns inga signer av PIZZA. Jag tror att vi har en av dem som arbetar på BTN. Han bor i Norwich, vilket är färdigt ut i sticks. Han har hittat en älskare i shoppen. Han har älskat Apple Pay för första dagen att det var utgång. Och hon har nästan älskat mig av witchcraft. Är det så bra? Det är skönt. The Verge reports that Office 2016 for Windows will launch on September 22nd. Folks, new features include real time editing by multiple people at once within your desktop apps anyway. News of new design themes. Microsoft will also release new tools for businesses to manage office updates. Just just something to tick off if you're a Windows office user. September 22nd, you're getting your update. Niantic Labs is working with the Pokemon company and Nintendo on Pokemon Go, a smartphone-based augmented reality game. And Gadget suspects Niantic, which makes the game Ingress, is probably using the location-based back-end of that game to allow players to catch, fight, and trade Pokemon in the real world. The game also includes a Bluetooth-enabled red and white Pokeball that flashes and vibrates when there are Pokemon nearby. Pokemon Go will be available for both Android and iOS in 2016. Thanks to DJ Sakane, by the way, for posting this on the Daily Tech News Show subreddit. I don't mean to speak for you, but I'm guessing that you and I are past the Pokemon generation, no? I can't wait. Are you going to collect them all or catch them all, or whatever? No, my boy would love this. He's going to be over the moon with that, definitely. My son and my daughter both got iPads, and they love that kind of stuff, so he's still into it. He makes sense of Pokemon, which to me just means that I need to refer him for mental health already, because he doesn't understand himself in the slides. I get the general, the way the game works and everything. I'm also really impressed by this video they show, where you've got Pokemon jumping out of the water and running down the road and fighting in Times Square. It's not going to look like that, though. I want to see what this thing is actually going to look like, and nothing was a real representation of the game, it seemed like. Yeah, no. I mean, the videos are always great. They always come with that not-actual in-game footage underneath, don't they say? Yeah. Facebook release statistics showing its active users in Africa grew 20% to 120 million in June. Nigeria has 15 million monthly active Facebook users. South Africa clocks in with 12 million in Kenya with four and a half million. Most of the users on the continent access Facebook on a mobile device, as you might guess. Really just another notch to say, yeah, Facebook's efforts in Africa seem to be paying off. Yeah, I think one of the things that people don't look at Africa as an advanced internet nation. I know it's not a nation. I know you said it was running for Miss World, didn't it, God? But no, the nations of Africa, they don't see it as internet advanced. And actually, they're probably running faster speeds than most of us are in the West, and they're probably running cheaper plans than most of us are in the West as well as. Yeah, it's a misunderstood marketplace, and there have been a few good articles about this recently. The next web had a great one today. TechCrunch had one yesterday. In fact, we're going to try to get Eric Olander on. He covers Africa for a financial network, and he's been on the show before, and it's very up to speed on what's going on there. Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, a lot of those countries, you hear about maybe when there's some kind of trouble, but they're very, very fast growing markets, especially for technology right now. I want to see how many of those Nigerian accounts there were princes. See, that's the joke, right? That's what, I think that's Nigeria's benchmark, is when they get to the point where people stop thinking of princes when they think of Nigeria and start thinking of IT companies, they will know they have made it. When all those emails were actually written in America. Yeah, right, they weren't written in, none of them were written in Nigeria, I bet. Baidu launched a voice assistant for Android-based smartphones called DUER, D-U-E-R, apparently it means Secretary-DU, Baidu World Conference on Tuesday was where the announcement took place. The app will initially be limited to Chinese users ordering food and accessing on-demand services. Baidu plans to expand DUER's capability to include voice control for internet of things, control of smart devices in the home, and connections to healthcare providers and other service providers. I don't, do you use Siri or Cortana or any of these very often? I think I'm sort of missing out because I don't find them that useful. No, there was a phase probably during iOS 7 and the early days of iOS 8 where you'd actually put in Siri, can you do the following and you go, I'm sorry, I can't do that right now. And you're like, come on, you've got an internet connection, but it just flaked. But it's not like that at all now and Cortana knocks strips off Siri. I mean, I set a reminder on Siri. Siri, when I get home, remind me to do the following. It still hasn't reminded me and that was six months ago. Whereas Cortana actually allows you to say this is home whereas Siri wants a postcode and actually it thinks my house is round the corner from where I live. So it's convinced that I never go home. You know, I take it back. The one that I do use is the Amazon Echo and I really wish that it was available on my phone because there are times when I'm not in the room with my Amazon Echo when I'm like, oh, I want to add something to my shopping list or I want to make a to-do list note and I can't do it. I can't use it that way. So it's not quite as convenient as I would like. Now Amazon's made that APK or I'm sorry, the SDK available for people to use and put into more things, but I'd like to see Amazon come out. We don't have the Echo, but we do have the Fire TV and it's in terms of searching for stuff on Fire TV. It's excellent. So I guess it's using the same engine. I just want to point out though, we went through that entire story about Baidu Dewar and you didn't make the joke you were promising to make. I do do. Yeah, there we go. No, no, no. The interesting thing I thought with this is Baidu launched an assistant for Android-based smartphones. Well, Baidu's the largest search engine in China and it says it's limited to China to begin with. Well, that's a surprise. But actually I think it'd be interesting, jokes aside, to see what they actually achieve with this in Chinese and then see what's going to come across and how that's going to relate then to other search engines and what other search engines will pick up from it because I mean Google really would be stupid not to have a Chinese-speaking department who are monitoring this and seeing what happens. Well, yeah, and that's why you're seeing them wanting to get back into China with the Google Play Store because that is less problematic than putting search back into China and it's also where all the money is. They got dollar signs in their eyes and then they can get things like the Google voice assistant into China. But right now they can't, it's much more difficult. PC Mag reports that Periscope will now let users broadcast in landscape mode. Hooray, let your Ewoks dance. Shoot off your fireworks. Viewers can tilt the landscape as well or they can continue to stubbornly watch in portrait and it'll just be a smaller video. Among other updates with Periscope an easier way to tell who's sharing a video in your feed. Android users now have the option of private broadcasting, selecting audience from a list of followers. That private broadcasting will eventually come to iOS as well. Are you one of the folks who fights against portrait video? Well no, I mean I actually shot something in portrait video for a customer about six weeks ago because it was going on a TV screen. And a lot of the TV screen stuff that we get now in the underground or in transit stations for general public transport is a portrait piece of video on a screen that's turned on its side. So I think there's a very definite place for portrait video. If you're talking about getting the kind of ridiculous portrait shot videos that then appear in a landscape window on YouTube, yeah, that frustrates the hell out of me. And why YouTube hasn't come up with a portrait player that fills the left hand side of the screen, yeah, he's beyond me because I would have thought that was fair. They have something that makes it less damaging now than it used to be but yeah, it's still an issue. It's on mobile, you can watch a portrait video on YouTube and it will look normal finally. But then you get people saying, well that's just encouraging people to bad behavior. But I'm glad to hear that you're defending the times when there are sensible reasons to use portrait video. Well, I use portrait video in my keying studio as well. So if I've got someone who wants to walk along the keying wall, I shoot it in portrait because that gives me a bigger picture to then shrink and put in against the key background. So I get more definition and I've got more flexibility with the size that I use. Effectively, if you shoot portrait video in a DSLR, you're effectively shooting 4K if you like of that person because it's double level. Yeah, I mean, there is no wrong aspect ratio. It's all about compatibility between recording and playback, right? And what your purpose is. Makes sense. Squash tacos submitted this next one on our subreddit, the NDTV article summarizing the latest Android distribution data from Google. Based on logging into the Play Store, Lollipop has risen to 21% share, good for third. Lollipop had just passed the 10% mark in June so it's perking along there. KitKat has fallen, but still maintains the top spot at 39.2% and Jelly Bean's three variants combined for second place at 31.8%. I don't know ever what to do with these numbers. They made it to the top of the subreddit and votes because people like to have arguments about fragmentation. But frankly, I don't think Android is super more fragmented than other operating systems have been in the past and it looks like we're actually getting good uptake for Lollipop here. I think there's too many people where they have absolutely no control over that. That's the real problem with those numbers. It's all based on the carriers. It's all based on what other people want you to do rather than what you want to do and what Google want you to do, which is why I find it really childish when Apple har fun about uptake of Android against iOS because there is no choice. Yeah. In Gadget reports on Qualcomm's new Snapdragon flight platform based on the Snapdragon 801 processor. It's for drones and Qualcomm's not done. They want a little of that drone money. Qualcomm is providing communications and camera tech on one board platform supports 4K video, a variety of sensors and quick charge, dedicated video encoding and dual image sensor support for depth sensing cameras. Fast company says unique, a Chinese company will be the first drone maker to use the platform. It sounds like good ideas from Qualcomm. It's always as usual in the implementation. Yeah, I mean, I think there's definite interest there probably for surveying tools and that kind of stuff. I know that there's a few of the energy providers here in the UK use a German firm that survey size of coal stocks and that kind of thing, and they'll do a surface area fly by and then do a depth fly by and the 3D on the 4K would be really useful for that. So I think the industrial uses would be massive for this most definitely. But I mean, the problem that we still got the civil level is people flying their drone too close to houses with cameras on it and getting shut down in Kentucky. Yeah, there's that. And well, just today Governor Jerry Brown here in California vetoed a bill that would have prevented you from flying your drone over private property, which would have been almost unenforceable since there's so much private property everywhere. But yeah, working out the details of that is a much harder challenge than providing good chip platforms. We'll see if Qualcomm gets an uptake here. Thanks to everybody who submit stories in our subreddit, dailytechnewshow.reddit.com. We appreciate it. It helps us put that whole line up together every day. So get in there and do some voting or at least do some submitting. And that is a look at the headlines. A very interesting article came out today. I think it was on TechCrunch where I saw it, yeah. About Flurry's app analytics report regarding apps versus TV viewing. Now this is US based, but the average US consumer spends 198 minutes a day in apps according to Flurry versus 168 minutes a day watching television. I don't know what they're, when they're working or sleeping or going to the bathroom. A lot of their time is spent in apps and TV. But I guess you can overlap. You can watch TV and use apps at the same time. They're not even counting browsers. Flurry said if we counted browser as an app, that app usage jumps to 220 minutes. And the other thing is that TV usage has been flat. It hasn't really been falling precipitously but it hasn't been rising either while app usage has been skyrocketing. And they think for the first time in 2015 in-app purchases will outperform mobile ads. And they're pointing a little bit to these new services like HBO Now and Showtime where you make in-app subscriptions to video services. I know it's a little different in the UK just because of the different landscape of how television works, Ewan. Nearly a third of page views from mobile and tablets though according to ComScore in the UK recently. Only 17% of UK teenagers 16 to 24 would miss their TV most if it was taken away. So it's not that far off. Do you think, here's my question. Do you think we're just spending more time doing lots of different things now that entertainment with phones and tablets and computers has provided more ways to divert our attention? I think there's a couple of things. So things like Netflix in terms of an app traction is high on the Apple TV and that kind of stuff. A lot of people watch that. We watch that an awful lot. We also watch an awful lot of stuff through Apple TV. And I don't know whether that's classed as an app you see now or because it's a digital cord cut platform so it perhaps falls within the criteria for this survey. I know for my own use at the office here if the cricket's on or the rugby's on or something like that and I wanna do work. I've got my iPad sat here playing away with the Sky Go application which I use religiously all over the place even at home and that for me has become a better way of watching Sky now because the kids are usually hogging the TV with their own stuff and it lets me to do it. And the other thing is as well I can pull my phone out and I can carry on watching the rugby whilst I go and do the shopping for the wife who's cooking dinner and says oh we're short of so and so I get the brownie points for getting the goods in and I can still keep up with the rugby. And you know what they were saying on the Apple announcement yesterday was apps are a better experience. I don't tend to agree. I feel like a cross platform experience where I get a little more flexibility like the web always ends up being a better experience but we're in an app world right now and what he's comparing it to when he says that on stage is comparing it to the ability to just turn on your television and watch either cable television or over the air. In that sense you do get a better user interface when you're talking about apps but I think it's beside the point. I don't think we're watching video on apps more because of the user interface. I think what we're doing is just you know spending more time taking control of our own entertainment and our own amusements. I think you've got the edge in me there because one of the other problems that we've got is app use over here because we don't get Hulu at all. We can't get any of the HBO ghost stuff yet. So we don't have that app opportunity that the Americans have to watch this. And I think if you've got the Sky Now app it's because you don't have Sky Television because if you've got Sky Television you'll use the Sky Go Gap as part of your package and I don't think the update for Sky Now and Sky Now as far as in my own mind I'm thinking it's the only app that really is out there apart from iPlayer app perhaps for TV and the catch-up apps and the ITV catch-up apps which I don't see people using that an awful lot because the catch-up stuff is usually very painful to try and watch with adverts and so on. Actually iPlayer is not too bad but I get what you're saying. How would you know? Because every once in a while I visit England obviously. You don't come for tea. Yeah, I should. It was rude of me and I apologize for that. The VPN wouldn't let me through to tea for some reason. But what about not TV apps though? I mean, I think that's the wider point I'm making is we hear print is dying, music is dying. Now television is on the rocks and really none of that is true. People are reading more than ever. They're watching more video than ever and they're playing with apps and they're playing games more than ever. They're listening to more music than ever. It's that we have more things and so when I say more things I'm not saying you have more apps to watch video necessarily. But even in the UK I'm sure it's true that you have more choices to entertain you besides just video. You can play games. You can do all kinds of things. Yeah, I mean with the Amazon Fire TV box that I've got, it's great. There's tons of games to play. There's the controller with that which is absolutely brilliant. There is a lot more things to do. Even going to the toilet in the morning before you go to work you can take some extra time with you. Yeah, you can read your feedly. I'm not saying that I know anyone who does that but it does help you keep up on the tech news that you're preparing for every day. We're just, our attention is pulled in more ways than ever and within the verticals, within music, within reading, within video we have more choices than we've ever had before. So I don't think that gets counted enough when people talk about the decline in music sales or the decline in advertising sales is that there's not an overall decline in consumption of media or even in attention to media or in creation of media, do you think? No, I think there's a lot of people taking an awful lot more in and to a certain degree without a little bit flotatious with the information rather than engaged in the information and a lot of it, you know, it's in one ear and out the other. Yeah, it's rather than being absorbed by us. Well, because we have, that is one of the difficulties that I think as a society we're probably working through is that when you have that much information to deal with it can be overwhelming, right? And so that's where portals what we're positioning themselves in the early 2000s and we've got apps that are trying to curate things for you and nobody's ever cracked that balance between I'm going to curate and give you what you want based on your own tastes and actually delivering so that you want to continue to use that. I have not found one app that I don't fully control the curation on like an RSS reader that works and gives me things that I didn't know I wanted in a satisfying way. Yeah, I know the suggestions of media in full stop whether it's written or whether it's TV and video is usually, it's kind of like you walk into a store and you say to the guy, here's what I absolutely want and you give him the brand name and you say this is what I want and he takes you over to something else and goes, yeah, but this is better. And you're like, no, I don't want you to tell me what you need to sell because the store owner wants you to get rid of these. I want you to give me the thing I just told you about and there's none of the apps do that. Nothing actually does it. It's all about pushing what they want you to get what they're going to get the most clicks from what they're going to get the most ad revenue from, etc. Yeah, absolutely. Well, that's where the money is, right? So it's a tension that has not been resolved yet. Let's get to our pick of the day. Funkaround, who apparently is British, wrote in with a pick of Radio Station BBC Six Music. You and I, I'd like to hear your opinion of this. Funkaround says it's the best station I've ever listened to and in my humble opinion, the best station there is. This digital internet only station serves up an incredibly eclectic mix of music. No other station in my knowledge can you hear Van Morrison, followed by Public Enemy, followed by Dof Punk, followed by Beck, followed by Kendrick Lamar. I hope a few members of the audience give it a listen and enjoy it. My advice to anyone checking out for the first time, have Shazam ready. You can thank me later. Yeah, Six, if you look at the BBC channels that push out, I think you know Radio One is aimed at a certain age and hits that certain age and if you're not in that certain age you see it as crass and Six is probably something which has got a little more of a broader spectrum perhaps for music. Radio Three is all classical. Radio Four is all discussion. So yeah, I can see that Six is the best out there on the BBC networks. Whether it's the best of all time or quite as good as they've alluded to, I'm looking around the room because I've got a couple of friends of me and they're kind of rolling their eyes a little bit at that statement. Well, I think... It's the best of the bad bunch. I think he's reacting to the clamor around Beats One when it launched and how wide a variety you would have on that and he's saying, hey, this existed already and they have a wide variety as well. I would say it's better than Beats One and my listening to Beats One so far. I think it's far more eclectic and far more diverse and it's appeal most definitely than Beats One is. But I mean, when it comes down to it, it's radio DJs talking about themselves which always kind of falls badly anyway. It was nice to hear Zane Lowe on the announcement telling people to turn their phones to mute. Yeah, that was quite nice and what they were playing there seemed pretty pleasant as well. Send your picks to us folks. Feedback at DailyTechNewsShow.com You can find my picks at DailyTechNewsShow.com slash picks. Got a few messages today. We got to talk about the Apple announcement reactions. Regarding the iPhone upgrade program Rich from Lovely Cleveland writes, I think this could be laying a very practical groundwork for Apple eventually offering their oft rumored MVNO. They're cutting off the carriers completely now from sales, subsidy and warranty service with the program getting consumers to associate with their carriers even less. For individuals and families completely bought into this program, the carrier is almost academic now leaving room for Apple to make a move. Wouldn't be surprised if we see a similar program from Google with Project Phi. And then Ryan says, haven't any of you bought jewelry? Rose gold is a golden copper alloy with a little bit of silver. It is very commonly used in jewelry and has been becoming more popular. The color used by the new iPhones very much resembles the look of rose gold and fits the name quite well. Stop making fun of rose gold. It seems to be his opinion there. So bucks move to one side, thank you. Yeah, yeah. You know, my wife is switching back from Android. Big news here to iPhone and she wants a rose gold one. Yeah, there's quite a few Twitter comments this morning and it seems to be a ladies color. I don't wish to categorize or stereotype but the tweet, anecdotally the tweets I saw this morning from people going, oh rose gold, we're predominantly ladies. What do you think of this idea of Apple sort of secretly trying to capture away the carrier market from the carriers that Rich put forth there? Yeah, I think there was more than one instance last night in the keynote where Apple had tried to play ball with the content creators and the carriers and all that kind of stuff and they dragged their heels and they'd stuck in the mud and Apple last night delivered a kind of FU to them in terms of the way that they looked at. As you said, they've absolutely cut the carriers out now. Carriers be damned. You can provide an airways and nothing else because you get no more subsidies, you get nothing from us that helps you. So you either provide the airways and that's it or nothing at all. And I think also if you look at the apps comment that they made with the Apple TV, that was because they couldn't curate their own Netflix like streaming services that people could buy into. So therefore they said, right, stuff here, that's it and they cut people off. And I think those markets are gonna feel the pinch most definitely in the next couple of years. And Apple's too big to mess with. It's like a wasp stinging a bear and expecting the bear to run. It ain't gonna happen. They've got some leverage over people and it just keeps getting bigger. Overall, what was your summation of the announcements yesterday? I think it was a game of two owls, mate, to quote Jimmy Groves. The first half, they wired me. I thought Christ, I spent the last month working hard so I could just give it all to Apple. And then the second half of it, it was just like, okay, you've gone too far, you've gone too long with iPhone. The 3D force touchy type thing, I thought they made more of that than there really was to it. Other apps have been dealing with long touch or prolonged touch secondary menus for quite a while. That's gonna, developers are gonna take that and run with it. And it was too long again, two and a half hours, too much time to sit and watch. My wife had left me tea to stew on the table. It was, I wasn't gonna be back at half seven like I normally am. They've got to whip that down cause people switch off after about an hour and a half. I thought they did a really good first half job, second half, no, you lost me, sorry. Well, it felt like they took their October announcement and pushed it into this one and that's why it was two hours. We would normally get an hour in September, an hour in October about iPads and they just mushed them together. So I don't expect to get another announcement out of Apple for the rest of the year. The dancing dog did it for me. You know the kind of like happy days jump in the shark thing. I think the dancing dog was Apple's jump in the shark. That did it for me. Dancing the dog with Tim Cook. D-dog wrote in with a little more info on Instagram's new advertising system that we mentioned yesterday. The targeting he says will be more detailed now and D-dog writes in terms of quality expected to be similar to what we see now on Facebook. Previously ads on Instagram had to be pre-approved which was doable when ads were limited. Now it'll follow a similar process to what exists on Facebook. Images for advertising on Facebook are restricted to 20% text and the company is constantly reminding advertisers of preserving a certain style when advertising on Instagram. Additionally, like Facebook videos will still be tapped for sound despite being autoplay. So we're not going to see as nicely curated advertisements in Instagram as we used to. Does that bother you at all, Yun? Yeah, I think the online video market has kind of lost its soul a little bit with the advertising stuff. There's an awful lot of overlay advertising in videos now where you see the X but actually there's another transparent ad laid over the top that you end up clicking positively which falls you into it. I think the perfect advertisement that there was in Google, a YouTube brother, was the five second that you could skip and everyone would get, oh yeah, but everyone would skip in the ads. Oh yeah, that's because your ads were crap. Good adverts you watched. So there's the quality control if you like and we just talked about this on The Big Show. There's no way I'm sitting down watching a minute and a half and advertising to see a 30 second clip about the Grand Prix or about the football or about the rugby or about the American football and just say I stuff it, not having it, go on. When you're flipping through Instagram, though, is it going to bug you if there's some gaudy ad thing in your stream? Yeah, I'll just move on. I think you just hit in the tab to close it straight away. I don't think there's any positive to it at all. I think advertising, well maybe advertising is at that point now where this is a painful thing that it's got to go through. It's adolescence perhaps and it'll come out the other side and be a bit more mature about the way it deals with its consumers. Internet advertising for sure. Yeah, I think you're right. James The Aircraft Mechanic in Lake Charles, Louisiana said, wanted to weigh in on your email from Tuesday regarding using the smartwatch to get around phone restrictions. I work on military surveillance aircraft. Hopefully that's sufficiently vague. Around here, we also have strict phone restrictions and I hadn't thought of a smartwatch as a way to get around this. I have to listen back to hear exactly what model he was using. It was the gear s by the way. But another brilliant workaround from the DTS communities as James. Well, there you go. Yeah, and a lot of people wrote in and said, hey, it's the camera in the phone is often the problem or just, you know, some some places of work aren't necessarily particularly finicky about security with the phone, but they just don't want people distracted. So they make them leave their phones, but they aren't going to make them leave their watches. I love the fact that he's put down surveillance surveillance aircraft. Hopefully that's vague enough and then he puts his address down. And the address that he's put down clearly means he's you too. Yeah, well, you know, there are all kinds of things going on over there in that corner of the world. And then Allison Sheridan wrote in and pointed out there's a mode on Roku you can turn on that if you hit the 32nd back button, it turns on subtitles temporarily when it replays. She says Siri is cooler, of course, but Roku can already do that. And I'm pretty sure voice search on the other devices requires a special remote. We've been going back and forth about this. Fire TV, if you buy the box, gives you the remote with the microphone in it. It doesn't if you buy the dongle. You have to buy that remote separately if you buy the dongle. I think the current Roku 3 gives you the voice activated remote, but not the older Roku 3s if I have this right. So it's again, nothing in that Apple announcement was new. There was nothing that they announced that Apple is the first one to do, but that's always the way it is. Apple's position is always, we're not the first to do it, but we're the best to do it. You can decide whether you agree with them or not, but it's funny like for more than 10 years now you and every time there's an Apple announcement, somebody comes out and points out all the things that other people have done first. And it's like, yeah, of course, that's gonna happen every time. I love the fact they invented the remote last night. That was awesome, I never saw that coming. Yeah, and apparently works from the things I've read. I can't wait to try that actually, see if it actually lives up to the hype. But that's it for this episode of Daily Tech News Show. Folks, if you haven't checked out the British Tech Network, it's just getting bigger and better all the time. Go to britishtechnetwork.com, follow you in on Twitter to find out what's happened over there, twitter.com slash you in ranken, that's E-W-E-N-R-A-N-K-I-N. You guys are killing it man, congratulations. We're just doing a great time. I mean none of us are making it. We're not like you. We're not ready to buy CBS or anything yet, so. Oh, believe me, I'm not ready to buy CBS. I'm ready to buy groceries. I'm very happy about that, yeah. No, we just do it for a lot of fun. We got several shows on there. We got some fantastic people in the back room helping us out. We just started streaming HTML5 rather than just Flash all the time, which is great. That's working smoothly, thanks to Anders, he's done that. We've got a Hoya tie up with the guys there and they've been helping us out with optics and stuff for the studio. And that's really been great. And also, we just got new shows. We've got Lee Tarshow with Lee Peterson where he takes you through how to do the backing track, how to do the solo for a guitar each week in a lesson. And we've just got great people around us. It's really nice time at the moment. Real renaissance at the BTA. And you need to come on as well. We haven't seen you in ages, do you? I know, man. I'm sorry. I've just overcommitted this entire year. I will be back, though, I promise. Are you less popular? Or just less busy. But folks, go check it out, man. There's some good stuff, BritishTechNetwork.com. 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We'll be back tomorrow with Natalie Morris and Len Peralta. Talk to you then. This show is part of the Frogpants Network. Get more at frogpants.com. I hope you have enjoyed this program. Ah, a great show as always, man. Thanks, buddy. That was really nice. Yeah, that was good stuff. With the coal bear level. The whole new battery and goal levels. Yeah, the CVS level for my suit of fed. You got a coal, dude. Yeah, a little bit. At least you turned on your splutter in a bit. A little bit post dragon con. Ridiculousness. Then you do the fist bump, you should cancel. Yeah, a little too often. Stopped eating my kale. That's what happened. So what should we call this? I have some ideas. Do you? We've got Periscope Widen's Expectations. That's pretty good, Bioco. I like that. It's an app, app, app, app world. Which is great because it's about the actual discussion title. Gentrafragamentation. Let's see. Too many companions, which has the dual doctor who benefit. Landscape ho as viewed through Periscope. That could leave Rose Gold alone. Nice. Yeah, I was surprised. Eileen doesn't usually like pink, but she said she likes it because it's the only color. Like everything else is so muted. And it's Rose, love. Yeah, well, middle name's Rose. That's subliminal marketing from Apple. All the people who have got middle name Rose. Are all going to buy that phone or that watch. It's just pink. Middle name Rose, there's your show title. Fred had app-tight issues. Oh, dear. Rose. There's also periscopes up and down. Ah, right. Either way, 90 or 180. Well, I like Periscope widens expectations, but I get that it's an app, app, app world fits the title. So I don't know, do you either? Maybe they take 30 more seconds to vote on it. All right, showbot.tv, get in there and vote. Do it. I'm still levelating. There's still time. All right. 30 seconds? How many seconds? Sure, 40 seconds to catch up so that they can actually hear it. Followed by 30 seconds to vote. The only thing we had was when we were running Flash, we had a two second delay to the world on the server. And it was awesome because the chat room was virtually running in real time by the time they first started. Oh, wow, that's amazing. But now we've gone to HTML5 because of the software, we're back to 30 seconds. It's not horrific, but... That will get better though. No, it's going to be a while, but that will eventually be conquered. Yeah, there was times we were at 45 seconds to move a minute and a half at times on YouTube and Livestream. Yeah. Big vote for Hoyer in the chat room. Really? Thanks for all the filters, he says. They're making glasses now. We have used it to a mod, mod, mod, mod world before, as Dark Redeemer points out. Så, I don't know what that means. Apparently we're periscoping the show at the moment. Oh, good. Excellent, in portrait. Even better. No, you can't change it over once you've started, mate, that's it. I don't know, Jenny, can we just go with it's a nap-ap-ap-ap world then? I say so, there's never too many times to reference that movie. Let's get real. Fine, done. I did different titles on YouTube than I did on the podcast yesterday, it was insanity. What happened? I left the original Apple title on the YouTube video, and then I used a different title on the podcast. Wow, that is all universal. AB testing. Yeah. All right, I'm exporting now. It's an app-ap-ap world, showbinder, if you need to know. That's what has been picked. Yerp. That's pretty late over there, Leuen, if you need to go. No, no, no. If you want to get rid of me, that's fine. No, no, no. Not at all. What do you do? So, how are you fixed for a macho, etc.? You're on Fridays at 7, right? Fridays at 7 a.m. for you. Yeah, you know what? Oktober, my schedule frees up. So like, oktober, yeah, this year, good question though. From October 9th, that Friday on, one of those could work. Okay. I should get to it, would you get yourself an email, so let's do that. Okay, yeah, yeah. Let's do it. Let's make it happen. Yeah. Too many cooks. You said it, now it's back in my head. I'm sorry. What is your problem? I know. I'm an evil man. Ah, man, you're just saying about us killing it. You are absolutely rockin' and rollin' at the moment with this and core killers and... Things are going. Yeah. Oh, it's only 10.07 p.m., so those batteries. That's when I go to sleep. Mm-hmm, especially in this heat, it's passed out at 9.30 the last two days. I mean, yeah, it must be hot as well if you guys have complained about the heat, because the climate is a little bit more than what I mean. We had a really nice day today, but it's September air, so it's cool and crisp, and it's a nice day. Oh, that sounds great. 100 degrees yesterday. Oh, man. Now, at the moment, it's the kind of perfect weather. If you get a really nice day during the day, but it gets cooler at night, it's to get the log burner going out in the garden and pull on a fleece or something like that. It's just cool and crisp around your legs and your face and that kind of stuff, but it's, you know, you're getting some heat off the fire. It's a good character. Get a nice warm cider. Yeah. And you've got the precipitation is low as well now in September, whereas it's higher in April, and the winds are up in April, so it's a really nice time. That sounds lovely. And you get clear skies as well, you can get some, because you're getting a slightly earlier night, so you can drag the telescope out at 8.30 instead of 11 o'clock. Mm-hmm. You've been doing that? Oh yeah, I've got a dobsonian that's 150 millimetres. It's great. Nice. We had the four millions of Jupiter on about three months ago, and it was awesome. Great deal. We should, because you know a whole lot about photography, my friend. I hope so. Yeah, and we should do a photography episode. Oh, I'm in. Yeah. Well, if you do a monthly one, then you can cover that. I used to do the photo show on my own, but it's like a day to put it together. And I couldn't afford effectively one and a half days a week to just put out a photography podcast. I need to do a monthly show, most definitely. So yeah, if you want to do like one day a month of photo, then I'll gather some news stories together with you. Let's kick stuff around. I feel like we could put together something good, even if it's not always like every month. You know, there's always, there's always photo news and I'm, and I'm photo dumb. Well, Canon dropped a 250 megapixel camera. Yeah, I saw that. I mean, that's, that's going to be scientific and commercial use, because there's no way that's going to hit. Right. It's industrial stuff, right? Yeah. Yeah. I'm getting shit now about not doing the photo show. Sorry. Sorry, I didn't mean to bring it up. Exactly. It's one of those things. It's like you mentioned it and it's like all I take is abuse for the next company. Yeah. People forgot all about it till you remind them. All right. Let's see. I think I've got this. He's canon biased. Yeah. I am canon. Well, I am canon biased. And if you go back three years, I'd have ditched all the canons through a Nikon and a Harby, but I'm just too bought into the lenses. That's the trouble. I got 25, 30 grams worth of lenses. That's the great issue with cameras. It's kind of like the mafia once you buy into a system, unless you can find someone to offload it to and get maybe 80% of what you put into it. I hate to say it, but you're kind of stuck with it. Yeah, totally. I mean, like, was it the Sony? Which one is it the Sony A? One that everyone loves, but all the Sony glasses, like twice as expensive as canon stuff. But you can get the adapters, but that kind of just adds weight. But there's a lot of the Sony sifters. Is it some of the Sony sifters, Micro Four Thirds as well? No, all Sony is the girls now. I think they finally ditched the Alpha, wherever the Alpha mount was, and settled on the E-mount. And then they have the full frame. Guy asked me the other day about, you know, I need to buy DSLR, what should I buy? And I said Micro Four Thirds all through now. It's not canon and Nikon, just get the stuff. You can get tons of stuff for it. It's better writing. There we go. I've got our second guest, Roger. I'll just say, so photos are interesting, and then you guys talk. Well, no, it's like the issue with Micro Four Thirds, though, is that it's almost... I hate to use this word, but it's almost bipolar, because it's so dominated by Olympus and Panasonic at this point, that there really hasn't been kind of a cohesive focus on developing like an actual, you know, comparable sensor that Sony's been making for everyone, and they're all cool, including Nikon. Right? They're making the sensor for... Well, that's what it is. Sorry, that's my kid. For Nikon's line-up. He's very upset about the sensors. I mean, a lot of people overspeck what they want to shoot, in terms of the camera purchase that they make. I guess something because it's a higher end. And actually, even as a pro, I wouldn't use some stuff at the higher end. Everyone's raving about 4K. Most of the stuff I'm making video gets shown on a crappy projector in a boardroom. So what the hell do I need 4K for? I think that's the difference with pros and amateurs, is they'll buy overspeck stuff rather than what they actually need for what they actually shoot. I'm actually really drawn. Less of the Sony and more of the Panasonic is the hybrid DSLR video camera. Play with the GH4GH. All right. Excuse me. Yeah, that's all right. All right, well, I'm out of the post anyway, so we should probably end this. But thank you again, Ewan. No, I'll see you again soon. Absolutely. Talk to you all later, folks.