 Coming up on DTNS, Tim Stevens shares the mobility trends to come at CES, including scooters, rolling pods and flying cars. Plus the brewing war over eight K resolution. And finally, a showerhead you can talk to. This is the Daily Tech News for Friday, January 3rd, 2020 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt and from Studio Redwood. I'm Sarah Lane drawing the top tech stories from Cleveland, Ohio. I'm Len Peralta and the show's producer, Roger Chang. And as I mentioned, Tim Stevens, editor-in-chief for CNET's road show back on the show. Welcome back, Tim. Thanks for having me, Tom. Glad to be here. Thanks for coming back. It's sort of an annual tradition, as I mentioned on Good Day Internet to have Tim on right at the beginning of the year. He was the very first guest of Daily Tech News Show all those years ago. So I'm always very thankful for that, Tim. I'm very thankful for that, too. In fact, if you want to hear us talking about that and sleep number beds and CES diseases, you got to get Good Day Internet by becoming a member at patreon.com slash DTNS. Let's start with a few tech things you should know. Wireless charging accessory maker, Zenz, is now accepting pre-orders for its Liberty Wireless Charger with 16 charging coils and an overlapping array that means you don't need to place the device down in a very specific way in order to charge it. You just pop it on there and it pretty much works. Up to two Qi-compatible devices can be charged with 15 watts of power at once. A fabric model retails for one hundred and forty euros. It's about one hundred fifty five US dollars and a glass addition, which lets you see all of the coils inside kind of nice, is one hundred eighty euros and add on to also charge an Apple Watch sells for forty euros. Samsung announced it sold six point seven million five G phones in twenty nineteen between the Galaxy S ten five G and the Galaxy Note ten plus five G. That's a little bit better than the expected four million. So they did about two point seven million more than they thought they would. Samsung now says its devices count for fifty three point nine percent of the total five G marketplace, which is a very small marketplace still. But yeah, it'll be interesting to see how that changes a year from now. Lenovo announced updates to its X one laptop lineup with Intel's 10th Gen Ice Lake processors up to 16 gigs of ram and up to two terabytes of internal storage. Lenovo also added new function keys for voice over IP calls and both the X one carbon and X one yoga can be customized with a new privacy guard, ten eighty P display with five hundred nits. So quite a bit brighter than previous models. The X one carbon starts at one thousand four hundred ninety nine dollars and the X one yoga starts at fifteen ninety nine for you. Conference room fans at CES. Lenovo will show off the think smart view smart display that runs Microsoft Teams, essentially an audio video conferencing device that's more affordable than similar enterprise solutions that generally run eighteen hundred dollars or more. The view starts at three hundred forty nine dollars. Or if you want an included pair of Bluetooth headphones for your open office four hundred forty nine dollars, it launches later this month. Apple announced that former HBO CEO Richard Plepler's production company Eden Productions has a five year deal to develop original content exclusively for Apple TV Plus. Plepler left HBO in February of 2019 following AT&T's acquisition of Time Warner. All right, let's talk a little more about a very unsettling thing that happened with the Xiaomi cameras. Yeah, everybody loves a story like this. Android police noticed that a user on Reddit called Dov said that their Xiaomi Mejia 1080p smart IP security camera was showing still images that appeared to be from other people's homes. The images appeared when they tried to stream from their camera to a Google Nest hub. Dov told the Verge they saw somebody's porch. They saw a man sleeping in a chair. They saw a sleeping baby in a crib. So there's personal stuff here. Google issued a statement saying, quote, we're aware of the issue and are in contact with the Xiaomi to work on a fix. In the meantime, we're disabling Xiaomi integrations on our devices. Xiaomi has since told the Verge the issue had to do with a cash update meant to improve streaming quality. Xiaomi also said it's fixed. The bug will will will not resume Nest integration until the root cause has been completely solved. Yeah, so this is fairly unsettling, as I said. But it didn't happen with Xiaomi's own app. So you can still use that. It was only with the Nest integration, which Xiaomi is one of the few companies to get certified for that Nest integration these days. In order to protect security, this wasn't a breach. It wasn't an attack. It was just a weird bug and it was fairly rare. It wasn't like hundreds of thousands of people were seeing these images, but it was out there and it was a little weird. It's also a bit creepy that showed some of the pictures and they were all kind of distorted and kind of like a Japanese horror film. They're all kind of digitized. And if it wasn't bad enough that your personal information, your pictures in your home are being exposed, they're being exposed in a very creepy way. It was definitely top to bottom. Not a good story. I think where do you stand on the Tim, where do you stand on the kind of security camera home that, you know, the possibility that this type of thing might happen? Rare as it is still possible. Yeah, I mean, usually with these sorts of cameras, you have to worry about firmware vulnerabilities and faults and, you know, default passwords being left on and things like that. And this is like a whole new level of thing to worry about, where you could have everything perfectly set correctly. All the security updates, the latest firmware on your device and still have your stuff be exposed due to a third party integration. So I think that shows some of the vulnerabilities of a lot of our smart home devices, even if you keep them integrated or updated themselves. If you add in a third party integration at that point, you're just adding more potential vulnerabilities. And so on this case, even though it wasn't an explicit attack, like you said, Tom, it was still a possibility for something to go wrong and it did go wrong. So, you know, this is the kind of thing that's completely out of anybody's hands. No consumer could have really prevented this. And that is definitely troubling. And bugs happen. So whenever you are putting your data images or otherwise in a cloud provider's hands, this is possible. This is why people are clamoring for better security precautions to make this very rare. And it is so far very rare, but as these items proliferate, we're going to see a ton of them at CES, the need for security precautions to be built in and to be tightened up is going to be necessary so that you prevent bugs from causing this sort of thing. You make it really hard for this sort of thing to happen. TechCrunch reports on a tip from Israel's market research startup watchful.ai that code in bite dances, TikTok and DuYen or Android apps refer to a feature called FaceSwap. Remember, DuYen is essentially TikTok in China. The code found in both would ask a user to take a multi-angle scan of their face, then choose from a selection of watermarked videos that they would like to put their face into to share. So it's a fun little filter game. It's making sure it's you. It doesn't let you share anybody else. That's why it's got to scan your face and make you move your face. You can only put it in preselected videos that TikTok or DuYen said they have the rights to. The technology fits the description of a deep fake but would be limited. So TechCrunch suggests this might raise awareness of what deep fake technology could do. Unpublished updates to the terms of service found by watchful state that your facial pattern will only be used to generate face change videos. Chinese terms of service for the DuYen app further stated that matches are deleted immediately and your facial features are not stored. Now remember, neither of these are launched. These are things in the code. So TechCrunch reached out to TikTok and TikTok said, this is definitely not a function in TikTok. Nor do we have any intention of introducing it. So pour in cold water on that. Took the code out of the app, said, maybe it's going to be in DuYen. We don't know. We don't talk to them. And DuYen just kind of said like, hey, we have nothing to say about this right now. You know, the Facebook thing as talking about creepy, I mean, some of the stuff, as we've mentioned on the show previously and recently, is creepy enough to confuse. But this is not the sort of upcoming feature that I wouldn't have really freaked me out at all. It seems like the next logical step. I mean, look at all the stuff that Snapchat is doing. It's the same idea, isn't it? I think it actually could be pretty fun. A lot of people in TikTok are, of course, recreating music videos. And in this case, you could actually put your face on Janet Jackson or someone like that and be in the actual music video. So I think that's probably sort of what they're thinking about. I think that could be actually kind of fun. Yeah, I think this could be a fun addition to the app if indeed it comes together. And it also could raise awareness for what this sort of technology can do. And there are some troubling implications there too, but I think this could be fun. And yet, TikTok's reaction was like, oh, hell no. We want nothing to do with that idea. That's kind of what surprised me the most. You think that the company would be like, hey, we're going to do this. It's going to be great. Our five billion users at this point are going to love it. It's going to revolutionize. But they were like, nope, not doing this. We are not doing this. Moving on to OnePlus, which is always good for concept phones at this year's CES will be no exception, because OnePlus is teasing the concept one. It has an invisible rear camera array with color shifting glass. An electrochromatic sheet of glass covers the rear cameras and can switch to opaque with an electrical signal, which then hides the cameras. That means you have a nice smooth back to the phone rather than the now common camera bump, we've all gotten used to, but it would be nice if it was smoother. OnePlus worked with car company McLaren, which uses electrochromic glass in its cars as well. The array of the prototype features a 48 megapixel primary lens and a 16 megapixel ultra-wide lens, the same as in the OnePlus 7T Pro McLaren edition. OnePlus is looking for feedback from users. I don't know, Tim, McLaren sounds like a fancy phone. Yeah, I mean, the McLaren integration is great. McLaren is always doing lots of cool high-tech things in their cars. In their cars, McLaren is using this actually for sunroof, so basically you have a big sheet of glass instead of a roof in your car and then the touch of a button, it goes dark of the sun's out. If you want to see the stars or see the sky, you hit a button and it goes clear. And I think in that application, it's very cool. But in the camera, I honestly don't see it being that much of a big step forward, because you still got the same lens packaging you have before. You still have to have a separate pane of glass to cover the cameras. So it doesn't really, I think, fundamentally change the design of the phone itself. It just kind of hides the lenses. And honestly, I don't really care if people can see that I have three or four 18 lenses on the back of my phone personally. Yeah, I'm with you. I don't sit here and think about the bump on my Pixel 4 or my iPhone 10, either one. I'm not upset by them. I'm not sitting here wishing that someone would solve this problem, but maybe you're out there. If you're the person who's like, yes, this has always bothered me, I would love to have this. Let us know feedback at DailyTechNewShow.com and at what price? Because OnePlus wants the feedback. They want to know, is this something people like? And the fact that they're teaming up with McLaren makes it sound like they're thinking it might be a luxury high-end feature to me. Definitely. Yeah. LG announced eight 8K TVs. So there were eight televisions, all of them 8K, all of them supporting either Amazon's voice services, Google Assistant, AirPlay 2, and HomeKit. I shouldn't have said or. All of them support all of those, as well as native support for HEVC, VP9, and AV1 codecs. So right there in the TV, you don't need it to add on box. Two of them are OLED models. Those are the 77 and 80 inch model, 88 inch models. There's also six nano-cell LCDs that are between 65 and 75 inches, and all of them support 8K streaming at up to 60 frames per second through HDMI and 5.1 surround sound at 8K upscaling using LG's Alpha 9 Gen 3 AI processor. Now that AI does some recognition of faces, too, to optimize the appearance during upscaling. So the fact that there's not any 8K content out there, no big deal. You've got this upscaling to bide your time until there is 8K content. The other thing that's going on here is LG calls these Real 8K, which is an early shot in the burgeoning 8K format war. Everybody agrees that 8K is 7680 by 4320, no matter who is defining it. But how you measure those pixels is in dispute. LG is following the ICDM and CTA definitions, which don't just count the pixels, but use contrast modulation to determine if the pixels are clearly distinguishable from each other. Contrast modulation measures the ability of a screen to distinguish a pattern of alternating one pixel wide white and black lines. So you've got to have really good contrast to see that. And they say, if you can't do that at more than 50%, then it's not really 8K because everything gets smudged together too much. Samsung, on the other hand, uses the definition from the 8K association of which Samsung is a member and LG is not. The 8K association definition does not require contrast modulation to be used. Though the 8K association agrees that contrast modulation may be a better way to measure pixels, the 8K association has argued it's not necessarily a better way of measuring image quality. And so they are working still on the final certification for 8K through the 8K association that will say you're gonna get a really good image quality out of 8K, not just the actual pixels. So it's probably not gonna end up being a fight that matters to most people, but if you hear about real 8K versus not real 8K and war of words between Samsung, maybe Sony and LG, that's what they're talking about. Yeah, I mean, as somebody who's, I don't know, I'm watching very little 4K content, I can't imagine anybody saying, well, there's a real 8K TV and maybe I'm like, hello, but yeah, I understand the distinction being made. I think that the human eye is probably gonna miss a lot of those stuff, but it is a distinction nonetheless. I just love that there's zero 8K content available, but we already have the format war beginning and I think that's a wonderful thing. So 8K is coming because of format wars here, so good times. I remember in 2010, the 4K TVs having this exact same conversation, there's no 4K content, what do you need it for? I remember in 1999, the 1080 TVs, no content for it, what do you need it for? It eventually comes and what it'll be good for, nobody knows until it arrives. With 4K, it turned out HDR was the thing that made people go, ooh, that looks really good. So I think about that, when I think about the 8K association's argument here, it's like, yeah, it really is about what it looks like, not how many pixels, because a 4K image, like you said, Sarah, doesn't really show up that differently to our eyes, but it allows you to do things like HDR, which does make the picture look really good. Well, CES right around the corner, you start getting some pretty creative technology solutions and this one is no different. Kohler will show off a smart speaker with Amazon voice services that slots inside of a shower head. The Kohler movie shower head, Moxie shower head rather, is a circular ring, it sells for $70. You buy the smart speaker and then you can get that for $99. If you only want Bluetooth, or you can go for $159 if you want Amazon's voice control as well. You get six to seven hours of battery life from the Bluetooth version, up to five hours from the voice controlled only one. And then here's the thing, it is a shower and you have to recharge your shower head occasionally. Do you wanna do that? I don't know, maybe, maybe not. Yes, it's all IPX67 waterproofs, you don't have to worry about that anyway. All the items will be available sometime this year. Kohler also announced it will show off its Vader smart mirror with the Amazon voice and upgrade to the new me intelligent toilet also with the Amazon voice and the pure warmth heated toilet seat that doesn't have Amazon voice but does have its own app for controlling the heat. On those chilly mornings, you just get on in there and warm right up. No joke, all the toilet seats I sat on in Japan were heated, it was pretty amazing. You know, all heating aside, a heated toilet seat is a very nice thing. I mean, I really wish I had one at home. And maybe I'll get the pure warmth now that it has an app. But to this shower head, I was all on board for this because I do keep an Amazon Echo in the bathroom and I listen to music on it or weather updates. And sometimes I wanna tell it to skip or something from the shower and it can't really hear me from there. So it'd be great if it was in the shower with me until you got to the port about charging it. I don't wanna have to remember to charge this thing and pull it in and out of the shower. So that's kind of a deal killer for me. Yeah, exactly the same way I was thinking exactly the same thing. I think it's actually a good idea until you had to charge the thing. And I don't know why they couldn't just wait until they can develop like a micro turbine or something like that to slide the shower head to charge it. I would think that that would provide enough. Maybe, I don't know. But I think without that kind of technology, this thing is just the kind of thing that's meant to get people talking ahead of CES. And we'll see some more advice like that soon too. It's the modern version of what you used to see in the Sky Mall, the shower radio, right? It's just now it's voice controlled. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, there are probably some shower singers in the audience who are like, this is great. Oh, I love it. You know, it's that much easier. Like you said, Tom, instead of shouting over, you know, whatever your shower setup is to wherever your smart speaker is, it's right in there with you. But the charging thing makes it so clunky. I would never buy this. Yeah, I have to say, I think they need to go back to the drawing board, take Tim's idea of little water wheels in there that will charge the battery from the flowing water that's going through the shower head. That's brilliant. It's right there, right there in front of you. Hey, folks, if you want to get all the tech headlines each day in about five minutes, be sure to subscribe to dailytechheadlines.com. Of course, Tim, as the editor-in-chief of Roadshow, you'll be at CES looking at cars and scooters and other odd things that roll around and help us move from place to place. What is your take on CES as you head in? Well, CES is definitely and increasingly an automotive show, especially as the Detroit Motor Show is now moving from January into the summer. That leaves kind of a lot of automakers want to show off something in January. This is the place they're going to do it. So we're seeing a lot of stuff. Unfortunately, a lot's still under embargo, so I can't talk too many details, but I know we will see some very cool concept cars, some of which are more likely to come into production than others, but certainly there's going to be some really cool stuff to see on the show floor. And some more practical stuff too. We talked about LG having an 8K TV. They're also going to be showing off some interesting automotive displays that will fit in the dashboard of your car. Things will allow for a curved display that goes across the entire width of your dashboard, which is going to be kind of neat. And also, another form of transportation, they're going to be showing off high-definition displays for high-end first-class cabins as well. Folding displays, curved displays meant to kind of make your in-flight experience feel a little bit more open and airy, which should be pretty interesting to see too, I think. But beyond that, we'll see smart home integration. So you'll be able to talk to your car, much like you can talk to your toilet seat or your shower head. And a lot of sensor updates too for autonomy. So more of the bits and pieces that we need to make our cars be able to drive themselves more safely sometime down the future. Now, that sounds like the practical stuff we'll be seeing is the sensors. And the car has been sort of this parallel, almost accessory in a way to the smart home. So I'm sure we're going to see some real things that you'll be able to buy that are aftermarket, improve your car, maybe some of them will even be built into those concept cars. But will any of these cars fly? Maybe. Hyundai is promising that they'll show us what they're calling a personal air vehicle, which will be their vision for a future of flying cars. Interestingly, they're also planning on having like a hub within every city that these cars will kind of launch from or connect to. So it's basically going to be something like Uber Elevate, what they've shown us in the past. Basically, the idea would be an app or a transportation service. You won't be buying these flying cars, but you'll build some in a flying car, it'll land near where you are, take you to where you're going to go. They show a quick concept video of people flying in luxury and looking down at the poor peons who are stuck in traffic below them. The ideal future for people in a flying car. But what exactly they're going to have being functional at this show that I don't know. Last year, Hyundai actually showed a walking car, which was pretty neat, but the only functional demo was a little model that was about this big. So I don't know if we'll see an actual flying car or not, but it's fun to think about what the future might hold. So when you say it would land in the street in front of you or it'd land at a nearby launch pad? That remains to be seen. I think it would have to be at a launch pad. Of course, a big question of all these flying cars is exactly what kind of legislation needs to be put in place to make it happen. We're seeing a lot of issues. Elon Musk wants to build tunnels and most of us are saying, no, you're not going to build a tunnel. But what about flying a car over a city or landing on a rooftop? You need a lot of changes to make that legal. And of course, a lot of proofs need to go into place to make them safe. None of that infrastructure exists right now. So it is, the technology question is getting close to being answered, but the legalities and the logistical questions are still pending. So the Hyundai flying car will be on your local news, for sure. Absolutely. That's going to capture all of the CES coverage. What about the Segway S-Pod that sort of took over the headlines this morning? Because it's not a stand-up Segway. It's a sit-down Segway. Right. The new vision Segway gets a lot of buzz for whatever they do. And this is an interesting thing. The S-Pod, you can think of it kind of like, if you saw Wally, you know, the floating things that people were floating along on drinking their slushies in, it's much like that, but it's on wheels. It does balance on two wheels, but it does have a third wheel that deploys maximum speed of 24 miles an hour, which is pretty quick. So we're thinking it'll probably hunker down on three wheels when you're going top speed. But if you're cruising through the mall, maybe, or a shopping center at a slower speed, it'll probably go up on two wheels and balance. What exactly the deployment's gonna look like there, what the plans are, and of course, what it's gonna cost that remains to be seen. We'll have to wait until we get to Vegas next week. But it's an interesting idea, for people either with limited mobility, or maybe people who need to go a bit of a longer distance, maybe from one airport terminal to another. That sounds pretty nice to me. Yeah, I mean, having been to theme parks, seeing more people in these mobility scooters, I could see it being used for things like that. I don't know, it doesn't seem like it's meant to replace wheelchairs in general, but I don't see why it couldn't. Yeah, it definitely remains to be seen. There are some really interesting wheelchair concepts out there that balance on two wheels that allow people to lift themselves up, to access things on shelves and things like that. This looks like a bit of an evolution of that, something a bit more accessible, meant for more in general purpose. But yeah, absolutely, I think this definitely could serve as a wheelchair for a lot of people. And the Segway's also gonna have other things there, including a boring old scooter that balances itself. It's yawn compared to others on this thing. That's the T15 e-scooters. Is there anything particularly interesting about that? It's a little bit more compact than before. I think this is pretty similar to some existing models that they have out there. They moved away from the larger Segways, a lot of us are familiar with, to more simple, smaller units that you can just step on basically and just control your legs and your feet basically. So it's an evolution of that, but something that we've seen pretty much before. Now you mentioned that the Detroit Auto Show has moved to the summer. So there's more of an opportunity for the automakers to focus on CES for this time of the year, but I was surprised when you told me that GE is not going to be at CES this year. GM, yeah, General Motors. I'm sorry, GM. Yeah, GE will be there for sure. GM. GM CEO, Mary Barrow, was actually gonna be a keynote speaker at CES this year, and GM's had a large presence at CES for a long time now. They actually unveiled the Chevrolet Bolt at CES back in 2016. And again, that was one of the moments where we realized that CES was really becoming a bit of a threat for Detroit because they unveiled the Bolt the week ahead of Detroit in Las Vegas. But this year they actually pulled out and just about a month ago is when they did pull out. So very late notice, kind of scrapping all their plans and pulling out. There was a lot of debate about it being related to the UAW strike that was ongoing and that causing delays to their plans that they couldn't recover from. I think it's probably a little bit more complicated than just a simple strike related issue. But ultimately, it was a pretty last minute pullout and they were expected to show off what's going to be Cadillac's first electric car. So we're gonna have to wait a little bit longer to see that, I think. And that's a bit unfortunate that that won't be there. But yeah, definitely big news to have them pull out last minute, at least a pretty big hole. And they need to find some new keynote speakers. And I think that may be why Ivanka Trump's stepped in kind of last minute as well. There was an opening for them to fill. So they filled it, interesting. I've also seen some stories around about using some AI for a three video feed, rear view mirror from Aston Martin, all digital cabin from Fiat Chrysler, AI stuff in Honda, a lot of EV stuff, including Jeep, possibly doing plug-in hybrids. We would expect to see autonomous tech EV innovations. Is there any of those areas that you think we should pay close attention to? I definitely think that the mirror that Aston Martin is gonna be showing off is interesting. We've seen digital mirrors before. In fact, General Motors was one of the first to show off, I think at CES, as a matter of fact, where basically you could flip the lever on the bottom of the mirror and it would turn it into a digital LCD display showing a camera display instead of relying on a mirror. That's really great when you're talking about towing something, for example, if you have a big truck with a large horse trailer behind you, you can't see anything in the mirror. Now you can actually see through the trailer. Stuff like that is pretty neat, but the Aston Martin application takes a step further by including the left and right views as well, meaning you can check your blind spot very quickly and easily, especially if you have a sore neck, which is gonna be pretty nice. So that kind of technology needs some minor step forward. Ultimately, I think something that makes it a little bit safer, especially if you're talking about a sports car like an Aston Martin that don't tend to have very good rearward visibility anyway. Little things like that, I think we'll start to make our lives easier. And as I mentioned before, we're gonna see a lot more components that will be themselves not that interesting, light our skinners with higher resolution or that are smaller or that are cheaper. Those are really important components as we're talking about getting our cars better able to see the world around them and leading to the autonomy that we all want to see. Yeah, there will be quite a few autonomous cars that CES is ever, but ultimately nothing closer to something that you and I could buy. Gotcha. Hey, thanks everybody who participates in our subreddit going into 2020. You can submit stories that you hope catch our eye and also vote on others dailytechnewshow.reddit.com, bookmark it, bookmark it now. Also join in the conversation in our Discord which you can join by linking to a Patreon account at patreon.com slash DTNS. What is in our New Year's Mailbag? Oh, glad you asked Tom. Sam wrote in and said, quick comment about smart fridges after y'all talked about the new LG one that was in yesterday's show. Sam says, I really do wonder how big the potential market is in Europe. As far as I know, most kitchens in Europe have fridges built into cabinets, meaning that they kind of are flush with the rest of the cabinetry. So external screens don't make any sense. Here in Belgium at least, almost nobody is interested in fridges that aren't built in. Well, I mean, you could have a screenet still in the cabinet, but it won't fit with the rest of your decor at that point. Do you really want that? I mean, some people have the see-through cabinets where you can see the glassware in there. So maybe it would fit with that design. That's a really good point, Sam. Thanks for bringing that perspective because these big, huge American stand-up fridges that we're always seeing don't fit in everywhere across the globe. And, you know, Sam's right. I definitely know what he's talking about and I do think it's more prevalent in Europe. It's also becoming more prevalent in the US, at least in some, you know, some fancier kitchens. If you have the money to buy a smart fridge, it might not work with the rest of your, you know, fancy cabinetry. Hey, shout out to patrons at our master and grandmaster levels, including Brad Schick, Paul Boyer, and Dustin Campbell. Let's check in with Len Peralta for the first tech art of 2020. Len, what have you drawn for us? Well, as is always the case with the first show of the new year. It's always about CSS. And I want to say that the future is now at CES 2020. Just looking over the notes. It's flying cars, smarter homes, balancing chairs. And this is what I think it's going to look like. It's CES next week with Sarah and Tom sort of doing the flying car, the Hyundai flying car. And Tom might become a redhead. I, yeah. And George Jetson has a beard, too. He does a little bit. Yeah, it's going to be very, very interesting. It's worth going, making the trip out to CES to see this happen. So, yeah, the future is now. This is 2020. I just noticed the Hyundai logo on the flying justice. Yeah, this is what it's going to look like. I'm telling you, I'm telling you, just mark my words. I know this. This is what it's going to look like. This image is actually available right now in my online store, lennprobsstore.com. And I am also on Patreon. You can, if you're a Patreon backer, if you back me at the $5 level, you can get every single one of these drawings I do during the new year, even some past ones. So go over there, patreon.com forward slash Len. Thanks to Tim Stevens for being with us, Tim. It's a bit of a tradition at this point. And I know you're going to be at CES. Where can people keep up with all of the work you'll be doing there next week? Yeah, check out all the automotive content at theroadshow.com. We'll have a lot of folks on the ground at CES. And I'll be there myself. And I'm on Twitter at Tim underscore Stevens. If you haven't noticed, CES is coming next week. And we will be doing coverage right here on Daily Tech News Show from Las Vegas. We'll be in the central hall if you want to swing by and say hello, expect us to be talking about AK TVs in all shapes and sizes from OLED to micro LED. Samsung actually shipped the wall this past year. It was pretty crazy. There'll be some foldable mobile devices, smarter smart home stuff, Google and Amazon assistance and everything, 5G everything. Find out what the surprises are though by becoming a member at patreon.com slash DTNS. You'll get some exclusive looks from CES, from all of us and of course, every show Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday will be devoted to covering it as well. Our email address is feedback at dailytechnewshow.com. We will be live from CES next week as Tom mentioned, but it will be at our regular times Monday through Friday at 4 30 p.m. Eastern 21 30 UTC. You can find out more at dailytechnewshow.com slash live. Talk to you Monday from CES 2020. This show is part of the frog pants network. Get more at frogpants.com. Hope you have enjoyed this program.