 I want, I wanted somebody to start a chain called Burger Rex. That, that would be a Burger King, but for dogs. Burger you, it's just a reflection of whatever your status as a society is when you walk in. Ooh, that would be scary. But why didn't anyone start Burger Emperor? Just a one up Burger King. Too many syllables, Burger Emperor. The no pose thing. You don't want to feel that way. What about Burger Lord? That would be great for the Atkins, folks. Your burger has no pose. Another word. But Lord your vassal of the King. So Burger Surf. That is for people with really, really low opinion of themselves. Burger Thane, Burger Surf. Which one is for you? Well, if you get a Burger Surf, they automatically pop up the burger fraud you made me. Burger Chef was not run out of business by Burger King. Burger Chef was bought by Hardee's and became a rum part of the company became part of Hardee's and then Hardee's got merged. I don't know if they got bought by or they bought, but merged with Carl's Jr. Hardee's. Hardee's. Yeah, it's, you know, people put helmets on their Hardee's. They don't put best food. This is some Midwestern thing. I don't know. It's everywhere west of the Rockies. They're east of the Rockies. Who's ever heard of Hardee's? The majority of the country. Getting hungry now. Yeah, sorry. Patrick's off to Burger Rex. Well, I hope Finland has wonderful burgers. Well, we do have McDonald's and Burger King's and all of those, which by the way, I never stopped saying when I say I enjoy those fast food joints, a lot of people often say, oh, why? It's so disgusting. Our Burger King's and especially McDonald's, I kid you not. They are twice as well done and delicious as the ones in the US. The US, they're all greasy and disgusting. Here, it's not the case. I can back you that the McDonald's I have had and granted the McDonald's that I've had overseas are limited to England and Japan. Okay. Definitely better in both instances than the McDonald's. Well, they also charge a higher price. Never had McDonald's in France. I think that, I mean, it's just the way McDonald's developed in the US. It became a very kind of entry level tier and they tried to move up market, but they never really had too much success. I mean, you know, that's, that's why somebody was like, I don't think I've ever eaten McDonald's outside of the US now that I think about it. Well, next time you are outside of the US, try it. And especially try the items that are only available in those countries. Well, and that's the thing. People say, oh, why would I eat a McDonald's when I'm overseas? I want to eat their food. Because McNuggets, that's why you are eating their food. They, their McDonald's is different. I mean, I'm not saying you should eat there every day. If you're in France, definitely try out some French stuff. Oh, I also ate at a McCafe in New Zealand once. Do they have a missed baguette in France? It's like eating ice cream. They don't have the mac baguette. I think there's, we probably have to start soon, but they never made, they never did a Mac baguette. I think because people, that would be too much of a magnet for jokes and offensive to the French culture. So, Ms. Laine, would you read line three for us today? I sure would. All right. Here we go in three, two. Trey Warren has supported independent tech news directly for five years. Be like Trey, become a DTNS member at patreon.com. This is the Daily Tech News for Tuesday, January 15th, 2019 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt and from Studio Feline. I'm Sarah Lane and from Finland up there, uh, higher than the wool in the North. I'm Patrick Beja and uh, from a slightly damp side of LA County, I'm Roger Chang, the show's producer. All right, folks. Uh, we have got a packed show for you today. We're going to decide on the future of television. Let's start with a few tech things you should know. After concerns about battery life, Apple discounted its battery replacement program for all of 2018 from $79 to $29 per device. John Gruber of Darien Fireball reports that Apple CEO Tim Cook said at a January 3rd employee meeting that last year, 11 million iPhone batteries were replaced, which is almost 10 times the standard rate of battery replacements. It's the going rate anyway. Apple's battery replacement program began in late 2017. People doing the math say that the number could possibly explain the five to nine billion dollar, uh, cut that Apple cut from its expected Q4 revenue. I think they're overestimating, but certainly contributed. A regional court in the city of Mannheim, Germany, threw out a patent lawsuit filed by Qualcomm against Apple as groundless and said the patent in question was not, uh, was not violated by the installation of its ships in Apple's phones. Qualcomm said it would appeal. It won a separate case in a Munich, Germany court in December that allowed a ban on the sale of older iPhones at Germany in the US Qualcomm is fighting a US antitrust case brought by the Federal Trade Commission and Apple CEO Jeff Williams testified Monday that Qualcomm refused to sell modems to Apple because of the company's licensing dispute. The president of the United States signed a bill into law that requires federal agencies to publish nonsensitive information in a machine readable format. That makes it easier to access on your smartphone or your other devices. The open government data act also sets the presumption that all government information should be open data by default and freely usable. Pandora launched an in-app voice assistant that can be called upon by saying, Hey Pandora, it'll let you control music playback by artist album radio or playlist as well as personalized results by mood like play something new or play workout music. And Alphabet's Loon is looking to make carrier deals and has formed a wireless advisory board that will help it find partners so they want to make it a service founding members including Craig McCaw who runs Clear Wire a broadband provider that's been acquired in 2013 Ian Small ran technology development and international carrier Telefonica and is currently the CEO of Evernote. Marnie Walden was an executive vice president and president at Verizon where she managed global media and new business so experienced folks in the carrier game on this advisory board for sure. All right, let's talk a little bit more about search privacy Patrick. Well, Tom duck duck go which markets itself as protecting your privacy more than Google and that's not very hard. I have to tell you announced it will use Apple Maps to power local search results. So in case you didn't catch that it will now use Apple Maps. Apple allows developers to use its maps for free with a limit of 250,000 map use and 25,000 service goals. So one would expect that duck duck duck go is paying to exceed the limit though no announcement was made about that Apple Maps will replace open street maps for most things and being here and Google which are options for getting directions duck duck go says it will continue it's proactive. It's proactive of not passing IP addresses to map providers. It's proactive policy of not passing IP addresses to map providers. Well, our IP everyone who needs real directions. Well, really, really though. I mean, I Apple Maps is the worst. Have you used it recently? Oh, yeah, I use it in my car every day. Okay, so those of you who might throw stones at Sarah Lane, she's speaking from experience. It sounds like so it's really not that good still. Well, here's what I do. I put an address. I look it up on Apple Maps and then I look it up on Google Maps and it's startling how different the directions are every single time. See, I don't understand. I get where duck duck goes going where they say we you know, we're making our name on protecting your privacy. People criticize duck duck go because they do take advertisements and a lot of people have shown that they don't protect your privacy as well as maybe they could and there's some open source projects that are probably better. But like Patrick said, if your aim is to just be better than Google, you know, you got a lower bar. So going to Apple Maps means you don't have to deal with Google's privacy policy and Apple for their part does some things like randomizing user IDs, not associating user IDs with with Apple IDs and things like that. But if Apple Maps is not better than open street map, then why change unless that's the thing where duck duck goes like, yeah, Apple Maps may not be the best, but it's better than open street map. So we're going to use it. And it's also a long term solution. Apple is in the map game for the long term, I think. So maybe they're they're thinking we do that now and we're good for a while. It's unfortunate for open street map though, which could be a great open source for all of these mapping companies for multiple mapping companies to lose a big supporter like duck duck go. Facebook announced it will invest $300 million into news partnerships over the next three years in order to help local newsrooms. Kind of a trend this week. $16 million will be distributed amongst Pulitzer Center report for America. The Knight Lenfest news transformation fund, the local media association, the local media consortium, the American journalism project and the community news projects. So we heard yesterday about Google getting in with Automatic to create a scam. That's for news. Now Facebook saying we also are going to throw some money at the problem. I mean, Patrick, it is big companies who benefit from the news industry sort of subsidizing the news industry, right? Well, in France, we have had in Europe, we've had a lot of problems with the news industry in the press accusing those companies of killing them. So I think there is, you know, those seem to be focused on in the U.S. So maybe that's addressing a different problem. Maybe an image problem. But I mean, in Europe, it would be an image problem. In this case, it's to have material to work with maybe in the U.S. But they have a lot of incentive to make sure that the news industry doesn't completely disappear. And I will say two things about that. First of all, I've always thought Facebook was a tremendous company, extremely well run. And if you have money for podcasts, then I think it would be a good idea. So, you know, you have my number and 300 million, I wouldn't need that much. One concern, though, would be Facebook having control over you if they give you money, right? So I think that's something to think about here too, although as large of an amount as it is to you and me, $300 billion spread across all the news organizations, even just in the United States is it doesn't go that far. I know one of the things that they're funding is giving a few million dollars to help newsrooms hire reporters, except it's like $2,000 per reporter is what it ends up being. So, well, it can help not throwing enough money to control the press. Right. And I think honestly, in the current landscape, things might change, of course, but in the current landscape, it would be very, very difficult for either Facebook or Google to actually control what's happening in the news because they are in the crosshairs of everyone. Yeah. So, yeah. Bite Dance launched Duoshan, a new social media product in China under its Douyin brand. TikTok is the same as Douyin in China. That's two different names for the same thing. So if you know TikTok, that's what we're talking about. Duoshan is for private messaging and offers a bunch of special effects and filters, but videos disappear after 72 hours. Oh, so kind of like Snapchat. It appears to be Bite Dance's attempt to take on 10 cents dominance WeChat and QQ messaging platforms are pretty much dominant throughout China. Although Bite Dance's COO of News said, we hope WeChat doesn't see Duoshan as a competitor. What they do in essence is to build an infrastructure over there. We, on the other hand, are only going after people who are closest to you, which I know the translation makes it sound like they're going after people, but they're saying like, we just want personal messaging. We chat with all this other stuff. If you want to look at the roadkill behind you though, Alibaba, no small company, last attempted to take on WeChat with a product called Lai Wang and pivoted that to an enterprise product that's more like a slack kind of thing because they just couldn't make any headway against WeChat. Very difficult field to enter. It's the kind of thing where, you know, it's even it feels to me like it's even more difficult than social network because you absolutely use it for only one thing and that's communicating directly with your network and you don't browse stuff. You don't look at funny cat videos. You really talk with people and share stuff among close, relatively close people. So when one has been established as the one people use, attacking that market seems like a very challenging challenge. And we're seeing something with ByteDance that we don't see in the US or European markets, which is a rising star. You've got, I mean, especially in the US, you've got Facebook, Google, Amazon. I mean, Netflix is probably the most recent entrant into that top tier. ByteDance is taking on the two big ones. They're going after Tencent and Alibaba. They want to be that next big company right along with them. This is the kind of thing that you have to do to do that. Take them on, but say you're not. If I'm not mistaken, they've built their success on TikTok exclusively, right? Or almost exclusively. No, they have a news app. They have a bunch of other stuff out there. TikTok is their most successful product, though, for sure. Yeah, and this is this is a way to expand that they've actually got a couple other startups that they've acquired recently that are also doing messaging apps that are looking to be gaining popularity pretty fast right now. Well, and it's funny, the regional differences are interesting to me. Firmware messaging in the U.S. is sort of like, yeah, snapchat used to do that. Nobody cares about that anymore. The idea of, okay, your video is going to be here for 72 hours, 72, which is a very specific number. You know, it's not it's not 12 hours or 48 hours. It's three days. Is a I would love to know more about how the the the marketplace is receiving that. They're explaining it as with 5G connectivity, ephemeral messaging is going to feel more important to to younger folks out there. And, you know, snapchat didn't get rid of its ephemeral messaging. So even though it's new, it's still sort of just not novel. Look at Instagram stories. Look at Facebook stories. I don't think this company is trying to say it's novel. I don't even think it's new in China. I think what they're saying is we're banking that this is this is a thing that the people are going to continue to want. And just to finish off, I wonder if in China, these kinds of things are received differently given the state of the government surveillance. But I don't know. All right. Netflix is raising its prices in the U.S. by 13 percent to 18 percent, which is its biggest increase ever. Netflix's most popular plan will now be $13 per month up from 11. The company's cheapest plan is going up to $9 per month and a premium HD plan will rise to $16 per month up from 14. This is the fourth time that Netflix has raised its U.S. prices and the first time that higher prices will hit all 58 million U.S. subscribers. And all the shareholders rejoiced. Yeah, they did. Like the stock shot up. They're like, great. Yeah. Easy revenue. Just raise your prices. That's how you do it. And it's funny to think about the first time Netflix raised prices, they were very careful about it because they knew how price sensitive their customers were, especially after going through the change from DVD to streaming only and splitting those apart and the whole quickster debacle. Now Netflix feels confident enough that, hey, people want to keep Netflix. We can pop it up a couple of dollars and folks will stay with it, which is interesting because Netflix now one of its tiers more expensive than HBO now. It's honestly, it's getting to a point where I think, I mean, obviously, Netflix is extremely popular and most people who want these kinds of services will want Netflix. But it is getting to a point where I know they know their stuff and they have the data. So they probably understand how far they can go. But I'm wondering at which point piracy starts to become appealing again to some people because we're getting to an amount that is not as insignificant. You know, when it started out as roughly 10 bucks, you kind of think about it but don't really think about it so much. When it's 16 for some people, it's a significant amount. So for sure. U.S. Magistrate Judge Candice Westmore of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in Oakland ruled law enforcement cannot force people to unlock a mobile phone with their face or their finger. Judge Westmore wrote that quote, citizens do not contemplate waving their civil rights when using new technology. And quote, she further wrote that the government has other avenues to seek information like obtaining messages from Facebook. Adding quote, while it may be more expedient to circumvent Facebook and attempt to gain access by infringing on the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination. It's an abuse of power and is unconstitutional. And quote, the ruling comes in connection with the denial of a search warrant in Oakland, California based on an investigation into a Facebook extortion crime. Yeah, this is an interesting ruling. We've had other rulings out there that said, no, you can force them to use their finger to unlock something because it's been using the old standard of you can't make someone give the contents of their mind. You can't force them to give you the combination to the safe. But you can make them produce the key. If they've got the key, you can force them to give that because that's not the contents of their mind. That's part of your search warrant. Whereas biometrics is neither. And I think what I like about Judge Westmore's ruling is she's saying this is just because it's new technology doesn't mean suddenly people get to just, you know, like they don't have any civil rights and you have another way to do this. Facebook doesn't have end to an encryption on messages. In this case, they're looking for messages from Facebook. So do go to Facebook and get get the information from them. Let's not set a precedent here. What happens if they're seeking information from a service that does have into an encryption though? Right. Then I think Judge Westmore if I if I could guess what she might say is, well, then you're out of luck. You can't force her to do that. She seems very clear that to her this is a violation of both the first and the fifth amendments. But this is an important ruling. However, it's not going to be decided until this works its way up to the Supreme Court. However, Judge Westmore does use a Supreme Court precedent on a different type of ruling to extend here. So you're seeing the kind of thing that happens when you solidify the law happening in her decision, which if this I don't think this one will go there, but eventually once one gets up there, those previous Supreme Court decisions that sort of ruled in the favor of someone saying, Hey, just because you got technology doesn't mean that you give up your rights. Seems to be the prevailing wind for now. It's certainly so. Yeah. No, I just wanted to say it certainly that looks like this kind of decision at some point will need to be decided on by the Supreme Court because this is incredibly important in so many cases. It needs to be at that level. If I understand anything about the American legal system. Folks, if you want to get all the tech headlines each day in about five minutes, be sure to subscribe to dailytechheadlines.com. Now, NBC Universal, which I should point out my wife works for plans to launch its own streaming service in early 2020. It will be an ad supported service available at no cost to pay TV subscribers in the US. So if you have cable doesn't matter who you have cable with. If you get NBC on that cable, you can get this ad supported streaming service for free. However, if you don't want ads on the streaming service, you can pay for it. And if you don't pay for cable that has NBC or you don't pay for cable at all, you can also pay for it and get it. So everybody can get this NBC's streaming service. Some of them will get it with ads. Some of them not some of them for free. Some of them not a source told NBC that it'll cost about $12 a month. So cheaper than Netflix. Depending on how you look at it. NBC said it will continue to license content to other studios and platforms. However, it will retain rights to certain titles for this new service. Now combine this news with the fact that Disney CEO Bob Iger recently said that Hulu will stick around once Disney takes over Fox's ownership of it and therefore giving Disney the majority ownership in Hulu and Hulu will feature Fox programming as part of its service. You're not going to put Fox programming over on the Disney Plus streaming service. In fact, you're probably not going to put ABC's adult oriented programming. It's primetime programming on Disney Plus. That's going to stay on Hulu. You've also got Apple's recent CES announcements of airplay integration into all major TV providers including iTunes, movies and TV shows showing up on Samsung smart TVs. Now you got Apple available to be on pretty much every TV in one way or another. And we're now starting to see the coalescence of what the streaming TV world is going to look like at least from the beginning. Apps for everything. Got an app here in the United States. Anyway, app for NBC app for CBS Hulu, which will be Fox and Disney or ABC got an app for Univision. You got an app for HBO and stars and you got an app for Netflix. You got an app for prime video and an app for Apple potentially certainly one on Samsung TVs certainly one on Apple TVs and with airplay kind of available on any TV if you want. Will the future of all of this be an app from each source when we have like a dozen sources maybe maybe more each broadcast or cable network having their own app family of networks you know so NBC remember is Bravo it's USA it's sci-fi all of them combined into one app plus prime video plus Netflix plus Apple all on essentially an even playing field when you can put any of them on any TV Patrick and even playing field but an expensive one if you're actually going to have all the channels that you wanted to have in the first place this is you know the whole cord cutter generation was all about like No, well, we're paying too much. I don't think so. I don't think okay. The here's the big thing most most cable subscription the average price is above $90 and most people say I wish I could have all a cart so I don't have to pay for the channel but I don't want so if you say well, I want to have every channel that's available it'll be more expensive but if you say if you stick to I really just want to pay for the channels I want you can make it less expensive you just decide what those channels are you know the interesting thing there is that all of these it feels like they are a little bit different from standard broadcast channels you need like one or two maybe three hit shows that people want to get your subscription for and it's not completely impossible that each of those will have two or three hit shows and then you're like well, I do want all of these just for those few shows so maybe you know it will be a little bit more complicated to decide which one you want and don't want but yes, I agree with you, Tom this is a key difference with the cable bill the other one is you get different apps that you probably can't explore without diving into each app which is already a little bit of a problem if you have two or three or four different services but when you have 12 how do you know where each thing is maybe Apple will expand its TV app the one the one that exists now and that basically puts together the content from different providers notably in Netflix is not in that ecosystem though so it's likely that not all of them will be in there it seems like more of a headache than what we hoped would happen when we started down that cord cutting road I don't I don't necessarily think it's a horrible situation like I'm sure maybe people hearing this will default to I also don't think it's going to be more complicated in the end I think what's making it complicated is we're all thinking about it in the sense of well I used to pay just one thing and I got everything and I didn't have to think about it and I used to have a guide that showed me everything that was available to watch and I didn't have to think about it and so we have to reinvent that and the TV app does that except for Netflix pretty much everything else is on the TV app Plex does it even better than that if you run Plex everything just shows up by show you just look for what you want to watch and you don't have to know what network it's on it'll it'll help you navigate that on the back end for you and so I think we'll see more of those kinds of solutions does it integrate Netflix though yeah yeah oh I didn't realize oh that's everything okay Plex is my media server of choice however question for all of you how much money are you paying per month for your a la carte television because almost to a hundred bucks and that's almost like cable even though I feel like I am yeah don't count Netflix that's a mistake I think everyone makes is you would pay for Netflix even if you have cable most people have cable do so that's not a I canceled cable and now you can't count Netflix well but I but I pay for it but you pay you'd pay for it if you had cable too fine I'm still paying it's not an extra thing is what I'm saying if you want to compare a cable bill no no no not no I'm I'm not an extra thing just how much are you spending on television if you're spending then you have to also when you compare it to pay TV add Netflix to that is what I'm saying so it's easier to I feel you're saying okay and so you know I pay for Netflix either way that one doesn't count I don't have television I mean I have a screen but I don't watch or own a TV and that's been the case for quite a while and I am very happy without those things you should try it it's it's actually kind of freeing but you don't know what's going on 90 day fiance that in what never mind reality television you're missing out okay I yeah I yes maybe although there is some reality TV on Netflix but that's quality like terrace house for example from Japan yeah although who the sock incident anyway so I yes you can pay more but you can also pay less and the complaint with cable was I have no choice I have to pay for everything and I get a bunch of stuff I don't want so I don't I don't think it's actually more expensive I also don't think to your points there I also don't think it's going to save you money or hoping it would but the key is you can decide to save money if you decide to go without if you're like you know I I don't need to watch HBO these days you and Game of Thrones isn't on it's the only thing I care about I can get rid of it now granted you can get rid of that on pay TV too so I guess it's not as big of a you're more in charge of the money you're yeah but it's easier to cancel and you know my system right now is I pay $40 view and then I pay an extra $9 for Hulu frankly I wouldn't have to because PlayStation view has almost all the stuff that's on Hulu on my DVR it's just nicer to get it through Hulu because it gets the rid of the commercials when I pay for it so I'm paying what $12 for Hulu and I am definitely paying less than I was paying direct TV when I was paying 100 plus dollars for their cable plus the the rental of the equipment so what I like about this is you have more control what I don't like is we haven't quite solved the guide problem right is we haven't quite figured out how do you figure how how do you decide what's there but I think we got some good solutions being developed for that as well well thanks to everybody who participates in our subreddit we have lots of TV stories on our subreddit if you haven't hung out over there do so submit stories and vote on others at on facebook good news we have a facebook group facebook.com slash groups slash daily tech news show let's take a gander at the mailbag Oh let's do it KV from snow melted Virginia writes enjoy the episode and the discussion around type C he's talking about yesterday show coming from an essential phone it was a nice rule finding a type C headphone that would work properly on multiple devices without rehashing the whole discussion one thing I wonder is when did it become a zero some choice bluetooth and the 3.5 millimeter jack coexisted peacefully for at least a decade without compromise I currently enjoy switching between them on my note nine the removal seemed arbitrary with no visible consumer benefit either in features or cost savings maybe I'd be more open to the removal of more phones came with two type C ports so like Sarah's friend I mentioned her yesterday I could listen and charge at the same time man I feel like I didn't emphasize this enough yesterday on the show because the very first thing I said was you reduce the components needed inside the device giving you more room for either more battery or slimming down or some combination that is why they get rid of the headphone jack and KV is right it's not about you it's about them it's about them wanting to reduce the cost of manufacture and being able to use the room that's taken up by that headphone jack apparatus for something else because out into the into the headphone itself well thanks KV for the feedback and also thanks to Patrick Beja for being with us we missed you Patrick what's been going on in your world oh well first of all I've missed all of you too happy you're here I don't think I got to say that yet absolutely about it and I guess I have two things for everyone listening I guess if you're a little bit of a gamer you might be interested in listening to monthly video game briefing which is an offshoot of the daily tech news show hence the clever name we record this every month with Scott Johnson and we cover the news for the from the gaming world with a little bit of a an angle for people who are casual gamers who are still gamers but they don't need to hear about every single game for an hour and a half every week so it's a 40 minutes show every month but if you're more into games you can listen to pixels and on pixels we cover this a little bit more in depth and it is industry analysis and game discussion show so mvgb or pixels depending on how much of a gamer you are check it out folks daily tech news show .com slash mvgb feed also don't forget if you're a patron at one of our top tiers and you stick with us for three months you can get a mug or a poster with lens five-year anniversary art on it if you're at the master level you get a mug if you're at the advisor level you get a poster find out all the details at patreon.com slash dtns slash merch if you want to be part of our feedback section well feedback at dailytechnewshow.com is where to send those emails we're also live Monday through Friday 4 30 p.m. Eastern 2130 UTC find out more at dailytechnewshow.com slash live back tomorrow who is part of the frog pants network get more at frogpants.com club hope you have enjoyed this bro work Oh yeah good stuff guys yeah I'm sure we were going to make it in the lot of time but it worked there were a few reds soft few reds don't know what you're talking about folks we just talk as long as we want it's just natural we just always hit 30 you know though here's the thing though and and you know pull back the curtain a little bit Roger does flash up some orange and red signs at the dock to kind of help us know when when it's time to move along even though we did have a few more flashes of red from him we still ended up at 31 minutes like we did it's somehow it all self-corrects along the way it does I think he does that because he tells us and that gets it into our head like okay be a little more efficient down the road and we make it up and I also appreciate that because there are certain times where I'm like one more thing and then you know I see she's flashing red where it's like you know it's our wrap it up you've made your point we never want to cut short we just want to no you just want to go on and on about something that right right the point you've already made that was good talk though I like that and lots of different perspectives on that it was good yeah good stuff and I guess one thing and I'm sure we'll get an email about this the Netflix plug-in for Plex apparently according to someone in the chat room only works on Mac OS oh so there you go I was I was Frank Frank take not TV us Mac OS for Plex Mac OS for that's server for the Plex server I'm not sure that's true well I want to know how about your Plex servers running on yeah I guess not the not the end app you're using for Plex but where the server is run okay I want to know how to do it from world like that have Roger run I mean it's not rocket science Plex is the best I watched everything through Plex and Roger all of the recordings are or the one recording is synced what should we call this show their friends duck duck go is to Apple Maps the tic tach clock against we chat both Mojam creations right there off the top good stuff give you the finger I don't know what that means what that was that refer to I mean the finger means one thing yeah the search the the U.S. District Court saying you can't make them give you the thing got it I knew clever for your own good old guy I had figured out Netflix flexes its pricing apps for everything there's an app for you and an app for you in the stream that is what we are apps are the new channels that's pretty dead on it's an apps world folks it's an app app app world it won't slim you down watch what when and where you want on whatever app you want well if we're gonna go for the main topic I'd say it's an apps world or apps of the new channels but I'm open to other suggestions I would I would vote for apps of the new channels all right apps of the new channels it is motion carried not go good work by a gavel down done hey Patrick how's your little one he is a pretty awesome yeah well I mean besides being awesome well he started walking oh yeah a week ago yeah and now he's he's wobbling around everywhere oh cute he now he's a little bit sick he's in the leap and he's getting back teeth in so by the end of the day he's so tired he'd literally seems drunk like he's rolling around on the floor he's he's just had enough he lost at right how much alcohol you give me really one roll roll it enough enough is just enough back teeth we're talking about molars right well I mean I I'm not sure which ones but yeah yeah I don't know it's the one like it's not quite the it's not the front evening but it's the front teeth were relatively easy these ones are who it's it's it's it's an adventure yeah and it's the Niagara bowls of slurry yeah teeth are well I mean that's the what put whiskey in the bottle yeah exactly if I if I if I had all the time like that I'd be swigging it down to right I mean there's a solution guys but yeah essentially he is still impossibly cute and and he's lovely aww that's so great I mean yeah proving that it's possible but before before him you would have thought it was impossible for sure well I mean I'm still not quite sure I believe it so I don't know I look at it and I think my eyes are just leaving me you're like are you really that cute I feel like Roger and Patrick have this in common where Roger's like most of the time it's really hard but then they do something really cute and then you just find you remember that you're you know I well so glad for me the thing is I only have one and we're getting to an age where he's relatively I don't want to say easy but you have to take care of him but it's not a it's not a blob yeah yeah he does stuff he walks around he laughs he so it's enjoyable the first personality is coming through he laughs you don't have to make him laugh anymore on him but you know it's no laugh now we don't have to all of these things these ridiculous things like he's been you know the the baby in a the kid in a certain state so anything and you've known that for weeks or months so anything different that happens is like oh my god he said he it said of ah and you're amazed and and now I get how parents are like oh he's like putting something on the table look at this and it's amazing and everyone else you know who doesn't have kids or who sure it's like you're the first person to have a child all the time you don't seem to yeah exactly so I get that now oh yeah well I look forward to some walking videos soon I absolutely somewhere will do that before that though I will go sleep because it's getting quite late and I'm getting tired I'm very curious though I don't get how you install the Netflix plug-in on Plex I'll have to research that or maybe pick your brains your collective brains got got the most Plex experience of the bunch of us so yeah so Sarah I'll make you a deal cute walking baby videos against an exchange for a Plex deal excellent all right well have a good night's sleep and we'll talk tomorrow and I'll make your Netflix life better thanks everyone he's chat room bye I love Prashan so do you child what was the title that we picked that you guys exactly in the post absolutely new channels yeah I put it in the word press impressed if that helps yeah absolutely are you getting excited about your your upcoming trip Sarah kinda yeah yeah Sarah going to be with us for one more day then she'll be back and then I'm gone for not going to forever no it's going to be yeah no I'm I'm but Thursday and Friday I'll be off of work because I'm going to Mexico city for the first time ever see you guys night is you should watch Roma before you go if you haven't already I've watched it twice already you yeah oh my god I gotta go around the tour of Mexico city the first time I saw Roma I was not prepared something yet it's it's a lot yeah it's Roma movie or it's a movie yeah by Alfonso Cuaron set in Mexico city Roma is a neighborhood exactly it is it is a wonderful movie but it is heavy yeah it's not a like it's not a like watch yeah no no like to the point where I think if my mom were to ask me should I watch that I'd be like I don't know I'm not sure maybe not maybe watch a mouse it's intense I lean and I watched it over the Christmas break like pretty pretty soon after it came out and actually it might have even been before the break but both of us were just kind of speechless afterwards sort of slack job yeah well that's why I watched it a second time because I was like you know maybe I wasn't like a weird mood the first time I watched it and you know like right and I mean it's it's no it's very yeah yeah um it's a really good movie but it is very heavy it's heavy oh yeah really heavy especially for parents yes I don't watch it yeah that's why I'm like there's certain people who I'm like maybe just get this yeah I mean unless you really want to kind of go down unless you're prepared like nope I can handle a real heavy movie I'm ready to cry you know yeah yeah in which case it's great it's great movie you shouldn't avoid it but if you're like I'm not in the mood for something intense and heavy then exactly yeah sometimes you're not yeah sometimes I'm not yeah only till the summer right wait till it's sunny outside this is not exactly the same thing as avoiding watching Roma but on Mondays is my long day because I do I do DTNS then cord killers then spoiler in time then a little post-show thing for cord killers and so at the end I'm I'm happy but exhausted like I've used my brain yeah that day so I watch Bob's Burgers because it's you it's on on Sunday it shows up on Hulu on Monday and it's always the perfect thing after a long day to just be like ah this is I would definitely not watch Roma after on Monday evening oh no no no it requires a lot of I guess I was just saying sometimes you just you just want something that is fun and laughable and yeah that's why I watch 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé oh my gosh Terrace House you do you watch Terrace House I don't I know I got to get into it once I get done with all my real house lives episodes it's I'd be very curious as somebody who likes American reality shows if you actually like Terrace House because it's different or if you're like now to to two different because I like it because it doesn't have some of the tropes that you have in American reality shows but it is all the way reality show so yeah and that's a good point I mean reality shows are really formulaic at this point yeah which is why I I put it on the background when I'm making dinner you know I'm like half-watching it's got subs unless you speak Japanese but should I no I do fluently okay well then you could do that yeah yeah so I wouldn't need that so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so okay nah I'll check that I'll check it out yeah I'm just saying all the Japanese phrases that I know pronouncing them badly and they don't relate to one but that's the fun of video is seeing the expression in our faces when we do that and now it's over so thanks for watching audio folks stick around and imagine what we look like there's more to come