 Hey, we're not here. Okay. If you're watching us on YouTube, this isn't happening. It's all an illusion. You're having a meltdown. No, what's really happening is that we are moving our live streaming over to Twitch because the Hangouts on Air system doesn't, we just don't have confidence that it's going to stick around. So we wanted to find an alternative solution. Roger and Amos did some hard work to figure out how to stream us to Twitch. Twitch has a lot of cool things that you can do when you're live streaming. So twitch.tv slash Good Day Internet to watch us live Monday through Friday at 4.30pm Eastern, 1.30pm Pacific time. We will continue to post Daily Tech News Show to YouTube.com slash Daily Tech News Show. But if you want Good Day Internet, the audio and video will be available to patrons at patreon.com slash DTNS or you can watch live at twitch.tv slash Good Day Internet. Well put, Tom. We're going to have a few minutes to fill your heads with whatever we need. Teeth information. We're talking all about the teeth. Kiki, before we start, when was the last time you were on the show? I feel like it's been a while since I've seen you. Yeah, it's been a couple of months. A couple months, yeah. I think two and a half, two and a half, two months. So it was in 2019. Yeah. The days lawn together sometimes. How's life up north? Oh, it's good. We've hit our spring stride. The roses are in bloom right now. We're in the middle of the Rose Festival. Oh, I love the roses of Portland. They're really beautiful. They are and they smell so good. It's just, yeah, it's lovely. It's that wonderful time before the heat of the summer actually kicks in. But it's great up here. And my son is almost out of school for the year. And it's going to be real summer pretty soon. We were talking about spring and roses when you said my son. I thought you meant the sun. My son. It's my son in the sky. It's my school. My son. Yeah, in summer vacation, out of school and shining on me. What's the highest it normally gets during the summer? Oh, it can get up into the hundreds. Usually not super high, but like 102, 103. That's hot. It's pretty hot. I was in Portland in the 90s. In the summer and there was a heat wave. Yeah. And it was hot and kind of muggy even. Yeah. Are y'all ready to talk about robots? Let's do this. Yay, Apple is a robot. Apple is a robot. Yesterday we mistakenly mentioned Patrick Beja would do with us today too. He's not... Except he kind of is. In fact, we're going to start the show with Patrick Beja. So here we go. In three, two... Hey, Tom, Sarah, Roger and Kiki. Patrick here. Unfortunately, I'm still off the show. I apologize. I will be back next week for E3. But I did want to send a quick message about the Apple Sign In feature that was announced at WWDC. Sign In with Apple, which is going to be in competition with Sign In with Google, Facebook and everything. You know what it's about. I just wanted to mention that I think it is the biggest announcement of the conference. It solidifies Apple as a company that sells essentially data privacy protection as much as anything else, or maybe not as much, but in large part. And I think this is massive. No other company has the weight and power to offer that kind of alternative. And I think it's a really big deal. I would have loved to be there to talk about it more yesterday or even today. But alas, that's going to have to do for me. Love you all. I miss you and I'll be back soon. This is the Daily Tech News for Tuesday, June 4th, 2019 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt. And from Studio Feline, I'm Sarah Lane. And I'm the show's producer, Roger Chang. Yes, indeed he do. It is time for some tech news and we have got some cool stuff. We're going to follow up with some Apple clarifications. Things that always come out after they do their keynotes. But Dr. Kiki from This Week in Science is also here. Dr. Kiki, what are you going to tell us about? I'm talking about fingers and robots. No, it's a digital story. It's a digital story. Brains and robots and fingers. There we go. I cannot wait to hear more about this. Let's start with a few tech things you should know. Enhanced tracking protection which blocks cookies from a black list of thousands of third-party trackers is now on by default in new installations of Firefox. We come the default for existing users in the coming months as well. Mozilla also announced improvements to its Facebook container extension and released a Firefox desktop extension for its password keeper, which is now called Lockwise, formerly called Lockbox. The leader of the US House of Representatives Anti-Trust Subcommittee, Representative David Siciline, announced a probe of tech companies to determine if they stifle competition and harm consumers. Seems to be a popular thing to say these days. Amazon users on Android in the US and Japan can now digitally try out different shades of lipstick using Live Mode on their front-facing camera. An iOS version is slated for launch later this year. Live Mode uses AI-powered data from brands and images and descriptions aggregated from social media. It's powered by Modi Face, which L'Oreal bought last year. Alright, let's talk a little bit about Tim Cook and his reaction to all this stuff about anti-trust investigations in response to the report that the Department of Justice has now taken jurisdiction to investigate, not just Apple, but Google Face, or Google as well. Tim Cook told CBS News, with size, I think scrutiny is fair. I think we should be scrutinized. But if you look at any kind of measure about is Apple a monopoly or not, I don't think anybody reasonable is going to come to the conclusion that Apple's a monopoly. Following a Supreme Court decision that developers had standing to sue Apple over the App Store, California app developer Donald R. Cameron and Illinois' Pure Sweat Basketball have alleged in federal court in San Jose, California that Apple's App Store is, in fact, anti-competitive. So Tim Cook saying, we're not, people are now going to court to say you are and it looks like there's going to be an investigation. We just heard about a congressional investigation of tech companies in general. So this will be a story for a while. Yeah, Tim Cook is going to say this whether or not anybody at Apple thinks that Apple might be a monopoly. So it's not a surprising quote and it's not really all that interesting anyway. But I think what the courts have granted developers to move forward with is going to be interesting. Yeah, Dr. Kiki, do you have any thoughts on whether you consider Apple anti-competitive or not? Well, I mean, I think it's debatable. All these really large companies, they control multiple markets. And it's arguable that Apple has to control its marketplace. It has to control its software. It has to control the apps and the hardware to be able to maintain the Apple-ness of its product. But then again, could it all be split apart and could that be maintained? So all of these Google, Facebook, Apple, these walled gardens, the walls either need to come down and we need to bring them down on all of them or we're just going to have to let them keep going. The Hamilton Public Library in Hamilton, Ontario has joined the Internet Archive's Open Libraries Program. The program uses controlled digital lending or CDL to make digital copies of almost one million print texts available worldwide. Libraries can't lend more than the physical, the number of physical copies that they hold and restrictions also prevent copying or redistribution. Otherwise, very cool. Yeah, I think this is interesting. I had not heard about controlled digital lending. Archive.org has so many projects going on. It's not surprising, but the idea behind this is that if you want to lend out a copy of a book but that person can't get the physical copy, maybe the Internet Library loan doesn't work for this particular person, there's no reason you shouldn't be able to scan a digital version of it and make it available to anyone who has an Internet connection worldwide. The idea is that once that has happened, you can't give it to anybody else, so you're trying to fend off any kind of exploitation of this for copyright infringement. And when you join CDL, Archive will look at your entire collection as a library and tell you which texts they already have scanned in so you don't even have to scan those. You can just authenticate that you have those and only scan the ones that nobody else in the system had. Yeah, it's exciting. I think moving forward, this is going to allow interlibrary lending, allow much greater movement of works around the world and greater information sharing. Yeah, and if people don't know, the knee-jerk reaction might be like, well, this will get squashed, but libraries and digital content have been working very well. Check your local library and find out what apps they have because they probably have one that allow you to check out audiobooks and e-books and things and even movies and TV shows. There's also, yeah, I checked out my local library branch recently. It's right down the street for me. It's real nice and they don't kick you out. They don't make you order coffee if you want to use the Wi-Fi. It's a lovely co-working space and sure, your library may vary, but yeah, the libraries are thriving and they've got a lot of great resources for the community. And librarians have been working on this information sciences for years and how do we maintain copyrights? This is something that is crucial to library sciences and to literature and information sharing moving forward. Yeah, I'm looking at the Hoopla app that the LA Public Library uses right now and I can get RBG or Pokemon the first movie and just watch them right on my phone right now with my library card. Spotify Stations is now available in the United States after launching on iOS in Australia last month and now on Android in Australia last year. The Lightweight app offers easy access to curated playlists with a more radio-like experience rather than your customized libraries and playlists. So users can personalize stations by selecting a favorite artist, say, but you can't pick every song that goes in them. A favorites playlist based on the user's interest also exists in the app. It's very similar to the way Pandora was for years in its early days. Free users of stations will hear ads and can't skip tracks, but if you're a Spotify Premium user, you get unlimited skips and ad-free listening. Over in the main Spotify app, five curated playlists of podcast episodes are going to start showing up for about 5% of the users in Argentina, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Sweden, the U.S. and the U.K. Themes of the list include comedy, true crime, geek culture, walking, motivational. So I guess it's stuff to listen to while you're walking and relaxing or mindfulness. A couple of things going on here. One is sort of the Lightweight app where you're like, I don't want to make choices or I don't have a phone that has a lot of storage on it and I want to be able to listen to Spotify stuff. And the other one is good for us, you know, trying to get more people into podcasts. Yeah, absolutely. I'm not a Spotify user, but I am an Apple Music user and I often will just hit the radio button because it's like, give me a genre that I like because I am a radio user. I like the element of surprise and I'm not so good about downloading a bunch of albums and keeping up on all of that and curating my own playlists. So I can see why Spotify is like, why not? You know, you're going to hear ads if you're a free user just like you would be on regular Spotify. Give folks another option if for some reason the full app is a little bit overwhelming. And yeah, as far as podcast themed playlists, I love this. I want to know what geek culture is that Spotify considers geek culture. Yeah, I know what I consider it to be, but yeah, sure. But I think so. But often these sorts of things are a little hit and miss, but I will find something that I wouldn't have found otherwise and I'm happy to know about it. I also like walking, so motivation is good too. Yeah, especially if you're motivated to walk. But Spotify has now opened up its own podcasting platform and is probably going to be allowing, having its own specially featured podcast. So I'm wondering who will these curated lists be made up of? Like you are, Sarah. I mean, it's are they pay for play? Are they podcasts that Spotify employees just really like? How do you get into these lists? And seriously, is a motivational walking podcast like you can do it. Just take one more step. Keep walking. I don't know what I'm talking about. You can go under that tree. It might just be something that's got a good beat. You know, see your power walking, you know, like, like a robot along. You are great and you can do it and keep on going. There you go. Spotify is the walking podcast. Spotify has acquired some original content companies, Gimmut Media being one of them. So one would think these will be prominently featured, but as somebody who's always been trying to get Apple to pay attention to my podcast over the years with varying results, I know that, yeah, that sort of curated editors pick stuff can be a little confusing for the rest of us. Well, folks, if you get all the tech headlines each day in about five minutes, that means you're subscribed to DailyTechHeadlines.com and it's working. If you're like, wait, I don't get all the tech headlines each day in about five minutes. Well, by goodness, go over to DailyTechHeadlines.com and take care of that right now. All right, we're going to do a lightning round of Apple aftershocks, things that came out after the WWDC keynote yesterday, starting with iOS developer Steve Moser, noting that 9 to 5 Mac confirming that the first beta of iOS 13 includes an asset package used for pairing devices by proximity, similar to how AirPods and HomePods work. The product type, though, is Tag 1 comma 1. Sounds like a tile type system. Another asset found in the beta shows a mockup of a white circle with a blue border around it, matching the description of Bluetooth tags that Apple is said to be developing to work with its Find My app. So Apple might be coming up with its own version of tile. Well, I don't know. I've mentioned on a previous show that I no longer use a tile for more than kind of a paperweight that's part of my key chain. However, I know that there are many people who love this feature, and if you want to keep track of your stuff, keys, or otherwise, then it makes sense based on what we heard yesterday that Apple would be doing this. Yeah, lightning round, Kiki, what do you think? Yes, no, I don't care. I don't really care. Fair enough, moving on. Fair enough. We all have opinions. Ars Technica got the official word from Apple that iTunes for Windows will continue to work and be supported just like it is now. We wondered about this yesterday. Apple didn't say what would happen to it in the future, however, but for now it sounds like it's going along. Also, Apple Music in macOS Catalina will access existing music libraries, including rips from CDs and MP3s and things added from other sources along with your iTunes purchases, and non-itunes files can continue to be synced to the clouds. Yeah, I call this story Everyone Calm Down. It's going to be just fine. Good advice. Developer Steve Trouton-Smith notes that in iPadOS you can plug in a USB mouse and it works with an assistive touch feature. There does seem to be a Bluetooth device section in the pointing devices settings as well, but that has not been confirmed to work yet, so don't get too excited about Bluetooth mice with your iPad, but it looks like with iPadOS, when it comes out, you'll be able to plug in a mouse on your iPad, which we never thought that would work. Thumb drives, mice, it's a whole new world. Right, it's like almost like a little computer. Almost, not quite. Well, it's funny too, because my first reaction was like, would I want a mouse? And the answer is, yeah, I'm just so used to not being able to use it that way that now I'm wondering why I would use it that way. I know they're doing some windows, but if they could do like almost an infinite number of windows overlapping on the screen that I could move around with that mouse, that would be something. I'm imagining it using it as a teleprompter, right? If you had a mouse right next to you, you could just scroll right through. I actually use it as a teleprompter. Would it be better with a mouse? I don't know about that. Yeah, well, we can try it out when the version is available. Developer Ben Sendofsky notes that in its updated App Store review guidelines, Apple writes, quote, sign in with Apple will be available for beta testing this summer. It will be required as an option for users and apps that support third-party sign-in when it's commercially available later this year. This seems to imply that if you use Google or Facebook sign-in, you will also be required to offer Apple sign-in if you want to be in the App Store. Oh boy. Remember those stories about anti-competitive behavior? I'm not saying this is a clear example of anti-competitive behavior, but you can be sure developers are going to be upset about this and complain that this is anti-competitive behavior because they won't want to have to implement this if they don't want to implement it. Well, I mean, is that anti-competitive though? It's offering another option that Apple has laid out as a, for many people, better option. Well, it's forcing the developer to offer it. It's not forcing me as a user to use it. Well, no, but they're saying to a developer, if you want to be in the App Store, and you want to offer a competitor sign-in, you also have to offer our sign-in. We want to compete. We want to play. I think Apple may have a point that the way that its sign-in works is so different than at least Facebook and Google to use two other examples that it has a point. Well, what I see what you're saying. Yeah, what I'm saying is I can choose to not use anybody else's sign-in and run it myself, and I don't have to do Apple sign-in. It's only, according to this, if I'm using Google or Facebook sign-in, that then I have to use Apple sign-in. I don't get a choice if I decide to use anybody third party. Yeah, isn't this being argued as a, hey, well, if you want to stay within the privacy of our system and not be snooped on by other outside interests, then that's great. That's definitely what Apple's doing. Yeah, our Apple users want this. Apple also added a line that in limited cases, companies using multiple device management or MDM for parental controls may not sell, use, or disclose to third parties any data for any purpose and must commit to this in their privacy policy. If you missed it, they said you can use MDM for parental controls. Made a big deal of how MDM shouldn't be used for parental controls, which I found reasonable, and now they're saying, okay, well, as long as you abide by these rules, we'll go ahead and soften that. Apple was previously restricting companies who were criticizing them for anti-competitive behavior for doing that. So it seems like they had a little change of heart there. Well, like Tim Cook said, nobody would think that we're a monopoly if they're reasonable. We're not anti-competitive. Come on. Last week, Apple raised the limit for app downloads on cellular connections to 200 megabytes. This is a leftover from when mobile carriers were worried about data congestion and all the plans had data download limits. 9 to 5 Mac reports that iOS 13 beta shows a card warning a download is over the limit if you're on cellular, but you can download it anyway if you want to. There's also a setting to just always allow downloads no matter the size. No, that's nice. Give me a choice. I like that. And of course, with every new OS release, there will be some hardware that can't support it. And the list of hardware that will not get iOS 13 is as follows. iPhone 5s, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPad Air, iPad Mini 2 and iPad Mini 3. And Gadget notes that means that the iPhone SE, the 6s and the 6s Plus are now the oldest devices to support iOS 13. All right. That's our Apple lightning round. Hope you feel more well-informed about some of the things that weren't in the WWDC keynote. And now Dr. Kiki has brought us a story about how the Six-Fingered Man from Princess Bride has paved the way to let us control robotic limbs with our thoughts. Yeah. If I have that right. I think you've got the general idea there. Yes. So it's not necessarily a story about the Six-Fingered Man, but researchers have been trying to figure out how people born with extra fingers actually move those extra fingers. What parts of their brain are involved in that extra processing and does that extra processing actually create a load on the brain and what it what it's achieving with motions of the body and the end goal here is maybe we can use the information gained from figuring out how polydactyl people actually use their brains to move their limbs to help people use extra limbs that are artificial. So robotic limbs potentially. Could surgeons be more easily trained to use robotic arms? Could astronauts be used to? Could astronauts be trained to use extra limbs as well for missions and would understanding how the brains of people who are born with more digits help us do that. It's really exciting. So the question according to the researchers who just published in Nature this week they said even though we've known about polydactyly in people and cats and you might know your Six-Fingered Orange cats but people also are born with more than five digits on their fingers and tones at times but nobody has ever looked into whether or not it's muscle or nerve inputs from the surrounding digits that control that sixth digit or if there's actual brain input coming in to control number six and so the researchers looked at people tying their shoes working keyboards doing all sorts of tasks with their six-digited hands and in the case of tying shoes they could tie their shoes one-handed so there's even a manipulation benefit to having extra fingers. I found this fascinating because part of the story was about how it's hard to find people with polydactylism because it's usually corrected quote-unquote because people see it as a birth defect and so they found a woman and her son who both had an extra finger between the thumb and forefinger and they could do things like tie their shoes with one hand. Mm-hmm tie their shoes one-handed and we were talking about, you know, we're talking about devices and our screens is there the possibility that with six fingers you have more control over your IOS device? Pinched to zoom at these six-figure gestures though there's not very many people going to be able to do that. There's got to be some advantages. Now, I know with polydactyl cats which is fairly common Yeah that's it's almost always symmetrical, you know if you're polydactyl it's it's both parts. Yep with humans that's not the case, right? I think it depends. It definitely there are different ways that it can be expressed if it is expressed in a in a in a basic gene mutation that is part of the symmetrical development of the person and yes it's on it would be both. Yeah. If it is if it's a mutation that only occurs on, you know on later in development then you're going to get it only on one side or the other because it'd be really interesting to have somebody who again if it was not corrected and it was only on one side to explain this is what I can do with the extra digits that I can't do on the other hand you know because you've you've got something to to test against right and to get back to the to what I think the technology aspects of this article is they identified Kiki if I have this right they identified the part of the brain that gets devoted to this extra digit and because of that they're like oh well that's that's kind of flexible up there if you have an extra digit you you you just use a part of your brain that would be used for other things otherwise maybe other digits and so maybe we can figure out how to do that and people who don't have extra fingers or extra toes to control something else that's when you get the Doc Ock situation exactly you know where you're you're controlling these external things to you so you you could you could have you know like you said a doctor with a a third robotic arm to assist in the surgery that he wouldn't have to talk to he could just control it himself or yeah and if we're talking yeah the future of brain control interfaces if you just have to imagine it in your brain you know it would make the reality of it so much simpler yeah and so in our brain the motor cortex when we lose limbs we know that the parts of the brain that used to control those parts of the body do start to get encroached upon by other areas our brains never want to just let brain brain tissue go fallow our brain is always trying to maximize its use of space and so the amount of of nervous tissue that is there for your fingers then is going to get allotted up based on how many fingers you have and so the question is if you're learning something since birth what is the difference between you and somebody who wants to put on artificial limbs as an adult can you start to approach the the brain tissue allotment in the same way so that's the trick that that's the thing they haven't figured out that was not in the study of nature communications which is can we can we shoehorn an extra limb into your brain into your brain control yeah and I mean I imagine that if you were to I don't know if you were to to practice often enough it would be like learning to play the piano learning to drive a car learning to use a pen a pencil any any device it's it would be a tool and your brain will create pathways to make the use of that tool easier and easier over time and so I don't know would you have to put on those artificial limbs and never take them off would it be something that it would you know you can take them off and put them down and your brain goes okay that's awesome I don't I'll just save that space for later you know so there's good there'll be some really interesting questions I mean our blade our brains are very plastic because you'll need to wash it yeah right you would need to wash it at some point your brain that is no you just live the extra limb and the brain yeah I wonder if it's sort of like trying to teach yourself to right with the opposite hand right if you grew up left-handed trying to right right-handed exactly is it is it going to be like that or is it something even weirder or harder well and we always say well you know if you'd learn to play the piano or ride a bike or lots of things we learn a language at a younger age you have the advantage because there's just you've got so much more absorption potential in your brain then when you get older and it's harder to to adopt these things but then you've got situations where you know I know somebody who had a stroke he was a very accomplished artist and he his right side wasn't really working anymore and now he draws with his left still really talented it's just different so I wonder you know in those sorts of situations where you almost have an opportunity to to be able to adopt some of this stuff mm-hmm yeah for the people who relearned to talk by imagining themselves singing or that's yeah yeah there's not going to be a weird all of it though I mean it'll be a massive learning curve as with you know as we're seeing with all the brain control interfaces that are coming up in research it's none of them are easy to take on and something that would be an extra limb that that control would be kind of tough to make fine-tuned well something we like to consider our extra limb is our subreddit you could submit stories and vote on them at daily tech news show dot r facebook group facebook.com slash groups slash daily tech news show they're like two extra lobes of our brain it's true yeah just feeding good information every day all right let's check out another lobe of our brain the mailbag Daniel Nas and Cincinnati was at the mall recently said I was at the food court in Kenwood mall on Saturday in Cincinnati and I discovered this kiosk he also sent us a picture of the kiosk which is an uber kiosk Daniel says apparently uber is trying to get new drivers in my area looks like an automated system you walk up to and automatically get connected to a recruiter at uber when I took the picture of the kiosk a nice man sitting over to the right off-camera stood up and asked if I had questions or if I ever had thought about driving for uber he said they have about 20ish kiosks around the nation in malls trying to recruit more drivers so his job was to get somebody excited enough to pick up the phone at the kiosk then an uber recruiter would come on the screen and talk to you about driving for uber and potentially fill out an application right then and there this is why I am not concerned that automation in the long term will wipe out all jobs I'm not saying I won't disrupt things and there won't be problems than there are because there are and we've talked about that but look at this like instead of being like oh we'll just put up a kiosk and that'll be it they're like now we really need somebody there standing there yeah kind of like explaining to you waiting for you to get interested enough see recently but I have not seen one of these kiosks and I'm not sure how close the nearest one is to me but it would yeah I I would love to witness somebody being like oh cool this is exactly what I've been meaning to do and here's this kiosk and now it's like a very convenient for me well and instead of having to get all of your experts on talking to people about driving in and spread them out to malls around the country you have mall in one room in San Francisco is my guess yeah people who don't have that specialty to stand around by the kiosks and and help people understand and do the kiosk to to make the connection it's that personal connection yeah yeah well thanks for the email Daniel and thanks to everybody who emails us every single day and also thanks to Dr. Kiki Sanford for being with us on the show so good to have you let folks know where they can keep up with your fabulous work thank you for having me on the show again you can find my work this week in science is my podcast you can find it twist T W I S dot O R G and you can follow me on Twitter at Dr. Kiki D R K I K I don't forget folks our goal each month is one more patron than last month you could be the person that puts us over the top by becoming a member getting access to all kinds of cool extra content as a member of patreon.com slash D T N S and if you'd like to join in live one of the perks of being a patron is getting in the discord and you can listen in on the good day internet channel live at twitch.tv slash good day internet our email addresses feedback at daily tech news show we're also live Monday through friday at 4 30 p.m. Eastern 2030 U T C find out more at daily tech news show dot com slash live back tomorrow with scott johnson talk to you then this show is part of the frogpants network get more at frogpants dot com I'm in club hopes you have enjoyed this program oh look at that prototude subscribe to twist good job party you won't regret it good night Rob good night Rob you won't regret it you'll get all sort of science science the goodness yay thank you Blair's animal corner and Justin's opinion corner oh Justin's opinions they are they are entertaining and often very insightful that's actually you know he is incredibly insightful and so many times I'm like oh I should I I wish I could get him to be quiet right now and then he's says something and I'm like oh he's totally right like damn it that was actually worth trying to talk to say it good show good show what should we call this show that we just did we have suggestions at DTNS dot showbot dot TV brains and fingers and robots oh my that's the one yes no I don't care I thought we'd get more princess bride jokes I don't care yes researchers fingering out poly dectilism I think that one that's cute I like it born ready to sign in with apple because born ready born ready you could do it Sarah motivation for your walking thank you that's motivation alone dogs dogs yeah we got we got man the six fingered man yeah five fingers to dance teaching old dog new limbs giving robots the finger oh I like it everyone calm hi good good good titles today so she got she got as a punchy I like I like giving the finger to giving robots the finger but I'm not sure if it's descriptive enough but I think it's clever we could do brains and fingers and robots oh my then I like that one sure hi all right that's gonna be brains and fingers and robots oh my hi I already voted for that title I know I'm trying to copy it haha all right and then for good day internet dental tips now show DT nuts Dr. Kiki's S. U. N. We're not here we're not here I'm I'm good with any of those they're funny Oh yeah the copy entry is off dude yep I could turn that on thanks do you care good day internet Roger yes no Roger's not here I'm here I'm here okay what was let's let's see we're not dental tips now show we're not here and Dr. Kiki's son S. U. N. I'm amazed no one made a poly dactyl peridactyl drug like cause you could have the peri old peri old dactyl list and stuff yeah to cover by half wait wait yeah okay what pair pair periodactyl poly dactyl I don't get the joke periodontal that poly dactyl I think he's trying to do pirate periodontal as a yeah that which is high just something I so it would be periodactyl that's the joke not polydactyl periodactyl okay we'll do the dental tips now dental tips now show I well I think I think I am a periodactyl because I had six wisdom teeth you had six wisdom teeth and it's not that uncommon actually did you have all taken out told me I had five taken out when people usually get them taken out like a 18 and then I had the sixth one taken out just a few years ago I had no wisdom teeth at age 18 I had my first wisdom tooth appeared at age 37 well so they weren't like on x-rays or anything they just went there they're like oh you don't have any wisdom teeth that's weird and then at age 37 my doc my doctor took yours you have a you have a wisdom tooth did you not ever get these taken out I'm like I don't even have any and so I've got one now it was just the one it was just the one and then five years later another one and then they took that one out you're late you go in for your x-rays weren't they like okay you've got a tooth growing back there it'll be coming in well that's probably what they said when once it started yeah although although yeah your gap of me not going to a dentist ah there we go that gave it some time I gave it some teeth well you know my the sixth one because it was four up top and two on the bottom and they don't my wisdom teeth I well that's I know I'm sorry I'd now you know now you know what I did find where they were but it was yeah it was the sixth one was there was something it was impacted like it was up too high it was just like it was just it was way too invasive and they were like leave it it'll never move you know you'll never know it's just going to be a tooth living in your face well it did it did move it took it's about 20 years but it finally became something where they were like huh do you want braces again because if not we got to take that tooth out because it's going to screw up everything because it's going to start pushing on the rest of your teeth when it drops no I don't have braces again no I really don't no now that you mentioned it I don't wisdom teeth actually chew on flex the idea but they they're I have all four yeah I want new sets of teeth like you know how you lose your baby teeth I that'd be great I actually have my wisdom teeth in a drawer right next to you right they're actually right I love it I think somebody I don't remember if they asked when I was younger but they did ask when I had the one taken out a few years ago which was not a fun experience but whatever they were like do you want this and I was like no I do not want that I don't want this to you don't save your teeth when they pull them out no oh I don't why would I want that that way when something happens you know to a terrible accent they'll have dental records and you can have the tooth but then how do they even know they were my teeth they're out of my mouth they're going to just anybody anybody's be anybody's teeth hey we've got this tooth do you want it it's tooth frauds in the making if you if you put it on your pillow eventually I'm sure it's going to do something I found these stuffed animals they were like weird ugly doll type things they weren't ugly they weren't the brand name ugly dolls but they were like ugly dolls and they had little baby teeth sewn into them there's a mouth on the front like real teeth oh wow they were real teeth somebody had taken them and sewn them on to these very creepy that's not at all unsettling there's there's there's there's there's there's the rest of my teeth wow do you like it teacher do you like the teeth the goodness the teeth that didn't exist yeah so we and here they are and you're and you're in your desk drawer I wonder where they where they can be accessed easily see and then and then at at at Halloween I can put it back in just there were I think I think actually my parents did save my teeth for a while I don't know if that is still around but I I think that that was a thing that I have I don't know that was something that they saved wonder what like if I could make a necklace the tooth fairy has all of eyes Oh you could make a necklace whether or not it's a cool necklace depends on your craft I think that was more what I was I don't know these have you not creeped out enough people in your life because that's a fast way to do it Oh here's my my mom texting me she's going to have a tooth answer she's like I have all your teeth all your teeth I still have your baby teeth Oh well well all right there we have it that's how parents control you don't you realize that oh are those sure teeth no those are my own baby teeth I thought myself I should make a tooth necklace yeah I didn't realize I even had this option like kind of drill a hole and make a kind of fun like puka shell type look but their teeth yeah as their one of my teeth these yeah every tooth was lost in the in the state of I don't know how would you lose your tooth in growth age sugar here Oh this is it Oh I found the picture I can here I'm going to can I screen share no can you email it to me and I'll send I'll put it up yeah it's just the